WBC Deontay Wilder vengeful to settle score, 9th title Defense at Barclays, With heavy hitting Deon Nicholson On The Under card 18 May

BY Scottie “The Context” White

Grab an old jack-O-lantern, the fog of war can be seen in the distance. Ground troops are on the mve out of Tuscaloosa Alabama, destined to wreak havoc once the Brooklyn perimeter is breached this month in a terrific boxing showcase. When it comes to the purist and main-streamers of boxing, this is a perfect setting to indulge your appetite for destruction come 18 May, a heated collision betwixt two heavyweight rivals touching gloves in the worse way.

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Undefeated Heavyweight titian Deontay Wilder has did everything boxing demands of him, he fought the best who are willing to sign contractually, competed famously with stunning performances of dismissing all of his opponents to the canvas and echoed his challenge of intent to fight for the unified championship in cementing himself as one face, one name, to reign atop the division as the undisputed heavyweight king. So what is the hold up? Well boxing is a business first, the paradigm disappoints the wishful thinkers in simulation, so my only advise is allowing it to flow as unofficial advertisement, coupled with a mental bookmark for your archives.

Inasmuch to the dense telepathy of recognition, the manual shift of wavering support of Wilder has blossomed for the better good. His sensational night out at the Staple Center proved his resilience once again in a magnificent performance against UK boxer Tyson Fury. His underrated ring intellect forced two crucial knock downs in the fight, a memorable two-punch power set which baptized Fury to the company of Jack Reiss. His alias “Gypsy King” met with the spirits of his ancestors that night, for many believed he wouldn’t in no way revive short of a ten count relay but to our amazement was guided back from the light to close out the final bell.

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From left to right identifying the obvious unblemished side of Wilder boxing ledger, he’s up for his next appointment, a 9th defense obliging his mandatory assignment just outside two weeks. The media AP to the promotional bliss will soon amplify the usual technical scrutiny of Wilder fragmented skill set, lack of balance, but fans need to cogitate for however long it take to derived a conclusive reality with a note to self. “why is it so dam difficult to earn that win over Wilder. Fury swan song return didn’t bamboozle me not one iota and with all the subtitles to soothe his sinful reign as a champion in highlighting the weight lose marathon, still couldn’t condition his reservoir of courage to undertake a rematch. Moving on!

U.S. has a broad footprint in boxing for decades, some of the most historic bouts were here on our own soil. There are always hungry, motivated, rising killas in the mist awaiting their shot to shine. Say no more, because Wilder trip from Tuscaloosa contains a second fist of fury campaigning at a neighboring set just below in the cruiser-weight caucus.

His name Deon “Equalizer” Nicholson who is rebelling off a devastating knockout punctuation of Charles Dale in front of a frenetic hometown crowd and cheered by many who attended the Tuscaloosa Hall Of Fame fight card hosted by Jay Deas.

Not to sound cliche but he’s a problem, a left and right handed liability for anyone signing up to challenge his ranking levitation. He’s the current WBC United States cruiser-weight titlist (USNBC) who’s set to grace the square on the under card contention of Bryan Howard on the Wilder/Breazeale Showtime bonanza. My recollection in seeing Deon battle as the main attraction his last fight, convinced many he’s a cruiser-weight diamond in the rough. His recorded demolition is balanced evenly on both sides of his ledger for a reason. 11 wins | 11 knockouts. With his tenaciousness, retains technical composure to the hunt. After watching Deon for a couple of minutes to his boxing chaos, especially if you’re new to his familiarity, he may indeed win you over with his brash stylistic demeanor. There is an “it factor” burning in this warrior, a subtle carefree monotone vibe during interviews, but hearing the bell awakens a Kodiak savage.

Cruiserweight Deon Nicholson knockout round of Charles Dale in Tuscaloosa Alabama at the Hall Of Fame fight card hosted by Jay Deas.

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For the realist who transient the sport understands the dire need of a superstar to illuminate such a terrestrial cruiser weight division. At this point, the cruiser weight dominion has a real-one in the chute, a solid fighter with power and technical prowess to his domineering authority. Deon is set to ring walk the Barclays center on the under-card of his 6’8 compeer WBC champion Deontay Wilder, whom is the main assignment for the night. I would suggest to keep a look out for this incoming contender because it won’t be long before the boxing communal is chattering about this lethal striker in the foreseeable future. Switching stances back to the “BronzeBomber”

Forty-second fight, 8-0-1 (KOs) in World Title fights is Deontay Wilder

WBC crown holder Deontay Wilder 40-0-1 (39KOs) will defend his crown versus adversary Dominic Breazeale 20-1 (18KOs) in a 12-round championship reckoning. For those who are rigtheous followers of boxing, the pugilist parishioners whom are fully attentive to the toxic venom betwixt these pugilist will arrive amped up, full of anxiety to witness a night of fireworks. Trust me, the verbal cadence is real, deeply seated for pending torment, a pair of pugilist contending in the heaviest division in boxing with a single transgression of ill-intentions. Both will arrive that night, corner to corner, mano y mano, with an evasive augmentation to sever the consciousness of the other. When I had the pleasure of visiting Wilder in this fight camp, not only did his timing look sharper than a brand new Rolex bezel but his message to Breazeale organ the tune of a preambled for the darkest of eulogies.

“He’s in trouble now! I don’t even feel sorry for him. He ask for this. See people ask , and they shall receive. But when I do what i do, how I do it. I don’t want to hear nobody complaining, don’t want to hear no one saying nothing. Cause ya’ll ask for this. I want silence! This man go down and don’t get up and he close his eyes and don’t wake up. You guys fault – you ask for it! Ya’ll want it, you got it!

This clash is temperatured years back from a raucous encounter rendering a two-sided brush with physical detriment. Alleged punches were exchanged in admissions from both fighters but drivels in a distorted tell of culpability as to who’s the instigated source. How did it get to this point? A twitching needlepoint of furiousness, now the question is; will either fighter have a sustainable wit to enter battle on the 18th of May and execute a sound offensive deployment of strict technical ownership? Ok, granted! We all agree at this division of boxing masonry, the punches are brick laying concierge. One punch is a game changer, which leads me to synapse over to my neighboring narrative.

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Has anyone besides my self , deeply assessed the knock out analytics of the “BronzeBomber?” The hardest hitter in the sport of my comprehensive concurrence. See, I’ve grasp the attainability to never staple a template to any fighter when it comes to sweet science because what makes it sweet is the dynamic draft of a fighters collective boxing prowess. And the totality to their potential. Wilder is innately induced with mere immortal power, the awkwardness is indeed a talking point for many but at the end of his glove is nothing but pure fugugliness. A subconsciousness reverence as an onlooker to gesture hand to mouth shaking of the head mannerism. Sorta like an “Oh Shit” mortification glad it’s him, not me. For now, this seems like a respectable stopping point to my summation of the champion. And by-the-way, a prediction from me is as follows. Not past four-rounds to my introspective proclamation. Doesn’t need to be a perfect prediction, but what i feel comfortable in knowing is, Breazeale betwixt the opening bell until the referee intervention, will probably recall the last seconds of the fight from archival media footage. “He getting knocked out!” AGAIN!!

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