Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Victor Ortiz

The mega-fight will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev. HBO will televise the fight on pay per view.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Victor Ortiz

The mega-fight will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev. HBO will televise the fight on pay per view.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Victor Ortiz

The mega-fight will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev. HBO will televise the fight on pay per view.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Victor Ortiz

The mega-fight will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev. HBO will televise the fight on pay per view.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Victor Ortiz

The mega-fight will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev. HBO will televise the fight on pay per view.

Victor Ortiz talks like a true champion

Apparently Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s (41-0-0) next foe Victor Ortiz (29-2-2), knew that he could knock Floyd out since Victor was 9 years old. In a video interview, Ortiz talks like a true champion, humble yet aggressive and promising in his predictions.

Ortiz, while showing respect to Mayweather Jr., discusses how it’s Floyd who is at a disadvantage in their upcoming bout on September 17, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Ortiz talks about his valuable assets compared to Mayweather Jr.: Ortiz believes he is the bigger, stronger, and faster man.

Is Ortiz becoming the new David Haye with his self overestimation? Selling the fight is one thing, and Haye was a genius at that, but promising the unlikely is another. Having beaten the truly untested Andre Berto (27-1-0), Ortiz seems to be on his high horse, giving himself a value that he has yet to earn.

 Mayweather Jr. is the favorite and will likely dominate in their bout, and I doubt there will be many boxing fans or analysts out there who could muster up the bravery and factual information to disagree.

While there will be fellow countrymen and true fanatics who will put their money on the younger and stronger Ortiz, most of those that have solid knowledge of boxing will play it safe with Mayweather Jr.

Sure size makes a difference, and punching power is always a plus in any given fight, but it’s the ring intelligence paired together with experience and speed that dominates fights for Mayweather Jr.

I am very curious to see what Ortiz comes up with in the ring against Floyd, and whether he is going to be able to adapt to Floyd’s style. Either way, I hope the winner takes on Pacquiao sometime in 2012.

Source:  http://www.diamondboxing.com

Boxer Victor Ortiz is starting to demand respect

Welterweight boxer Victor Ortiz is barely beginning his run of fame and fortune and already there's a book title just waiting for him: "From Living in Trailers to Flying on Lear Jets."

Ortiz is the current World Boxing Council champion, having knocked the title out of Andre Berto's able hands in April. He is only 24, just beginning to prompt nods of recognition in the fancy suites at HBO and Showtime and is already in position to make a huge wave in the sport.

When he beat Berto, Ortiz seemed to become perfect fodder for Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s next step. Which is: 1) Get a decent warmup fight before actually taking on Manny Pacquiao; or 2) Get a comfortable-feeling fight that guarantees a nice payday and allows you to leave the impression that you actually want to fight Pacquiao.

So Ortiz and Mayweather Jr. will fight Sept. 17 in Las Vegas, and the boxing world will do what the boxing world always does — spend all its time talking about whether Pacquiao, finally, will be next. The thought that Ortiz actually might win will be little discussed.

The designated opponent in these matchups, in this case Ortiz, can react one of two ways. He can go through the phony promotional motions and dream of the fancy paycheck he will soon be able to see through swollen eyes. Or, he can get fighting mad about the lack of respect he is receiving.

The latter is Ortiz's current stance, and it is especially irksome to him now, because he is the champion, not Mayweather. Yet Mayweather is not only an unbeaten legend, but also is holding the boxing world hostage as it remains hopeful of seeing the only true mega-fight currently possible.

It shouldn't be hard to get Ortiz fighting mad. Until recently, life in general had taken care of that.

He is the middle son of Mexican immigrant parents. Dad was a truck driver and mom was a cook at a homeless shelter. He was born and raised in Garden City, Kan., with older sister Carmen and younger brother Temo. When he was 7, his mother, Manuela, left for another man. Six years later, his father, Victor, took off too.

"I can still remember it," says Temo. "We came home from school one day and my mother was gone. That was it. Just gone."

According to Temo, dad Victor would also be gone for weeks and months at a time, and eventually left for good when he was 11 and Victor Jr. was 13.

"I call my brother Junior," Temo says, "but nobody else can or will."

Dad, according to both Temo and Victor, was an alcoholic who beat them up frequently and stayed around long enough to introduce Victor to boxing.

"There was a kid named Lalo who beat up Victor pretty good," Temo recalls. "That made my dad very angry, so he took Victor to the gym."

Victor kept at it through more than 100 amateur fights. Carmen got pregnant when she was 15, but the three tried somehow to stay together, sometimes living in neighbors' barns. They relied greatly on the parents of friends for food and shelter.

"It was scary," Temo says. "You were always thinking about what was next, what was your next meal."

Victor says, "I was like a stray dog."

He says that sometimes, they would use crowbars to break into their old house, boarded up by Social Services.

"My parents also had an old trailer," he says, "and we would go there, and try to break in. But it was 10-12 miles away. I'd just run up there, anyway."

When he was 14, Victor got a job at Burger King and would call his brother and sister when leftovers were available.

Source: http://www.latimes.com

Is Floyd Mayweather Destined for a Fall?

More than a few fans and analysts noticed something different about Floyd Mayweather Jr. as he attended the two press conferences to hype his September 17 bout with "Vicious" Victor Ortiz.

Gone was the arrogant, dismissive "Money" Mayweather who would swagger on stage and literally sneer in the face of whoever he had to face off against.

But, this time, on the dates of the press conferences, Mayweather was docile and calm. One could say that the 5-division world champ and pound-for-pound entrant looked tired-- even disinterested. For the first time in an otherwise high-octane career, Floyd Mayweather was looking his age-- every bit of his 34 years on this planet.

Some could write it off as just another publicity ploy. Maybe a ploy to get inside the head of an inexperienced, head strong fighter like Ortiz. It wouldn't be the first time that Mayweather opted to play head games with a rival.

But this certainly looked authentic. It wouldn't be far-fetched at all to think that a fighter who has only reluctantly entered the ring, seemingly for financial reasons alone, would be tired and burnt-out from having to do a job he apparently no longer enjoys.

Since capturing the lineal welterweight title from Carlos Baldomir in November of 2006, Mayweather has only fought four times. (By comparison, Manny Pacquiao has had nine bouts in that same stretch of time). That comes out to an average of only one fight every fourteen months. Between bouts with Ricky Hatton and Juan Manuel Marquez, he went 21-months without fighting. Most recently, there will be a 16-month stretch of inactivity between his masterful performance against Shane Mosley and when he steps into the ring with Ortiz.

For a fighter who depends on rhythm and reflexes, the lack of activity will sooner or later show up in his in-ring work-- especially at an age where fighters typically begin to slow down and lose their edge. Add the
 inevitable physical slow down to an apparent general malaise, and you get the recipe for a fighter drifting towards an upset.

And with nothing but young, hungry lions in their 20's, like Victor Ortiz, Timothy Bradley, and Amir Khan ahead of him, things will not get any easier.

How long can a professional, even one who executes his craft at the highest level, be effective when forced to do something he feels less and less passionate about? Can even an elite-level future Hall of Famer keep winning when he's really only fighting for a paycheck?

Even if he gets by Ortiz, we may have seen the beginning of the end when it comes to Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Some may rejoice at the idea, but others will just be left to consider what could've been.
Source: http://www.associatedcontent.com

Floyd Mayweather Vs Victor Ortiz: Star Power Comes in September to Vegas

Deep in space beyond the spiral Milky Way and on the inner edge of the Orion and beyond the furthest galaxy there are two bright illuminated stars Mayweather and Ortiz they are on route and set to collide on September 17th, 2011 in Vegas.

Tickets for this star struck historical event have gone on sale today, the likelihood of this fight being the fastest selling is immensely big more than the earlier fight of the year Shane Mosley vs. Manny Pacquiao, which was a record breaking sell out. 

This Welterweight WBC Championship is the fight that’s going to cause a sudden wonder, people will reach to the stars in utter amazement. I wanted to carry this space theme through this report of the undiscovered and uniqueness of how this fight will turn out both have never fought each other before, however both have fought with amazing fighters even though Mayweather has had a longer career and Ortiz has not.

It’s known that the space shuttle Discovery took its last flight into space on Mayweather’s birthday this year and another astronomical connection is Ortiz was born on the precise day that was the anniversary of the very first successful American satellite which was called “Explorer,” he exactly and duly is a rising star, in a high degree with his talent he has previously held USBA and WBO NABO titles.

He presents himself very well as a smart young man and will take his youth into the ring and crowds will certainly be given satisfaction and pleasure just like the observers of the moon and the depth of space, audiences of this bout will be inspecting closely for the sign of the future as to who will win this and get total star power of this galaxy!

After examination of the last 16 months of Mayweather’s time spent without fighting and outside of the gym, he has faced scrutinizing calls of contest, court challenges and claims of denials that he didn’t want to fight Manny Pacquiao. Blood test queries aside, he still trained at the Mayweather gym continuing to construct and assemble his routine. He will remain to be fully operational, rapid swift, and his mannerisms in the ring will be of endurance and distinguished with no losses he has been of receipt of all the prizes, financial gain and rewards making him the best pound for pound boxers in the world this division has seen.

Ortiz has got in his possession something that is beyond people’s mental activity, beyond all realms of space…he will take this opportunity to prove to the world, to prove to boxing fans that he can attempt to win and Mayweather as a fighter is very durable and difficult to beat, regardless this is an opportunity, no one in their correct desirable mindset would of declined.

Ortiz’s life started with sad and unhappy times he went to the Police Athletic Boxing Club and started his career there with Brandon Rios. He has said that his rough childhood drives him he said “When you’re a champion, everyone wants to take it from you, so you have to pull yourself together physically and mentally through hell to keep what you have already”.

Respect was the main topic last week at the very first press conference by Mayweather as he touched on how he has been treated well however asked for the press to have more respect as his children were getting older and they are using more technical tools more which leads them to the worldwide web, his team thanks their sponsors and fans and fans, and stated without them he wouldn’t be here today “Thanks for keeping me relevant”.
As the day approaches for the tickets to go on sale it will undeniably be a star struck, full of star power astronomical event!

FLOYD MAYWEATHER VS. VICTOR ORTIZ TICKETS ON SALE TODAY AT 1:00 P.M. ET/10:00 A.M. PT

Las Vegas (July 8, 2011)...Don't forget! Tickets go on sale today, Friday, July 8 at 1:00 p.m. ET/10:00 a.m. PT for "STAR POWER: Mayweather vs. Ortiz," the most talked about fight in the cosmos set for Saturday, Sept. 17 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

"STAR POWER: Mayweather vs. Ortiz" is promoted by Mayweather Promotions and Golden Boy Promotions, and sponsored by Cerveza Tecate, DeWALT Tools and AT&T. The 12-round mega-fight, which will be contested for Ortiz's WBC Welterweight World Championship, will take place Saturday, Sept. 17 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nev.


The Power of STAR POWER:


· Mayweather has acquired 100,671 new Twitter followers since June 7, the day "STAR POWER" was announced, bringing his total number of followers to 1,353,568 (as of July 7 at 5:45 p.m. ET).


· On the day the fight was announced, Ortiz was mentioned more than 100 more times than Mayweather on Twitter causing him to trend worldwide for the first time.


· During last week's "STAR POWER" press tour, media members and fans turned out in droves in both New York City and Los Angeles to be a part of the out-of-this-world events.


· Fans started lining up in front of the Hudson Theatre in New York beginning at 6:00 a.m. In Los Angeles, fans notified Golden Boy Promotions via Twitter that they were camping out all day at the NOKIA Plaza at L.A. Live to save their spot for the 8:00 p.m. start of the event. Additionally, more than 500 people entered to win two prize packages to attend the fight, which were given away prior to the press conference.


# # #


Tickets are priced at $1,250, $1,000, $600, $300 and $150, not including applicable service charges, with a total ticket limit of twelve (12) per person. Ticket sales are limited to ten (10) per person at the $1,250, $1,000, $600 and $300 price levels with a ticket limit of two (2) per person at the $150 price level. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. Tickets also are available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com.


HBO®'s Emmy® Award-winning all-access series "24/7" premieres an all-new edition when "24/7 Mayweather/Ortiz" debuts Saturday, Aug. 27 at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT. The four-part series will air for three consecutive Saturday nights before the finale airs the night before the welterweight championship showdown in Las Vegas.

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