Don't know if it's the shaven face but Larios looks rejuvinated to me.
Don't know if it's the shaven face but Larios looks rejuvinated to me.
For every story told that divides us, I believe there are a thousand untold that unite us.
Wasn't impressed with Aoh in his last outing with Enoki...
Enoki had a bad showing that night and just couldn't let his hands go...
Aoh for the most part cruised by and did not engage.
When the Chris John-Enoki fight was announced a while back I picked Enoki as I think his time is now and he will get the upset. They fight next week.
Aoh is a huge question mark skill wise, he occasionally throws brilliant combinations with speed and power, but when it turns into an inside fight he rolls around with soft punches, I think the skills are there, but the common sense is not. You are definately right about him getting lazy and it definately could cost him against Larios, but Aoh has those random power shots that are dangerous, of course he is not exactly hard to drop either. Anyone find out who's streaming this yet?
For every story told that divides us, I believe there are a thousand untold that unite us.
Surely Larios can't be in that bad a way considering he's won three since Linares
On paper he wins this fight easy. He has an unbeaten record in Japan too (bear in mind ive never seen Aoh fight)![]()
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
For every story told that divides us, I believe there are a thousand untold that unite us.
Larios continued boxing like Marco Antonio Barrera... Barrera has a brain surgery before but continued boxing... It's quite a delicate situation but Barrera boxed with it through the years... Same with Edwin Valero...
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I think Aoh wins, but I may be a little bias as I got Aoh in my stable & stand to lose $3,000 if he is defeated!
The Best There Is, The Best There Was, The Best There Ever Will Be
WBC feather champ Oscar Larios (64-6-1, 40 KOs), 126, barely kept his belt as he came off the canvas from a very bad knockdown in the fourth, and withstood shaky moments to be awarded a highly controversial split decision (114-112, 115-111 and 112-114) over previously unbeaten Japanese southpaw Takahiro Aoh (16-1-1, 8 KOs), 126, over twelve heats on Thursday in Tokyo, Japan. Aoh looked a winner rather than Larios, so the spectators were stunned by the debatable verdict.
Also, WBC bantam ruler Hozumi Hasegawa (25-2, 9 KOs), 118, impressively scored his seventh successful defense by a quick demolition of WBC#2 Mexican Alejandro Valdez (21-3-1, 15 KOs), 117.5, at 2:41 of the second round. It was an encounter of southpaw contestants.
Larios was a good bet after all
Didn't expect Hasegawa to win that easy.. he hits harder than his record suggests.
3-Time SADDO PREDICTION COMP CHAMPION.
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