Fundora is basing his Saturday night expectations on a version of Thurman that feels more like a highlight reel than actual history. By claiming Thurman beat Danny Garcia with ease in 2017, the WBC junior middleweight champion is rewriting a grueling split decision into a dominant masterclass.

“I expect a Thurman that beat Danny Garcia,” Fundora said. “I saw it with ease.”

The problem is that fight wasn’t easy.

Thurman’s 2017 win over Danny Garcia was close, physical, and competitive. It ended in a split decision, with Thurman absorbing sustained pressure late and leaving the ring with an elbow injury that led to a long stretch of inactivity. He didn’t return for nearly two years.

That version of Thurman wasn’t dominant. It was durable and just good enough on the night.

Fundora (23-1-1, 15 KOs) may still be right about the outcome of this fight, but the reference point matters. If he’s expecting a clean, comfortable version of Thurman based on that memory, he’s building his expectation on a fight that was far tighter than he describes.

Thurman’s current situation only adds to the uncertainty. He enters Saturday with limited activity over the past five years and no recent run at junior middleweight. Timing, conditioning, and reaction speed tend to show early under those conditions.

Fundora’s own rise has come through pressure and pace, particularly in his win over Tim Tszyu, where sustained output broke the fight open.

Even a sharp version of Thurman would be forced to deal with that over twelve rounds.

The version Fundora described never really existed in the first place. The version showing up now has even more questions attached.

 

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