Agreed. But he has put on weight.
It's ancient history though, because the average heavyweight is currently much bigger than they were a decade ago.Cyclops wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 10:19David Haye and Tomasz Adamek are examples of good cruiserweights (I know Adamek started at LHW too)of recent years that I can think of that put on size and then handled some of the lesser heavyweights reasonably well, then were beaten fairly easily when they met the Klitschko brothers, who were just too big.
Deontay Wilder is the only heavyweight fighter within the last decade to have successfully engaged in a world heavyweight title fight weighing less than 225lbs.
And he only ever did it three times.
Let's be perfectly honest though, Wilder would probably weigh around the 245lbs mark if he had legs like a "normal" human being:

Agreed.
Disagree.
Agreed. He was too negative, employed too much lateral movement and often failed to control the distance.
Agreed.Cyclops wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 10:19The Haye/Booth/Groves style was low hands, head movement, feints, speed and, above all else, explosiveness. I think that's what ended Haye so early: Not just the fights but sparring big guys and constantly having to remain elusive and fast with the extra size on his frame. When Usyk first moved up and almost immediately injured that was a red flag.
Usyk is no longer aligned with Matchroom, but he's a free-agent that will continue doing business with them.Cyclops wrote: ↑27 Apr 2021, 10:19Age and hard camps are catching up with the Ukranian, I think. He's not going to be fighting AJ or Fury any time soon, and he seems to have made it clear Joe Joyce doesn't interest him. He can't fight Ruiz, who's fighting Arreola and will sit on that win for a while after; he can't fight AJ or Fury; he can't fight Joseph Parker. Who's he going to fight?
Usyk was only instated as the WBO's mandatory challenger for AJ's title due to their silly 'super-champion' rule.
He's an official mandatory challenger due to a technicality in the rule-book, rather than merit (at least not at heavyweight anyway).
He will likely continue facing less-than-stellar opposition, whilst waiting patiently for the mega payday he'll receive facing Fury or AJ.
It doesn't make any business sense for him to engage in stay-busy bouts against high-risk-low-reward opponents like Joe Joyce.
Dillian Whyte headlines PPV's. He can't do this if he's fighting subpar opposition.
And as we've seen with his handling of his WBC title shot over the years, he's willing to continue facing tough opposition, without caring less about preserving his spot in the title-challenger queue.
I feel that Usyk would be more reluctant to face Whyte than the other way around.
Anyway, Whyte is taking a step-down in the calibre of opposition for his next outing (against Trevor Bryan for the WBA regular title or the winner of Jermaine Franklin vs. Stephan Shaw).
However, if you review Whyte's resume for his last ten outings, there are very few stay-busy bouts. He deserves the ocassional free-pass.
