Keith Thurman today took to social media, calling Tim Trzuu to send him a contract for another fight. He wants him to send it tonight so that he can sign it.
Today’s tactic
There is a strategy behind this movement. The 36-year-old aged, aged Thurman, presses Tiszu (25-2, 18 KO) to make a fight before he can look in a different direction towards a more lucrative match with Sebastian Funda or Errol Spence. Keith uses the aged trick of the seller, hoping Tim is gullible.
Tsyzyu should wait for him and his team to see the best offer. Fighting with Thurman will not do much for Tim’s heritage. It would be better to avenge your loss with the fund or fight a greater fight against the more popular Errol Spence.
Thurman never achieved the fame he could have because he became an part -time warrior after his exhausting battle with Danny Garcia in 2017. Thurman has only fought four times since this fight in the last eight years. It’s pathetic.
If Tziu goes in a different direction, Thurman will be forced to wait, age more and sit on the shelf until he is free. If Tim takes this fight, there is a good chance that it will lose to the fund, which will cause a longer waiting time for Thurman. With Keith as inactive and aging as now, he can’t afford to wait.
Last Saturday, the former WBO Junior Master of Medium weight Tiszu knocked out Joey Spencer (19-2, 11 KO) in the fourth round of Newcastle Entertainment Center in Newcastle, Australia. The fight was designed as a pick-me-up for Tim to augment his confidence after it was blown up in three rounds in defeat with the IBF 154-LB Bakhram Murtazaliev champion on October 19 in Orlando, Florida.
Tziu did not know what to enter when he took this fight, and before he discovered what he was with, he was too overdue. The fight was basically after the first overthrow in the second round. Tsyzu never recovered from the left hook with which Murtazaliev dropped him in this round. He passed Tim three times before the fight was stopped in the third round.
Contract
“Congratulations, Tim Ty. I see that you went through with this starter. I went through with mine [Brock Jarvis]. I pulled him out of three. I pulled him out for four, said Keith Thurman Social mediasending a message to Tim Tziu after victory over Joey Spencer on Saturday evening in Australia.
“I do not know about you, boy, but I am still hungry. Send a contract. Send a contract. I will get him tonight. I promise that I will come to Australia and give you a good fight. Show off,” said Thurman.
Frank Warren believes Tyson Fury will not only beat Anthony Joshua when the long-awaited heavyweight clash finally happens, but also stop him.
The All-British clash is scheduled for November, after a delay from its earlier summer date. Warren confirmed that Fury signed a contract for the fight in January, and both men are expected to undergo interim fights before the fight becomes official.
When asked how he sees the fight developing, Warren made it clear he expected Fury to win and pointed to Joshua’s knockout loss to Daniel Dubois as a major factor.
“I think Tyson will win,” Warren told Secondsout, predicting a Tyson Fury knockout over Joshua.
“I think Tyson will stop him.
“Did you see him fight Daniel Dubois? That gives me that confidence. I was sure Daniel Dubois would do it and he did it, and I’m sure Tyson will do the same in brief order, no matter what catches him.”
Earlier in the interview, Warren also suggested that Joshua was still feeling the effects of the Dubois defeat.
“He has the specter and cloud of what happened when he fought Daniel Dubois hanging over him. So, you know, he’s vulnerable if he gets caught now,” Warren said.
Joshua is scheduled to return on July 25 against Kristian Pregna, while Fury is scheduled to fight his own warm-up fight before November. Warren said the location for the proposed blockbuster has yet to be determined, though he confirmed the fight remains signed and will likely take place later this year, provided both heavyweights win their fights.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most crucial fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
David Benavidez won the WBA and WBO cruiserweight world titles with his last fight, and the “Mexican Monster” may add to his collection in the future after one of the world champions was ordered to fight him under the threat of being stripped of his belt.
As a result, the 29-year-old must decide whether he should return to the featherlight heavyweight scene or stay in the cruiserweight division, where he put in arguably the best performance of his career last time out after tuning out his fight with Jai Opetaia.
However, Benavidez was also named the WBC cruiserweight mandatory challenger and was ordered to fight WBC cruiserweight champion Noel Mikaelian, another who has been linked to a fight with Opetaia.
If Mikaelian refuses to defend the title against Benavidez, the WBC president announced in an interview for the WBC magazine that he would strip the Armenian of the belt. Boxing Scene.
“The WBC order is Mikaelian against Benavidez. That’s all. If he fights again, he will waive his obligations to the WBC.”
“[There is no deadline] at this time. I will be talking to different managers. This is the highest priority. I look forward to making sure that happens.”
If Mikaeilian decides to continue the fight with Opetaia and thus lose the world title, it can be expected that Polish-born interim champion Michał Cieślak will benefit. Either he will be elevated to full world champion and ordered to make his first defense against Benavidez, or he will be included in a vacant belt fight against the three-division world champion.
“Well, he has his team there and I’m not criticizing anyone, but in both fights his tactics weren’t good,” Peter said in an interview with Sport Boxing.
“It worked out badly because look, if we have a little guy here who can throw, let’s say, a welterweight who can throw a thousand punches, and we have a heavyweight, will a heavyweight fighter throw a thousand punches with him? No.”
“Or maybe he’ll step in and take one good shot? Absolutely.”
“So basically yes, the strategy was just wrong. It doesn’t mean Usyk was better than him. It doesn’t mean he doesn’t say anything. You misunderstand the tactics and they are wrong.
“And you know, when you look at Usyk’s structure and what he does, when he distances himself and tries to box an elite boxer who is lighter than you and who is giving away pounds, he will ping you all over the shop. That should be noticed,” Peter Fury said.
Tyson Fury announced his return earlier this year and is expected to have a preparatory fight before the start of his scheduled series with Anthony Joshua. Queensbury promoter Frank Warren recently confirmed that Fury’s next opponent could be announced in the coming days, with the long-awaited fight against Joshua expected to take place later this year.
Usyk remains at the top of the heavyweight division and has been ordered to fight WBC interim champion Agit Kabayel. Warren also confirmed that negotiations for the fight are ongoing.
Fury’s third meeting with Usyk has not been announced. Peter Fury, however, remains convinced that the strategy used in the first two fights determined the result.
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