The Ring expert picks below , 12-8 in favour of Wilder
I'm favouring Wilder more and more as fight night approaches. Just can't see him not landing that nuke and ending it
https://www.ringtv.com/591951-fight-...-tyson-fury-2/
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The Ring expert picks below , 12-8 in favour of Wilder
I'm favouring Wilder more and more as fight night approaches. Just can't see him not landing that nuke and ending it
https://www.ringtv.com/591951-fight-...-tyson-fury-2/
Don't bully fat kids - they've got enough on their plate
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Fury believes Wilder sacked promoter Lou DiBella because of his reaction to their draw
Tyson Fury has claimed the he knows the real reason Deontay Wilder parted ways with promoter Lou DiBella in early 2019.
Last month, DiBella came out and declared that he’d been exiled from Wilder’s team after setting up a meeting with rival US broadcaster DAZN about a potential network switch for showdown with Anthony Joshua.
However, Fury disagrees with this line of thinking and instead believes DiBella was sacked after being seen on camera telling him he won at the end of the controversial draw.
Fury told BT Sport: “Me and my team were celebrating. I was running round with my hands up.
“Wilder’s head was in his corner like he was getting consoled. His trainer was patting him on the back.
“Even his promoter came over to me and you can hear it on one of the interviews and said, “You won that fight,” before the decision.
“I think that’s why he’s probably had the sack.”
DiBella previously told iFL TV: “My relationship professionally as a promoter for Deontay Wilder and working with his team ended when I set up the DAZN meeting, which is perverse.
“What did I do? I tried to talk to everyone in the marketplace and make a best effort to make the most money for a guy that I cared about.
“Isn’t that what I’m supposed to do?”
DAZN offered Wilder a three-fight deal worth a reported $100million which would have consisted of a mandatory defence against Dominic Breazeale, followed by two Joshua fights.
Despite initially indicating he was excited by the idea, Wilder ultimately changed his mind, rejected the offer and stayed loyal to Showtime and FOX.
When the Breazeale fight did happen – on Showtime – DiBella was no longer involved.
https://talksport.com/sport/boxing/6...2-lou-dibella/
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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I'm picking Fury by UD or late round KO. Wilder is very easy to hit.
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An in-shape Fury schools Wilder in the early to mid rounds with focus and discipline, but then a Wilder right connects and a stunned Fury backs off. Wilder then presses the action and KOs the giant in the next round—maybe the 9th or 10th-- with a windmill shot (left or right) or a paralyzing straight ala Breazeale.. We know Fury can go down. We know he can get up. But so does Wilder and Mark Breland.
“If you want loyalty, buy a dog.” Ricky Hatton
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As we get nearer to fight night I'm leaning more and more towards Wilder.
Partly fear because I'm a big Fury fan and nervous but mostly that I just cannot see him NOT detonating that bomb on Tyson's chin at least once in the fight.
And this time I think once will be enough.
I hope I'm wrong.
Joshua is a poor third behind these two for me.
Don't bully fat kids - they've got enough on their plate
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Kenny Bayless is a referee who has a history of siding with and helping American boxers.
Glenn Feldman, Dave Moretti and Steve Weisfeld have all produced dodgy scorecards in the past, favoring home country the American boxer over the foreign fighter. So even if Fury survives the 12 rounds, which I think is unlikely, he'll probably lose on the scorecards regardless of how well he fights.
no reiss to help out this time, better not get dropped
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.
Yeah as a Fury fan I'm abit concerned that in a fight between an American and and Englishman in America they have 3 American judges and an American referee. No wonder Tyson says he needs a KO. However the same thing happend with Lewis and holyfield after the draw in their first fight and Lewis got a decision more comfortably than perhaps his performance deserved
In a true 50-50 fight the poll has it 10-10 and 1 draw.
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