"C'mon and do tha Khonga"
About 6 of them come into the arena doing it wearing party hat's 😁
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"C'mon and do tha Khonga"
About 6 of them come into the arena doing it wearing party hat's 😁
Is Josh Taylor a little overhyped over here or is it just me? Don't get me wrong he is a decent boxer, but people seemingly go a bit overboard in gushing praise of him.
He's no doubt number 1 in a pretty limited division. He just about got by Prograis in a close fight (I actually scored it to Prograis by a point), and while he probably as the beating of Ramirez if they face each other there are better fighters in the divisions around him.
If the main 3 boys in the lightweight division moved up, or Josh went in with the welterweights he'd be in trouble.
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Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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I always like the mystery guys billed a big punchers brought in for a stars home showcase. Khongsong pulled perfect brick putting Kondo to sleep and the guy has a little awkward swagger. Still though Taylor is many levels above and a bit of the 'pressure' for Ramirez build is off for now. I came out of Ramirez v Postol wanting a rematch more than wanting a Taylor showdown. Wondering if Arum feels same
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I've said he's seemingly the best, in a somewhat limited division though. He just happens to be between 2 divisions where there are some super elite boxers. I'm not sure he has the beating of the likes of Lomachenko, Davis, Errol Spence or Crawford. I'm not saying I've seen people say he would beat these guys, but he gets enough high praise that he should be able to mix it at that kind of level.
For me, I'm not sure he is quite up there. Would be happy for him to prove me wrong mind. Lots of great match ups around those weights.
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Josh Taylor EXCLUSIVE: Viktor Postol made Jose Ramirez look ‘very ordinary and slow’, I will ‘expose’ him
Josh Taylor has told talkSPORT he was far from impressed by Jose Ramirez’s recent win over Viktor Postol.
The Scot, who holds the WBA and IBF super-lightweight world titles, is being lined up for an undisputed unification fight with the American, who owns the WBC and WBO belts.
Ramirez retained his crowns by edging out mandatory challenger Postol on August 29.
He did so with a narrow majority decision – scores of 116-112, 115-113, 114-114.
Taylor agreed with the third judge, and told talkSPORT Fight Night: “I think it was a very good fight.
“I actually scored the fight a draw myself. I scored it a draw.
“I thought Postol ran away with the early rounds.
“First half of the fight, he made Ramirez look very ordinary and slow.
“I saw lots of holes that I definitely will expose if or when we meet.
“I believe I will expose him. I wasn’t impressed with what I saw at all.”
Taylor knows Postol very well, as he beat him by a wider unanimous decision back in 2018.
He did not have it all his own way against the Ukrainian though, and was hurt in the seventh round.
Comparing the two fights, he continued: “I think it was a good performance considering.
“That was my first fight at world level, it was only my 13th fight as well.
“There was a lot of pressure riding on me, I was putting a lot of pressure on myself because I had a lot of proving to do.
“So I believe if I had that fight again I’d put on an even more dominant performance and blow him away.
“I think it [the Ramirez vs Postol fight] makes my victory look a little bit better.
“I thought he was quite unlucky not to get the nod.”
Taylor must defend successfully against his mandatory Apinun Khongsong on September 26 if he’s to meet Ramirez later this year.
Regarding the bout, which will take place behind closed doors, Taylor concluded: “The point with no crowds – the belts are on the line and my record is on the line.
“So I will have that fear factor and the nerves which you do need to keep you on your toes.
“There’s no need to worry about that, I’ll be right up for it because I’ve got a fear of losing, a fear of losing my titles.
“And a fear of losing the dream that I’ve got, which is getting that undisputed fight or that dream fight at Edinburgh Castle or Easter Road.
“I don’t believe it’s gonna affect me in any way.”
https://talksport.com/sport/boxing/7...-jose-ramirez/
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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Unbeaten Josh Taylor dreams of fighting 'hero' Manny Pacquiao as Apinun Khongsong title bout approaches
Josh Taylor makes a mandatory defence of his WBA and IBF light welterweight titles against Thai knockout artist Apinun Khongsong on September 26 in London behind closed doors, but the unbeaten Scottish fighter revealed on Saturday that his dream fight would be at welterweight against eight-division champion and future Hall of Famer Manny Pacquiao.
Southpaw Taylor, from the fishing town of Prestonpans, told Telegraph Sport on Saturday: “I’d love to share a ring with my hero, Manny Pacquiao. It would be my dream fight against another southpaw who I've watched avidly since I first took up boxing at the age of 13. He is a special fighter, and an inspiration."
"There are other great welterweights right now - Terence Crawford, Errol Spence, Shawn Porter - and I call it the 'sexy' division. The talent is so deep, it’s unbelievable. But Pacquiao is the man. First, though, I have to become undisputed champion at light welterweight."
That means the 29-year-old former Glasgow Commonwealth Games champion has to maintain his poise behind closed doors against the heavy-handed and, frankly, underrated Khongsong, before going on to a blockbuster with American Jose Ramirez, who is unbeaten in a 26-fight resume, and who holds the WBO and WBC 140lb belts.
Bob Arum, who promotes both Taylor and Ramirez, said that the undisputed fight between the Scotsman and the exciting Californian is already in the planning for late this year, potentially in Edinburgh, should Taylor prevail against the Thai challenger.
“I think outside the heavyweights and whoever Canelo fights, this is one of the biggest fights out there," Taylor said. "It’s the purest boxing fight. It’s not very often you get to fight for all the belts. I think it’s one of the biggest fights in the game right now. I’ve got my fight in a couple of weeks, I believe I’ll get through it, no doubt in my mind. My full focus is on that and I don’t really want to talk about Ramirez too much, but potentially that’s a massive fight.”
Taylor is now trained by Ben Davison, who helped bring heavyweight Tyson Fury back from the brink after a deep depression in 2016, and the Scotsman believes the 'Gypsy King' deserves No 1 status in the blue riband division.
“At the minute it’s the big man, Tyson Fury. I thought he won the first fight with Deontay Wilder - even with the late knockdown - and he dominated him in the second fight. It showed he’s unpredictable. That fight with Anthony Joshua has to happen, and soon. If it doesn’t happen it’s a joke. I see it 60/40 in favour of Fury. Boxing wise, I don’t think there’s anyone who can beat Fury. But Joshua is very good at combination fighting, a great finisher and very good at mid to short range. His uppercut, left cut and variation is good and he’s powerful all the way through. If Joshua catches him it could be game over. If he gets up, Joshua will jump in and try and finish him. It’s a very, very good fight and I think it has to happen sooner rather than later.”
https://uk.sports.yahoo.com/news/unb...101116381.html
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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