Abreu back on the front foot in 4th but getting strafed in spots. Roughing Ennis up more with shoulders elbows and head more that punches so far.
Abreu back on the front foot in 4th but getting strafed in spots. Roughing Ennis up more with shoulders elbows and head more that punches so far.
Ennis turning it up in 5th jarring Abreu and lands hard on the beltline, Abreu looks for a time out and ref says keep fighting. In turn Abreu hits Ennis in his Ennis Jr and both warned. Ennis walking in behind high shoulder guard and landing left hooks..and down he goes. Abreu flat and up at 8! Abreu not long for this. Beautiful inside right uppercut counter got the KD, very fluid
Ennis scores another KD and Abreu up wobbly..ohh Ennis beating the crap outta the fella as ref steps it to call a halt to it. Solid finisher is Ennis
Ennis is good
Other than resembling a distant cousin of Tim Bradley I know nothing of Breedy. Hope he packed a lunch and looks more than willing at start.
Minimal from Tug but clocks Breedy with a clean hard right to make him aware. Breedy tightly wound, ohh gets caught at rounds end with same right and goes down. Was having decent round until then but King Tug takes it back.
Levels. Levels cannot be overstated. Breedy down again, Tug very calm and very accurate with punch placement. Breedy working his movement but bit weary now looking to make the round. Be interested to see if Tug goes harder or plays it cool this early
thats how steve forbes knocked out julio sanchez leon.
a while ago it used to be that, if you missed a right hand, you'd bring your right arm across your face, sort of like a face bar, so you could catch that counter in palm of your right glove.
if you watch all the old fights you will see guys doing that often. i think it might have something to do with how fighters used to throw that counter more often. it is nice to see someone that can still do that today, even if no one else knows how to keep from getting hit by it today.
Nice comparison between the two shots. However, my thoughts on the bottom one is that the guy throwing the right hand isn't doing so with any conviction and is almost expecting the upper counter..... so in effect he isn't putting much behind the right hand because he's avoiding the momentum that will leave him open for the counter. Instead, it looks like a shortened right hand immediately followed by the defensive position underneath the chin.
In the top picture Sanchez sold out on the huge right hand..... and kudos to Forbes for having the ability to lean away from it while maintaining his feet in position to deliver the classic counter.
i think if you have enough time to get hit with that counter, you have enough time to catch it in your right glove.
Sanchez hadn't even finished his right hand swing, when Forbes' counter uppercut was on its way back to him.
But ok... we'll agree to disagree in that you feel Sanchez had time to "catch it with his right glove."
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