Essential The Official Boxing Random Thoughts Thread...All boxing heads ENTER.

ℒℴѵℯJay ELECTUA

Return of the Khryst
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
77,783
Reputation
9,440
Daps
119,917
Reppin
ℒℴѵℯJay ELECTUA
Fury rap sheet over the past 12 months:
-Pulled out of an October fight
-Pulled out of a December fight and claimed he was fighting Carlos Takam
-Said he was never fighting Wilder again
-Declined fighting in February to finally be done with this and claimed the contract expired
-Started promoting AJ fight when he knew he was in arbitration
-Said the AJ deal was done a day before the arbitration ruling that he had to fight Wilder
-Somehow caught COVID weeks before the fight date, when he was partying and doing coke in Vegas for months and was corona-free
-Is now out in public and quarantining by buying exotic cars and going to casinos


Just gonna wait here for people to make this about Wilder instead of holding Fury accountable as usual. :mjgrin:
basically stole the Wlad blueprint early 2000's..
 

LauderdaleBoss

#TunnelGang #RingGangRadio
Staff member
Joined
May 9, 2012
Messages
18,474
Reputation
5,213
Daps
57,407
Reppin
Lauderdale
I hope AJ comes out on top out of Fury, Wilder and him.
Some thinks he's bland but rather have that than whatever Wilder and Fury are doing, AJ seems to be a lot more decent person than them

Facts
Fury and Wilder were made for each other at this point. One gave us a ton of excuses on why he got his ass kicked last year and the other one is doing fukk all this year to complicate a fight he dominated for 80% of the time in the 1st 2 bouts. :snoop:

Meanwhile
Mell and Castano about to give us a FOTY this weekend and everybody is worried about Fury's goofy ass. :mjlol:
 

Apollo Creed

Look at your face
Supporter
Joined
Feb 20, 2014
Messages
56,304
Reputation
13,518
Daps
211,887
Reppin
Handsome Boyz Ent
Facts
Fury and Wilder were made for each other at this point. One gave us a ton of excuses on why he got his ass kicked last year and the other one is doing fukk all this year to complicate a fight he dominated for 80% of the time in the 1st 2 bouts. :snoop:

Meanwhile
Mell and Castano about to give us a FOTY this weekend and everybody is worried about Fury's goofy ass. :mjlol:


Fury needs to be stripped so the heavyweight division can move on. AJ finna fight Usyk while Keenan and Kel still going through their antics with the WBC belt holding it hostage.
 

desjardins

Veteran
Joined
Nov 3, 2015
Messages
16,948
Reputation
1,117
Daps
63,011
Reppin
Mustard Island
Don't blame Fury, it's Arum fault for fukking up the arbitration then setting a fight date against Wilder quick as hell after they lost the ruling
If Fury ain't mentally or physically ready cause he got caught off guard by the ruling then delay that shyt by any means. he got too much bread on the line for a potential AJ fight to rush into a dangerous Wilder fight when he probably wasn't even ready for that specific opponent

long as they have the match so it lines up with what AJ doing then ain't that big a deal. I just hope they keep that good ass undercard they had originally announced
 
Last edited:

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
120,850
Reputation
11,735
Daps
250,480
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
Gary Russell On Financial Upside Of Gervonta Davis Fight: It'll Sell More Than Him And Barrios

BY SEAN NAM
Published Thu Jul 15, 2021, 09:23 AM EDT
Longtime 126-pound titleholder Gary Russell Jr. is not sure what more he can do to get Gervonta Davis to fight him.

After all, the two share the same manager (Al Haymon), appear on the same network (Showtime), were both raised in the DMV area (Russell in D.C., Davis in Baltimore), and fight in and around the same weight class. It does not not hurt either that both have traded words over the past couple of years.

Most of all, Russell thinks the fight would represent Davis’ biggest payday of his career (and, conversely, Russell’s). In fact, he believes it would sell more pay-per-views than whatever Davis put up with his recent opponent Mario Barrios. Davis knocked out Barrios in the 11th round of a 140-pound clash at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta last month.

“It’s not like the fight won’t sell,” Russell, 33, said on The PBC Podcast. “You can still fight anywhere. It’ll sell more than him and Barrios. I guarantee you our numbers will do more than what he just did. Whatever his pay-per-view numbers were [with Barrios] our numbers would be much higher than that.”

Russell (31-1, 18 KOs), however, believes that Davis’ inner circle, particularly his promoter of record, Floyd Mayweather, wants nothing to do with him. Russell has long been critical of Mayweather for coddling Davis.

“It makes sense business wise if you’re looking at the financial gain, but it doesn’t make sense if you’re trying to protect your investment for the long run, for Floyd and Gervonta, because I’mma burn Tank’s a-- up,” Russell said.

Asked what it would take to get Davis in the ring with him, Russell surmised that it would require Russell to turn in a subpar performance in one of his future fights.

“Probably for [Davis] to see me fight and show signs of slowing down or signs of rust or something along those lines,” Russell responded. “Maybe Floyd and them just gotta grow some nuts and say f--- it let’s make the fight happen.”

Although Davis (25-0, 24 KOs) is one of the most explosive fighters in the lower weight classes, Russell was not exactly impressed by his defense in the Barrios fight.

“I thought he was losing,” said Russell. “He had determination. He had to be determined to go out there and still get a win. But he was losing. He was down on the cards. He needed to hit the guy and hurt him. This is not the first time we saw Gervonta down on the scorecards. The problem is a lot of these guys aren’t defensively sound. They’re not actual technicians. If they were a little bit more defensively sound and on top of that, Gervonta would have lost that fight.”

A potential fight between Russell and Davis would probably have to take place at either 130 or 135 pounds, although many believe that Davis, who has struggled making weight in the past, will likely never go back down to 130. Russell, who has held the WBC 126-pound title since 2015, has fought as a featherweight for his entire career. It did not sound like he had any plans of moving up, however, unless there was a title on the line.

“I would love to jump up to 130, 135, the only problem is if these guys aren’t willing to fight me without a title,” said Russell. “If I jump up to 130 or 135 there’s no reason forcing these guys to fight me. The fans aren’t pushing for the best to fight the best. They’re still supporting fights that shouldn’t really be supported.”

Russell has not fought since last February, a unanimous decision over Tugstsogt Nyambayar.
 

reservoirdogs

Superstar
Joined
Jun 1, 2016
Messages
12,711
Reputation
1,030
Daps
25,537
Gary Russell On Financial Upside Of Gervonta Davis Fight: It'll Sell More Than Him And Barrios

BY SEAN NAM
Published Thu Jul 15, 2021, 09:23 AM EDT
Longtime 126-pound titleholder Gary Russell Jr. is not sure what more he can do to get Gervonta Davis to fight him.

After all, the two share the same manager (Al Haymon), appear on the same network (Showtime), were both raised in the DMV area (Russell in D.C., Davis in Baltimore), and fight in and around the same weight class. It does not not hurt either that both have traded words over the past couple of years.

Most of all, Russell thinks the fight would represent Davis’ biggest payday of his career (and, conversely, Russell’s). In fact, he believes it would sell more pay-per-views than whatever Davis put up with his recent opponent Mario Barrios. Davis knocked out Barrios in the 11th round of a 140-pound clash at the State Farm Arena in Atlanta last month.

“It’s not like the fight won’t sell,” Russell, 33, said on The PBC Podcast. “You can still fight anywhere. It’ll sell more than him and Barrios. I guarantee you our numbers will do more than what he just did. Whatever his pay-per-view numbers were [with Barrios] our numbers would be much higher than that.”

Russell (31-1, 18 KOs), however, believes that Davis’ inner circle, particularly his promoter of record, Floyd Mayweather, wants nothing to do with him. Russell has long been critical of Mayweather for coddling Davis.

“It makes sense business wise if you’re looking at the financial gain, but it doesn’t make sense if you’re trying to protect your investment for the long run, for Floyd and Gervonta, because I’mma burn Tank’s a-- up,” Russell said.

Asked what it would take to get Davis in the ring with him, Russell surmised that it would require Russell to turn in a subpar performance in one of his future fights.

“Probably for [Davis] to see me fight and show signs of slowing down or signs of rust or something along those lines,” Russell responded. “Maybe Floyd and them just gotta grow some nuts and say f--- it let’s make the fight happen.”

Although Davis (25-0, 24 KOs) is one of the most explosive fighters in the lower weight classes, Russell was not exactly impressed by his defense in the Barrios fight.

“I thought he was losing,” said Russell. “He had determination. He had to be determined to go out there and still get a win. But he was losing. He was down on the cards. He needed to hit the guy and hurt him. This is not the first time we saw Gervonta down on the scorecards. The problem is a lot of these guys aren’t defensively sound. They’re not actual technicians. If they were a little bit more defensively sound and on top of that, Gervonta would have lost that fight.”

A potential fight between Russell and Davis would probably have to take place at either 130 or 135 pounds, although many believe that Davis, who has struggled making weight in the past, will likely never go back down to 130. Russell, who has held the WBC 126-pound title since 2015, has fought as a featherweight for his entire career. It did not sound like he had any plans of moving up, however, unless there was a title on the line.

“I would love to jump up to 130, 135, the only problem is if these guys aren’t willing to fight me without a title,” said Russell. “If I jump up to 130 or 135 there’s no reason forcing these guys to fight me. The fans aren’t pushing for the best to fight the best. They’re still supporting fights that shouldn’t really be supported.”

Russell has not fought since last February, a unanimous decision over Tugstsogt Nyambayar.
:unimpressed:

GRJ ain't even a big featherweight. Why should I care him vs Tank now that Tank been at 140? That boat has sailed
 
Top