Fury is surprisingly mobile for a big man. I think it'd be a close contest.
There you go, the oracle of all boxing knowledge has spoken.
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Silly **** - why don't you add something constructive to the thread instead of your pissed up incoherent bollocks. Knobhead.
Tyson in his prime would have wipe the floor with AJ! AJ fought like a fighter on a downward curve to me!
I went to the fight and have since watched it back. At the time of the knockdown it was very tight. On my scorecard, I had AJ 1 up, but there's a strong argument that WK was up by 1/2. Some of the rounds were very tough to call.
It was naivety that nearly got AJ beat and yes the fight was probably a little too soon for him. He started very well though and at the end of the 4th he was 3-1 up (39-37), but he went for broke in the 5th and it nearly cost him. Had he of sat back behind the jab, I feel he'd have got him out of there with minimal fuss by the 8/9th.
More positives for AJ, his head movement has improved massively as well as his defence as a whole and he'll have learnt more than in his other 18 fights combined. If there was a rematch, it would be far more routine. I don't think the true atmosphere came across on the TV, it was absolutely electric and all 90k were on their feet for the full fight.

Tyson in his prime would've beaten ANY man who ever stepped into a ring. Right then he was the most fearsome and brutal boxer of all time.Tyson in his prime would have wipe the floor with AJ! AJ fought like a fighter on a downward curve to me!
My point is pretty clear, really; you (quite rightly) pointed out that Lewis schooled/battered Tyson, and I was merely reminding you that Tyson was past his best by then.What's your point? I said Lewis battered him, and he did.
Yeah, it would've been a split decision.you obviously never saw the judges scorecards upto the 11th round then. Joshua 95-93, 96-93, Klitch 95-93
I'm a bit perplexed at the way you've carried on here, GLP. Maybe it's been a misunderstanding of semantics, whereby you think 'the fight was never in doubt' means something slightly different to the rest of us.
Who won? When is Klitschko's open top bus parade? I'd like to see it.
It's probably the only thing that could motivate him now. I would fully expect him to get back in shape, get his head in the right place, and focus intently on fighting AJ, for one last potential hurrah. It would be an awesome fight, and probably quite similar to the one he had with Klitschko, albeit with a slightly different result, I believe.Hopefully Fury can sort his head out and get in shape for it.
I'm a bit perplexed at the way you've carried on here, GLP. Maybe it's been a misunderstanding of semantics, whereby you think 'the fight was never in doubt' means something slightly different to the rest of us.
When AJ was caught with that shot in the 6th round and started doing his Frank Bruno impression, there only looked like being one winner at that point. Yes, he had enough ringcraft about him to stay out of trouble for a couple of rounds until he had his wits about him again, but I can't believe that you weren't feeling any doubts during that part of the fight, especially when even his own trainer admitted to feeling certain he was about to lose.
Fair enough, but I still find this hard to believe.I was myself, never in any doubt that Joshua would win. Even when he picked himself up off the floor...I was confident he'd clear his head and go on to win.
Fair enough, but I still find this hard to believe.