Ruthless-RKO wrote: ↑25 Apr 2018, 13:18
So Whyte has been okay to fight the likes of Pulev to become Joshua's mandatory, but won't fight Ortiz to become Ortiz's mando?
I know he was #1 ranked, but he was never actually the mandatory challenger.
Dillian Whyte has been the number one challenger for the WBC title for more than six months, he's already competed in an eliminator, he currently holds the WBC silver title and is ranked higher than Dominic Breazeale, who is Wilder's current mandatory title challenger.
The Brit has been overlooked on multiple occasions due to the WBC's allegiance to Al Haymon's heavyweights.
The fight against Ortiz only determines the second mandatory challenger for Wilder's title,l and the winner won't be granted an opportunity to fight for the WBC belt before Breazeale does.
According to the WBC's own rules, their champion only needs to perform one mandatory defence per year and it'll be five months or so until we see Wilder face Brazeale.
So therefore, why would Dillian Whyte agree to engage in yet another WBC eliminator, when that organisation has already overlooked him by allowing lower ranked Al Haymon fighters get a shot at Wilder before he does?
What benefit does facing Luis Ortiz bring to Dillian Whyte's career, since he'd have to wait at leats 18 months before he gets a shot at the title?
Let's not forget that Dillian Whyte first competed in a WBC title eliminator in 2016, but has never been granted an opportunity to face Wilder.
Why does the WBC insist that Dillian Whyte has to jump through so many more hoops in order to gain a world title shot than the other nine men that has or will challenge Wilder?