Enlightened-One wrote: ↑17 May 2022, 05:25
I really don’t know what to think about the Yoka upset.
On one hand, I considered Martin Bakole as being excessively overweight and I previously expected him to lose to Yoka (possibly even get stopped).
And my prediction for the outcome of this fight was obviously incorrect – upsets happen.
But then again, some people could reasonably claim that Martin Bakole was an “unbeaten” fighter, even though he technically lost to Michael Hunter, because it was the injury that caused the loss, not the American.
Hunter was hurt towards the end of the seventh round in that fight. And he also looked dishevelled and exhausted during the eighth, until Bakole badly injured his shoulder and wanted pulling-out, despite clearly owning the winning momentum.
Bakole’s trainer, Billy Nelson, was disgraceful and demanded he continue, which resulted in his man taking a beating before eventually being stopped.
Martin Bakole’s profile and reputation took a serious hit due to the Michael Hunter defeat, perhaps resulting in him being underappreciated and flying under the radar, hence the reason why I expected him to lose to Yoka.
But then again, when Tony Yoka accepted the Martin Bakole fight, he was clearly taking a massive step up in class, because he’d previously only engaged in eleven fights.
In the context of the Frenchman only being a prospect, he was being pushed fairly aggressively, because he’d previously beaten fairly decent opposition: Johann Duhaupas, Christian Hammer, Alexander Dimitrenko, Petar Milas, David Allen and Jonathan Rice.
But it was clear that none of them were anywhere near as good as Martin Bakole.
So perhaps it was simply a case of Tony Yoka being pushed excessively aggressively – too much, too soon. He can recover from this.
Put it this way, Tony Yoka and Martin Bakole both suffered losses in their twelfth outings against very decent opposition that were more experienced than themselves in the paid ranks, with the latter now on the cusp of receiving a world title shot.
I am reluctant to be harsh on Yoka, because the vast majority of heavyweight prospects are protected hype jobs that constantly face journeymen, but regardless as to whether you like him or loathe him, we definitely can’t say the same about the Frenchman.