Conor was more successful against Floyd than haters will admit. The first 8 rounds were close.
View: https://imgur.com/F4qajEB
View: https://imgur.com/F4qajEB
Not according to those stats.Conor was more successful against Floyd than haters will admit. The first 8 rounds were close.
View: https://imgur.com/F4qajEB
What do you mean? 93-72 is quite close. Conor had 77% as many power punches as Floyd by this count.Not according to those stats.
it wasn't even close at that point...that was the opening actWhat do you mean? 93-72 is quite close. Conor had 77% as many power punches as Floyd by this count.
Because it's an awful data set. The first round is an obvious outlier and rounds 2 and 3 are so close as to be negligible. Why exclude the last two rounds, which were of course definitive? To say he gassed and didn't just have accumulated damage is hard to prove. Also, the power shots are only a portion of the story in a boxing match. This is a prime example of lies, damned lies and statistics to try to spin a face saving narrative, particularly in light of a TKO.What do you mean? 93-72 is quite close. Conor had 77% as many power punches as Floyd by this count.
The last two rounds are excluded because Conor gassed in those rounds. It's not like I'm saying Conor should have won or something, I'm just putting the fight in another perspective.Because it's an awful data set. The first round is an obvious outlier and rounds 2 and 3 are so close as to be negligible. Why exclude the last two rounds, which were of course definitive? Also, the power shots are only a portion of the story in a boxing match. This is a prime example of lies, damned lies and statistics to try to spin a face saving narrative, particularly in light of a TKO.
Here's the complete dataset.
There's nothing smug about calling a spade a spade. The complete compubox numbers do tell a pretty compelling story, just not one that indicates Conor did very well. According to the scoring of the contest, Conor undeniably won at least 3 rounds, but even at an incredibly low output in those rounds, Floyd still managed to land as much or more except in round 1 which he took off completely. If it was indeed a cardio issue and not damage accumulation that did Conor in, the high miss rate counts as a much more significant stat than the power shots.The last two rounds are excluded because Conor gassed in those rounds. It's not like I'm saying Conor should have won or something, I'm just putting the fight in another perspective.
Also, you're acting smugly, but I don't see how you've poked holes in any of my data! You say that two of the rounds were so close that Conor's lead is negligible. That might be a good argument if I were suggesting that Conor kicked ass, but all I'm saying is that it was CLOSE, not that Conor had a huge lead in some rounds.
Furthermore, I understand that CompuBox numbers don't tell the whole story, but that doesn't mean they are meaningless. These numbers coincide with the observation by many that Conor won 3 or 4 of the rounds.
This.Floyd conserved energy, let Conor shoot his wad, and then closed the deal like a boss. Props to Conor for taking the fight, promoting the shit out of the fight, convincing a ton of marks that he had a shot, and representing himself well.
The replay of the fight is on at nine on Showtime. Watch it again maybe Connor will win this timeConor was more successful against Floyd than haters will admit. The first 8 rounds were close.
View: https://imgur.com/F4qajEB
With this in the backgroundThe replay of the fight is on at nine on Showtime. Watch it again maybe Connor will win this time
Fight? Match.No excuses though, Floyd was better at a circus rules fight.
Floyd didn't fight like he normally does, he didn't have to, but in the early rounds he was missing shots and looked off his game in general.To be fair though, Floyd fought completely out of character the entire fight.
It'd be like Conor going after half assed takedowns and playing with Floyd on the ground or just disdainfully throwing lazy kicks.
We know what Floyd looks like when he takes his opponent seriously, same goes for Conor.
WHen they're both on, few can hang with them in their respective sports.
He probably didn't take the fight as seriously, so he didn't train as hard as he's done his entire career.Floyd didn't fight like he normally does, he didn't have to, but in the early rounds he was missing shots and looked off his game in general.
Despite the fact that he won handily and took no damage in the process he looked rusty in there, lay off and age catching up to him.