Tim Bradley on Canelo: “Don’t run away from Crawford!”
Tim Bradley got on his soap opera this week to put pressure on Canelo Alvarez to give Terence Crawford the fight he’s been asking for against him.
It’s a fight that Crawford, 37, desperately wants but has eluded him due to his unwillingness to earn it through the hard work of beating the dogs at 168 and 175.
Golden parachute
Bradley urges unified super middleweight champion Canelo (62-2-2, 39 KOs) not to “run away” from the fight against Crawford. This fight is not helping Canelo. It is seen as a means for Crawford to get a golden parachute that will give him a soft landing into retirement and allow him to comfortably live out his golden years in a giant mansion in Beverly Hills.
Crawford (41-0, 31 KOs) looked awful in his last fight against 154lb champion Israil Madrimov on August 3 and showed he has reached the limit of how far he can go in moving up the divisions. Terence was eating right hands from Madrimov all night and looked like an old man in that fight. Why would Canelo want to fight Crawford after that performance?
“Canelo, don’t run away from this. You already ran away from the Benavidez fight,” said Tim Bradley on his YouTube channel, talking about his desire for Canelo Alvarez to fight Terence Crawford. “You don’t care what people have to say about you anyway because of the fact that you didn’t fight.
“You walk around Mexico and you obviously don’t care what people think about you so you don’t take that fight. Fight Crawford. It’s the fight everyone wants to see you fight, and it will give Crawford a chance to show you and the world his greatness,” Bradley continued.
“Everybody talks about the weight. ‘Oh, he’s going to knock him out.’ When was the last time Canelo knocked someone out? You can give up on that, ‘He’s going to knock out Crawford.’ Canelo is the same height as Crawford [5’8″]. Canelo started at 147 pounds. He’s not a natural 168 pounds,” Bradley said.
Canelo is much bigger, stronger and more talented than Crawford. Fans saw the 37-year-old Terence narrowly defeat Israil Madrimov in his debut at 154 last August, and rightfully believe the Nebraska native is too small and old to bulk up 14lbs to 168 to challenge Canelo for his unique titles.
Proving Ground
If Crawford was willing to prove himself by moving up to 168 and going through the fence David Benavidez, David Morrell, Artur Beterbiev and Christian Mbilli, the fans wouldn’t mind if this fight happened. But since Crawford doesn’t want to do that, he doesn’t rate the fight against King Canelo. He gets ignored like other poor fighters begging Alvarez to give them the fight they don’t deserve.
To meet the king, you have to do something big. It’s always been like that. Crawford tries to skip that part and just beg for a fight or have others try to pressure Canelo on his behalf.
“We just saw a fighter [Oleksandr Usyk] who was 50 lbs lighter than the other man [Tyson Fury] whom he confronted and beat him up. He beat him with his skill, ability, heart and determination. Usyk is a great fighter. You know who else is great is Crawford,” Bradley said.
The difference is that the 36-year-old Tyson Fury is completely washed up in the clinical sense, always overrated and manufactured, thanks to the careful connection of his promoters.
Canelo is no pushy piece of work and has real talent to go along with his power and size. More importantly, he is a proven PPV draw. Crawford is not a PPV draw and never will be. This fight is just to help Crawford financially and make his fans, like Bradley, happy.
This fight is not helping Canelo. If Bradley really cared, he would put Crawford up to take on the killers in the 154lb division, which includes many he has yet to fight. Bakhram Muratazaliev is waiting for Crawford and if he wants to cement his legacy, he has to fight him.