1:20
Finally a straight answer at the insistence of the reporters! Nu b/s ducking the question answers!
More or less admitting it's all about the money now. The easier the better, but then that's what boxing is all about, and always has been. Murata is an understandable target, and from the look of it an easy fight to make.apollo creed wrote: ↑06 May 2018, 14:23
1:20
Finally a straight answer at the insistence of the reporters! Nu b/s ducking the question answers!![]()
Very true.Thomastearns wrote: ↑06 May 2018, 15:16More or less admitting it's all about the money now. The easier the better, but then that's what boxing is all about, and always has been. Murata is an understandable target, and from the look of it an easy fight to make.apollo creed wrote: ↑06 May 2018, 14:23
1:20
Finally a straight answer at the insistence of the reporters! Nu b/s ducking the question answers!![]()
It's a long, difficult and dangerous road to the top. Even when you get there, one slip and you fall off. To get back again depends on a lot of things often outside your control, often a lot (too many) concessions to be made.
To a newcomer, boxing politics must seem unfathomable. Why don't certain fights get made? Why don't sanctioning bodies enforce more mandatory defences? What's all this A side business all about? What are purse bids? Why so many belts and divisions? How do the rankings work?
The answer is, basically, a bit like most of world history, its all about the money. Fighting is secondary.
I don't doubt it. A Japanese Middleweight Champion is unheard of so I'm sure they're very proud of him in Japan, and Japanese fight fans have a tendency to have unrealistic expectations of their fighters.
Yup. They worship their fighters.gilgamesh wrote: ↑06 May 2018, 15:36I don't doubt it. A Japanese Middleweight Champion is unheard of so I'm sure they're very proud of him in Japan, and Japanese fight fans have a tendency to have unrealistic expectations of their fighters.
As Pride FC showed routinely with their matchmaking.