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Tim Bradley’s “boredom” excuse: why the not impressive victory of Bruce Carrington over Mateus Heita creates doubts about the potential of the career

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Image: Tim Bradley's "Boredom" Excuse: Why Bruce Carrington's Unimpressive Win Over Mateus Heita Creates Doubts about His Career Potential

Tim Bradley blames the lackluster performance of Bruce Carrington last Saturday evening against Mateus Heitie that it was “”bored in the ring “ Because it was too uncomplicated for him. It didn’t seem to be bored.

Bradley protection

The fans saw fear in Carrington’s eyes because he was persecuted by the relentless, hungry predator, Mateus Heit (14-1, 9 Kos), who did not intend to give up. Bradley sounds like a classic example of a person who will turn in a warrior’s defeat. Shu Shu looked terrible, but Bradley blames him for boredom. Fans do not buy Tim excuses for Carrington.

Carrington won the 12-round fight with a unanimous decision, but he did not look good. He ran too much and did not show any dog in him, to the extent that he was ready to fight Heita Toe-toe. He was forced to move all the time to stop him from knocking out by the highest blow, Heita. The results were 119-109. 119-109 and 120-108.

After the fight, Carrington sounded comical, saying: I see [WBO featherweight champion Rafael] Espinosis in the crowd. I want to fight him. “

The best rank does not intend to put Carrington with Espinosis (27-0, 23 KO) and watch how he broke his career in the way he did the two-time Olympic gold medalist Robeis Ramirez.

“As for the performance of today’s performance, I wanted to see more,” said Tim Bradley Fight Hub tvResponding to the penniless win of Bruce Carrington over Mateus Heita on Saturday evening in Novel York. “If you hit such a guy in Wola, if it is so uncomplicated to land this kind of blows on him, you can do a little more to try to enter the judge.”

Carrington couldn’t do more because he would be knocked out. Heita had too much power for him to try to choose a knockout. When Bruce tried to unload it, Heita caught him with huge mountains, which broke away from the head.

Carrington’s skills restrictions

Bradley did not look closely at Carrington’s fight last year with a pretender for the featherweight Sulaiman Segawa to know that he was a circumscribed warrior. Carrington is not one of the best aged 126. Segawa clearly defeated him, but he received a miniature end of the stick with judges on the side of the fighter A, who had noise behind him.

In addition to Heita Segawa, he is the only other pretender with whom Carrington stood during his four -year professional career. The point is that they were both pretenders with fringes, not with a high ranking of fighters, and still make Carrington fight.

“Everything is targeted to push Shu Shu in this direction, the direction in which he wants to be. He wants to be known as one of the best fighters who leave Brownsville [New York]. I do not set any restrictions About his skills. Everyone else can set restrictions. No, I think you are better than what you showed, “said Bradley.

Bruce has all kinds of restrictions on her skills. He revealed last night that he could not stand in his pocket for a idle, move too much and resorts to using stiff arms. It is also circumscribed in terms of power. His promoters did a good job so that he was a great blow, but he showed that last night that he was not at the level of heity in the energy department.

Carrington will soon be 29 years elderly. He will not be “one of the best fighters who leave Brownsville. If he had such talent, he would already be shown and would not struggle with the only two players with whom the best rank suited him, Heita and Segawa.

Boredom Bradleya excuse

“Fulton? I think it would be a hellish match. I think he had the opportunity to beat [WBC featherweight champion] Stephen Fulton. Absolutely. When you get a guy who is bored in such a ring [Carrington]It was too uncomplicated, but he couldn’t get a knockout. This does not push him, “Tim said.

Impact on heity pressure

Boredom was not the reason why Carrington looked penniless against Heitie. Who is trying Bradley? The reason he ran on the ring, fought and did not stand on his land, was fear. Carrington was worried because he was Coping with pressure similar to GGG From Heita, who never stopped coming, persecute him around the ring and hitting heavily as he trapped him.

Heita was like a hunter in the ring, and Carrington looked fear. Sometimes he tried to bluff, but his movements showed that he was afraid of his well -being. Bradley does not see the reality of what happened last night.

“If you compromise him and put him with a guy who is at the same level as he, in terms of IQ, and he must kick and try to get him, I think we see another shu shu. Really.

“Today, he [Carrington] He was supposed to shine today. I thought he had a perfect opponent in front of him, a hand -chosen opponent [Mateus Heita]. I’m forthright. It can rub him in the wrong way, but that’s all. I just keep it 100 because I’ll tell you. Fans at home see it and they will say it too. It’s just that, “said Bradley about Carrington.

Bradley sounded as if he refrained from baking Carrington last night during the ESPN broadcast of his fight with Heita. Tim did not see that Shu Shu was maximum, fighting for what he could, but he lacked power and talent to dominate Heita.

Carrington was not comfortable with complex arrows with which Heita hit him. The guy could look slowly, but he had it Brigadier’s power on his hefty shots.

You could hear the sound of heity blows. It was the sound of bangs, and Carrington was not willing to stand in his pocket for a long time to endure this punishment. The mountains and looping of the right hands with which Heita hit Shu Shu made him a survey, reluctant to stay in his pocket.

Carrington changed the rabbit early, choosing continuous movement and holding. It wasn’t accidental. It was self -preservation. He tried to save his skin because he met his match.

Last updated 27/27/2025

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Boxing

Roy Jones Jr admits there is one fighter he wouldn’t want to face: ‘He’s explosive and mean’

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Roy Jones Jr admits there is one fighter he wouldn’t have wanted to face: “He’s explosive and mean”

Roy Jones Jr named another Hall of Famer whose speed would pose major problems if they ever collided in the ring.

The American had remarkable speed himself, particularly during his dominant run between middleweight and airy heavyweight, with his only defeat coming against Montell Griffin in 1997.

Even then, Jones was only disqualified for punching Griffin while he was on one knee, and eventually won the rematch via first-round stoppage later that year.

Regardless of this flaw, the pound-for-pound legend was almost untouchable throughout his prime, yet he admits that fellow icon Sugar Ray Leonard would have been a tough matchup.

While Jones was arguably most effective at 168 to 175 pounds, Leonard scored two of his most crucial victories – against Tommy Hearns and Roberto Duran – at 147 pounds.

He then moved up to middleweight and, most importantly, he won a razor-thin split decision against Marvin Haglerbefore a rematch with Hearns at the 164-pound catchweight in 1989.

At this point, Leonard had everything behind him, and yet even at middleweight, “Sugar Ray” would be considered a fierce opponent for Jones.

In a social media clip reposted by BeeBoxJones explains that Leonard’s speed and malice would cause him problems.

“I never really wanted to fight [Leonard]. I knew that [against] a swift fighter like him, the jab is your problem – you can’t [keep] punch in the face.

“If you let him move around and do what he wants [wants to] do this, he will beat you because he is very compact tempered and very mean.

Ultimately, Leonard ultimately retired following a loss to Hector Camacho in 1997, though admittedly both he and Jones were shadows of their former selves before they hung up the gloves.

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Bam Rodriguez wins the bantamweight crown with a sixth-round TKO of Antonio Vargas

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Image: Bam Rodriguez Scores Sixth-Round TKO of Antonio Vargas for Bantamweight Crown

In the main event, Rodriguez improved to 24-0 (17 KO) after a sixth-round stoppage of Vargas, who dropped to 19-2-1 (11 KO). Rodriguez secured the victory at 1:15 of the sixth round of the scheduled 12-round fight.

Vargas had the advantage in the first round, ahead of Rodriguez. Rodriguez responded well in the second round, using the move effectively before Vargas closed the scoring strongly with a quick strike slow on. Vargas continued to find success in the third and fourth rounds, often overpowering Rodriguez.

The fight took a dramatic turn in the fifth round when Rodriguez delivered an overhand left hand that knocked Vargas down early in the round. Referee Chris Flores counted and Vargas got up and continued.

In the sixth round, Rodriguez closed the show. A fierce three-punch combination sent Vargas to the canvas again, and Flores counted out Vargas, giving Rodriguez another world title to add to his growing resume.

In the co-main event, Arturo Cardenas improved his record to 18-0-2 (9 KO), defeating Jordan Martinez, who dropped to 16-1-1 (15 KO) over 10 rounds.

The first two rounds were close, with Cardenas pressing and having a slight advantage. Martinez found success in the third and fourth rounds with his counter punches and movements, rocking Cardenas with a left hand slow in the fourth round.

Cardenas responded in the fifth round, landing a right hand that caught Martinez’s attention in another close stanza. From the sixth to ninth rounds, the action remained fierce, although Cardenas seemed to gain the advantage with body attacks. In the 10th and final round, Cardenas seemed to outsmart Martinez enough to secure the decision.

The judges scored the fight 100-90, 98-92 and 97-93. Raul Caiz Jr. he was a judge.

In the lightweight division, Elias Terraza remained undefeated, improving to 14-0 (9 KO), following a second-round stoppage of Adrian Rodriguez, who dropped to 10-1 (6 KO).

Terraza effectively took advantage of his height advantage in the first round, landing a jab and landing a right hand to Rodriguez’s temple in the final minute. Early in the second round, Terraza dropped a right cross to Rodriguez. After Rodriguez took down the count, Terraza pounced on him with a sustained attack, forcing referee Chris Flores to stop the fight at the 2:30 mark.

IBF women’s lightweight champion Elif Nur Turhan defended her title with a narrow unanimous decision over Gabriela “Sosa” Tellez.

Turhan improved to 14-0 (8 KO), while Tellez dropped to 7-1 (3 KO). Despite the official verdict, the fight was fierce throughout.

Turhan boxed effectively in the early rounds, while Tellez managed to land right hands, especially slow in the opening phase. Turhan seemed to have the advantage in the middle rounds before Tellez rallied in the fifth round.

Turhan landed a solid right hand in the final seconds of the sixth round that briefly rattled Tellez. In the seventh round, Tellez responded with a left hook that drew blood from Turhan’s mouth before the champion finished the round strongly.

The ninth round was close and Turhan seemed to have beaten Tellez. During the final round, referee Richard Hoyle warned Turhan twice for pushing Tellez to the canvas. Turhan pushed tough to stop in the closing moments, landing a wild right hand as the fight came to an end.

All three judges scored the fight 96-94 in favor of Turhan.

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Trainer Robert Garcia Predicts Devin Haney vs. Shakur Stevenson Fight: ‘With a Very Slim Edge’

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Regis Prograis predicts Devin Haney vs Shakur Stevenson after facing Haney: “He’s more skilled”

Esteemed coach Robert Garcia provided his expert opinion on a potential clash between Shakur Stevenson and Devin Haney, who have verbally agreed to meet at the 144-pound catchweight division.

There are rumors that both American stars will be joining Dana White’s Zuffa Boxing, apparently with the intention of clashing under the promotional banner.

While nothing has been confirmed, the pair regularly exchange information on social media, and Haney has verbally agreed to drop 3 pounds below his preferred fighting weight.

“The Dream” won the WBO welterweight title in November, becoming a three-division world champion dethroning and unanimously overtaking Brian Norman Jr.

Earlier this week, however, the WBO confirmed that Haney would be stripped of his belt if he fought Stevenson at the 144-pound catchweight division, as the 27-year-old had been ordered to face mandatory challenger Keyshawn Davis.

However, if they do end up facing off at 144 pounds, top trainer Garcia said Fighting Hub TV that he will favor the WBO super-lightweight champion the least.

“Honestly, I think it’s a great fight for both of them. They both fight very astute – they don’t handle each other [many] mistakes.

“The first one to make a mistake, the second one will take advantage of it. It’s a tough fight. With a very miniature difference, I probably think Shakur [would win]. He’s too astute.

“What I like about Haney is that he’s willing to take a risk. He’d be willing to take that risk and I think Shakur benefits from that [of his mistake]”

Stevenson became a four-division world champion when he dethroned Teofimo Lopez in January with a unanimous majority victory in his first appearance at 140 pounds.

That’s why the 28-year-old is reluctant to face Haney at 147 pounds, where his opponent would have a significant size advantage.

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