Gervonta Davis and Terence Crawford traded dirty talk about being filthy rich. Crawford appears to have done just that I started it By rubbing salt In Tank Davis' wounds, they talk about how he is bitter about not being invited to Turki Al Sheikh's concert in London for the Ring Awards last Saturday.
Real motivation
Talented lightweight star Tank then indicated that Crawford is not “chasing greatness” by climbing up to 168 to challenge Canelo Alvarez for his unified super middleweight titles. This is what Crawford “has to do to make decent money.”
Exposed double talk
The “chasing greatness” and “legacy” argument that Crawford used as his justification for moving up to 168th to challenge Canelo for his three belts feels like doublespeak. If it was about greatness, Crawford would have stepped up and won the fight by defeating the top contenders. He wants a direct title shot, which reveals what it's all about —Retirement funds.
Crawford wouldn't have gotten into that fight if Turk hadn't given him the chance. Terrence wasn't about to move up to 168 to earn a payday against Mexican superstar Canelo the hard way by running the gauntlet through killers in the division.
Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) probably wouldn't last two seconds if he got in with some predators, like David Morell, David Benavidez, Christian Mbele and Diego Pacheco. You can respect Crawford then Income of the general population He's 168 years old to risk his soft skin against the Sharks to get a title shot against Canelo instead of Turk handing it to him on a silver platter.
Circus boxing
Turk engages in mixed circus fights that make no sense in terms of sporting value but are good entertainment-like entertainment. For example, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury are fighting MMA man Francis Ngannou. It was pure circus. We've got the 38-year-old Crawford who will soon move up two weight divisions to challenge Canelo.