I see a lot of people saying "go to Eddie if you want to ruin your career" but he is matching prospects how they're supposed to be matched. Before they say the prospect is the truth and that he's gonna be a future champ, and then they say that they shouldn't have been matched that tought.... people just love talking shit
Wrong thats not how you match guy with 20 fights. Unless you are sure. AJ was a guy that never should've been a champion because he was pushed to early. I get what you saying. But this is the problem with boxing as well as what you saying. All I disagree with is the amount if time you put a guy with 10 fights in with a dog. 15 fights I can see by 20 fights he should be fighting top tier level guys in the top 10. By 25 to 30 fights depending how good he is belt time. jaime munguia is a guy they allowed to cherry pick his entire career. So it can be over done. He's a perfect example. All cherry pickers get beaten by guys you never expect. Why? They are busy ducking the guys that you know who could possibly beat them. This is why Canelo lost to Bivol AJ Lost to Ruiz and so on. Boxing is just full of 💩. It's my fav sport. But in the UFC you know who they true champs are. Unlike boxing. Just a bunch of title holders until they have collected atleast 3 belts. Most of the time the best guy will have the most belts. Not always. Cause AJ had 3 and at the time Wilder would've been undisputed for sure. But boxing sucks.
Prospects losing is a healthy sign of the sport having enough real fights to cause upsets. Boxers aren't superheroes because they are americans, in real fights there is atleast a 30-40 percent chance of the presumed favorite losing add subjective scoring criteria to that and there is a very real chance of a incoming loss. I think in general that alot of americans has this rehersed idea of boxing where they presume they are the best and there is no competition, so when they lose it's almost instantly called a robbery, many of the fans calling it a robbery didn't even see the fight but saw the highlights. Such is the american culture, cry whine and scream robbery when things aren't going your way. That's how they are raised, even in the amateur system they are raised to automatically link corruption if an american darling loses a close fight, it's a problem within the american culture. Prospects losing is healthy and great for the sport and shows it is truly a global sport.
Bro are you seriously one of those guys know it doesn’t make the sport any better when the prospects are losing this early it’s exposing them you think it’s gonna give better fights is crazy just because their stock is low now they could just go out and fight anybody that doesn’t mean good fights that just means desperate fights there’s a difference😂
Bro if he’s a prospect losing this early what makes you think they’re gonna put him in a position to fight guys Who are higher in the ranks in his division it makes more sense to not put them in that sort of fight this is going to mean more fights are not gonna happen at 1:47😂
@@iampage2089 So you would rather watch a sport where all the prospects are protected and even when they actually DO LOSE they get the benefit of the doubt on the scorecards? You want 50 little Mayweather's and Sven Ottke's running around? How is that gonna progress the sports image? However I may have been a little too harsh in my critisism and it wasn't targeted at Hackett at all, who I actually gained newfound respect for, since it takes balls to take hard fights this early on in his career. Having a loss doesn't mean that his career is done, that's again a problem with american boxing culture; Look at Duran, he had many losses, look at Bhop lost his first fight: Losses shouldn't define someones career and they shouldn't be portrayed as some kind of humiliation ritual, some fighters learned from losses and grew better from that moment. Look at killers like James Toney or Julian Jackson, where are those killers today? I'll tell you they don't exist because promoters and teams are too busy protecting their fighters so they never get on that level.
I believe eddy has got this energy with his prospects now coz he has so many fighters. Even in Cameron Voungs last fight he Eddie said he thought he lost and for a guy who talks as much as he does he shouldn’t be struggling like that
@OmegaMaleEnterpriseBxngit’s no secret Hackett is draining himself to make 147 he almost always looks like a skeleton during weigh in, sometimes I don’t even notice him a week or two after a fight he blows up so much
@ it’s how fat the looks out of camp that’s the real concern for me, moving up to 154 won’t help if he’s walking around at 190 or something stupid like that anyway, in my opinion he should prioritise keeping the weight down out of camp first and foremost, so he can use his physical advantages to pick up gold at welterweight (a division not too stacked right now so it’s very possible), then move up in weight after to possible be a multi division champ. If he doesn’t keep his weight in check then he might just keep going up and up in the weights before ever winning a world title.
@ I agree b with you if he don’t keep his weight in check in between camps he will get beat again before he even gets a title shot. Furthermore I think he’s out of the loop as far as getting a shot at 147lb I don’t see any champs giving him a shot.
@ Yeah tbh it’s a long road to the title with all the fights to climb up the rankings so he might not be able to make 147 several more times and keep winning, it is possible though but we’ll see
I see a lot of people saying "go to Eddie if you want to ruin your career" but he is matching prospects how they're supposed to be matched. Before they say the prospect is the truth and that he's gonna be a future champ, and then they say that they shouldn't have been matched that tought.... people just love talking shit
Wrong thats not how you match guy with 20 fights. Unless you are sure. AJ was a guy that never should've been a champion because he was pushed to early. I get what you saying. But this is the problem with boxing as well as what you saying. All I disagree with is the amount if time you put a guy with 10 fights in with a dog. 15 fights I can see by 20 fights he should be fighting top tier level guys in the top 10. By 25 to 30 fights depending how good he is belt time. jaime munguia is a guy they allowed to cherry pick his entire career. So it can be over done. He's a perfect example. All cherry pickers get beaten by guys you never expect. Why? They are busy ducking the guys that you know who could possibly beat them. This is why Canelo lost to Bivol AJ Lost to Ruiz and so on. Boxing is just full of 💩. It's my fav sport. But in the UFC you know who they true champs are. Unlike boxing. Just a bunch of title holders until they have collected atleast 3 belts. Most of the time the best guy will have the most belts. Not always. Cause AJ had 3 and at the time Wilder would've been undisputed for sure. But boxing sucks.
Prospects losing is a healthy sign of the sport having enough real fights to cause upsets. Boxers aren't superheroes because they are americans, in real fights there is atleast a 30-40 percent chance of the presumed favorite losing add subjective scoring criteria to that and there is a very real chance of a incoming loss. I think in general that alot of americans has this rehersed idea of boxing where they presume they are the best and there is no competition, so when they lose it's almost instantly called a robbery, many of the fans calling it a robbery didn't even see the fight but saw the highlights. Such is the american culture, cry whine and scream robbery when things aren't going your way. That's how they are raised, even in the amateur system they are raised to automatically link corruption if an american darling loses a close fight, it's a problem within the american culture. Prospects losing is healthy and great for the sport and shows it is truly a global sport.
@@larryliston5288 spot on mate 😅😅
Bro are you seriously one of those guys know it doesn’t make the sport any better when the prospects are losing this early it’s exposing them you think it’s gonna give better fights is crazy just because their stock is low now they could just go out and fight anybody that doesn’t mean good fights that just means desperate fights there’s a difference😂
Bro if he’s a prospect losing this early what makes you think they’re gonna put him in a position to fight guys Who are higher in the ranks in his division it makes more sense to not put them in that sort of fight this is going to mean more fights are not gonna happen at 1:47😂
@@iampage2089 So you would rather watch a sport where all the prospects are protected and even when they actually DO LOSE they get the benefit of the doubt on the scorecards? You want 50 little Mayweather's and Sven Ottke's running around? How is that gonna progress the sports image?
However I may have been a little too harsh in my critisism and it wasn't targeted at Hackett at all, who I actually gained newfound respect for, since it takes balls to take hard fights this early on in his career. Having a loss doesn't mean that his career is done, that's again a problem with american boxing culture; Look at Duran, he had many losses, look at Bhop lost his first fight: Losses shouldn't define someones career and they shouldn't be portrayed as some kind of humiliation ritual, some fighters learned from losses and grew better from that moment. Look at killers like James Toney or Julian Jackson, where are those killers today? I'll tell you they don't exist because promoters and teams are too busy protecting their fighters so they never get on that level.
You a saints row fan? You used some songs from that game.
I believe eddy has got this energy with his prospects now coz he has so many fighters. Even in Cameron Voungs last fight he Eddie said he thought he lost and for a guy who talks as much as he does he shouldn’t be struggling like that
kids tuff asl i remeber seeing him spar jarrett hurd who was a champ at the time when he was like 16 and giving him good work
Make it decaf
Hackett should be at 154 that’s what weight bullying got him 😂
@@noopposition He can make 47 he just needs to stay disciplined out of camp
@OmegaMaleEnterpriseBxngit’s no secret Hackett is draining himself to make 147 he almost always looks like a skeleton during weigh in, sometimes I don’t even notice him a week or two after a fight he blows up so much
@ it’s how fat the looks out of camp that’s the real concern for me, moving up to 154 won’t help if he’s walking around at 190 or something stupid like that anyway, in my opinion he should prioritise keeping the weight down out of camp first and foremost, so he can use his physical advantages to pick up gold at welterweight (a division not too stacked right now so it’s very possible), then move up in weight after to possible be a multi division champ. If he doesn’t keep his weight in check then he might just keep going up and up in the weights before ever winning a world title.
@ I agree b with you if he don’t keep his weight in check in between camps he will get beat again before he even gets a title shot. Furthermore I think he’s out of the loop as far as getting a shot at 147lb I don’t see any champs giving him a shot.
@ Yeah tbh it’s a long road to the title with all the fights to climb up the rankings so he might not be able to make 147 several more times and keep winning, it is possible though but we’ll see