Originally posted by Ray*
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Can someone explain to me why wilder is allowed to get away with ducking whyte?
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by Robbie Barrett View PostWhy are you ignoring what he said just before. That they planned the Joshua-Wilder fight for the summer but "I'd like him to fight Whyte"?
That completely destroys your argument in the same damn interview.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ray* View PostYour lies in this thread. And you still continue to do so. Show us where he tried to use Whyte to block a Joshua/Wilder fight..
"Yeah, Wilder fight Dillian Whyte...and the winner fights Josh"
What does that mean?
You're Brit, you might get this analogy. Germany, Italy, and England are in the World Cup. Germany has already won and is in the final game. England and Italy have yet to play. If England doesn't beat Italy, they're not playing Germany, are they? Therefore, the game between England and Germany is contingent upon England beating Italy.
Comment
-
Originally posted by GGG Gloveking View PostNo, sir. Actually, that element is crucial to my argument. The introduction of a fight with AJ is what makes it a conditional, or contingency, offer. The fight with AJ is the reward for the conditional fight with Whyte. Otherwise, it would simply be an offer to fight Whyte.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Robbie Barrett View PostHe actually made an offer months before for Wilder to fight Whyte. "I'd like" is not conditional. If it was conditional he'd say "has to". What you're claiming makes no damn sense. I think you're digging in and making yourself look more ****** so you can claim "i was trolling, look at what i said" but i'm not going to let you get away with that. You were really dumb enough to claim what Hearn said was a demand.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by GGG Gloveking View Post"I'd like" is not the operative clause here. "The winner (of Wilder/Whyte) fights Josh" is the operative clause. What it does is creates the condition, to wit, victory, to achieve the reward, to wit, a fight with "Josh."
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ray* View PostI refuse to accept your lies and your narratives of Whyte being used to block anything.
A video of Eddie saying something is me lying and creating a narrative...sure bud.
More like I see a fight being offered as a reward for winning a contingent fight, and call it a conditional offer.
Comment
-
Originally posted by GGG Gloveking View PostOk, I'm guessing you're trolling me too.
.
Tell us again how it was all a ploy to use Whyte to roadblock a Joshua/Wilder fight...
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ray* View PostAgain i refuse to believe your lies and narratives, just like many others who refuse to believe your lies and narratives...You are on your own.
Tell us again how it was all a ploy to use Whyte to roadblock a Joshua/Wilder fight...
I've told you, and I'll tell you again. Unfortunately, you won't give your interpretation of Mr Hearn's remarks, so we don't really have a starting point for constructive debate. But, in any event, I'll try once more.
Mr. Hearn made the statement, "Wilder fight Dillian Whyte...and the winner fights Josh." My interpretation of that statement is that the Whyte fight is an eliminator for the AJ fight. My interpretation is that this is not a direct offer for Mr. Wilder to fight Mr. Joshua, but rather only for "the winner" to fight "Josh." Therefore, this requirement of fighting and defeating Dillian Whyte is the prerequisite condition, or obstacle, being placed in front of Mr. Wilder by Mr. Hearn.
Comment
Comment