Fury-Wilder II Recap

courtesy of newsfortomorrow.com

Saturday night’s Tyson Fury-Deontay Wilder rematch was a good night for boxing once they got in the ring.  It overcame the silliness on the way in.

Boxing fans tend to be traditionalists like baseball fans.  I don’t know anyone who likes watching a guy dressed like King George (Fury) being carried to the ring on a thrown followed by a guy wearing a stupid imitation of a Star Wars villain costume.

That nonsense doesn’t attract one extra viewer.  If anything it will turn off a casual sports fan next time out if the fight itself doesn’t deliver.

They definitely can’t use that stupid baseball bullshit of trying to attract kids to the sport.  Not when you ring the first bell at 12:30 AM.

Ring walks that fire fans up are Mike Tyson walking to the ring barechested or draped in a towel.  Or how about the image of Marvin Hagler with a pointed hood up on his robe bobbing and weaving on the way to a showdown with a fellow all time great?

Enough with the costumes and sombreros and ballcaps.  Please!

So back to the ring action.  First off, I got it completely wrong.

After picking Wilder inside the distance, I was even more sure after the big Brit weighed in at 273.  But he beat the living shit out of Wilder in every which way.

Wilder showed championship heart before assistant trainer Mark Breland (former welterweight champ and likely this country’s greatest amateur) threw the towel in round 7; truth be told, they could have stopped this one after the 5th.

Even though the fight was one sided (I had it 58-53 at the halfway point which is five rounds to one with 2 points deducted from Wilder for knockdowns and  1 point deducted from Fury by the inept referee Kenny Bayless), it was nonstop drama.  Fury was taking Wilder apart but The Bronze Bomber was always lurking with that big right that never came.

But what I have enjoyed most about this fight is that boxing and more specifically the Heavyweight Championship of the World has been the center of the sports world for the past week.  This is what putting on a major event in February can do for a sport the media loves to shit on (often deservedly so).

So where do these giants go from here?  Let’s start with Wilder since he still holds the cards.

There was a clause in the contract that the loser of this fight could demand an instant rematch.  Wilder has announced his intention to do so but I question how official that really is yet.

I’m not sure if the American has fully thought things through without emotion and media pressure.  So far he sounds like he’s currently in the post-loss finger-pointing stage.

He has been classy in his praise of Fury, but has blamed his performance on Breland throwing the towel; Breland seemed to be the only one in Camp Wilder who did his job.  He has blamed Kenny Bayless who is and was far too quick to inject himself and break the fighters.  Bayless actually helped the former WBC champ take a lesser beating and even deducted what I thought was a cheap point from Fury.

He also has blamed the dumbass 40 lb. costume he wore to the ring stating it sapped his legs.  This is ridiculous on every level!

First why is a professional boxer, not to mention a grown man wearing such a thing?  Second, a heavyweight champion can’t walk 100 yards with 40 lbs?

You want to tell me it became a factor in the 10th?  Sounds farfetched, but MAYBE.  But his legs were gone in the third.

The real reasons in my opinion were the punches he took from Fury, Fury’s 273 lb. frame leaning on him and maybe Wilder wasn’t in the best of shape.  He also came in around 20 lbs. heavier.

So let’s see when the dust settles and the American heals physically and mentally if he really wants an immediate 3rd fight.  From a business standpoint the fight will probably be more lucrative now than later.

But from a sport standpoint, if I were close to Wilder I would push to wait a bit.  Wilder took a real beating from the inside out.  Yes, the ear was bleeding but he absorbed some vicious body shots that really hurt him.

He may need to get in there with a more comfortable opponent and get his confidence back first.  One thing about a dominant puncher:  when the invincibility is taken away they are often never the same.

As for the WBC/Ring Magazine and lineal champion, the most important thing is to keep his head on straight.  Tyson Fury’s first major success lead him down a path of obesity, addiction, depression and suicidal ideology.  That was after he first won the world title from Wladimir Klitchko.

Now he is back atop the division and the entire sport.  If he wants to stay there he must insulate himself from the inevitable temptations headed his way.

The most dangerous opponent right now for Tyson Fury is Tyson Fury.  If Wilder exercises that rematch clause, Fury will have a huge mental advantage right now.  Wilder will always be dangerous to anyone at anytime with that God-Given power, but a focused Fury is a nightmare for a self-doubting Wilder.

Personally, I would rather see Fury fight WBA, IBF and WBO king Anthony Joshua for the undisputed title in front of 100,000 in some soccer stadium in the United Kingdom.  Joshua’s promoter, Ed Hearn has stated he is willing to work with Bob Arum to make the event should Wilder pass.

You can still get to a trilogy down the road if it doesn’t happen right away.  The Muhammad Ali-Joe Frazier trilogy happened over the course of 5 years with major fights with both against George Foreman mixed in.

The best thing for the sport right now is to settle who the true Heavyweight Champion of the World is.  This has been a question casual sports fans could not answer for the last decade and a half.

Fury would be a deserved favorite over Joshua who doesn’t have Wilder’s power.  However, the fellow Brit has plenty of his own and a more complete tool box than the American; his style could present difficulties for the Gypsy King.

Whatever happens, people now care about heavyweight boxing again and that is refreshing.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

Fury-Wilder II Preview and Prediction

courtesy of BoxingScene

On Saturday night the heavyweight division takes centerstage in the sports world for the first time since Mike Tyson’s failed title challenge to Lennox Lewis in 2002.

Between 2x unified champion Anthony Joshua, former titlist Andy Ruiz and Saturday’s combatants:  Lineal champion Tyson “The Gypsy King” Fury (29-0-1, 20 KOs) & WBC strap holder Deontay “The Bronze Bomber” Wilder (42-0-1, 41 KOs), the division has the juice it has been missing for nearly 20 years.

Additionally, fight promoters have gotten it right on two fronts.  First, Bob Arum/ESPN and Al Haymon/Fox have done the right thing by the fans with a cross promotion to make this rematch happen.

Second, they have done the sport a favor holding a major event in February.

For the past decade, the biggest fights have taken place in May and September.  They have done some record breaking numbers, but those times allow the boxing-hating media to push the event to the fringes of coverage.

February is a no-brainer boxing month as the attention competition just isn’t there from other sports.

This is a rematch of the two big men’s 12 round draw in December of 2018.  You can watch the first fight on YouTube here if you have not seen it.  I welcome your comments on the outcome.

Once again, a terrific effort by the guys in the ring was tainted by inept or more likely corrupt judging.

I had it 116-110 for Fury.  That’s 10 rounds to 2 with 2 points deducted from the big Brit for the two knockdowns scored by Wilder.

MAYBE you could go 9-3, nothing closer.  But both guys shined in different ways.

The American showed his punching power from God that can never be taught, learned or created by man.  Teddy Atlas believes Wilder is the best right hand puncher in heavyweight history.

The Gypsy King showed outstanding boxing ability and elusiveness; especially for a man of his size as he out-boxed Wilder throughout the night.

But the most impressive thing Fury showed was his heart.  After being dropped for the second time and laying flat on his back, Fury got up.

It looked like the Undertaker getting up from a scripted WWF chair shot.  And he did not just get up and survive; he got up and fought.

However, Fury became another victim of the judges.  There used to be a valid belief that North American fighters had to be leery of going overseas and getting robbed by crooked judges.

But foreign fighters now have the same gripe.  In the last 15 years we have watched Felix Sturm (Oscar De La Hoya), Manny Pacquiao (Tim Bradley), Gennady Golovkin (Canelo Alvarez twice) and Sergey Kovalev (Andre Ward) all robbed on American soil.

That brings us to the keys to victory and prediction.

Keys to victory for Fury:

courtesy of xercise.gy

BOX!  Basically, do the same thing he did last time but make Wilder pay a little more when he misses.

To get a decision here, the Brit will have to tag The Bronze Bomber more often.  The other adjustment he needs to make is to stay off the canvas.

Easier said than done against a puncher like Wilder.  But I am convinced Fury needs to stay on his feet which means he must be near perfect to get a decision on American soil.

Moving to his right as much as possible will help Fury avoid Wilder’s Sunday punch.

Keys to victory for Wilder:

courtesy of boxing247.com

Get going earlier.  Wilder, like many big punchers tends to give early rounds away against better competition.  The sooner he gets busy, the more opportunities to land and stop the big Gypsy.

Another key is the left hook.  Wilder has an all time right, but he also has plenty of pop in his left.

Rather than just throwing 1-2s, put a left hook being that right hand and make Fury worry in both directions.

So what happens?  Usually the more complete fighter wins the rematch and that is definitely Tyson Fury.

He’s faster, better defensively and has better footwork.  Wilder’s only clear advantage is power and he may have a chin advantage.

But does Fury get a tad more reckless feeling he needs a knockout of his own, or at least a dominant performance?

If so, this could take him out of his game.  Also, I think Wilder has gotten a bit better since the first fight.

The Olympic Bronze Medalist took up boxing late and it has shown in his pro career.

He has been crude in his style leading to his knockouts.  But his jab has gotten smarter.

He doesn’t throw them all to land.  He’s more nuanced now.

He has adopted that old George Foreman trick of lulling you to sleep with a lazy 3/4 jab.  He makes you think you are safe at a closer distance than you are and a killer right comes behind it.

My gut tells me at least one of those floors Fury.  Can he summon that same heart again to get up against this gifted puncher?

Will heart even be a factor, or will the lights be put out this time?

Not sure, but one of those last two scenarios occurs in the second half of this fight and Deontay Wilder takes the judges out of the equation this time around.

Wilder by late knockout.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

Did Trump Learn Anything?

A week has passed since the acquittal of President Donald J. Trump.  I have to wonder if he learned a lesson from this ridiculous ordeal.

No, not about having conversations with leaders of corrupt nations about corruption.  That’s his job.  I don’t care that it involved a political rival.

If that disqualifies him from having such a conversation, logic would state that nobody in the House or Senate running for president had a right to vote on Trump’s removal as he is their political rival.

Just like a voter on welfare, their vote is completely tainted  from the jump by personal gain.  What the President should have learned from this is a lesson on loyalty.

As a Trump supporter I never got too fired up about this impeachment sham because I knew it was a weak case.  Even demented Nancy knew, but she caved to The Squad (the future and true power of the party of Satan).

The thing that made me sick was when gutless Mitt Romney voted to convict Trump on one of the articles of impeachment based on his faith.

Yup, his Mormon faith somehow made him miraculously jump party lines to support the agenda of Lucifer’s abortionists.  If I could go back in time I would sit out the 2008 and 2012 elections.

In hindsight I am glad Barack Hussein Obama won those elections.  Had Benedict McCain or dickless Romney fought the Iatola of Honolulu as hard as either fought Trump they would have likely been President.

But then we would have either some neocon war monger establishment Republican in Office right now, or Crooked Hillary.  Trump likely would not have run.

However, anything the cowardly Mormon from Utah does to hurt Trump politically is the President’s own damn fault.  He should have seen this coming.

After Trump endorsed Romney in 2012, Romney did everything he could (short of having the balls to actually run against him) to see to it that Trump did not get the Republican nomination.

When that didn’t work he still did not endorse his party’s candidate stating he could not get behind Trump or Queen Crooked.

But Mitt reemerged in 2018 for a vacant Utah Senate seat.  He was up against Rep. Mike Kennedy for the GOP nomination.  Kennedy’s views are far more in line with Trump’s MAGA base.  Romney already tried to screw Trump so it would be a no-brainer to endorse Kennedy right?

WRONG!  The Prez played it safe, or so he thought and endorsed Romney (swamp over MAGA).  Think he regrets that?

President Trump has accomplished a tremendous amount with an awful lot of bullshit standing in his way that no other establishment leader from either side of the isle would.  But he’s at times delinquent in showing loyalty to those loyal to him.

Instead of tweeting constantly how unfair the Mueller witchhunt and impeachment were (both atrocities), how about pardoning those being bankrupted and imprisoned by dirty cops and rigged juries for their connection to you?

Instead of complaining that the fake MSM covers you dishonestly (which has been proven), how about going on The Savage Nation or Infowars (outlets that helped you get elected)?

Instead of whining about Saturday Night Live mocking you, how about calling attention to those fired from their jobs for supporting you and your agenda too openly?  How about going to bat more for those assaulted and harassed by left wing domestic terrorists for wearing your caps?

President Trump has been treated unfairly by the media, the Justice Dept., the party of Satan and the limpdicks in his own party.

But he may have better people around him if he showed a tad more loyalty to those loyal to him.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

Thestraightshot.com Is Back

The Straight Shot is back.  Yes, after only one article in 4 months we have returned.

Where has Marksman been, you may ask.  Someone extremely close to me needed my attention giving me less time and quite honestly less desire to write.

As I have stated in the past, I have had to keep this blog anonymous.  It bothers me, but until I am financially independent of my current source of income I am forced by the Bolshevik speech police to hide behind anonymity.

I suppose that is actually a bit of a copout.  I call bullshit on a lot of things/people on this site, so I guess I better hold myself to the same standard.

The truth is, those commies only hold the power over me that I give them.  I could end these articles with my real name.

They would attempt to terminate me for speaking too many plain truths (at least as I see them), especially as a straight white Christian conservative male.  I may be able to fight them in court (spending tens of thousands of dollars on lawyers) if they did, or I may not.

But nobody is forcing me to work for them.  I guess the truth is it is not a fight I quite have the stomach/will to engage in.  At least I don’t right now.

Tending to this loved one in a very hard time has taught me a few lessons though.  You definitely find out who adds value to your life and who does not; I can luckily say I have SEVERAL that add value and I thank them (you all know who you are).

I may speak down the road more about some specifics this person went through, but not right now (to cowardly protect my anonymity).  The main message here is we are back.

One thing I have always known but not practiced enough for my liking is that you cannot worry what people think.  I advertised in my very first article that I would write about whatever is on my mind.

I did not plan to write to please an audience.  I have done a pretty good job of that.  However to again hold myself accountable, I have at times softened my words in subtle ways in the spirit of not offending.

It’s not potential readers that you worry about.  It’s family, friends, girlfriend, etc. that you don’t like to offend.

But if they don’t know where my heart is by now (and I am confident they do), when will they?  So, while my aim will never be to offend for shock value I will be pushing myself to allow a higher level of unfiltered honesty and therefore vulnerability.

My future articles will likely not be much different than they were.  Any differences will be subtle but I will be holding myself extremely accountable on the honesty front.  Talk soon.

-Marksman