Mike Tyson said he doesn’t like the idea of Terence Crawford moving up to 168 pounds and fighting Canelo Alvarez for three titles in that weight class.
“Iron Mike” Tyson notes that Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) didn’t look good in his last fight, moving up from 147 to 154 to fight Israil Madrimov for the WBA junior middleweight title on Aug. 3. Tyson says Madrimov was large and Crawford shouldn’t have fought him.
Madrimov hammered Crawford with powerful right hooks all night long and clearly landed the harder, cleaner punches in each round. I watched the fight and had Madrimov win based on better punches, but the judges scored the fight as if it were amateur.
Judges gave Crawford a unanimous decision win after 12 rounds, but it was not a performance that showed the 37-year-old Crawford is capable of moving up to 168 pounds and facing WBA, WBC and WBO super middleweight champion Canelo.
It’s obvious that Crawford just wants that purse from the Canelo fight so he can enjoy his retirement money and live in luxury like one of robber barons With The Golden Agebut fair to the fans. If Crawford wants to get his retirement against Canelo, he needs to move up to 168 and prove himself against the Gigantic Four:
- David Benavidez
- David Morrell
- Christian Mbilla
- Osley Iglesias
If Crawford can pass these four tests, he can move on to the next level, to challenge Canelo Alvarez for three belts at super middleweight. It’s that uncomplicated. To get that golden parachute, Crawford has to work strenuous for it, just like everyone else in life. There are no handouts. His resume is feeble, full of fighters who have stopped competing and worse guys who are never good.
“I don’t like this fight” [Canelo vs. Crawford]. Too much weight. He had a close fight with the last guy he fought [Israil Madrimov] because he was large and really clumsy. He shouldn’t have even fought that guy,” Mike Tyson said on It is What It Is YouTube channel, sharing his thoughts on Terence Crawford potentially moving up to 168 pounds and fighting Canelo Alvarez for the unified super middleweight titles.