gregregegg wrote: ↑02 Apr 2023, 23:52
HomicideHenry wrote: ↑02 Apr 2023, 20:47
Lackeos wrote: ↑02 Apr 2023, 20:34
You're talking about the guy who has an Olympic gold medal, a world AM silver medal, four-belt pro world champion, KO'ed Wladimir Klitschko, etc.?
Look at his career. He went from GARY CORNISH to the IBF belt to Klitschko. There was virtually no middle ground fights for him to truly develop his skills. His physical gifts carried him through to the top but he missed a lot of things, and those things became telling the moment he hit road bumps.
Whether people want to really acknowledge it or not his road to the top was one of the softest in heavyweight boxing history. He merely looked the part because Klitschko was old, and even then he nearly lost. His title defenses were only marginally better than Wilder's.
Then came Ruiz. The worst possible guy to have as a replacement opponent. Fast heavy hands, underrated skills, and an iron chin. Combine all that with an attitude of having nothing to lose, it was a recipe for disaster.
Ruiz was the kind of guy that Joshua should have fought much, much earlier in his career. But his management skipped the middle ground for an easy title grab against Charles Martin, and they rolled the dice with Klitschko because he was already looking vulnerable since prior to Fury and was inactive for over a year.
Between Cornish and klit he fought Whyte, Charles Martin, breazeal and molina are all fine middle ground fights. I’d say he had more middle ground fights than most. After Throw takem in to and Old pulev?
Cornish= British level
Whyte= British level (at the time)
Martin= IBF title
Brezeale= IBF defense
Molina= IBF defense
Klitschko= WBA/IBF unification
Takam= IBF/WBA defense
Parker= WBA/WBO/IBF unification
The jump from domestic British level fights to world alphabet title matches, at least to my mind, was skipping middle ground. Now, one can argue Martin & Brezeale & Molina were middle ground bouts but in my view it was hardly learning curve bouts. They couldn't really challenge the man. The only "test" Joshua had was against Klitschko where he picked himself up off the canvas to win.
Takam, arguably a middle ground fight, but again there was no learning curve there. Parker was a legitimate top ten guy, no question, but a lot of people felt at the time the Italian referee basically was fighting against Parker too. So, all in all, here you had a guy rushed to the top with only one test and one assist to become unified champion (minus the WBC belt).
Ruiz would become Joshua's second test, at least in terms of his character. He did change his body composition and style for the rematch and won, although it wasn't a great performance. One can argue he didn't win it as much as it was Ruiz threw the title away by nearly being 300 pounds.
I think had Joshua not fought Martin years ago and had 3 or 4 or 5 middle ground bouts before going for the titles it's possible the loss to Ruiz might've never happened. It's plausible that the losses to Usyk might've not happened either because it's clear the Ruiz loss changed Joshua's overall abilities as a boxer. He's not been as aggressive as he used to be.
Imagine if Joshua after Whyte fought Ruiz then. I think he would've learned a lot much sooner than he did. He would've been more battle tested and ready for someone like Usyk. But by taking matches where there was no learning curve to build from it only ruined him in the long run.
Don't get me wrong Joshua probably could defeat everybody in the division under the top five. Including somebody like Joe Joyce. But he'd of certainly benefited from more tests. Because of the lack of tests in his career he is paying for it now. I tend to think that's why Eddie Hearn wants to cash out with a Fury fight because he can see what a lot of Joshua fans can't see, that the man has more holes in his game and emotional makeup than previously thought.