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Thread: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    Stylish outfit he's wearing there. The fucker doesn't derserve to ever get a PPV fight either. He's just looking for a couple of big paydays before he shuffles off and I hope he doesn't get them.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    Quote Originally Posted by Kirkland Laing View Post
    Stylish outfit he's wearing there. The fucker doesn't derserve to ever get a PPV fight either. He's just looking for a couple of big paydays before he shuffles off and I hope he doesn't get them.
    I have the same feeling about Amir Khan.
    Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    I might be old-fashioned but, you don't talk about being a HOF fighter. Others talk about you being a HOF fighter. Then they vote you in. Don't like this self-lobbying B.S.

    Besides, I think all HOF's across the board should work to maintain their standards high. Otherwise what's the fun in it.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    Quote Originally Posted by TitoFan View Post
    I might be old-fashioned but, you don't talk about being a HOF fighter. Others talk about you being a HOF fighter. Then they vote you in. Don't like this self-lobbying B.S.

    Besides, I think all HOF's across the board should work to maintain their standards high. Otherwise what's the fun in it.
    It’s always the non HOFers claiming to be HOFers. Most really good fighters already know they are in so don’t have to say it. Some like Garcia has had a solid career. He was a good fighter that lost a few of his big fights but won a few pretty impressive ones too. Solid career but in no way a HOFer.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    Sometimes the ego of Garcia is as loud as some of the outfits he used to wear. But I've come around on the guy really. Call me nuts but I think he and Spence would have been a pretty solid fight and unlike some pre auto accident, he was more than willing. Then again he waited way too long with Porter and has been paused since. The guys opposition has been top notch and they made Redkach late to highlight that searing left hook against a very willing guy. But for a guy to be talking HOF while still active and seemingly being lined up for a major fight mid-late year is just silly.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    highlight reel ko coming up for danny
    It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.

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    Default Re: Danny Garcia v Ivan Redkach

    Jarrett Hurd enacts sweeping changes after losing titles, including moving out of his parents' home

    Jarrett Hurd won 23 consecutive fights, 16 of them by knockout. He won a world title and quickly unified the belts.

    He was among the biggest stars in boxing, and he had a back story that people loved. Even as a world champion, Hurd continued to live at home with his parents. He worked with the same trainer he had from the earliest days of his career, and was in some of the most exciting bouts in recent years.

    As good as things looked on the outside, though, Hurd felt differently. Something was missing.

    His wasn’t a feel-good story; this was his life, and as good as the results were, he knew he should be better. So when he lost a unanimous decision to Julian Williams in May, Hurd knew it was time to make some tough choices.

    “Changes had to be made,” Hurd said. “Sometimes, you come to a point in your life and you know you need to make a choice and that’s where I was.”

    After losing to Williams and dropping his IBF-WBA super welterweight titles on May 11, Hurd essentially did a 180. He fired trainer Ernesto Rodriguez and replaced him with Kay Koroma, an assistant coach on the 2016 and 2020 U.S. Olympic boxing teams. He spent much of his time training in altitude for the first time, working with Koroma at the U.S. Olympic training center in Colorado Springs.



    He moved out of his parents’ home in suburban Washington, D.C., and found a place of his own, where he now lives with his girlfriend. He vowed to be more active after having fought just once in 2019. He even went so far as to change his hairstyle.

    He felt the need to diversify his game and take control of his life, and so he instituted sweeping changes. Even though they essentially came all at once, it wasn’t a rash decision by any means, he insisted.

    “I’m one of the biggest guys in that class, and my size and pressure, I was beating everybody with that,” Hurd said. “Eventually, somebody beat me at my own game. I fought Julian Williams and he beat me on the inside. I got beaten up that night, and I didn’t have a Plan B. I didn’t have a way to switch it up. That pressure, fighting on the inside, it’s always in my back pocket. I can pull it out, and use my size.

    “But when I needed that Plan B, when I needed to switch up and do something different, I didn’t have it. I don’t want to go into a fight any more with just one mindset. I needed to add to my game and diversify what I am able to do so I can adapt to what I see in there.”

    On Saturday at the Barclays Center, he’ll fight Francisco Santana in the first bout he’s had since losing his titles. It’s also the first time he’ll have fought since leaving his parents’ home.

    He’s 29 years old, so there is nothing radical about getting a place of his own, but his mom did try to talk him into staying.

    “I’d been there for 12 years,” he said. “It was just time for a change. I had been inactive and I had time on my hands and I wanted to kind of shock the system. I feel good about everything. My parents kind of gave me a pep talk and told me I was welcome to stay with them and all of that. They tried to convince me, but they understood.

    “It’s the same thing with training at home. My team got me out of the area and I had nothing to focus on but my craft. I think I’m a lot better because of it.”

    It’s a process, though, and he knows he’s not going to be a finished product in his first bout with Koroma. But his goal is not to move up to middleweight, but to complete what he refers to as his unfinished business at super welterweight.

    There are a number of good fights for him at 154, including the eventual rematch with Williams, who lost his titles last week to Jeison Rosario.

    He didn’t take an immediate rematch with Williams, leading some to speculate he was on his way to middleweight. That time may yet come, but he wants to prove he’s the best in the world at 154.

    “My goal is to be undisputed at [super welterweight], and I’ve taken the steps I feel I needed to take to help me get to that point,” he said. “I’m very confident I’ve made the right choices, and it’s up to me to show the improvements I’ve made and then go out there and do it.”

    https://uk.sports.yahoo.com/news/jar...231727224.html
    Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.

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