In Mashiba's fight against Juan Garcia, Juan Garcia mentioned that Rosario a rough fighter, took away his belt. It could mean that Rosario became a champion without knowing what being a boxer is. Btw, Juan Garcia was the champion before Rosario took over.Is it just me, or is it really weird to write a world champion as just now realizing "ah geez, guess slacking off on weight control, hydration, conditioning, and general training is bad when fighting other world champion level boxers"? Like, how the fuck did he get this far? Even the most "raw talent, nothing going on upstairs" boxers that aren't Woli would probably cotton on to training being kinda important, yet here we have a world champion who is apparently only now coming to that epiphany?
This feels like the kind of attitude I'd expect from some kind of upstart who is rising through the ranks on sheer potential, and then encounters someone like Ippo, in chapter 250 or whatever, who trained his ass off, learned proper technique and all that jazz, and that's the turning point in their outlook or something. Not an established world champ, even one as shitty as Rosario. He must've had a couple fights at least to get here, right?
Is it just me, or is it really weird to write a world champion as just now realizing "ah geez, guess slacking off on weight control, hydration, conditioning, and general training is bad when fighting other world champion level boxers"? Like, how the fuck did he get this far? Even the most "raw talent, nothing going on upstairs" boxers that aren't Woli would probably cotton on to training being kinda important, yet here we have a world champion who is apparently only now coming to that epiphany?
This feels like the kind of attitude I'd expect from some kind of upstart who is rising through the ranks on sheer potential, and then encounters someone like Ippo, in chapter 250 or whatever, who trained his ass off, learned proper technique and all that jazz, and that's the turning point in their outlook or something. Not an established world champ, even one as shitty as Rosario. He must've had a couple fights at least to get here, right?
It happened to Mike Tyson against Buster Douglas. Which led to his first and greatest loss.Is it just me, or is it really weird to write a world champion as just now realizing "ah geez, guess slacking off on weight control, hydration, conditioning, and general training is bad when fighting other world champion level boxers"? Like, how the fuck did he get this far? Even the most "raw talent, nothing going on upstairs" boxers that aren't Woli would probably cotton on to training being kinda important, yet here we have a world champion who is apparently only now coming to that epiphany?
This feels like the kind of attitude I'd expect from some kind of upstart who is rising through the ranks on sheer potential, and then encounters someone like Ippo, in chapter 250 or whatever, who trained his ass off, learned proper technique and all that jazz, and that's the turning point in their outlook or something. Not an established world champ, even one as shitty as Rosario. He must've had a couple fights at least to get here, right?
This is probably the first time he got caught in this position. He himself says it: he won way too many matches, he was at the top of the world, he got arrogant, slacked off, got locked away in prison, and when the next big fight came he found himself unable to keep up with the challenger.Is it just me, or is it really weird to write a world champion as just now realizing "ah geez, guess slacking off on weight control, hydration, conditioning, and general training is bad when fighting other world champion level boxers"? Like, how the fuck did he get this far? Even the most "raw talent, nothing going on upstairs" boxers that aren't Woli would probably cotton on to training being kinda important, yet here we have a world champion who is apparently only now coming to that epiphany?
This feels like the kind of attitude I'd expect from some kind of upstart who is rising through the ranks on sheer potential, and then encounters someone like Ippo, in chapter 250 or whatever, who trained his ass off, learned proper technique and all that jazz, and that's the turning point in their outlook or something. Not an established world champ, even one as shitty as Rosario. He must've had a couple fights at least to get here, right?
Not rare at all, tbh. More than one mexican fighter went the same route after touching the belt. They get too full of themselves and start with the mistakes and bad decisions.Is it just me, or is it really weird to write a world champion as just now realizing "ah geez, guess slacking off on weight control, hydration, conditioning, and general training is bad when fighting other world champion level boxers"? Like, how the fuck did he get this far? Even the most "raw talent, nothing going on upstairs" boxers that aren't Woli would probably cotton on to training being kinda important, yet here we have a world champion who is apparently only now coming to that epiphany?
This feels like the kind of attitude I'd expect from some kind of upstart who is rising through the ranks on sheer potential, and then encounters someone like Ippo, in chapter 250 or whatever, who trained his ass off, learned proper technique and all that jazz, and that's the turning point in their outlook or something. Not an established world champ, even one as shitty as Rosario. He must've had a couple fights at least to get here, right?