Gervonta Davis and Terence Crawford talk trash about getting filthy rich. Crawford seems to have it starts Rub salt Speaking of being bitter about not being invited to Turki Al-Sheikh's London bash for the Ring Awards last Saturday, Tank Davis hit back.
Talented lightweight star Tank then noted that Crawford was “not chasing greatness” by climbing to 168 to challenge Canelo Alvarez for his unified super middleweight title. Crawford “has to do it to make decent money.”
Double talk is open
Crawford is using that “greatness” and “legacy” argument as an argument for moving up to 168 to challenge Canelo for all three of his belts sounds like double talk. If it's about greatness, Crawford will step up and beat the top contenders to earn the fight. He wants a straight title shot, which reveals the mask which is about—Retirement money.
Crawford wouldn't have gotten that fight if Turk hadn't given him a chance. Terrence wasn't supposed to go to 168 to get paid the hard way, running the gauntlet through the killers of the division against Mexican superstar Canelo.
Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) probably won't last two seconds if he matches up with some of the fighters like David Morel, David Benavidez, Christian Mbili and Diego Pacheco. If you can respect Crawford He entered the common people The Turk handed him a silver platter instead of earning a title shot against Canelo for risking his soft hide against the Sharks at 168.
The Turks do mixed-and-matching circus-type fights that make no sense in terms of sporting standards but are good trashy entertainment. For example, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury fight MMA guy Francis Ngannou. These were pure circuses. We're moving an older, soon-to-be 38-year-old Crawford up two weight divisions to challenge Canelo.
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