The title is provocative; the realm, however, is not. For 30-year old Russian cruiserweight Rakhim Chakhkiev, narrowly (not widely) known as the Machine Gun, his Friday fight versus WBC cruiserweight champion Krzysztof Wlodarczyk will be the first title attempt in a pro career, lasting for three and a half years. Regardless the outcome, the feeling is that it will not be his last shot at title. The reason for some extra attention to a lonely championship collision at a remote venue in the city of Moscow is that it can easily produce one of the best fistic gems in a year, filled with them.
The upcoming clash has all tools of the hidden classic. Firstly, there’s a Russian fighter involved. Don’t forget, who the parts of previous FOTY candidates this year were: Ruslan Provodnikov gave hell of an effort in the Bradley fight, while Denis Lebedev (also in Moscow) was one half of the most grueling cruiserweight title affair in a very long time. Add Evgueny Gradovich in another notable performance with Billy Dib, and you’ll have a trend. Secondly, both combatants aren’t defensive-minded stylists – that’s for sure. A collision of a prudent slugger with a cautious puncher can produce fireworks, even though a mixture of styles isn’t as bombastic as an old cliché “Boxer vs. puncher” suggests us. Thirdly, the reason why this attraction will have a “hidden” label around it: both participants are well underestimated. [Click Here To Read More]
The upcoming clash has all tools of the hidden classic. Firstly, there’s a Russian fighter involved. Don’t forget, who the parts of previous FOTY candidates this year were: Ruslan Provodnikov gave hell of an effort in the Bradley fight, while Denis Lebedev (also in Moscow) was one half of the most grueling cruiserweight title affair in a very long time. Add Evgueny Gradovich in another notable performance with Billy Dib, and you’ll have a trend. Secondly, both combatants aren’t defensive-minded stylists – that’s for sure. A collision of a prudent slugger with a cautious puncher can produce fireworks, even though a mixture of styles isn’t as bombastic as an old cliché “Boxer vs. puncher” suggests us. Thirdly, the reason why this attraction will have a “hidden” label around it: both participants are well underestimated. [Click Here To Read More]
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