“He causes people’s division,” Ryan Garcia recently said about Oscar de la Hoya promoter, “and he doesn’t know how to keep a good relationship.” This is one of the long statements of the warrior over the years, indicating that he is dissatisfied with the management of de la Hoya. “He likes to emit business business and do things that he should not,” Garcia continued. “He always comes to me.” Garcia was considered one of the growing gigantic boxing not so long ago. However, the losses from Gervont Davis and Rolando Romero in combination with time with the extraordinary behavior of Garcia took some gloss to the stars of the juvenile warrior.
“After the Romero fight,” said Garcia, “they gave me the worst offer that you can imagine … Oscar tried to take my ROLLY rematch and give it to Raul Curiel. I tried to get Rolly Rematch, and now you want to give it to another warrior?” Garcia has a good reason to want a second crack in Rolly, but de la Hoya actually made him prefer his warrior to face someone else. It is not certain why this is so, although it is understandable why Garcia wants to avenge his nervous loss from Romero last spring.
On the other hand, De la Hoya wants Garcia to put on the popular and very qualified Teofimo Lopez. “I want him to be cleaned of his hand. He has an injury and I want doctors to neat him 100 percent,” said De la Hoya. “Ryan is 100 percent perilous for everyone. We can’t wait for his return and I can’t wait to submit something.” One thing is certain-at this point in his career, Garcia certainly needs victory … Best against a well-known opponent, such as Ramiro or Lopez.
Garcia is unique because he is one of the first juvenile boxers who has been a legitimate star of social media. In brief, a man can be very good for boxing sport. There were many dramas in the whole career of the man, at least this has been the case in the last few years. Again, the warrior needs a significant win at the moment. And, on his attention, Garcia really seems to look for this critical win. His presence of the media once again draws attention to matters outside the ring.
Although most people praised the timing of his decision to retire, some believe that “Bud” should have stayed with the team to prove himself against the novel generation, namely Jaron Ennis.
In a series of social media posts, Crawford appeared to refer to an interview with “Boots” Ennis in which the 28-year-old claimed that if the fight did happen, he would be confident of winning by knockout.
Crawford added that he “waived or rejected” the challenge. While he suggested it wasn’t directed at Ennis, he quickly added that the rising star’s career “would be over” if he fought.
“How did you get Boots out of what I just said? It’s crazy how you all play like you like him but want me [to] end your career before it starts, because that would definitely happen.
lol how did you get Boots out of what I just said?🤣🤣🤣 it’s crazy how you all play the way you like him but you wanted me to end his career before it started because that would definitely have happened.🤣🤣 smh, let me tell you something else.
“Boots” won the IBF interim welterweight title around the same time that Crawford was becoming the undisputed leader of the division by defeating Errol Spence. He was later promoted to full champion when “Bud” increased in weight.
With fighting no longer an option, Ennis is now focused on creating his own legacy in the sport. In June, he has a chance to become a unified two-division world champion when he faces Xander Zayas for the Puerto Rican’s WBO and WBA super welterweight belts. This is a fight that “Bud” is supporting “Boots” to win.
“What’s better than being Undisputed? Being Undisputed twice. What’s better than being Undisputed twice? Being Undisputed 3 times at three different weights. Now argue with your mom.”
Crawford clearly sees it differently. His argument is straightforward. Becoming unchallenged once is infrequent. Doing this twice puts the athlete in unique company. Doing this three times in three divisions gives him a resume that doesn’t require much defense.
That was Crawford’s response to anyone who questioned the timing of his departure.
Some fans believe Crawford left at the perfect time, before Ennis became more in demand and before top super middleweights started calling for him. Ennis is just a part of it. Crawford’s retirement removed him from the ranks of contenders who would force these fights next.
While Crawford points to his three sets of belts as proof of greatness, a vocal segment of the boxing world sees these titles as shields rather than trophies.
The argument is that being unchallenged today is as much about promotional maneuvers and sanctioning body politics as it is about being the best. To these fans, Crawford’s departure looks like a calculated retreat. By leaving now, he avoids the hungry Jaron “Boots” Ennis and the group of talented 168 fighters that Alvarez ignored for years.
Crawford was allowed to fight for Canelo’s undisputed championship at 168 without facing any of the 168-year-old fighters: Osleys Iglesias, Christian Mbilli, Lester Martinez, Diego Pacheco and Hamzah Sheeraz.
Much of fan frustration stems from “skip the queue” culture. Fans say superstars can compete in title fights without facing established challengers who competed in mandatory positions. When Crawford defeated Canelo, he took the throne, but he didn’t necessarily clear the room.
Tomek Galm is a boxing journalist covering the global fight landscape since 2014, specializing in heavyweight analysis, industry trends and fighter psychology.
Muhammad Ali is considered by many to be the greatest heavyweight of all time and arguably the greatest fighter of all time, but in the eyes of another pound-for-pound legend, Floyd Mayweather, there is another recent heavyweight who would defeat “The Greatest.”
Ali suffered five defeats in his iconic career, with three of them coming in his last four contests when his best form was well behind him; losing to Leon Spinks, Larry Holmes and then Trevor Berbick.
His other two shortcomings came at the hands of Joe Frazier and Ken Norton, both of whom he avenged twice in his trilogies, which is one of the many reasons why Ali is considered the best heavyweight operator in history.
In addition to Ali, the other standout candidate for the title is Joe Louis, who holds the record for the longest reign in the history of the division – holding the heavyweight title for almost 12 years and making 25 consecutive title defenses.
However, Mayweather said that by participating in the premier “Winner Stays On” match, which features the best heavyweights of all time, Daily mail box that he believes first-rate Lennox Lewis would beat Ali.
Like Ali before his last two fights, Lewis has defeated every opponent in his career, winning rematches against Oliver McCall and Hasim Rahman, who shockingly knocked him out to become one of five three-time heavyweight champions.
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