asking who someone is on an anonymous internet forum lmfao durp da durp Im actually the ghost of Martin Luther King, uppercut and iv came back from the dead to tell you that your trolling is ruining all my good work. durp da durp da durp now you have been told
Obviously, Wilder hits harder because he's a HW, and Kovalev is a LHW. Wilder is also faster. Force = mass x acceleration.
You mean p4p hardest puncher, because Kovalev doesn't punch near as hard as Wilder. But Wilder isn't the only heavyweight who can punch. Klitschko hits harder, Joshua, Povetkin, Haye, and Ortiz probably do too. Beterbiev and Gvozdyk hit as hard as Kovalev at light heavyweight. Golovkin probably hits as hard p4p as anyone. Lucas Matthysse has an 81% knockout rate, so he can swat, even if he doesn't have the greatest finesse. Gonzalez has an 83% KO record right up there with Kovalev's 84%. Inoue is sitting pretty at 82%.
I think he has trouble with big guys that walk forward while covering up. He doesn't seem to know how to completely and effectively deal with pressure. If we say that Wilder is able to come back in pretty much the same condition he left in, then he needs to work on at least a left uppercut and an occasional right uppercut if he can catch his opponent coming in. I agree that Wilder has the potential to be one of the greatest heavy, but he has not yet proven the ability. I do feel sorry for his opponents though, as they do take a lot of punishment. I just hope they all have their health intact, spiritual, physical, and mental.
Agreed. Everyone understands that Wilder is very much, a work in progress. He still has many flaws and I think many of them having to do with aggressive offence is due to his trainer, Breland, not being the most aggressive boxer himself. I think Breland has done a great job with Wilder, but I feel that Wilder has outgrown Breland and needs a new trainer to teach new tricks. A new trainer like Roger Mayweather.