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Racism - making the race of other people a factor in attitudes or actions concerning them. It implies a belief in the superiority of one's own race.

Tungod, Inabanga, Bohol– There’s no stopping Mayweather’s mouth. It fears no criticism… disregards the consequences… and knows no boundaries. But will the owner of that enormously notorious mouth be man enough to put his money where his mouth is? That is, of course, the prevailing question that only the ultimate boxing villain can answer.

About a day or two after his racist-flavored verbal jabs against pound-for-pound king Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao, Mayweather expressed his apology, which is apparently more intended to save his endorsement deals that might have gone awry as a result of those racist rants rather than his being really sorry about it. But the public knows better than believe yet another one of those Mayweather publicity stunts. That huge mouth is certainly a clear indication of his vast hunger for attention… and the people know it.

Truth be told that racism isn’t that much of an issue in the Philippines than it is in the US and some other parts of the globe. Pacquiao, in a recent interview, even just laughed off Mayweather’s out-of-this-world rants, saying that he doesn’t need to comment on anything that Mayweather says because Margarito is the one he’ll be facing off with come November. The very unassuming Pinoy boxing great then added that a boxer can be great, popular, and successful without putting other people down. He also said that he wants to be a good example for other aspiring boxers so that people will erase negative impressions about the sport. After all, it is, according to Pacquiao, a sport for gallant and honorable men.

Pacquiao, notwithstanding all his legendary achievements, remains magnificent, magnanimous, and gracious of the praises and accolades he so deserves. On the other hand, the more Mayweather talks, the more he makes himself unworthy of being the face of the sport. He is an attention whore and a disgrace not just to this sport, but also to his ancestors who fought and died for the rights and freedom that he now abuses.

But what if Mayweather finally agrees to trade mitts with the guy that, most of us believe, makes him piss his pants off? Will it make a difference? Will all his audacity become a little bit more acceptable? That, of course, still hangs in the balance, as Mayweather is showing all indications that he wants no part of Pacquiao. Is he afraid to get beaten up by the guy he considers a midget? Or does he know deep down inside that the only means and avenue to beat Pacquiao is outside the four corners of the squared circle? You be the judge!


Source: http://www.bukisa.com


In the second round, welterweight Floyd Mayweather began cheering for super featherweight Manny Pacquiao. The Erik Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the second round, welterweight Floyd Mayweather began cheering for super featherweight Manny Pacquiao. The Erik Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the second round, welterweight Floyd Mayweather began cheering for super featherweight Manny Pacquiao. The Erik Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the second round, welterweight Floyd Mayweather began cheering for super featherweight Manny Pacquiao. The Erik Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the seventh round, Mayweather implored Pacquiao to press the action against Erik Morales. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the ninth round, Mayweather implored Pacquiao to attack the visibly weakened Erik Morales. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the ninth round, Mayweather implored Pacquiao to attack the visibly weakened Erik Morales. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather implored Pacquiao to finish off Erik Morales. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather implored Pacquiao to finish off Erik Morales. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering after Morales' knockdown. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering after Morales' knockdown. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather motions Pacquiao to finish off the Mexican. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering during Pacquiao's victory. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering during Pacquiao's victory. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering during Pacquiao's victory. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



In the tenth round, Mayweather is seen cheering during Pacquiao's victory. The Morales rematch was held on January 21, 2006 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.



Source: http://www.examiner.com

Former three division champion, Shane Mosley, is still looking to secure a few more career-defining fights at age 39. Mosley (46-6, 39 KOs) returns on September 18 against former junior middleweight champion Sergio Mora (22-1-1, 6 KOs) at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

In May, Mosley was dominated for the better part of his twelve round contest with Floyd Mayweather Jr. Looking back at the fight, Mosley attributes the poor performance to several factors, which include inactivity, bad strategy and an issue with his neck.

"I think that part of it was a little bit of bad strategy. Part of it was that my neck was tightening up. My neck tightening up, I couldn't throw punches the way I wanted to. But it wasn't age. You know. I hit him the hardest that anybody has ever hit him in his entire life. I had him hurt like nobody has," Mosley said.

"What it comes down to is that it was just a case of an off night. It was an off night. My last fight was the Antonio Margarito fight, and there was some time off away from the ring between that fight and the Floyd Mayweather fight. I mean, I didn't fight for over a year."

If Mosley defeats Mora, he has a potential fights on his wish list - and that includes a clash with the winner of November's battle between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito, and a rematch with Mayweather.

"Well, there are four or five more fights out there that I want. Manny Pacquiao, Antonio Margarito, Miguel Cotto. And of course Floyd Mayweather has a win over me, and I want to avenge that," Mosley said.


Source: http://www.boxingscene.com

Exactly when Floyd Mayweather plans on returning to the ring remains a mystery, however, if you’re one of the 703,267 fans that follow him on Twitter, you might have the inside track on where his next fight will take place. During an obvious lull in his rather hectic schedule, Mayweather decided to answer a select series of questions that fans Tweeted to him throughout the day. When one particular follower asked, “when u next in london,” Mayweather took the opporturnity to respond, “Sooner than you think. I’ll keep you posted.”

Given the manner in which Mayweather likes to floss his money as he travels around the world, that could mean anything, so again, another fan would ask, “When are you gonna come do your thing in england?” Mayweather’s response, “Real soon.” Now, obviously we have no idea if he’s dropping a hint about his next fight or simply planning his next vacation, but one has to wonder, if he truly plans on fighting Pacquiao, will he risk stepping into the ring with him next, or will he opt to take a tune-up after another long layoff. If the latter is true, the question is who could he possibly face?

While many have speculated that a bout with WBC welterweight champion Andre Berto might be his next best option, Mayweather’s latest Twitter update would have you believe that a showdown between the two undefeated fighters is highly unlikely considering that he just wished him a “Huge Happy” birthday. In boxing, two friends fighting each other is rare, and considering that Berto has never shown a real interest in testing his skills against elite competition, it’s doubtful that he’ll start with Mayweather. Bouts with Paul Williams and Sergio Martinez are highly unlikely as well, as the risk far outweighs the reward for Mayweather.

What is likely, however, is that Mayweather will indeed want to shake off the rust before stepping into the ring against his toughest competition to date. Given that he doesn’t have any real credible opponents to help put butts in seats in Las Vegas, there’s a strong possibility that Mayweather will take his show on the road. After all, this isn’t the first time that rumors of a world tour have circulated. Around this same time last year, shortly after the victory over Juan Manuel Marquez, Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer suggested that Mayweather could go on a world tour showcasing his boxing skills. “I mean, he has such a global star, has such a truly global reach. I was with him in England. The guy could do a world tour. The guy could do a world tour, do two, three, four fights overseas like Ali used to do. Nobody has done that,” Schaefer stated in an interview.

In fact, at one point, Mayweather himself was seriously considering a bout in England as an option. “My ultimate goal is to fight in the UK eventually. That’s always been one of my dreams to come over to the UK to display my skills and display my talent for the fans all around the world, but especially for the fans in the UK,” Mayweather stated during a Sky Sports interview in November of 2009. When asked about the possibility of going on a world tour and fighting in different countries, Mayweather continued, “I’m talking with my team about that. That’s in the future, absolutely.”

So here we are, roughly a year later, and again Mayweather is bringing up the UK. Granted, he never said he would actually be fighting in England, so hopefully, Mayweather is simply referring to his next shopping spree as opposed to his next bout. However, if he does plan on fighting Pacquiao in 2011, it’s doubtful that he’ll want to do it without first shaking off some rust. Should he indeed be eyeing a tune-up in England, don’t be surprised if it’s Matthew Hatton standing in the ring across from him. After all, Hatton was just crowned the European Welterweight Champion, so it’s perfectly understandable that Mayweather would first like to test the waters against Europe’s best welterweight before building up the nerve to face the best welterweight in the world.


Source: http://boxing.fighthype.com

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is a pretty foolish person. His recent racist and homophobic rant is indefensible and should not be forgiven or forgotten after the half-hearted apology he issued a few days ago. If Manny Pacquiao chooses to use it as extra motivation when these two (hopefully) come to blows one day, more power to him. Mayweather fully and entirely deserves the flack he is getting from the National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA) who condemned him for his hateful speech.

However, surfing the web, particularly on Pacquiao-devoted sites like “Pacland,” one can’t help but notice the hypocrisy involved in this situation. How strangely, some of the same fans and commenters who have referred to Mayweather as “Gayweather” for his refusal to fight their icon are now angry at his homophobic rant. How the same fools who have repeatedly called him a “monkey” and made other racially stereotypical remarks regarding Mayweather’s African American heritage, are saying his taunts about Pacquiao’s culture are unforgiveable.

Again, these fans are right about this particular case. Everyone currently condemning Mayweather for his illogical, stupid and poorly-thought out rant are entirely correct. The problem, though, is that too many fans are failing to see that they fall into the same hateful and disgusting trap that Mayweather fell into. They take a boxer that they dislike, and rather than focus on the only thing that matters (boxing skill) turn it into an issue of how manly, tough or hardcore he is.

Then, when derogatory racial statements are brought into the equation by one side, they’re quickly responded to by equally derogatory sentiments from the other side. In the end all you have is a bunch of senseless, moronic insults that only serve to make the people hurling them out appear ignorant and childish.

Case in point, here is a post from one of the articles that discussed Mayweather’s racist rant:

“too long people like floyd, for whatever reason, have lived under the assumption that because of what happened to their ancestors they've the right to do and say anything they want about other races sans repercussions. it's an astonishing trend in america and downright disgusting how african americans get the green light to demean other races yet hell to pay when ire is directed in their direction. that's why you see idiots trying to defend his astonishingly indefensible behavior.”

It’s absolutely amazing to watch the stereotypical, ignorant thoughts of a particular man be taken in, and then reversed by the general public into equally stereotypical, ignorant thoughts flung in the other direction. Not that the above poster is alone. There are thousands more just like him all over the web.

Generally, it’s not a good idea to lump a group of fans together and paint the whole batch with the same brush. Fans come in all shapes and sizes. In all genders, weigh classes and dialects. If you try to pigeon hole everyone you run the risk of being wrong about a lot of people.

That theory doesn’t apply with Pacquiao fans. This loyal to a fault group will defend their idol to no end regardless of the situation. They travel in droves on the internet, and have shown a tendency to defend their star regardless of what racial, cultural or generally accepted decency lines they may cross.

With that in mind, it’s fascinating that this group has decided to stand up and speak on the subject of the right and wrong associated with Mayweather’s rant. It’s amazing that this is the group that has decided to stand up for proper decorum as it applies to racial hate speech.

Again, no one is defending Mayweather. His actions were wrong, and he will suffer the consequences amongst his fans and detractors. That said, though, let’s call a spade a spade. A lot of the people currently outraged about Mayweather’s hateful speech never liked him anyway. A lot of the people angry about the stereotypical and homophobic slurs he slung at Pacquiao, have used similar language in the past. In fact, a lot have probably used it to describe Mayweather himself.

It's just sad that these same people won't look in the mirror before passing their judgement.

Not that anyone should be surprised by this. Hypocrisy and blind devotion amongst Pacquiao fans is nothing new.


Source: http://www.opposingviews.com

Floyd Mayweather has been hitting the headlines for all the wrong reasons lately, and more than anything else he could do with a distraction to turn talk away from his indiscretions and towards his boxing ability, which he seems to often forget is the reason he is where he is today.

To some, no matter what Mayweather does now he will never be liked or respected, either because of what he said recently or his general attitude and persona over the last few years. But then the opposite is also true, he will always have his supporters no matter how many he offends or what kind of nonsense he comes out with. Similarly he will always sell a lot of pay per views purely because of the fact that he knows better than any other fighter in the sport today how to create a lot of hype for his fights.

Right now though, the only reason people are talking about him is because of his two ill conceived internet appearances, and while he seems to have escaped any repercussions for the time being, his sponsors at least are probably eager for him to give people something other than racist remarks to talk about.

So how does he climb out of this pit he has dug himself into?

By doing what he does best, the one thing that people still stand by him for and the only reason anyone pays him any attention. He needs to announce his next fight.

A new opponent might not necessarily completely repair his public image, but it would go a long way towards making people forget about his recent idiotic statements, particularly if he consciously went about promoting his next fight without saying anything too offensive or derogatory.

By the sounds of things, he doesn't currently have any plans in the pipeline, and his talk of fighting in Dubai a few weeks ago now seems to have petered out. But even if he still wants to fight Pacquiao some time next year as he claims, there is still plenty of time for him to take another fight between now and then.

Not that he deserves to be able to say whatever he likes without any kind of consequences, like it or not as a top athlete Mayweather needs to acknowledge the fact that he is a role model and should act accordingly.

But with an upcoming fight to put his focus and energy into both Mayweather and the fans get what they want. Floyd should be busy enough not to be tempted into saying anything too damaging to himself or offensive to others, and he still gets the attention he seems to crave.

The fans would have the chance to either tune in or voice their disgust over his remarks by boycotting the whole event. If the pay per view buy rates were to drop perhaps even gaining the attention of his sponsors, who seem to be ignoring the whole thing and hoping it will go away.

Sam Taylor, Pittsburgh: "Floyd needs to fight Williams or Martinez if he wants to keep calling himself the best there is, not even mentioning Pacquiao who he has the perfect style to beat anyway"

Dean Benton, Philly: "Floyd was obviously worried his sponsors would drop him hence the apology, I hope his next fight is soon and that he sells less than Pac and Margo"



Source: http://www.examiner.com

Just a few days after both the Mayweather rant and following apology, I think the boxing media and general public are done with it.

I think it's over. Mayweather might have just run out of charisma. Friends might publicly come to his rescue, but, for the most part people have gotten on with their lives without too much trouble.

He has had a good run no doubt. He might still land the big fight against Manny Pacquiao, but he's not holding all the cards. He might not even be through self-destructing yet.

He might even have to face his own rock bottom before he can re-invent himself. He might be a male Lindsay Lohan, if you will. He might have to 12-step his way out of this mess and still many wouldn't care. Because they have lost interest and are holding on tight to their wallets these days.

Those that really don't like Mayweather can say with a straight face that they were paying pay per view dollars to see golden Oscar De La Hoya and Mayweather was just the opponent. That would actually explain a lot of things. In fact, that is the way I remember it anyway.

But we have to admit Mayweather could fight more than a little. He had to go deep into the Ricky Hatton fight while Manny Pacquiao got Hatton out quickly and dramatically. But otherwise he has a pretty solid body of boxing work, except, that wicked tongue of his.

As columnist Lyle Fitzsimmons put eloquently, Floyd should take some time to work on his shtick "because if the Pacquiao fight happens we will want his A game."


Source: http://www.examiner.com

Reports are surfacing that Manny Pacquiao’s first leg of training camp will take place in Metro Manila in the Philippines. Trainer Freddie Roach had reportedly favored Baguio City, where Team Pacquiao prepared leading up to last November’s Miguel Cotto clash, but Pacquiao wants to be in a location where he can balance his duties as a newly elected congressman. The team breaks for camp on the 20th.

Also in the news, Las Vegas is finally starting to get a little bit of buzz with three fight cards near the city within a six day span, Devon Alexander vs. Timothy Bradley seems to be getting closer to being finalized, and WBA heavyweight champion David Haye vs. Audley Harrison looks to be a go for November 13th in Manchester, United Kingdom.

For a detailed, picture by picture look at the latest news please continue on to the slideshow for more on Pacquiao, Haye, Yuriorkis Gamboa, Anthony Peterson, Antonio Margarito, Juan Manuel Marquez, Timothy Bradley and others..



(Photos: Pacquiao-Chris Farina-Top Rank...David Haye-Tom Hogan/Hoganphotos...Jhonny Gonzalez-AP)



It looks at though Team Pacquiao will be heading to Metro Manila in the Philippines for the first leg of their training camp for the champion's November 13th fight with Antonio Margarito (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Trainer Freddie Roach had reportedly preferred to train in Baguio City, the same location the team trained at for Pacquiao's November 2009 TKO over Miguel Cotto (AP Photo)



Roach says that Baguio City has far less distractions and the results were obvious as Pacquiao was impressive in halting Cotto in the twelfth round in Las Vegas (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



As for Pacquiao's upcoming opponent Margarito, the Tijuana brawler will be heading to Las Vegas for this weekend's Yuriorkis Gamboa-Orlando Salido clash at the Palms Casino (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Juan Manuel Marquez recently went on the record in stating that he believes that Pacquiao will emerge victorious against Margarito. Marquez believes Margarito's best chance is to use his superior height and range while staying busy with combination punching (Photo: Chris Cozzone)



The September 11th card will feature yet another Nevada showcase from Gamboa, who is no stranger to fighting in the area. His bout with Salido could be a springboard to a huge 2011 bout with Juan Manuel Lopez (Photo: Chris Cozzone-Top Rank)



Also on the September 11th card will be a WBA lightweight eliminator between Brandon Rios, pictured above, and Anthony Peterson (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Peterson was in Las Vegas in April for his brother Lamont's fight with Damian Fuller. Peterson had been angling for a shot at Humberto Soto but will settle for Rios instead (Photo: Chris Robinson)



Erik Morales also returns this weekend as he faces off with Willie Limond in a welterweight clash (Photo: HBO)



Looks like a November 13th bout between WBA champion David Haye and Audley Harrison is a go for Manchester in the United Kingdom. Haye is coming off of an April stoppage over John Ruiz but has suffered criticism for not facing one of the Klitschko brothers (Photo: Tom Hogan-Hoganphotos)



Who knows what Harrison has left at age 38 and his career never lived up to the potential many had for him (Photo; AFP-Getty Images)



Trainer Kevin Cunningham recently revealed that his charge Devon Alexander has told promoter Don King he has accpeted terms to a January 29th bout with Timothy Bradley (AP Photo)



Bradley is coming off a July victory over Carlos Abregu and later called out Pacquiao but an Alexander clash is huge in its own right (Photo: BoxingScene.com)



Former bantamweight champion Jhonny Gonzalez returns to the ring on September 15th at the Hilton in Las Vegas. Gonzalez will be squaring off with South Australia's Jackson Asiku (Photo: AFP-Getty Images)



On September 17th welterweight contender Freddy Hernandez faces off with former champion Mike Anchondo in Primm, Nevada. Hernandez has scored recent victories over Damian Frias and DeMarcus Corley (Photo: Tom Casino-Showtime)



Source: http://www.examiner.com

Just what boxing needs? Hardly. Floyd Mayweather's rant is more like another nail in the sport's coffin.

"He's a bum."

Time was when this simple insult was sufficient to every circumstance, from the waning days of a tight election to the promotion of an upcoming fight. Spoken by an angry mother-in-law, a squarejohn DA or some lunchdrunk publicist, and directed at a featherweight or a stool pigeon or a philandering husband, "He's a bum!" was an all-purpose indictment of a man's moral, physical and hereditary fitness; of his low prospects and dire history; of his ruined hopes and rotten hygiene; of his bad marriages and broken promises; of his prodigal sons and beatnik-dating daughters. A global blow to ego, it was the sum of all failures in only three syllables. "He's a bum" telegraphed a fortune's worth of insults in all tenses, past, present and future, and condemned a man complete.

Post-racial, post-colonial, colorblind, classless, irreligious, apolitical, "He's a bum" has the genius of brevity, and the virtue of being easily understood by everyone everywhere, of being verbally nonlethal and, in mankind's fallen state, of being universally true.

A bum. The echt expression of the ur insult can be found here in its pure, Platonic form.

But in this pretentious century, with all of us wallowing in excess, including our excess of time, vanity, technology and self-pity, simple insult has faded out of fashion. In the same way our ever-bigger houses suggested our ever-smaller souls until the housing market bustout, the more we speak the less we say.

As Floyd Mayweather's baroque soliloquy last week reminded us.

Floyd Mayweather is a prizefighter. A much-decorated champion in several of the ittier-bittier light-, feather- and welterweight classes, he was monologuing online to call out teensy-weensy Manny Pacquiao, his elusive, erstwhile, or perhaps next or maybe never opponent. For this reason or that reason -- every reason being nonsense in the long tradition of boxing nonsense -- Manny and "Money" and their people haven't been able to "put together" the Big Fight. This being the "once-in-a-lifetime" bout that promises to "save boxing." It won't, of course. Only a great heavyweight champion can save boxing now. Well, maybe several great heavyweights. Several great heavyweights with access to a time machine could save boxing. Only several great heavyweight champions with access to a time machine and a vast unicorn army can return boxing to its glorious past.

In the meantime, Mayweather versus Pacquiao -- when or if -- is spoken of as a very big deal among the shills and touts in the velveteen sportsbooks out on the Strip or at the Lindy's up on 33rd Street. Especially at a time when boxing is bleeding fan base to mixed martial arts. MMA is fantastically popular with people who don't know any better because let's face it, who wouldn't tune in to see a guy James Toney's size and shape last nearly four minutes in the ring before the folks from Greenpeace push him back into the sea? Good thing he was wearing that MedicAlert bracelet.

Help! I've fallen and Randy Couture won't let me up!

Was the boxing kangaroo already booked?

Anyway. Floyd went all stream-of-consciousness and blue and viral the other night. Himself the size of a wedding cake topper, Floyd called Pacquiao out for being small enough to wear as a boutonniere, and further asserted that Pacquiao is chicken, or can cook chicken or could maybe just bring some chicken to the table. Floyd did not just use the F-word. He used all the F-words.

The unedited thing -- with me and the smiling ghost of Mr. Walt Disney himself issuing you this special, personal, all-caps warning w/exclamation point WARNING! for fantastically immature "mature content," and for bad language and bad faith and poor grammar and brainless Not-Safe-For-Work-Or-Play racism and miserable homophobia and smug condescension and irredeemable self-regard -- well, I still can't link directly to it even with all of those disclaimers. I'm confident you'll find it.

And let me just say that if that's what it takes to save boxing, let it die. In fact, grab that pillow and help me smother it on its deathbed.


Manny Pacquiao so far has taken the high road. He hasn't fired back.

Sort of.

The abridged version of which is here. Legend has it that the full-length, art house director's cut of Mayweather's "apology" runs more than half an hour. If so, it is the "Berlin Alexanderplatz" of apologies.

Weirder still, it's not really even an apology.

It's a soft, scented blanket of universal affirmation. A warm cardigan of responsibility not taken. A floral non-denial denial that might or might not explain or excuse or perfume anything Mr. Mayweather has ever said or done to anyone anywhere in regard to anything or anybody else -- be they Hindu or Inuit or Man in the Moon or short of stature or bird in the sky or creature of the deep or rider on this roller coaster we call Life, etc., and so forth, it's all good, all about The Love, World Without End, amen and aaah-choo! It's the Internet Escape Clause, the rambling, inch-deep, mile-wide "I'm sorry you were offended," rather than "I'm sorry for what I said because what I said is indefensibly evil and wrong;" a content-free greeting card pouring saccharine into the lap of whomever makes the mistake of opening it.

So this isn't a sports feud at all. Nor is it even a successful promotion for that Mayweather/Pacquiao fight "everyone" wants to see. It's just another vanity project gone wrong, another midnight video someone shouldn't have posted, another example of empty self-expression gone wrong in the age of empty self-expression.

Floyd Mayweather manages to make of himself just another radio talk show host or politician with nothing to say and a million ways to say it trying to walk back a gaffe after the gaffe has done its work.


Was that an apology over the weekend? Didn't sound, feel or smell like one.

Which is about half heartbreaking. In the same way that the cheesecake at Lindy's lost all its flavor somewhere on the journey into the 21st century, boxing lost the courage of even its lousiest, most cynical convictions.

The first rule of a real feud? Never apologize, never explain. Rush Limbaugh and Rahm Emanuel both know this.

So which was real? The angry rant? Or the generic walkback? Thursday's diatribe from Mayday Mayweather of the Late Night Rave? Or the Friday syrup Reverend Mayweather ladled over it to make the worst of it go away?

Boxing as hateful and insincere as American politics? Even the phony bombast is inauthentic in this disappointing century.

Next time just say, "He's a bum."

Politician or prizefighter.

He's a bum.


Source: http://sports.espn.go.com

Floyd Mayweather, Jr. boasts a record of forty-one wins with no loss nor draw, inclusive of 60.98% knockouts. Quite impressive!

But, do not expect knockout win(s) anymore to add his record.

Mayweather, Jr. must have convinced himself to follow the path of Willie Pep, the featherweight champion from 1942 to 1948 and from 1949 to 1950. Pep was a graceful, dancing fighter who kept his opponents off balance and threw only enough punches to win. He scored 165 victories by decision in 242 career contests. In the same manner as Maxie Rosenbloom, the light heavyweight champion from 1930 to 1934, won 186 of his 299 career bouts on the scorers' cards. But unlike Rosenbloom and Pep, Mayweather, Jr. is not a weak puncher but not a strong one either. He is simply a consummate defensive fighter just like the two.

One thing for sure, what Mayweather, Jr. wants to avoid is to displease the odds-makers: another likely biggest upset in boxing history. One may remember, the biggest upset occurred when Buster Douglas scored a tenth-round knockout against previously undefeated champion Mike Tyson in February 1990. Record shows Douglas was 50-1 underdog at the time. To this history, Mayweather, Jr. knows well of several surprises in boxing. It starts from the record of his father. Yes, he knows well how his father, Floyd Mayweather, Sr., felt when the latter tasted the first defeat and knockout loss in the hands of Tyrone Phelps in 1975 in Baltimore, Maryland, and then came another devastating TKO in the hands of Sugar Ray Leonard in the tenth round. Before the stoppage, Mayweather, Sr. was down twice in the eighth round.

Yes, Mayweather, Jr. knows not as a first eye-witness of these two events but through the eyes of the aging fighter from Bronx, New York. The narrative fear emanates from them seeing the fast hands and power of Manny Pacquiao which are reminiscent of Leonard's of the golden days in boxing just before the latter was defeated by unanimous decision to Terry Norris in 1991 and a brutal knockout by Hector Camacho in the fifth after six years of no bout(s) on record.

Mayweather, Jr. may have internalized all these facts into his bones.

Sure, it's no wonder how Mayweather, Jr. badly needed to establish a strong hold with Don King nowadays. And Don King must have whispered to Mayweather, Jr.'s ear and to his father something magnificent about life in
boxing. The veteran of old has better wisdom. And they say 'Floyd Mayweather, Sr. and his junior are both nervous thinking about a potential Pacquiao bout. Just think about this: In February 1997, Oliver McCall under Don King's promotion was disqualified for "reluctance" in the fifth round of a fight against Lennox Lewis. As noted, McCall had apparently nervous breakdown in the ring, crying openly and refusing to fight.

One would wonder: Is Floyd Mayweather, Jr. experiencing the same consciousness as that of McCall? Hm...one may suspect: a distinction of cowardice!

What a strange twist by the Mayweather camp to lament Manny Pacquiao of potential steroid use! And now they turn their backs from what they stood for. This writer has previously intimated his potential win via unanimous decision over Pacquiao if ever they fight in the ring of madness. It's just Mayweather, Jr. will always be a consummate defensive fighter and his best defense is to avoid fighting Pacquiao, at least in the sphere of his fear of getting knockout!

The father-son combination is one of distinction: must be enshrined in the Boxing Hall of Shame!


Source: http://www.associatedcontent.com

Flashing cash, as usual, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and pals at the Big Boy Mansion in Las Vegas (Photo: Floyd Mayweather Twitter Page)

This minister in Gainesville, this character who is leading a public burning of the Koran on Sept. 11, what kind of a clergyman is he exactly?

I'd say he is a minister of hate and stands for everything that real Christians, real Muslims and real Jews stand against.

But, while this man fans the flames of racial and religious intolerance, he is no better than radical followers of Islam who respond to such insidious and inflammatory provocation with violence directed at American soldiers or just plain citizens.

No less an expert than Gen. David Petraeus has warned that the Florida Koran bonfire will exacerbate the tensions in military hot spots and put our fighting men and women in greater jeopardy than they normally are.

Violent conduct begets violent conduct. That eye for an eye thing only leads to the old saying that, in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.

Which brings me to Floyd Mayweather, who may not have truly been mean-spirited and ignorant but surely came across that way.

His bad!

Some people have gone over the top in reaction to Mayweather's Ustream rants.

Old friend Mark Whicker, Orange County Register columnist who is nationally syndicated, wrote that Mayweather should retire from boxing.

That won't happen and it should not happen. Mayweather's apology was weaker than week old coffee but he did apologize.

Call it strike one and let's see if Mayweather repeats such abhorrent commentary.

Others have yawned and said, hey, man up, this is boxing. Mayweather's comments were just trash talking, one boxer to another.

If that was true, we wouldn't still be discussing his ignorance, would we?

Mike Tyson said he would gobble up Lennox Lewis' children. But this threat of cannibalism was not a big deal since, at that point, Lewis had no children and Tyson was just trying to entice him into a fight.

Tyson did not call Lewis “a slimy Limey,” mock his Jamaican heritage or malign his Canadian background either.

Similarly, when Tyson said he would make Razor Ruddock his “girlfriend,” it was a personal attack uttered in the buildup to a fight. Tyson said it at a press conference and said it directly to Ruddock's face.

I know the difference between boxing trash talk and toxic garbage and so do you.

Bernard Hopkins spitting on and stomping on the Puerto Rican flag also occurred at a press conference and, while inflammatory and insipid, the show of disrespect was done in Felix Trinidad's presence.

Ruddock and Trindiad were able to fire back but Mayweather's Ustream attack was not designed to hype ticket or PPV sales.

Which brings me to the below the sewer line reverse racism and ethnic mudslinging in which the Lunatic Fringe of Pacland (not the site, I mean Pacquiao fans) are using the N word, referring to monkeys and apes and even citing the Ku Klux Klan.

This reaction is even worse than what Mayweather did. Unfortuantely, I cannot spend 12 hours each day deleting such spews from my comments section but I completely disavow it all.

Here now is an email sent to me by a Mayweather fan and a follow up communication between us.

Rodney King asked the proper question.

Can't we all just get along?

THE MAYWEATHER FAN: “All you ever write about is Mayweather. Must be the only way you can get readers lol.

Look since you are so concerned about racist comments, how about you talk to your readers who leave nasty racist comments About black people on this site all the time.

Even before Mayweathers ustream comments there were people on your site saying racist shite.”

Just saying peace.

Here's my initial response:

“U r right racism is foul. I spent hours this am deleting many of the hateful ones I will shortly write about this as I have before I will never condone that crap and I implore examiner to block it all.

As far as being a moron I am a law school grad so u may be right on that.”

Then a response from this female Floyd fan:

“Thanks for your response. The moron thing was a bit much and I am sorry.

All this does is bring the worst out of people and I just wish we could get past it.

Most of the comments I read are very hurtful on this site.

Glad to know that you are aware of this.”

As the Mayweather fan said, peace out.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)


Source: http://www.examiner.com

Manny Pacquiao – Antonio Margarito: The Dallas Showdown

It’s official that the two will collide at the Dallas stadium in Texas on November 13th for the vacant WBC Light Middleweight Title. Manny Pacquiao has been subjected to a lot of criticism for taking this fight and rightfully so, and there have also been those that choose to support this fight. Typically the most popular fighter in the sport is the face of the sport and Pacquiao is very popular. He has taken pride in his humble reputation and has not objected when his masses of fans have said that he does the right things for the right reasons. His reputation is losing its luster quickly.

Pacquiao has stated that he believes that Margarito cheated and that he is only a fighter and does not get involved in the business side of it. Put on your boots, it’s getting deep in here. If anyone is holding all of the cards, it’s Manny Pacquiao. He could easily object to this fight and pick another opponent that hasn’t attempted to kill his opposition by loading his gloves, but he didn’t. He had money waved in front of his face and jumped at it and that is what this fight is about.

Bob Arum is re-inventing Antonio Margarito and, believe it or not, the loaded gloves are going to help him do this. It’s going to help Arum’s bankbook as he sells this criminal, and it’s disgusting that the Texas commission is allowing it to take place, but if the money is right they would permit anything.

Boxing had the opportunity to send the message that we will not allow the crooks to run rampant and have their way no matter what the situation may be. Boxing cannot be bought. Boxing didn’t say that. Boxing said that we will allow people to go into the ring with a sledgehammer as long as the money is right. I expect nothing from Arum, Jones, or Margarito, but Pacquiao was the last line of defense against this scam. He has stuck his hands into the scum to take as many dollars as he could. It’s disappointing, but remember that boxers are like celebrities, molded and guided to make them the most profitable. What you see isn’t what you always get. Pacquiao has shown his true colors by taking this fight.

It’s amazing to me that PacNuts and groupie/fan boy journalists still support this fight despite all of the dirt that comes with it. Some of these wannabe journalists remind me of a plus sized Chris Crocker, screaming: “Leave Manny Pacquiao alone!” Objectivity is out the window here people. Boxing is a community and if we ban together, we can clean it up. Spend the 60 bucks you would on this fight on something else. Watch the inevitable replay on HBO the following week.

David Haye – Audley Harrison Official


As first reported by RSR, WBA Heavyweight Champion, David “Hayemaker” Haye gives the unworthy challenger, Audley Harrison a shot at the title on November 13th. Harrison is ranked #13 in the WBA, but he has had a very disappointing career. At one time, Lennox Lewis named him as the potential future of the heavyweight division, but he never seemed to have the desire, and now he goes into a title shot with one of the best fighters in boxing.

Harrison has lost to Danny Williams, Michael Sprott, Martin Rogan, and Dominick Guinn. He’s put together four straight victories but the competition has not been sparkling. He’s 38 years old and doesn’t seem to be much of a challenge to Haye. I guess every champion is allowed one easy one.

Expect this fight to be quick. Harrison has a puncher’s chance, but chances are he’ll be taking quite a few himself early and often until he crashes to the floor. This is a disappointing fight for the Haye fans. Most boxing fans in general want to see the brash champion take a swipe at the Klitschko brothers, but that is not likely to happen anytime soon. Expect Haye to feed on the mediocrities and make some money before taking on the big challenge of Wlad or Vitali.

Floyd Mayweather JR Apologizes


After making some racist comments in regards to Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather, JR., has come forward to apologize. This is more evidence that Floyd pays close attention to his headlines and comments from fans and journalists and he doesn’t have incredibly thick skin. He wants to be seen in a positive light and lashed out at those idiots that have called him racial slurs and those Manny groupie journalists calling him a coward. He came off horribly, making comments about Manny’s ethnicity, and he didn’t come off well. This apology is sincere, I’m sure, but I wouldn’t rule out another verbal tirade that isn’t exactly PC. Mayweather is frustrated and upset at those that don’t recognize him as the best in the game. The less he fights, the more people shift over to Pacquiao as the pound for pound best.

In the end, Floyd is still the man to beat, but as he remains inactive and apparently staying away from a Pacquiao showdown for the time being, his stock continues to plummet. There is a way to shut everyone up and keep his spot without dispute and that is to beat Pacquiao, unless Margarito pulls the upset. That would be a pound for pound victory by default for Floyd…perhaps that is what he’s looking for.


Source: http://ringsidereport.com

As if the hostage tragedy hasn’t tainted the image of the Philippines enough in the eyes of the world, along comes boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. unleashing a flood of trash talk on Manny Pacquiao. If you think that’s strictly Pacquiao’s business and does not affect the rest of us as Filipinos, think again. The world has a bad habit of going by stereotypes, and if Pacquiao’s ring prowess has had a positive effect on our people, Mayweather’s insults have also had a negative ruboff.

I’m reacting as a self-respecting Filipino should. While Pacquiao’s calibrated response was proper -- he being the champion with the record and the title that Mayweather covets -- the rest of us cannot simply let the slur pass. When vile-tongued individuals are allowed to get away with slandering Filipinos, onlookers and kibitzers tend to get into the act and join in the insulting spree. We can’t allow them to make virtual punching bags of us. Slanderers must realize that there’s a price to pay for their insults.

Back in the mid-1980s, a disc jockey of KMEL radio in San Francisco simulated a Pinoy ordering "dog sandwich" in the course of his show. This was reported by an irate FilAm radio listener to the office of Advertising & Marketing Associates, USA, which, at the time, was producing a weekly magazine show, Manila, Manila, on KTSF TV Channel 26. I happened to be the recipient of the complaint and I promised to do something about it.

I reported the slur to the Federal Communications Commission and was informed that the radio station could be held accountable for it. I then called up the KMEL station manager, told him of the FCC’s opinion, and demanded an on-air apology. The offending disc jockey, who was doing his show at the time, was forced to publicly apologize for the insult.

In late 2007, Filipino doctors were insulted in an episode of the ABC series, Desperate Housewives. In one scene, Teri Hatcher, one of the stars of the show, while discussing her oncoming menopause with her gynecologist, questioned the latter’s credentials and quipped, "Can I check those diplomas? Because I want to make sure they’re not from some med school in the Philippines."

The Filipino American community immediately protested the insult and more than 50,000 signed an online petition, initiated by Kevin Nadal, condemning the show and ABC Network. The National Federation of FilipinoAmerican Associations (NaFFAA) organized protest demonstrations at the offices of ABC and retail outlets of Disney and demanded an apology. ABC apologized and vowed to be more ethnically and culturally sensitive in its programs.

Mayweather’s verbal attacks require a similarly vigorous and angry response from our community. While his obvious intention was to demean and diminish the stature of Pacquiao as the best pound-for-pound boxer in the world, Mayweather also demeaned the rest of us.

Of course, the tirade merely served to expose Mayweather as a mean, envious, frustrated, and completely insecure juvenile delinquent whose parents failed to imbue with manners. Small wonder. Floyd Mayweather Sr. set a record for profanity and Barnum and Bailey quips in the weeks leading to the Pacquiao bout with Ricky Hatton. Of course, Mayweather Sr. ended up like a dog with his tail under his legs after his ward got knocked out in two rounds. At least, the Briton fought like a man. Mayweather Sr. spewed trash like a sewer.

And now comes his son, Floyd Mayweather Jr., trying to outdo his old man in bad manners. For a pugilist who claims to be "the best," Mayweather is an embarrassment not only to boxing but to sports in general. In case that juvenile brain of his hasn’t figured it out yet, the essence of sports is sportsmanship. And in case his potty mouth hasn’t learned to verbalize it yet, the essence of sportsmanship is fair play.

Mayweather subsequently "apologized" for his tirade and claimed he was "just having fun." The idiot can’t even tell the difference between being insulting and being funny. He can’t tell the difference between fair and foul. Indeed, this character should, from now on, be known as Foulweather.

Floyd Foulweather. Alias Potty Mouth.

In case Foulweather’s dad hasn’t told him yet, Pacquiao’s patronizingly civilized description of his insults as "uneducated" was as devastating as a left hook to the chin of Hatton. The contrast between Foulweather’s below-the-belt attack and Pacquiao’s matter-of-fact dismissal of it told a glaring tale of who the better man is. It certainly isn’t the one whose punch-drunk brain can’t tell the difference between right and wrong.

NaFFAA has, once again, taken up the cudgels for our community. It has released a statement strongly condemning Foulweather’s racist and homophobic remarks and has also asked civil rights organizations, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the leading African-American civil rights group, to censure the boxer.

Below is the official NaFFAA statement:

"NaFFAA condemns racist and homophobic rant against Filipino boxing champ.

"Washington, D.C. -- The National Federation of Filipino American Associations (NaFFAA) has strongly condemned boxing star Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s blatantly racist and homophobic attacks against Filipino boxing champ Manny Pacquiao in a YouTube interview released two days ago. In the vitriolic video, Mayweather called Pacquiao a ‘whore,’ a ‘little yellow chump’ and a ‘midget’ several times. He also said that he will force Pacquiao to ‘make some sushi rolls and cook some rice’ and ‘we’re going to cook him with some cats and dogs.’

"Pacquiao had challenged Mayweather to a fight in the ring, but so far Mayweather has refused. Instead, he has defamed and slandered Pacquiao with baseless accusations that he uses performance-enhancing drugs.

"’We are outraged by Mayweather’s racially offensive remarks,’ says NaFFAA National Chair Greg Macabenta. ‘This disgusting diatribe against Pacqiuao is a racial slur against all Filipinos and Filipino Americans and an embarrassment not only to the boxing community but to all Americans. Talking trash may be common between boxing rivals, but Mayweather’s racially laced profanities brazenly crossed the line of decency and respectability. Pacquiao, on the other hand, has taken the high road and acted like the gentleman that he is.

"’We call on the National Boxing Association and state athletic commissions to censure Mayweather for behavior that is both abhorrent and demeaning to boxing fans and to the whole world of sports. We also call on the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to reprimand the boxing star for insulting people of color. We are further asking all civil rights organizations to stand in solidarity with us in denouncing this racist and homophobic rant. Mayweather’s apology is unacceptable and he must be made accountable for his damaging statements.

"’At a time when immigrant communities are being viewed with increasing suspicion and mistrust, Mayweather’s cruel, abusive and hurtful remarks can only stoke more hostility, derision and resentment against individuals who look foreign by virtue of their looks, their size or the sound of their names. Coming from a boxing celebrity with millions of fans around the world, Mayweather’s shameless and reckless conduct unfairly paints an entire racial and ethnic group with a broad brush and seriously undermines America’s core values of inclusivity and racial tolerance.’"

We urge every Pinoy who does not relish being called the names Floyd Foulweather inflicted on Pacquiao to pass on this protest statement. Remember, Potty Mouth didn’t just insult Pacquiao. He insulted the rest of us.


Source: http://www.bworldonline.com

WASHINGTON, D.C.: The National Federation of Filipino American Associations (Naffaa) on Monday urged sport governing bodies to censure Floyd Mayweather Jr. for his racist and homophobic rant against Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao.
“We call on the National Boxing Association and state athletic commissions to censure Mayweather for behavior that is both abhorrent and demeaning to boxing fans and to the whole world of sports,” said Naffaa Chairman Greg Macabenta.


Macabenta also called on the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to reprimand the American boxing star “for insulting people of color.”

“We are further asking all civil rights organizations to stand in solidarity with us in denouncing this racist and homophobic rant.

Mayweather’s apology is unacceptable and he must be made accountable for his damaging statements,” Macabenta said.

Macabenta pointed out that Mayweather’s “cruel, abusive and hurtful” remarks could stoke more hostility, derision and resentment against minorities like Filipinos and other ethnic groups at a time when immigrant communities are being viewed with increasing suspicion and mistrust.

“Coming from a boxing celebrity with millions of fans around the world, Mayweather’s shameless and reckless conduct unfairly paints an entire racial and ethnic group with a broad brush and seriously undermines America’s core values of inclusivity and racial tolerance,” added the head of Naffaa, the umbrella organization of various Filipino groups across the United States.

Mayweather called Pacquiao a “whore,” a “little yellow chump” and a “midget” several times in a 10-minute video which is widely circulating on the Internet.

The unbeaten boxing star also said he will force Pacquiao to “make some sushi rolls and cook some rice” and “we’re going to cook him with some cats and dogs.”

“We are outraged by Mayweather’s racially offensive remarks,” Macabenta said. “This disgusting diatribe against Pacquiao is a racial slur against all Filipinos and Filipino Americans and an embarrassment not only to the boxing community but to all Americans.”

Pacquiao said Mayweather was just trying to draw attention and could actually be helping promote the Filipino icon’s coming fight against Antonio Margarito, another boxer Mayweather refused to fight.

Even respected boxing writers were turned off by what they called Mayweather’s “senseless” rant.

“The video depicts Mayweather as a short-sighted, small-minded man who doesn’t have the attention span of a three-year-old,” wrote the highly respected sportswriter Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports.

Rep. Winston Castelo of Quezon City, meanwhile, filed a measure warning against the recurrence of similar racists attacks in the future.

In a House Resolution, Castelo said it was “as contemptuous for any foreign national to issue irresponsible racist remarks against any of its members and to any of our country as a whole.”

“This racist tirade sent by Floyd Mayweather is an affront to the Filipino people and the very institution to which Honorable Manny ‘PacMan’ Pacquaio belongs,” the resolution stated.

Castelo also said that the problem with Mayweather is that he had not foreseen the “irreparable damage done” as a subject of the tirade.
Further, Castelo warned Mayweather that he could be declared as persona non grata if and when he send the country another blow.


Source: http://www.manilatimes.net

Manila, Philippines - Antonio Margarito won’t have a pair of stone for hands when he faces Manny Pacquiao on November 13.

Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach said he will not blink an eye when he watches the wrapping of Margarito’s hands a couple of hours before the scheduled 12-round battle for the vacant World Boxing Council (WBC) super-welterweight crown at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

“I will be there (in Margarito’s dressing room) when they start doing the wraps,” Roach told the Bulletin on Monday from the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood.

“I assure you that there won’t be anything illegal this time,” said Roach.

Margarito rose to notoriety last year when Nazim Richardson, the chief trainer of Shane Mosley, discovered that then Margarito trainer Javier Capetillo had placed Plaster of Paris inserts in between the Mexican’s knuckles.

Capetillo was then ordered to re-wrap the hands and Mosley went on to knock Margarito out.

Margarito denied having known of the inserts but was eventually suspended by the California and Nevada commissions.

Speculations then arose if Margarito had employed the same type of handwraps in his previous fights.

Recently, Texas granted Margarito’s application for a license since he had already served his full one-year ban.


SOurce: http://www.mb.com.ph

MANILA, Philippines – Mexican great and Manny Pacquiao nemesis Juan Manuel Marquez has picked the Filipino superstar to win over compatriot “Tijuana Tornado” Antonio Margarito on the November 13 super welterweight title clash.

Marquez, who has already fought Pacquiao twice, said the Filipino has the upper hand over the 5-foot-11 Margarito.

“His speed will be the difference against Margarito,” Marquez said in a report posted on Examiner.com.

Marquez already had a first-hand experience of Pacquiao’s speed, having been knocked down a total of 4 times in their two meetings.

The first fight was in May 2004 when the fight ended in a draw despite Pacquiao scoring 3 knockdowns over Marquez.

A rematch took place in March 2008 when the Filipino champion again decked the gutsy Mexican for a split decision.

Both fights ended in controversial fashion.

With these fights in mind, Marquez has come out with an advice to help his fellow Mexican boxer: “Margarito must keep his distance.”

“And when he attacks, fire off combinations of 3 or more punches,” added Marquez.

Pacquiao and Margarito are set to face-off at the Cowboys Stadium for the World Boxing Council (WBC) super welterweight title.

‘Most influential’ ranking
Pacquiao, meanwhile, was grateful to Yahoo! Sports which selected him among boxing’s most influential personalities.

“Malaking karangalan,” said Pacquiao on Tuesday. "Kung anumang biyayang ibigay sa akin ng Panginoon, tanggap ko."

The 7-division-champ is the 25th most influential person in boxing according to Yahoo! Sports.

Yahoo! Sports writer Kevin Iole said Pacquiao is “one of the elite active boxers whose passionate Asian following has helped make him an international superstar and fodder for non-traditional boxing media such as CNN, Time Magazine and GQ.” -- With a report from Timi Nubla, ABS-CBN News


Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com

MANILA, Philippines - It seems that Freddie Roach has given up on the fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Roach said Mayweather is so content and happy with that zero in his ring record that the undefeated American will never run out of reasons just to stay away from Pacquiao.

“He waits for Manny to sign a contract with someone else, so he won’t be pressured into fighting Pacquiao,” Roach told Mark Vester of boxingscene.com in a very recent interview.

Roach was asked if he thinks the fight will ever happen, and he said, “no.”

“He wants to keep the zero in his record so he can argue that he’s the best fighter in the world. So he can say that he’s better than Sugar Ray Robinson,” added the celebrated trainer.

Robinson, of course, is the legendary American fighter who figured in over 200 fights from 1940 until 1965. He went 40-0 before taking his first loss, and wound up with a record of 173 wins, 19 losses and six draws.

Robinson was the former welterweight and middleweight champion, and it was through his flamboyance and ring excellence that boxing writers had thought of handing out the pound for pound title.

Roach said Mayweather sees himself as better than Robinson. But he has to keep that zero.

“As long as he has that zero, he can make an argument. But once that zero is gone, the argument is over,” said Roach, who said even good boxers have taken losses even before they became great.

“A loss is part of life. A loss can make you better. Actually, it’s good to lose sometimes in our lives to improve ourselves, to get a wakeup call. In Floyd’s little mind, he’s content with that zero,” he said.

Roach said it’s quite hard to compare Mayweather with Robinson simply the latter fought everyone that was thrown at him.

And Mayweather?

“But when he compares himself to those type of guys, it doesn’t sit with me too well because he won’t even fight the best guys out there today. He actually ducked Margarito a couple of years ago also,” Roach said.

Pacquiao’s chief trainer said Mayweather was offered to fight Margarito twice in the past, and on both occassions the American ex-pound-for-pound champion found other ways to stay unbeaten.

“He was offered a lot of money to fight him twice and ducked him. He picks and chooses his opponents and if that’s what he’s going to be happy with.. so be it,” said Roach.

Mayweather has raised issues about the drug-testing procedure and has kept the superfight from happening.

Pacquiao, on the other hand, agreed to fight Margarito even if the Mexican is more than four inches taller.

Pacquiao also didn’t back off when offered to fight Oscar dela Hoya or other big guys like Miguel Cotto or Joshua Clottey. He said he’s ready to take on Mayweather, too, but the fight just won’t happen.

Freddie Roach knows why.


Source: http://www.philstar.com

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