- 25,508
- 667
was the exact samething as the fight
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Been a little dead in here a bit, and I was watching some boxing videos earlier and thought of something.
How do y'all feel about a fighter coasting the last two rounds, dancing around the ring, and not engaging?
Say the dude clearly won first ten rounds in a Championship fight, but coasted the last two, just sticking jabs every once in a while, but running the rest of the round?
And if you don't agree with the use of the tactic, why is it acceptable in Football and Basketball for instance? Why go ahead and give the other team a chance when you have the game/fight in the bag?
Curious on how you guys feel about it. Obviously it's screwed some guys in the past, but you often see a showering of boo's when it's obvious they are running.
^my two cents, I can't stand it. You play to win the game. I hate when football, basketball, etc teams do it. I love seeing a team try and hold off the last minute or two and turn the ball over and lose. Obviously you run the risk of getting caught with one but I measure the heart and courage of the fighter, not how he protects his record or $$ for the next fight. Difference between the business mind and the sport mind.
But if you "play to win the game", why risk losing it by slugging in the late rounds?
So a fighter doesn't have heart or courage because he dominates a fight in the first 10 rounds but moves and evades in the last 2?
I don't have a problem with it. I respect pretty much anyone that gets in a ring.
I'm kind of disgusted when people think these guys should take more punishment than they have to for our amusement.
It's a sport. They aren't fighting to the death.
And we've already seen what this can lead to in their old age.
Boxers aren't thinking about their health when they are in the ring fighting that moment lol.
Dan Rafael @danrafaelespn 5h5 hours ago
Deal made for @Klitschko vs. @Tyson_Fury. My story with the details on this big fight: http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/i...ko-tyson-fury-set-october-title-fight-germany … #boxing #KlitschkoFury
^Idk who in their right mind would have considered Martinez coasting or dancing in the 12th round. You're absolutely right though, he def could have used his feet more the final 2 minutes. If anything he did more than enough to go out like a warrior. He took some unnecessary shots from Chavez and even fought him on the ropes after that knockdown. Knowing the kid had 20+ pounds on him and was still had power.
http://espn.go.com/blog/dan-rafael/post/_/id/13381/heres-what-it-will-take-to-make-ward-vs-ggg
K2 Promotions managing director Tom Loeffler, who promotes middleweight titlist Gennady Golovkin, continues to look for a major fight for GGG, the most feared fighter in boxing and its most destructive knockout artist this side of light heavyweight titleholder Sergey Kovalev.
Loeffler and Golovkin (33-0, 30 KOs) have made it clear they are interested in fights with any big name from junior middleweight to super middleweight, including opponents such as middleweight champion Miguel Cotto, Mexican star Canelo Alvarez (although they are fighting each other this fall), super middleweight champion Andre Ward or former super middleweight titlist Carl Froch, who has not fought for a year, is considering retirement and not shown any genuine interest in fighting GGG, going to far as to say in an interview on British television that fighters would be wise to “swerve Golovkin like the plague.” Apparently, he is following his own advice.
Golovkin especially would like to unify belts at middleweight. Loeffler hopes titlist David Lemieux and Golden Boy Promotions will have a change of heart and show interest in a fall fight. Titleholder Andy Lee is out of the picture for the fall because he is making his mandatory defense against Billy Joe Saunders.
Loeffler said Golovkin would be more than happy to have a fall fight with Ward (28-0, 15 KOs), who returned from a 19-month layoff last month to pummel hapless Paul Smith for nine one-sided rounds.
Although Golovkin is the bigger draw than Ward in terms of selling tickets and television ratings, Loeffler explained the terms they would be willing to make the fight for.
“GGG is now clearly the ‘A’ side yet Ward still would want to dictate terms, which makes no sense,” Loeffler said. “GGG would fight Ward on a 50-50 basis, the best 160-pounder versus the best 168-pounder [at] 164 [and] a 50-50 split on all proceeds. But it seems like Ward needs more tuneup fights.”