I don't want this to turn into a flame war or some casual nonsense from idiots, but I'd like the few on here who are actual boxing fans, with genuine intellect to respond. This is why I am posting in the history section (although I have just seen some threads here for the first time in a while and oh boy, looks like we're infected).
Anyway, here is my piece:
The whole world in in the grip of a pandemic, regardless of one's opinions on this crisis, sporting service has been terribly affected. Football is just returning to normal, cricket has "bio-secure bubbles" and other team sports around the world are finding ways around it and yet, MMA's flagship brand, the UFC just hasn't seemed to stop. From May of this year, they have held events, everywhere from Florida to the UAE by way of Las Vegas. Health concerns aside, this is impressive enough but the fact that they have built on a bumper 3 year stretch of excellent matches and new stars, in a time like this, is to be admired.
Their first fight in these dark times? Tony Ferguson v Justin Gaethje, 2 of the 3 best lightweights on the planet. That was a huge fight to come back with and it meant something to the division (the idea of meaning will be raised again). Since then, we have had both Nagannou and Overeem stake a claim in the heavyweight division again, Poirier got back into the flow at lightweight, Miocic and Cormier capped off their trilogy....and this is all just a bit of what UFC have done so far. Heck, they just put on Adesanya v Costa, a blockbuster rivalry and another fight which means something.
The biggest card is still up UFC's sleeve, Khabib Nurmegameddov, the biggest star in the MMA business today will be facing off against the number 1 contender in his division, no nonsense, no pay offs, no mandatories, just straight up, best v best. This is a stellar year for MMA where the pandemic hasn ot been used as an excuse to make the very best possible fights happen.
But let us turn to boxing, Joshua v Fury is still a pipe dream, Fury himself can't even get the third fight with Wilder rolling and we're now at the end of September. The biggest stars are either unwilling to fight, or unwilling to have meaningful fights. The first and possibly last meaningful fight in the sport will be Lomachenko v Lopez. A whole year wasted with top boxers and promoters using the pandemic as an excuse.
Either the sport learns now or it is forever lost apart from the odd big PPV clash.
Anyway, here is my piece:
The whole world in in the grip of a pandemic, regardless of one's opinions on this crisis, sporting service has been terribly affected. Football is just returning to normal, cricket has "bio-secure bubbles" and other team sports around the world are finding ways around it and yet, MMA's flagship brand, the UFC just hasn't seemed to stop. From May of this year, they have held events, everywhere from Florida to the UAE by way of Las Vegas. Health concerns aside, this is impressive enough but the fact that they have built on a bumper 3 year stretch of excellent matches and new stars, in a time like this, is to be admired.
Their first fight in these dark times? Tony Ferguson v Justin Gaethje, 2 of the 3 best lightweights on the planet. That was a huge fight to come back with and it meant something to the division (the idea of meaning will be raised again). Since then, we have had both Nagannou and Overeem stake a claim in the heavyweight division again, Poirier got back into the flow at lightweight, Miocic and Cormier capped off their trilogy....and this is all just a bit of what UFC have done so far. Heck, they just put on Adesanya v Costa, a blockbuster rivalry and another fight which means something.
The biggest card is still up UFC's sleeve, Khabib Nurmegameddov, the biggest star in the MMA business today will be facing off against the number 1 contender in his division, no nonsense, no pay offs, no mandatories, just straight up, best v best. This is a stellar year for MMA where the pandemic hasn ot been used as an excuse to make the very best possible fights happen.
But let us turn to boxing, Joshua v Fury is still a pipe dream, Fury himself can't even get the third fight with Wilder rolling and we're now at the end of September. The biggest stars are either unwilling to fight, or unwilling to have meaningful fights. The first and possibly last meaningful fight in the sport will be Lomachenko v Lopez. A whole year wasted with top boxers and promoters using the pandemic as an excuse.
Either the sport learns now or it is forever lost apart from the odd big PPV clash.
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