Oh by all means, point out to me a more terrifying force.
I'm not uneducated / deluted, because I know there's a 'oh shit' factor of when fighters realize their opponent is blitzing, and its a completely different when its someone with the KO power of Ngannou behind it.
Bet they were quite sure, before Ngannou, they knew how to evade haymakers.
But his haymakers are a completely different.
One lands, they go to sleep.
Rosenstruk had a very extensive kickboxing record before fighting Ngannou, and he was KOed in 20 seconds.
It doesn't matter if that fight happened in MMA, boxing, or kickboxing. The exact same thing would have happened.
Oh by all means, point out to me a more terrifying force.
I'm not uneducated / deluted, because I know there's a 'oh shit' factor of when fighters realize their opponent is blitzing, and its a completely different when its someone with the KO power of Ngannou behind it.
there’s nothing that nggano offers that wilder didn’t. wilder is a better boxer (because he actually is a boxer), moves faster, and hits harder. if wilder couldn’t do it, how would francis do it?
i see people saying perhaps nggano can win if he blitzes fury and throws a whirlwind of sloppy haymakers. well, nggano wouldn’t be the first to try it, and it’s probably just going to result in him getting gassed in 1 round. i don’t like francis, but even if i did i would bet against him here. he has no chance.
Combat sports worlds will once again collide when Tyson Fury-Francis Ngannou headlines a Top Rank-GIMIK Fight Promotions boxing pay-per-view on Saturday at Boulevard Hall in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Fury, the reigning WBC heavyweight champion, enters the ring with a 33-0-1 record. Ngannou, a former Ultimate Fighting Championship titleholder, has never before competed in the Sweet Science. Talk surrounding the match—arguably the most significant crossover event of its kind since Floyd Mayweather Jr. fought Conor McGregor in 2017—permeates social media. A look into some of the discussions:
Fury and Ngannou started their final approach to fight night with open workouts, showing off some of their wares to the buying public in the Middle East.
Though the two participants are reportedly in line to bank upwards of $50 million (Fury) and $10 million (Ngannou), those promoting the event continue to sidestep questions regarding whether or not it will go down as an official bout.
“Rumble in Riyadh” pits two of the most accomplished heavyweights in boxing and mixed martial arts history against one another. As such, it has drawn the interest of some of the usual suspects in the combat sports world.
say what you want about ngannou but i don't think its fair to call him bad. he won the belt and even defended it, which is more than many could say
no idea about the other guy really, but he obviously wins so he can't be that bad
say what you want about ngannou but i don't think its fair to call him bad. he won the belt and even defended it, which is more than many could say
no idea about the other guy really, but he obviously wins so he can't be that bad
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