Short film?CaptainSpacerod wrote:Jesus Christ they're gonna screen a short film about Joshua's "journey" before the fight.
Can you imagine how nauseating that will be.
It's listed as 55mins long! That's a lot of Humble
Short film?CaptainSpacerod wrote:Jesus Christ they're gonna screen a short film about Joshua's "journey" before the fight.
Can you imagine how nauseating that will be.
I feel the same but I feel guilty about it.boxingknockout wrote:
I feel queasy just reading that.... I'm not sure I could watch such a programme without spewing every ten minutes....
Stuff like this really makes me hope Wlad Kos him spectacularlya and early.... then I can see Adam smith and camp Eddie look as nauseous as I would watching this....
I know what you mean. With regards to Bruno I was devastated when the Spoon stopped him. He got me into boxing along with mcguigan. Bruno was always my number 1 though. I played Frank Bruno's boxing religiously and beat Peter Perfect (the oddly skinny and white American heavyweight champion of the worldCaptainSpacerod wrote:I feel the same but I feel guilty about it.boxingknockout wrote:
I feel queasy just reading that.... I'm not sure I could watch such a programme without spewing every ten minutes....
Stuff like this really makes me hope Wlad Kos him spectacularlya and early.... then I can see Adam smith and camp Eddie look as nauseous as I would watching this....
Here we have a youngish, unbeaten British heavyweight knockout artist going in to battle with an over the hill Ukrainian yet I want our lad to get flattened. I remember watching Bruno in big fights back in the 80s and living every punch with the big fella and feeling gutted when he lost particularly in the Bonecrusher Smith fight.
Humour me, which qualities are referring to? (Not trolling)boxingknockout wrote:But Joshua has none of Frank's genuine qualities in my opinion.
Who would you want to win if they fought - Tyson Fury or Anthony Joshua?boxingknockout wrote:But pro boxing is an individual sport / business so nationality is not so relevant. Fighters fight for themselves and basically if I like their character and style I will root for them. After the humble hype train started in full flow, I felt nauseous and have wanted him to get chinned ever since and including the Dillian Whyte fight.
Some excellent points.dirk2686 wrote:Who would you want to win if they fought - Tyson Fury or Anthony Joshua?boxingknockout wrote:But pro boxing is an individual sport / business so nationality is not so relevant. Fighters fight for themselves and basically if I like their character and style I will root for them. After the humble hype train started in full flow, I felt nauseous and have wanted him to get chinned ever since and including the Dillian Whyte fight.
I get the idea that Joshua may be faking his humble guy thing to an extent, but it just seems like sensible behaviour. If you act the way you do in private in every context a lot of people are going to think you're a dickhead. Joshua largely says nothing controversial, largely does nothing controversial, but all that leads to (in my opinion), is that he's a bit of a average, perhaps fairly dull guy. I've no doubt his team have probably media trained him, but I don't see that as being reason to hate him, which some clearly do.
It reminds me of Lewis to an extent. He became a great and you barely meet any UK boxing fans who disliked him, but he was loathed for a long period of time, for every reason you could name; not a real Brit, not as nice a guy as Bruno, boring in and out of the ring, thinking he was better than he was, aloof, only interested in money, not enough time in the UK vs USA, chinny.
Now obviously Joshua is nowhere near the stature of Lewis and probably never will be, but I do wonder about what is making someone see a young, exciting guy who is without question the biggest attraction in domestic boxing to have debuted in the last decade, and think 'I hope this guy gets chinned.'
The reason I mention Fury is that he genuinely has said things that I can understand cause people to loathe him. And it often seems if someone dislikes one, they like the other. But I've definitely had conversations with people who openly admit they hope Wlad annihilates Joshua because they don't like his 'fake humble' approach, yet give Fury plenty of leeway when it comes to the gays/women nonsense.
Honesty.Rob3_142 wrote:Humour me, which qualities are referring to? (Not trolling)boxingknockout wrote:But Joshua has none of Frank's genuine qualities in my opinion.
Definitely agree this is an interesting fight, but I do not believe that Wlad will be able to lean in on Joshua. We're talking about a young, powerful fighter who I doubt anyone in the industry could bully.freddydoesdallas wrote:I keep changing my mind on this. Part of me thinks wlad is too wise to let a raw heavy just walk through him. Can't see wlad taking a clean, big shot early on. He'll be waiting to tie him up, lean on him etc and tired him out.
If he can do that for 4 rounds then I think he can win. If he struggles there then he has to go big early which will suit Joshua and make him a favourite.
A very interesting fight
My only thoughts are around how he'll cope with it. He's never had to deal with this as a pro and we know Wlad is a crafty fella. If he can try and do that knowing how much energy he'll expend hoping that it'll be energy Joshua hadn't planned on expending.Rob3_142 wrote:Definitely agree this is an interesting fight, but I do not believe that Wlad will be able to lean in on Joshua. We're talking about a young, powerful fighter who I doubt anyone in the industry could bully.freddydoesdallas wrote:I keep changing my mind on this. Part of me thinks wlad is too wise to let a raw heavy just walk through him. Can't see wlad taking a clean, big shot early on. He'll be waiting to tie him up, lean on him etc and tired him out.
If he can do that for 4 rounds then I think he can win. If he struggles there then he has to go big early which will suit Joshua and make him a favourite.
A very interesting fight
Actually, after thinking about this a bit more, I think Joshua will be pleased enough to keep things at his range. If Wlad looks to close the distance back, I'm pretty certain Joshua will have no problem in letting his hands go.freddydoesdallas wrote:My only thoughts are around how he'll cope with it. He's never had to deal with this as a pro and we know Wlad is a crafty fella. If he can try and do that knowing how much energy he'll expend hoping that it'll be energy Joshua hadn't planned on expending.Rob3_142 wrote:Definitely agree this is an interesting fight, but I do not believe that Wlad will be able to lean in on Joshua. We're talking about a young, powerful fighter who I doubt anyone in the industry could bully.freddydoesdallas wrote:I keep changing my mind on this. Part of me thinks wlad is too wise to let a raw heavy just walk through him. Can't see wlad taking a clean, big shot early on. He'll be waiting to tie him up, lean on him etc and tired him out.
If he can do that for 4 rounds then I think he can win. If he struggles there then he has to go big early which will suit Joshua and make him a favourite.
A very interesting fight
If he'd faced a couple of better opponents who tried that and he got through, I wouldn't be doubting him in this area
Tall poppy syndrome, simple as that - something the British have turned into an art form. If someone is good looking, rich and successful there is usually a desire to see them toppled.dirk2686 wrote:boxingknockout wrote:
Now obviously Joshua is nowhere near the stature of Lewis and probably never will be, but I do wonder about what is making someone see a young, exciting guy who is without question the biggest attraction in domestic boxing to have debuted in the last decade, and think 'I hope this guy gets chinned.'
I agree. Wlad has for years been able to dictate the pace with his strength, it'll be interesting to see how he copes having to fight more if he can't wrestle Joshua.youngrell wrote:The biggest factor in the fight for me is that Wlad won't be able to tie Joshua up and hold/lean like he has so many times to smaller, weaker opponents in the past.
Without this advantage, I think Wlad struggles with Joshua's speed, accuracy and power.
I'm hoping Wlad can take it to at least the half way stage, though, so we get to see how Joshua handles being hit hard.
It will be interesting. It could even be a positive for him, because I'm sure we've all felt he could do more damage if he'd opened up a little more over the years.TheDarkDestroyer wrote:I agree. Wlad has for years been able to dictate the pace with his strength, it'll be interesting to see how he copes having to fight more if he can't wrestle Joshua.youngrell wrote:The biggest factor in the fight for me is that Wlad won't be able to tie Joshua up and hold/lean like he has so many times to smaller, weaker opponents in the past.
Without this advantage, I think Wlad struggles with Joshua's speed, accuracy and power.
I'm hoping Wlad can take it to at least the half way stage, though, so we get to see how Joshua handles being hit hard.