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Mental fall of the most talented boxing stars

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Image: Ryan Garcia Addresses Devin Haney's "Skinny" Taunts Ahead of Romero Clash: Weight Struggles and Rematch Motivations

Boxing was never lacking in talent. Each era produces its wonderful. But size is not only speed, reflex or power. It’s about the mind – the ability to accept fire, pressure and expectations without breaking. Today, three names stand out not only at what they can do in the ring, but also about how close to wasting all this: Gervont “Tank” Davis, Ryan Garcia and Teófimo López.

Tank: a destroyer who wants to leave

Tank has everything: knockout power in both hands, compact bases and IQ, which is revealed in how he makes opponents before detonation. Sells Pay-Per-Views. Fills the arenas. At the age of 30 he should be a man carrying boxing forward.

Instead, he announces “boxing is dead” and threatens the retirement after the exhibition with Jake Paul. The fighter in his excellent level does not speak this way. This is not confidence, it’s fatigue. It’s a trauma. These are early stages of self -esteem.

And when it comes to rivals, Tank rejects what others do, ignores side by side and never showed the slightest interest to call their natural peers – Shakur Stevenson, Devin Haney, Teofimo Lopez. He lives in negativity, throwing indifference instead of hunger. The best want to fight best. The tank behaves as if he doesn’t care. This is not a size, it’s avoiding.

The tank does not lose the fighting – losing patience. But the box does not crowns the impatient. If he wants to be remembered as something more than a noise guard, he must silence the voices in his head before he silences people in front of him.

Ryan: A golden boy who can’t grow up

Ryan Garcia is the dream of a promoter. A bogus, which belongs to the repetition of a sluggish pace, a left hook that can end the nights in the blink and social media that did not match any boxer in history. He has all the tools to be a star.

But he behaves like a child in the game of an adult man. Craft in social media, mysterious posts about death, discriminating against the wound that WBC issued it – Ryan fights with himself as with opponents. His edges were not only unpredictable; They became glaring racism, poisoning their own image and alienating fans (at least those who do not share the same views) who once believed that he could be another king of crossover.

And the instability does not end. Ryan is closed in a lasting conflict with his promoters, meeting with a golden boy, threatening processes and publicly emit complaints. Instead of challenging the challenge, he wants a war with people who should direct their career.

He has potential inside the ring and should work on his craft. But talent without discipline is a candle in the wind. Ryan could have been a up-to-date face face. Instead, he risks that he is remembered as a warning about a warrior who had everything except stability.

Teo: Prodigy, which imploded

Teófimo López defeated Vasiliy Lomachenko. He shocked the world of speed, explosion and fearlessness. He was the future for one night.

But instead of building the dynasty, he tried. Diva behavior, public crash, retirement conversation at the age of 25. Then George Cambosos appeared, who took his lanes and aura during one night. Teo bounced off, defeating Josh Taylor, but instability never left.

Like Ryan, Teo devoted himself to racist edges, dying his reputation. And like Ryan, he is in constant conflict with promoters – publicly attacking the highest rank, emitting private battles in front of the world. He is as unstable outside the ring as an explosive one, and this variability has become its ceiling.

Every time Teo is fighting, the question cannot win? – What appears Teo?

Pattern

Tank. Ryan. Teo Three men who could be pillars of this generation. Three men who have what they need physically – but break mentally.

Tank is a talented destroyer who looks ready to leave, ignoring the rivals who should define him.

Ryan is a golden boy when he is still imploding with edges and promoters.

Teo is a wonderful, which once tasted size, but it is too unstable to keep it.

And it’s not just them – these fans allow it. Tank fans behave as if he did a favor to the world by entering the ring. A significant part of Ryan and Teo fans is more than willing to reject their racist explosions – some even share the same views. Instead of requiring responsibility, they provide a cover. Instead of pushing fighters in the direction of size, they stop them with the comfort of excuses.

The story saw it earlier: Tyson, Broner. Talent was there, but the mind broke. These three are dangerously close to walking the same path.

Last round

Do not blame boxing if this generation is disappearing. Clapse fighters who crack under pressure – and fans who defend their fragility instead of demanding greatness.

The size is not about the most vital events. It’s about stability. And now tank, Ryan and Teo look talented but broken.

Last updated 28/28/2025

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Boxing

Former heavyweight champion returning at 53 says Tyson Fury is ‘finished’ after his last appearance

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Former heavyweight champion making comeback at 53 says Tyson Fury is ‘done’ after latest performance

Former heavyweight champion Hasim Rahman, who defeated Lennox Lewis in 2001, has delivered a damning verdict on Tyson Fury’s future in the sport.

“The Rock” defeated Lewis in the fourth round to win the WBC and IBF titlesonly to lose the immediate rematch via stoppage in the eighth round.

At the age of 53, Rahman is currently preparing for his return to action on July 14, although no opponent has yet been announced for his six-round bout at Novel York’s ESL Ballpark.

In his last professional career, he lost to little-known opponent Anthony Nansen in 2014, but Rahman clearly believes he can surpass George Foreman and become the oldest heavyweight champion in history.

Whether he succeeds remains to be seen, but the American clearly believes he has a better chance of winning the trophy than 37-year-old Fury.

In fact, Rahman went so far as to suggest that The Gypsy King’s career was preceded by Deontay Wilder, who he felt had also gone way over the line.

I’m talking to Master B4Rahman suspects it was their trilogy in particular that caused significant fatigue for both heavyweights.

“I just think Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury beat [their] careers apart – they abandoned their careers in this trilogy. It’s over for both of them.

“You will never see the best Tyson Fury [again]. It’s over. [He’s] done.”

Fury won his third meeting with Wilder by knockout in the 11th roundbut he managed to overcome two tumbles and several periods of adversity when they collided in October 2021.

Based on his performance against Arslanbek Makhmudov, whom he outpointed unanimously in AprilRahman believes the fight with Wilder could very well have ended Fury’s career.

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Jose Benavidez Sr. calls on Artur Beterbiev to “sit down” and make the fight happen

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Image: Jose Benavidez Sr. Calls On Artur Beterbiev To 'Sit Down' And Make Fight Happen

Jose Benavidez Sr. publicly invited Artur Beterbiev and his team to enter into negotiations to fight David Benavidez.

The comments came after Beterbiev recently discussed previous talks involving both camps. Benavidez Sr., who is David’s father, trainer and manager, said he is ready for the fight to continue.


“Right now, if Beterbiev is watching, their managers are watching, or whoever is making this decision, I am David’s father, coach, manager. Let’s sit down. Let’s make these fights happen. These are the fights we want to make,” Benavidez Sr. he told Fight Hub TV.

“We never got an offer. Like I’m telling you, we never got an offer. But these are the fights we want. With all due respect, I think Beterbiev is a great fighter, man. He’s a very threatening fighter. He’s one of the best right now. He and Bivol are some of the top fighters, but these are the fighters we want to prove ourselves and want to fight.”

Benavidez Sr. added that organizing the fight shouldn’t be a major problem if both sides are interested.

“Let’s organize this fight. It can be fought in five minutes,” said Jose Senior. “These are the fights we want. We are ready to give the people what they want.”

David Benavidez became a three-division world champion earlier this year when he defeated Zurdo Ramirez in the cruiserweight division. Since then, Beterbiev and Dmitry Bivol are often mentioned among the potential opponents of Benavidez’s next fight.

“Let’s go,” Benavidez Sr. said. “We are ready. These are the fights we want.”

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Categories Artur Beterbiew, David Benavidez

Last update: 2026/06/13 at 18:45

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Muhammad Ali recognized one boxer as the true greatest boxer of all time: “I still say he was the best”

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Muhammad Ali ranked one boxer as the true greatest of all time: “I still say he was the best”

Many boxing fans consider Muhammad Ali the greatest of all time, but he once revealed his own choice.

Ali’s notable achievements include winning the world heavyweight title three times while talking about the greatest fights in history, including “Rumble In The Jungle” against George Foreman and “Thrilla In Manila” against Joe Frazier.

His final record was 56 wins in 61 fights, also defeating the likes of Sonny Liston, Floyd Patterson, Earnie Shavers and Ken Norton, and also became a cultural icon outside the ring.

These achievements are why many fans consider Ali to be the greatest of all time, but in a renewed interviewthe heavyweight legend once revealed that he chose Sugar Ray Robinson for the honor.

“This man was attractive. The timing, the speed, the reflexes, the rhythm, his body, everything was attractive.

“I’d say I’m the greatest heavyweight of all time, but pound for pound I still say Sugar Ray Robinson was the best of all time.”

Robinson reigned as the world welterweight champion for five years, from 1946 to 1951, and went on an incredible 91-fight unbeaten streak.

His record at one stage was 129 wins from 132 fights, 85 of which were knockout victories. After reigning at welterweight, he moved up to middleweight, where he became a five-time world champion in that category.

When he finally hung up his gloves in 1965, he finished his career with a record of 174 wins in 201 fights, and it’s clear why Ali considers him the best.

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