A Quote by Kell Brook

I'm more vicious in sparring when I am around 160 pounds or coming down from heavier than that. — © Kell Brook
I'm more vicious in sparring when I am around 160 pounds or coming down from heavier than that.
I walk around at 150-152 pounds to weigh 147 pounds. Other boxers weigh around 160-170 before coming down.
Lightweights are heavier and bigger than me. I walk around 166 pounds, and other lightweights come down from 198, so they are stronger than me.
Most people think I'm from New York or something. I was, like, 70 pounds heavier than what I am, and I didn't get no girls... I was definitely more on the deep fried crab than I was on the baked chicken side.
If I went up there and beat T.J. Dillashaw at 135 pounds, I have no interest whatsoever in staying at 135. People are like, 'Why not?' and I'm like, 'I have no interest in fighting guys who walk around at 160 pounds.'
If I'm two pounds heavier, I'm fat. If I'm skinnier, I'm sick. It's ridiculous. And that's not coming from agents or designers.
The weight of the dead was heavier than the pounds of the body.
Now I am training with sparring partners who are nice people, sure, but not my friends. These are sparring partners who want to knock me out in sparring. In the Croatian media, they said it was 'life and death' sparring - it was not quite life and death, but it was all-out fighting, very hard.
I'd rather be a few pounds heavier and enjoy life than be worried all the time.
The match would have to be made at 165 pounds. Sean can't make 160 any more, even though he's drinking lite beer these days
What I remember most about the 'Road' movies is my enjoyment at watching the two characters sparring with each other. But more important than that was my feeling that Hope and Crosby were enjoying the sparring, too.
I made my living being 20 or 30 pounds heavier than the average model. And that's where I got famous.
I am always in the gym sparring. I look at every fight kind of like a sparring match.
I sound the same regardless if I'm 20 pounds heavier or 20 pounds light, and I think that's the key thing with my fans and why they continue to be loyal because I'm that type of person.
We always train with heavier sparring partners to make it harder so the fight will be easier.
I'm a professional athlete. I've been paid since I was in my early 20s to go out there and fight with guys who were 40 or 50 pounds heavier than I am and fight for my life. I got into a business where people make decisions based on some of the most stupid things.
For me, it's very hard to train too much, just sparring, sparring, sparring. It's boring.
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