Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
-
HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
THAT.... is the real question....
-
Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Why wouldn’t he? Why waste millions of dollars fighting an unnecessary lawsuit?
-
HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Because he said he'd talk to his team about it.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:29 Why wouldn’t he? Why waste millions of dollars fighting an unnecessary lawsuit?
With the heavyweight division disappointment is more likely. I hope not but who knows.
-
Onetimeonly
- Super Featherweight
- Posts: 11584
- Joined: 16 Oct 2018, 06:28
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Of course he will, huge money against a guy he just beat the shit out of.
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Of course he will.
“The real question” is . . . Does AJ / Eddie want the rematch?
“The real question” is . . . Does AJ / Eddie want the rematch?
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
the team should get together, look at all these new possibilities, belts, opponents, purses as well as losses and act accordingly...
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Of course he will because he would win again by stoppage. The question should be if AJ and his team want to proceed with the rematch.
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Ruiz will fancy repeating the ko. It was no fluke, this has been on the cards since the Klitschko fight. When Joshua was massively exposed but Klitschko was too tired to pull the trigger.
Though I must admit I didn't think Ruiz would be the man to do the job in the end. Hats off to him though, he's just made the division fun again.
Though I must admit I didn't think Ruiz would be the man to do the job in the end. Hats off to him though, he's just made the division fun again.
-
apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 7254
- Joined: 18 Aug 2014, 12:28
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Yup. Also he'd make even more money. Ruiz is in a win-win situation atm.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:29 Why wouldn’t he? Why waste millions of dollars fighting an unnecessary lawsuit?
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
The only worry is that Ruiz might let himself go physically between now and the rematch. 
-
HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
-
Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Andy has been with Al Haymon for six months.HomicideHenry wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:39 Because he said he'd talk to his team about it.Just a week ago he was with Top Rank, now he's with Al Haymon. We might just see Ruiz try and tackle Fury instead, or .... You never know, he may refuse and be stripped and the titles are vacant all over again.
With the heavyweight division disappointment is more likely. I hope not but who knows.
Providing a non-committal vague answer to a “what next” type of question immediately after having fought is the normal response.
Ruiz Jr. won’t waste his entire life savings ducking the AJ rematch.
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
why wouldnt he take the rematch, huge money for a guy he just beat up, like said
-
apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 7254
- Joined: 18 Aug 2014, 12:28
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Wlad was a big puncher and a world class proven hw. It wasn't a shocker that he k.d AJ. Ruiz's grit and boxing skills made the big difference vs AJ.ewenhay wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:47 Ruiz will fancy repeating the ko. It was no fluke, this has been on the cards since the Klitschko fight. When Joshua was massively exposed but Klitschko was too tired to pull the trigger.
Though I must admit I didn't think Ruiz would be the man to do the job in the end. Hats off to him though, he's just made the division fun again.
-
HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Weird.... I must have misread an article about him leaving Top Rank for Haymon... The article was 4 days agoEnlightened-One wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:54 Andy has been with Al Haymon for six months.
Providing a non-committal vague answer to a “what next” type of question immediately after having fought is the normal response.
Ruiz Jr. won’t waste his entire life savings ducking the AJ rematch.
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
apollo creed wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 04:55 Wlad was a big puncher and a world class proven hw. It wasn't a shocker that he k.d AJ. Ruiz's grit and boxing skills made the big difference vs AJ.![]()
It was more that fact that he looked like the mover in that fight despite being 40 and never having looked like the mover in any of his previous defences rather than the knockdown.
Although the way Joshua couldn't recover quickly was another huge alarm bell. A younger Klitschko would have decimated him at that point.
-
Onetimeonly
- Super Featherweight
- Posts: 11584
- Joined: 16 Oct 2018, 06:28
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
I know, I was joking. I'm totally chuffed for Ruiz.
-
apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
- Posts: 7254
- Joined: 18 Aug 2014, 12:28
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Also AJ was not a paper champ or a chiny fighter as some armchair warrior-'boxing experts' are yapping about. His wins over Whyte and W.K are quality wins! He showed big heart in those fights. 
Last edited by apollo creed on 02 Jun 2019, 05:06, edited 1 time in total.
-
Onetimeonly
- Super Featherweight
- Posts: 11584
- Joined: 16 Oct 2018, 06:28
-
Enlightened-One
- Super Lightweight
- Posts: 14618
- Joined: 19 Jul 2016, 05:12
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
In terms of the existence of a rematch clause, AJ said the following:
'I didn't even ask about a rematch clause because I was so confident I was going to win. If it's there, we'll go again and I'll get the titles back.‘
So if there’s no rematch clause, then Ruiz Jr. won’t be obliged to face Anthony Joshua next, though I can’t imagine his team omitting this sort of blatantly obvious and seemingly mandatory stipulation in the contract.
'I didn't even ask about a rematch clause because I was so confident I was going to win. If it's there, we'll go again and I'll get the titles back.‘
So if there’s no rematch clause, then Ruiz Jr. won’t be obliged to face Anthony Joshua next, though I can’t imagine his team omitting this sort of blatantly obvious and seemingly mandatory stipulation in the contract.
-
Onetimeonly
- Super Featherweight
- Posts: 11584
- Joined: 16 Oct 2018, 06:28
-
HomicideHenry
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 18722
- Joined: 08 Sep 2005, 00:43
Re: Will Ruiz Honor the Immediate Rematch Clause?
Quality? Ehhh.... They were solid but not top notch quality.... The thing with Joshua is every time he won it was always overblown by his fanbase.... All his flaws were shrugged off, and any unanswered questions were basically ignored.apollo creed wrote: ↑02 Jun 2019, 05:05 Also AJ was not a paper champ or a chiny fighter as some armchair warrior-'boxing experts' are yapping about. His wins over Whyte and W.K are quality wins! He showed big heart in those fights.![]()
He is not a fluid man, because of his muscularity. He tends to be too mechanical, but that's typical of most British boxers. He gasses after a few exchanges, takes a lot of breathers in there. His chin isn't paper mache or china but it's not sturdy either.
And biggest of all is the way he was positioned to those titles in the first place. He was handed the IBF belt on a platinum platter. He fought an older, inactive Klitschko for the WBA strap and only won because Klitschko let him off the hook. He won the WBO, arguably, because the referee wouldn't really allow Parker to do anything.
Don't bring up Povetkin. He was 39 years old and hadn't been the same guy ever since being busted for PEDs a few years earlier. Takam was more telling, nearly going the distance and he wasn't anything special.
He may one day become a great champion like Lennox Lewis, but he's got a bigger mountain to climb than Lewis had to climb. He's got far more to work on. With Fury and Wilder around, both in their primes, let alone Ruiz and others coming up the pike (ie, Usyk) he may never regain the titles unless he changes everything.