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“You just got to be a dog in there. You’ve got to hang with him, find a way, and try to combat the skill,” Hearn said to DAZN Boxing. “You’ve got to try and trade with him, beat him up on the inside. You’ve just got to not give in and find a way to break him.”

That plan carries through the rest of Hearn’s description. He points to a fight that may not turn until the later rounds, where persistence is more important than early success, and where physical wear could change the terms. It’s a version of the fight where Williams absorbs as much as he gives, stays close, and keeps working until something gives.

“It might come in the 9th, the 10th, the 11th, but you’ve got to keep going and find a way,” Hearn said. “That’s the kind of fight this is going to be.”

The most telling line came when Hearn addressed the alternative. “I don’t think Ammo is going to go in there and outbox Carlos Adames,” he said.

That admission sets the boundaries for everything else. Williams isn’t being presented as the sharper or more complete fighter. The route being outlined is narrower. Close the distance, trade, and try to break Adames over time.

Hearn still pointed to what the moment represents if it comes off. “If Ammo can become a middleweight world champion, he changes his life forever. The opportunity sits right in front of him on Saturday,” he said.

The opportunity is real, but the path being described is difficult. When a fighter’s best route is to grind through rounds and “find a way,” it usually means the cleaner fight belongs to the champion.

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