I'd say proper conditioning at heavyweight is vastly underrated.
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I'd say proper conditioning at heavyweight is vastly underrated.
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Original & Best: The Sugar Man
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At any weight class, one punch can turn a fight around or end it. Happens less with smaller guys because they tend to be better fighters. Technical skill and boxing intelligence tend to be rare among HWs; big and dumb and all that.
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Technical skill is important at the higher weights people like Wilder cannot flourish on power alone. They would eventually be exposed.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
OK, I'm going to do my best Teddy Atlas......
You want to get from point A to point B and having technical ability is like having a GPS. If you miss a turn you can recalculate how to get there, if your opponent is blocking your path that technical ability gives you the knowledge to find a detour around that defense and BANG! Reach your destination, which is your opponent on the mat for a 10 count!
So basically you can have the biggest baddest weapons ever but if you can't get from A to B then once you fight a guy who has knowledge of how to box or can take and/or nullify your weapons then you're going to be screwed. There's all kinds of big punchers who have been just demolished by pure boxers.
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Its not overrated but people aren't particularly interested in it. You're Joe Bloggs tuning in to a heavyweight fight. Do you want to see a chess match between two technically gifted fighters or two less skilled guys smash lumps off of one another for a few rounds. I know which I'd prefer. The purists amongst us may say the former but they will be in the overwhelming minority.
Get half a dozen guys at the same time who are right hard cunts and skilled at the same time then you're laughing. We don't got that right now.
When God said to the both of us "Which one of you wants to be Sugar Ray?" I guess I didnt raise my hand fast enough
Charley Burley
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If anything I'd say power at heavier weights can be overstated. Power isn't anything unless you can likewise read it, roll it and avoid it. Gears, you have to have gears and a plan B and count on your opponent knowing the whole damn alphabet. People love raw power and a good conclusive ko but there is a lot of satisfaction in breaking a guy down and gradually busting him up. I think some heavyweights get a pass at times with the ko andeffect. It's understandable but honestly any weight chucking bricks but not boxing polished can have the same effect in hundreds of random 6 rounders.
Technical skill is essential at any weight, I just think there is a different type of "technical skill" at different weights.
Obviously, a heavyweight can't fight like a welterweight. It doesn't work ergonomically. A larger body burns more energy and oxygen with motion than a smaller body.
It can be argued that, with the added danger of heavyweight punching power, technical skills are even more important.
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