He already definitely is the top of the heavyweight division. 2x heavyweight champion defeating 2-medalists, and there is absolutely no doubt in the minds of anyone with a functioning brain cell that Joshua and Ruiz--- they only other men to hold the title not named Usyk--- would ever beat him.people just want him to take on the other top guys, for there to be an undisputed fight and for him to prove in the ring that he's cleaned it out and is defo the king, i don't see why that riles you up so much and most of the people you argue with seem to be saying tht he probably beats usyk, but you continually misrepresent their point
Usyk is the only question mark, and even at that there are more questions than there are answers surrounding the former cruiserweight champion as a heavyweight. I said it all along, if the Ukrainian was to ever be heavyweight champion the easiest route would be through Joshua--- and that is what happened.
True, I picked Joshua on the basis of the two crappy fights Usyk had--- but I honestly did not think that Joshua would do the absolute stupidest strategy possible to try and out box a man who is much faster and more skilled than he is.
Either Usyk doesn't handle pressure well at heavyweight, or he was playing possum. Both are possible. I guess we will see what happens in the rematch with Joshua--- but one thing is for sure, beating Anthony Joshua is not the same as beating Tyson Fury.
In a perfect world I would like to see Fury do the following: Whyte, Usyk (twice), Joshua and Ruiz. Maybe throw in Hunter or Joyce for stay busy matches. But I don't see that happening.
And really there is no point to do all that. Joshua keeps on eliminating himself, and we all know Snickers isn't really a legitimate threat, and Whyte is clearly a level or two below the best in the division. The only fight that makes any real sense is Usyk.
Fury doesn't need to beat X, Y, and Z because it's self evident that those guys couldn't beat him. Some fights are unnecessary to make in the grand scheme of things.
I wouldn't be surprised if Fury essentially drops the belt and waits for Usyk. Then he can be three time heavyweight champion and retire. And if Joshua ever reclaims the belts he can come out of retirement and go for a fourth heavyweight title run.
Of course that's another hypothetical that probably won't happen after all none of us know the future. All we can deal with is the here and now. Usyk has to successfully defend the title, and Fury has to wait for the Whyte-Wallin winner, and I reckon Fury can get himself amped for either man because ultimately he wants Usyk and has to face one of them in order to do it.
Whyte is at least an entertaining talker so the pre-fight build up would be fun and Wallin would be easier the second time around--- because Fury has demonstrated with McDermott, Chisora and Wilder that he only gets better in returns.