Crawford and Davis Trade Barbs: “Chasing Greatness” or Chasing Paydays?

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Gervonta Davis and Terence Crawford traded trash talk about being filthy rich. Crawford seems to have He started Rubbing salt On Tank Davis’ injury, Turki Al-Sheikh said he was bitter about not being invited to the London Bash for the Ring Awards last Saturday.

The real motivation

Talented lightweight star Tank then went on to claim that Crawford is “not chasing greatness” at 168, pointing to Canelo Alvarez for his unification middleweight titles. This is what Crawford has to do to “make good money.”

Double talk is exposed

The “pursuit of greatness” and “legacy” argument that Crawford used as a reason to challenge Canelo for his three belts to move up to 168 seems like double talk. As for greatness, Crawford would rise to the top and win the fight by defeating the top contenders. He wants live headline footage that reveals what he’s all about:Pension money.

Crawford wouldn’t have gotten that fight if Turki hadn’t given him the opportunity. Terrence passed the killers in the division and didn’t make it to 168 to earn his payday against Mexican superstar Canelo.

Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) probably won’t last two seconds if he goes in against fighters like David Morrell, David Benavidez, Christian Mbili and Diego Pacheco. If so, you can respect Crawford. He entered the general public At 168, exposing his soft hide against the sharks, he will be handed a turkey on a silver platter to earn a title shot at Canelo.

Circus Boxing

Turkey is into mixed and matched circus-style fights that make no sense with sportsmanship but are good trashy fun. For example, Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury fought MMA man Francis Nganu. Those were pure circuses. We’re getting a 38-year-old soon to move up two weight classes to challenge Crawford Canelo.

Image: Crawford & Davis Trade Barbs: "The pursuit of greatness" Or chasing paydays?