Greatest fight in the history of boxing

jaxvid

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USA today had several BIG articles on the Mayweather LaHoya fight and how it may RESCUE boxing. They went on and on about how great a fight this is and how bad the boxing scene is because there are no worthy heavyweights. They neglected to mention the names of any of the champs then went on to say how the public doesn't know their names. I wonder why????

I have no interest in this fight which should be a cakewalk for Mayweather, so the black jock sniffers can rejoice for one weekend. Hey there is still a black boxer worth a damn....everything is right with the world.

I couldn't care less about this fight and I doubt there are many people that do. A high profile UFC match would outdraw this potential snoozefest. I hope it ends like Rocky II with both fighters on the canvas at the end, but in this case I would prefer that neither of them get up.
 
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Mayweather-probably the most talented boxer out there, shame to say. I'll always hope for his failure. Like so many successful black athletes today, he has a truly ungracious soul.

Even though Oscar will almost certainly lose, I will hope that he makes something special happen.
 

Gary

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I hope Oscar wins but I have no real interest in this fight. The greatest fight of all time was most likely Dempsey vs. Firpo. The public don't know who the Heavyweight Champ is or who the top Heavyweights are because they are Eastern European men who drove the blacks out of boxing in the top class. These Russian men are good role models for the youth but the media is so twisted in there thinking that they would rather have some rapist thug as champ then a clean cut well educated White man.
 

white is right

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Gary said:
I hope Oscar wins but I have no real interest in this fight. The greatest fight of all time was most likely Dempsey vs. Firpo. The public don't know who the Heavyweight Champ is or who the top Heavyweights are because they are Eastern European men who drove the blacks out of boxing in the top class. These Russian men are good role models for the youth but the media is so twisted in there thinking that they would rather have some rapist thug as champ then a clean cut well educated White man.
This fight is a great fight for a non heavyweight fight. But the greatest fights are all heavyweight clashes. Johnson vs Jefferies, Louis-Schmeling II, Tunney-Dempsey II, Ali-Frazier I,III and Holmes-Cooney . This fight is more on the lines of Leonard vs Duran I. Big but the world doesn't stop over this fight.....
 

Gary

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There are other great fights that were not heavyweight-such as Zale vs. Graziano 1&2, Mickey Walker vs.Harry Greb,Pep vs. Sandler[all of them] and Archie Moore vs Yvon Durelle[1st fight]. I would like to see some recent heavyweight title fights shown over ESPN instead of the same old fights they show every Saturday.
 

white is right

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Oh yeah if Hoya lands he knocks Mayweather T.F.O. The million dollar question is will he........
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Hockaday

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When Oscar fought a shorter quicker opponant in Sugar Shane Mosely he struggled to connect. And now he's several years older.

Mayweather will be lighting up the arena by flashing his trademark patented smile at the end of twelve rounds.
 

white is right

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Hockaday said:
When Oscar fought a shorter quicker opponant in Sugar Shane Mosely he struggled to connect. And now he's several years older.

Mayweather will be lighting up the arena by flashing his trademark patented smile at the end of twelve rounds.
I have been thinking this over and Mayweather should win. Hoya couldn't land on an old Whitaker, almost ten years ago. How is he going to land on a prime Whitaker type. I guess I can always pray for miracles or hope that glass jaws run in the Mayweather family.....
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JD074

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I'm actually more interested in how the two British prospects, John Murray and John O'Donnell, will do. Edited by: JD074
 

Bart

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Oscar may get a huge Cinco De Mayo emotional lift from His fellow Latinos and pull a victoryout of his sombrero.
 

jaxvid

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or maybe Mayflower will treat him like a pinata and help him to a long siesta!
 

White Shogun

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<center>***SPOILER ALERT ***</font></center>







Floyd wins by split decision. It shouldn't have been a split decision, either. Boxing never changes.

It was a better fight than I expected, but still rather boring, especially compared to MMA. Floyd backed away most of the fight, throwing single, precise punches one or two at a time. De La Hoya managed to get Floyd on the ropes once in a while and throw a barrage of weak punches that mostly bounced off Floyd's arms and shoulders.

I can hardly watch boxing anymore unless a Russian is fighting.
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Edited by: White Shogun
 

White Shogun

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Sark6354201 said:
Check out the poll on SI.com.

Yes, please do! I don't want to spoil the fun for everyone, but you will like it!
 

white is right

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The fight didn't live up to the hype. It seemed like Oscar has no stamina at all anymore. Also they had three blind mice judging this fight....
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dkr77

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Mayweather performed like your typical black boxer. Run, run and run some more while throwing one or two accurate punches that have little to no effect. Dull fight with very few highlights in it. Give me entry level MMA anyday over this track meet tripe
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Kaptain

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The black style of boxing is what has destroyed the sport. Who wants to watch a guy back-pedal, throw jabs, and then hold on for dear life when in punching range? The media tries to blame the current Eastern Euro heavywieght champions, but when I watch their matches they always seem to be exciting and end in a thunderous knockout.
While the media dares not mention the name of any of these white champions, they have orgasims over a boring, back pedaling chump like Mayweather. Personally, I think the guy is extremely over-rated. At the very least, you have to agree that he is extremely boring to watch.
 

White Shogun

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Ok, nobody else has mentioned the SI poll, so I'll spoil you with the results: Over 62% of respondents either a) hated boxing, and b) preferred the UFC over boxing.

Yeah, this fight saved boxing alright!
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Edited by: White Shogun
 
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Send Mayweathers cocky behind to the UFC. I want to see him compete with kicks and grappling, especially with a style that relies on spacing to win in an environment of grappling and kicking.


Why is boxing being replaced by the UFC? Because UFC is a more complete combat sport. Unless UFC meets some demise from Liberals (not likely with it's recent success), it will continue to overshadow boxing.
 

dkr77

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Actually Mayweather made some noise about the UFC fighters not being true athlete's until Dana White offered to match him up with lightweight champ Sean Sherk. Mayweather shut up after White put the offer on the table. Sherk would destroy Mayweather in a matter of second's if they ever fought and I'm sure Mayweather's handler's realize this. If you watch the DLH / Mayweather fight you will see Sherk in the audience.
 

Solomon Kane

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Time to inundate the mainstream boxing sites (Eastside, etc) with posts pointing out what a lame match this was, and how anything with a Klitschko or a Maskaev would be ten times better.
 

white is right

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Well Spiderman III is out so why not Mayweather-Hoya II.......
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LAS VEGAS (AP) - Floyd Mayweather Jr. had been looking forward to Sunday morning for months. He was confident he would wake up that day as an unbeaten, retired champion who could take his four kids out for pizza in peace any time he wished.

Mayweather said he was done with boxing, content to retire at 30 after winning a competitive split decision over Oscar De La Hoya on Saturday night in boxing's biggest fight in years - and likely the most lucrative fight in history, once the receipts are totalled.

Though neither fighter particularly hurt the other in an active, entertaining bout, the win again stamped Mayweather's skills as the best of this decade, and added a 154-pound belt to the burgeoning collection carried into the ring by rapper 50 Cent.

So is the Pretty Boy really ready to dance, feint and dodge into the sunset? Hardly.

In fact, Mayweather only waited a few minutes after beating De La Hoya to start hedging on his plans for a lifetime of money-counting and kiddie pizza parties.



''That's up to Leonard and Al right now,'' Mayweather said, referring to his top advisers. ''As of right now, I'm sticking to my word, but I'm going to go home and talk with my team.''

Wondering why Mayweather might return to the ring after saying he had nothing left to prove in the sport? Take a look at the slogan on the back of the T-shirts for his recording label, Philthy Rich Records: ''If you don't like money, you don't like us.''

Absolutely nobody believes Mayweather will retire - not with so much cash to be made from a rematch with De La Hoya, or any other matchup that could come his way in the next few months. Every fighter in three weight classes would love a shot at him, though it's too soon to predict who might catch his attention.

And once the 34-year-old De La Hoya's bruised pride heals from his failed attempt to knock off the unofficial pound-for-pound king, his business partners believe he'll want to get back in the ring as well, despite losing three of his last five fights and not beating anybody of real consequence since 2002.

Though he already has hinted at his desire for a rematch with Felix Trinidad - the first fighter to beat De La Hoya in a controversial bout - a rematch with Mayweather would loom large to the proud fighter, even though the second go-round could never match the drama or attention of the first.

''I'm going to be very smart about the situation,'' De La Hoya said. ''I will go home and watch the fight and see how my movements were, how my body reacted, and analyze the situation. I'll wait and see. I'll analyze the whole thing and think about it.''

Boxing purists will dispute the necessity of a rematch, since Mayweather's athletic defence was more than De La Hoya could handle. After De La Hoya took a few early rounds with aggressive stalking, the fight settled into the pattern of almost every Mayweather bout for a decade - an opponent desperately trying to punch a fighter who has never really been pummelled.

Mayweather never betrayed a hint of nervousness, grinning around his mouthpiece after almost every flurry by De La Hoya. Though one judge narrowly gave the fight to De La Hoya, nearly everyone at ringside thought Mayweather's 12 rounds of steady excellence were better than De La Hoya's flashes of power.

''I thought it was going to be by a bigger margin than they had it,'' Mayweather said. ''All the shots he was throwing, I was blocking them.''

De La Hoya didn't argue with the slim margin of defeat, either.

''You just have to respect the judges at this point,'' De La Hoya said. ''I don't feel like a loser, because I came to do what I had to do. Now, as a champion, he has a big responsibility to work harder and maintain that title.''

Both fighters can spend the next few weeks deciding what to do with their eight-figure paycheques - though it's a pretty good guess De La Hoya's money will go into the bank, and much of Mayweather's cash will go straight into his pockets in rolls of US$100 bills.

But before too long, fight fans should find out just how boring the business world can be to lifelong competitors.

''He's a good guy, I'm a good guy, and we give the sport our all,'' Mayweather said. ''I believe Golden Boy Promotions and Mayweather Promotions are going to meet again.''
 
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