-->
Pages: 1

Mayweather Vs. De La Hoya


(Click here to view the original thread with full colors/images)




Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Now that the fight is officially signed who do you think is gonna win this?

I Say Floyd



Posted by: goandykid

Really? When is it? Mayweather by TKO early. DLH is roughly 65 years old now.


Having said that, Rocky VI looks great.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

I think May 5th '07 its suppose to be both of thei last fights, i don't know why Mayweather would retire so early he can't be but 29-30 years old



Posted by: goandykid

6 months? That's some early scheduling for publicity match



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

I can't wait to watch this one Oscar should give Floyd a run for his money



Posted by: Goodfella9783

PBF decision.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Hopefully it aint another boring UD for Mayweather



Posted by: goandykid

There's no way DLH will last. His day is done.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
There's no way DLH will last. His day is done.
Hes still got some power left it could be an upset



Posted by: Goodfella9783

Last fight for both (supposedly). I see no one giving up. It will probably be a slightly-less one-sided Mayweather/Baldomir.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by Goodfella9783 View Post
Last fight for both (supposedly). I see no one giving up. It will probably be a slightly-less one-sided Mayweather/Baldomir.

Hopefully not that fight was boring.. I would've payed more to see floyd spar



Posted by: Goodfella9783

I don't pay for boxing PPV's period. I did see that fight replay though and it was pretty much what everyone expected. Paying to watch PBF is dumb cause it will be a bad fight no matter who he's fighting. He's that good.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

I didnt pay for it either i meant like, if i did pay...



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

i would pay to watch this one though unless they jack the prices up



Posted by: goandykid

Quote:
Originally Posted by Goodfella9783 View Post
Last fight for both (supposedly). I see no one giving up. It will probably be a slightly-less one-sided Mayweather/Baldomir.
What? Where'd you hear that?



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
What? Where'd you hear that?
Yeah like i said up there... Theyre both SUPPOSE to be retiring after this fight... PBF says the better he gets the more meaningless his fights become so this will be his last one. Its because they booed him at the Baldimor fight and Oscar is just old



Posted by: goandykid

That's sad, I saw him as the next Roy Jones JR. I doubt he'll hang it up.

He should move up in weight.



Posted by: Goodfella9783

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
What? Where'd you hear that?
Floyd announced his retirement at the post-fight press conference against Baldomir. He was pretty emotional and seemed serious.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
I doubt he'll hang it up.
Yeah me too. he's only about 29 years old. thats why i said its "Supposebly" his last fight.

And i think he's moving up in weight for this fight but im not sure



Posted by: goandykid

He can't be serious, unless he's trying another venue or something. He has years of being a champ left.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

I hope he's not serious but like Goodfella said he seemed serious. Hopefully he'll just do something like move up a weight class or 2 and try for more competition.



Posted by: goandykid

Who are the belt holders in the 2 weight classes above him?



Posted by: Goodfella9783

Yeah I'd hate to see him retire this early too. Comparable to Barry Sanders if he does. All the talent in the world.



Posted by: goandykid

Exactly. If he does stop boxing I'm sure he'll keep fighting. He has the balls to fight some chump in the UFC if the set up is right (fighting another pure striker, limited training) or maybe even limited kickboxing or something. He could bring in some serious dough



Posted by: the nut

Pretty Boy 8 rounds to 4!



Posted by: the nut

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
He can't be serious, unless he's trying another venue or something. He has years of being a champ left.

Getting out when your speech is still clear is a good choice.



Posted by: goandykid

Quote:
Originally Posted by the nut View Post
Getting out when your speech is still clear is a good choice.
Personal opinion. There are people who would trade some brain cells for a belt anyday. Did you read that Rick Reilly article on Tiki Barber retiring early a few SI's ago? Great article.



Posted by: the nut

Quote:
Originally Posted by goandykid View Post
Personal opinion. There are people who would trade some brain cells for a belt anyday. Did you read that Rick Reilly article on Tiki Barber retiring early a few SI's ago? Great article.
Maybe If you've never had one, but Mayweather's won a championhip fight or 2 in his career.



Posted by: Goodfella9783

Mayweather barely gets touched in his fights.



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by Goodfella9783 View Post
Mayweather barely gets touched in his fights.
^True right there... Muhammad Ali got fucked because of his "Rope a dope" because he would take so many head shots on the ropes...


Any1 know if floyds dad will be training oscar?



Posted by: the nut

Quote:
Originally Posted by Detroit_4_Life View Post
Any1 know if floyds dad will be training oscar?

De La Hoya-Mayweather not only has sporting drama but also family drama. Mayweather's father trains De La Hoya, and after first saying he'd never train someone to beat his son, he has agreed to do so, claiming the son has so disrespected him over the years that it will be a pleasure. "Who instigated this?" grumbled Floyd Mayweather Sr., not needing to name the person he believes is the culprit. As for that culprit, he replied, "My father can say whatever he wants to say. He's said he taught me everything I know but not everything he knows. I'm glad he didn't because then my record would be like his. He lost to one legend, Sugar Ray Leonard, but his other losses were to journeymen and cab drivers." Meanwhile, the father's brother, Roger Mayweather, will step in to train his nephew as soon as he's released from a Nevada prison, which will be in plenty of time to get young Floyd ready. It's a psychologist's dream as well as a fight fan's, and when one adds De La Hoya's Hollywood looks and star power and Mayweather's street cred image, it is the kind of attraction that will transcend sport. This is the kind of showdown in which the principals appear not only in Sports Illustrated and on ESPN but in People magazine and on E!. It has the kind of crossover appeal that will drive PPV sales to a record number even if HBO PPV decides to price the bout at $52.95, which would be a record . . . England's Ricky Hatton has little respect for Mayweather. After watching him dismantle Baldomir without taking any risks, the former 140- and 147-pound champion said of Mayweather, "He came in to the ring dressed like Russell Crowe and he ended up fighting like Sheryl Crow." . . . On the flip side, Roy Jones Jr. sees Mayweather as the winner largely because of the presence of Mayweather's estranged father in De La Hoya's corner. "If my daddy had brought me anyone [to fight], he would have gotten him killed," Jones said. "If Floyd has to run 100 miles a day to beat Oscar, that's what he'll do, because his daddy is in the other corner. This ain't got nothing to do with Oscar." . . . No one is yet talking about how the money will be split, but understand this: We're not talking 50-50. Mayweather will have a significant upside on the pay-per-view, but De La Hoya did 925,000 buys fighting Ricardo Mayorga last May while Mayweather barely reached 350,000 with Baldomir. As Reggie Jackson might have put it, "We know the straw that stirs the drink."



Posted by: Goodfella9783

Damn that makes it even more interesting.



Posted by: goandykid

Yea wow



Posted by: Detroit_4_Life

Quote:
Originally Posted by the nut View Post
De La Hoya-Mayweather not only has sporting drama but also family drama. Mayweather's father trains De La Hoya, and after first saying he'd never train someone to beat his son, he has agreed to do so, claiming the son has so disrespected him over the years that it will be a pleasure. "Who instigated this?" grumbled Floyd Mayweather Sr., not needing to name the person he believes is the culprit. As for that culprit, he replied, "My father can say whatever he wants to say. He's said he taught me everything I know but not everything he knows. I'm glad he didn't because then my record would be like his. He lost to one legend, Sugar Ray Leonard, but his other losses were to journeymen and cab drivers." Meanwhile, the father's brother, Roger Mayweather, will step in to train his nephew as soon as he's released from a Nevada prison, which will be in plenty of time to get young Floyd ready. It's a psychologist's dream as well as a fight fan's, and when one adds De La Hoya's Hollywood looks and star power and Mayweather's street cred image, it is the kind of attraction that will transcend sport. This is the kind of showdown in which the principals appear not only in Sports Illustrated and on ESPN but in People magazine and on E!. It has the kind of crossover appeal that will drive PPV sales to a record number even if HBO PPV decides to price the bout at $52.95, which would be a record . . . England's Ricky Hatton has little respect for Mayweather. After watching him dismantle Baldomir without taking any risks, the former 140- and 147-pound champion said of Mayweather, "He came in to the ring dressed like Russell Crowe and he ended up fighting like Sheryl Crow." . . . On the flip side, Roy Jones Jr. sees Mayweather as the winner largely because of the presence of Mayweather's estranged father in De La Hoya's corner. "If my daddy had brought me anyone [to fight], he would have gotten him killed," Jones said. "If Floyd has to run 100 miles a day to beat Oscar, that's what he'll do, because his daddy is in the other corner. This ain't got nothing to do with Oscar." . . . No one is yet talking about how the money will be split, but understand this: We're not talking 50-50. Mayweather will have a significant upside on the pay-per-view, but De La Hoya did 925,000 buys fighting Ricardo Mayorga last May while Mayweather barely reached 350,000 with Baldomir. As Reggie Jackson might have put it, "We know the straw that stirs the drink."


Thanks for that.. I heard Floyd Sr wouldn't traid Oscar.. but i guess now its the opposite..




(Click here to view the original thread with full colors/images)





vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.


Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38