I think you misunderstand what I said and took it far too seriously. Of course I’m merely speculating about if Spence has a latent weakness against southpaws we haven’t seen yet. There would be no way to know it for certain. I can assure you I do not have sources leaking me info. It is merely a conjecture based upon the fact that Spence is a southpaw and has not faced an elite southpaw.Enlightened-One wrote: ↑09 Dec 2020, 10:44The obvious reason why neither Terence Crawford nor Errol Spence Jr. has faced an elite-level southpaw at welterweight, is because other than Manny Pacquiao, there aren't any!!!
You can only face the fighters that are available. Look at the welterweight rankings and list the southpaw fighters that Spence Jr. should have faced, but didn't?What on earth are you talking about?
A southpaw facing a southpaw is the equivalent of two orthodox fighters fighting each other. It won’t be a problem for Spence Jr.
There’s no proof of him being unable to cope with southpaw foes.
And Spence Jr. is highly experienced against orthodox fighters.
So the only advantage Crawford “potentially” has over Spence Jr., due to him being a switch-hitter, is that it forces Errol to adapt and improvise on the fly… and potentially disrupting his rhythm
However, as we witnessed during the Brook bout, Crawford didn’t really gain the winning momentum until he switched from orthodox to southpaw, which was clearly evident during the third and fourth rounds.
This means that Crawford’s experimentation or switch-hitting doesn’t guarantee success. This tactic could backfire, resulting in him needlessly losing rounds on the judges’ scorecards, which is something you can't afford to do against an elite-level opponent.
Anyway, back to what you claimed… where on earth leads you to believe that Team Spence Jr. are “fearful” of southpaw opponents? Be honest, did you make it up?![]()
On that note, yes, you are correct - there are not any. Which is why he hasn’t faced any. That also does not change the fact that he has not faced any. Which means we don’t know what he’ll look like against a southpaw. Which is why I said what I said. It is equally as likely that Spence will demolish any southpaw in front of him. I think it’s less likely than that he’ll struggle against a good southpaw but hey we might just get to find out.
Using the Brook fight as a comparison is useless because Brook is not a southpaw and is also not Errol Spence.
Crawford has a better chance of neutralizing Spence’s jab if he’s fighting orthodox. His jab will also be neutralized. He relies far less on the jab to win fights and therefore advantage Crawford. Also, with his hand speed and power, I do not think he should give up the lead right hand - THE most effective punch against a southpaw - just to get into a fight from the southpaw stance. Because, why? He knocked out Kell Brook doing it?
You clearly feel strongly about Spence’s impending domination of Crawford. (I don’t necessarily disagree since he will probably wait until Crawford is 35 and fight him at 154.).


