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.

FLOYD MAYWEATHER VS. VICTOR ORTIZ TICKETS LAUNCH INTO ORBIT TOMORROW!

Las Vegas (July 7, 2011)...Tickets go on sale tomorrow, Friday, July 8, for the biggest boxing event of 2011 "STAR POWER: Mayweather vs. Ortiz." The welterweight championship showdown, set for Saturday, Sept. 17 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, is the hottest ticket in the boxing universe.

"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.


Why "STAR POWER"?

"Floyd Mayweather is the biggest star in boxing and it was proven once again as media and fans turned out in huge numbers during last week's press tour. Mayweather's draw combined with Ortiz's desire to successfully defend his title makes the name of this fight, Star Power, a perfect fit."

- Leonard Ellerbe, CEO, Mayweather Promotions

"Victor Ortiz has the power and that is the story line. Is the star, the undefeated Mayweather going to remain undefeated, or is the power going to put a stop to that?"

- Richard Schaefer, CEO, Golden Boy Promotions

MAYWEATHER - The Star


· In his seven pay-per-view fights, Mayweather has generated a star-bursting 6.9 million buys and $375 million in pay-per-view revenue, $78 million of which was from his fight against Sugar Shane Mosley on May 1, 2010.


· Mayweather's star power has also attracted Hollywood's and sports' biggest name celebrities who have been seen ringside for his past fights including Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie, Muhammad Ali, Leonardo DiCaprio, Paris Hilton, Will Smith and Jamie Foxx. He has also become a crossover star with this fight marking his fifth HBO 24/7 series appearance, the most by any fighter.


ORTIZ - The Power


· In his world welterweight championship fight against Andre Berto on April 16, 2011, Ortiz showed his galaxy-like power inlanding 281 of 696 total punches thrown (40 percent) as opposed to Berto who landed 147 of 480 total punches thrown (31 percent).


· Sixteen of Ortiz's 22 knockouts occurred in the first half his fights. Two-thirds of his 33 fights have ended by way of knockout. All of this points to one thing...Ortiz's immense power is on display every time he steps into the ring.


# # #


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.


TWO DAYS UNTIL MAYWEATHER VS. ORTIZ BLASTS OFF AT THE BOX OFFICE

Las Vegas (July 6, 2011)...Tickets for the biggest boxing event of 2011 "STAR POWER: Mayweather vs. Ortiz," featuring boxing's biggest star Floyd "Money" Mayweather and boxing's newest star "Vicious" Victor Ortiz, will go on sale FRIDAY, JULY 8 at 1:00 p.m. ET/ 10:00 a.m. PT. The Welterweight World Championship bout, set for Saturday, Sept. 17 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, is expected to produce meteoric box office numbers.

"STAR POWER" in History: Did you know?

· The Space Shuttle Discovery made its final launch into space on February 24, 2011, the same day that Floyd Mayweather celebrated his 34th birthday.
· Victor Ortiz was born on January 31, 1987, the 29th anniversary of the first successful American satellite, Explorer I, launch into space.
· The first of the outer solar system asteroids known as Centaurs (minor planets that behave with characteristics of both asteroids and comets) were discovered in 1977 - the same year Mayweather was born.
· The first supernova (the explosion of a star) in more than three centuries was seen by the naked eye in 1987 - the same year Ortiz was born.

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.

Source: http://philboxing.com

MAYWEATHER MAIL: THE BEST WAY TO PROVE THEM WRONG

FightHype's exclusive Mayweather After Dark series sparked a ton of reaction, both good and bad, from fans and media alike. From diehard fans who were eager to hear more from the undefeated pound-for-pound champion to members of the media who had their own series of questions, the email has not stopped pouring in since the first video went up. Although I don't have all the answers, I do have some, so check out what I had to say to inquiring minds who want to know all about Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao and much more.



The Timeline was perfect definitely very helpful to the boxing fans out there. you're doing a great job. In my opinion if pacquiao wants to be considered the best pound for pound and he feels insulted that team mayweather seems to accuse him of taking peds then he should take the random test. That's the best way to prove them wrong. Anyways thanks again for the timeline. - patrick


BT: Patrick, that sure does sound simple, doesn't it? Just take the tests, whip his ass and ride off into the sunset! Call me crazy, but if someone insulted me, I'd love to have the opportunity to legally open up a can of whoopass on them. And on top of that, to get paid $50+ million to do it...priceless! At this point, even if Pacquiao were to win his lawsuit, I really don't think that will change the opinion of those people who actually do question his performances.

Sup Ben, I'm glad that I discovered your site. It's the clearly the best in boxing imho. The question/statement I wanted to pose for your next Mayweather Mail series is that I don't really understand the criticism of Mayweather and his opponents, it's my belief that it comes from people who don't have a clue about the sport but what I wanted to ask was this: If it was Mayweather that fought Manny's leftovers(ODH, Hatton, Mosley) and his very own in-house promoted fighters(Cotto, Margs, Clottey).......would you agree that people(media, critics) would go ape-shit over this yet Manny is given a pass time & time again. I just don't get it brah. Manny is the p4p #1 yet he's fought 3 guys AFTER Mayweather did(some at catchweights) and his own in-house promoted fighters all of which have severe flaws yet he's the greatest thing since sliced bread?? imho it has much to do with race than anything, Dan "know nothing" Rafael of Espn can't even write a positive article about Mayweather without bringing up the negative aspects of his life and it really just sickens me. Thanks for your time, Charles

BT: Charles, I agree. If the roles were reversed, Mayweather would still be heavily criticized. I don't necessarily think it has anything to do with race though. I think it has more to do with the fact that, thus far, Mayweather has never been pushed to the limit or even been in a really difficult fight, therefore, a lot of the media holds him to a much higher standard. In other words, he's looked so good, they can't help but to criticize him. They want to see Mayweather in a difficult fight and they want to see him "challenge" himself, so when he makes a fight look easy, they simply chalk it up to Floyd not "challenging" himself against "tough" opponents. I mean, even if you consider Mayweather's first fight with Castillo to be his toughest challenge, he still wasn't even pushed to the limit that much in that fight. He did what he had to do, but it wasn't the war that people want to see Mayweather in. The fact that he can dominate a fight and force opponents to essentially quit without taking any damage or letting his hands go is a frustrating thing for some people to watch, so they take their frustrations out by criticizing him. In Dan Rafael's case, I think it's just personal. He simply hates the fact that Mayweather doesn't talk to him. In his eyes, that's an insult since, after all, he's "the man" when it comes to boxing at ESPN, therefore, all fighters are supposed to respect his position and answer his phone calls.

After having read your latest post… you're definitely on one side.. I'm even more neutral than you… I love mayweather for the sake of the sport, the technique and skills, makes him definitely one of a kind… But I love Pacquiao as well, for his different style of boxing and his heart… they're both good for boxing specially to the real fans of the sport. BUT THE ISSUE ABOUT YOUR MAYWEATHER IMPLYING MANNY'S ON PEDS IS FOUL… there's no point of testing really… Mayweather should take the deposition first… I admire GBP for accepting their fault and for not being scared to apologize like a real man does… Be a man, show my posts this time. I've nothing but opinions. No dirty language or whatever. - Pocholo

BT: I wouldn't say I'm on one side or the other. Just like you, I enjoy watching both Mayweather and Pacquiao fight. I've said time and time again that I have no problem with Manny Pacquiao or his decision not to agree to Mayweather's request for random drug testing. Pacquiao has every right to say no, just like Cotto and Margarito had every right to say no to his request for a catchweight. I haven't placed any blame on Manny Pacquiao whatsoever. What I am doing, however, is trying to clear up some of the confusion that's been created due to inaccurate information. For example, the fact that you think there's no need for better testing, as if things are just fine and fighters aren't getting away with anything, makes me wonder just how much boxing you actually do follow. I've already mentioned two examples of fighters in defferent sports (Fernando Vargas in boxing and Thiago Silva in MMA) who were caught cheating only AFTER the fight was already over, but I can give you quite a number of other examples. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., Ali Funeka, Ricardo Mayorga, and Joan Guzman ALL tested positive for using a diuretic AFTER their fights were over. Omar Nino tested positive for methamphetamine AFTER his draw with Brian Viloria. Mike Tyson tested positive for marijuana AFTER his win over Golota. Pernell Whitaker tested positive for cocaine AFTER beating Andrei Pestraiev. Vitali Klitschko has admitted to his own steroid use in the past. Even guys like Ricky Hatton, Joe Calzaghe, and Sugar Ray Leonard, although they never tested positive for anything, they've all been linked to cocaine use while they were still active fighters. Now, that doesn't necessarily mean that any of those guys ever gained a significant advantage over their opponents due to their usage, however, the fact remains that most fighters aren't getting caught until AFTER the fights are over and AFTER the damage has already been done, so it's clear to me that the current system of testing is flawed and something should be done in order to fix it. Now, is Mayweather's request for his opponents to take random drug tests going to bring about sweeping changes in the immediate future? Probably not, but at least it's shedding some light on the subject and getting the discussions started. As for Mayweather supposedly implying that Pacquiao is on PEDs, personally, I think that's irrelevant. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, and honestly, I've heard quite a few other people not named Mayweather who made far more direct accusations regarding Manny (Paulie Malignaggi comes to mind). In fact, this isn't even the first time that a fighter has been suspicious of another fighter. Mike Tyson accused Evander Holyfield of taking steroids. Likewise, Holyfield said the same of Tyson. Riddick Bowe also accused Andrew Golota of taking steroids. Even Vernon Forrest accused Ricardo Mayorga of being on something. The list goes on, but the point is, whether there's evidence or not, people are entitled to their opinions. There's no evidence that David Haye or Tomasz Adamek have ever used performance-enhancing drugs, but guess what? I know a lot of people who think they both have at some point. If Mayweather has that opinion of his opponents, then he has every right to ask them to take additional drug tests. There's no law that says you can't have an opinion.

Big Ben, Whats good wit you? Lliking the website and videos, good to see you a Mayweather fan -- as am I.  Been a Mayweather fan since his pro debut, looking forward
to his next fight. Do you think Mayweather would be handing out tickets to his next fight? If so do you think you can send me a couple? Never had the pleasure of
experiencing a boxing event in person, would like to experience atleast once in life. Again, loving the website tell the team keep up the good work. God Bless, Q


BT: What's up, Q? I know Floyd definitely plans on running a contest or two prior to his fight with Ortiz. Recently, during a broadcast on his UStream channel, http://www.ustream.tv/floydmayweather, he announced that he would be giving away 2 tickets, airfare, and hotel stay to some lucky winner who was also a member over at ThisIs50.com. No details were given about the contest at the time, but he's definitely got something planned.

Hi Ben, enjoy reading your articles on Fighthype.  You seem to have the most in depth knowledge around the Mayweather/Pac debacle so I wanted to get your thoughts on a previous scenario? For years Oscar the Golden Boy was the lottery ticket in boxing, he was the one fight that took Floyd to the level he is at now.  Floyd earned the right to fight him and cash in and we all know that Oscar desperately wanted a rematch and even took a tune up with Forbes.  Why would Floyd not punch the ticket twice?  That is the most money in the game and he passed?  Was it because first fight was too close for comfort? or the only other option was to face winner of undefeated Cotto/Margarito at the time?  He retired and never pursued the one fight that would make more than any in a rematch with Oscar?  Just wanted your thoughts on that?  Thanks! - Ronnie

BT: Ronnie, I don't think it had anything to do with the first fight being "too close for comfort." In fact, I know it didn't have anything to do with that. Despite what the scorecards may have read, Floyd wasn't having any problems whatsoever with De La Hoya. He was actually having fun in there and, in my opinion, won the fight pretty easily (I have no clue what fight Tom Kaczmarek was watching, but I had it 116-112 for Mayweather). Just like when fans questioned his first performance against Castillo, Floyd was more than willing to do a rematch with De La Hoya. Truth be told, I think he walked away from it out of principle more than anything. It's pretty clear that Floyd Mayweather has always wanted the proper recognition for his talents, both inside and outside of the ring, that he feels he deserves. Whether people agree or disagree, as far as Floyd is concerned, he was the primary reason why his fight with De La Hoya shattered pay-per-view records. Don't get me wrong, I know Oscar De La Hoya has always been the draw when it comes to major pay-per-view events, however, what made that fight so big was the fact that the undefeated "brash and cocky" Floyd Mayweather was moving up in weight to challenge the beloved Golden Boy. The storyline had absolutely nothing to do with De La Hoya defending his jr. middleweight title. Instead, it was all about the fact that De La Hoya would be attempting to do something that has never been done before...hand Floyd Mayweather his first defeat. Not to mention, it was the first time that HBO introduced their award-winning 4-part series "24/7", an idea that Floyd Mayweather had a lot to do with as far as the buildup of the fight is concerned. So again, as far as Mayweather was concerned, he had a lot to do with the success of that event. As the two sides were negotiating the rematch, De La Hoya still demanded the bigger share of the purse, which was an insult to Mayweather, who obviously won the first fight and felt as though he was largely responsible for its success. Now, I'm just speculating, but my guess is that Mayweather walked away from the fight and "retired" in order to prove a point; essentially that he was the new king of pay-per-view and he should be compensated accordingly, otherwise, the pay-per-view market for HBO Sports would suffer without him. That being said, I also think he wanted to take a much needed break from the sport in order to recharge the batteries, but ultimately, I think it was more about feeling disrespected with the offer and wanting to make a statement. Whether or not he proved his point is debateable, especially since Manny Pacquiao was able to fill the void in his absence, however, ever since Floyd came back, HBO sure does appear to cater to him a lot more than any other fighter they work with, including Pacquiao (otherwise, you would have never seen Pacquiao fighting on Showtime).

You are obviously a mayweather fan but I still enjoyed reading it. It makes me laugh loud. Your stories are one side making it loose it's credibility but then again it's all business. Good or bad writing as long as people are reading, it will pay the bill. Thanks for entertaining us. Cheers. - Denver

BT: I'm a fan of all fighters. Just because I answer questions from fans about Floyd Mayweather, that doesn't mean that I don't like Manny Pacquiao. In fact, I've never said one bad thing about Manny Pacquiao and have always written positive articles about his performances. The point is, answering questions about Floyd Mayweather has nothing to do with my credibility. In my opinion, I think it makes me a little more credible because instead of writing opinionated articles about rumors, I actually contact him to get the truth. In fact, if memory serves me correctly, there were a whole lot of writers out there with stories about Leonard Ellerbe and Mayweather parting ways, but as I'm sure you now know, that wasn't true at all. That's why you never saw a story about it on FightHype. Instead of piggybacking off of some story that was totally inaccurate, like a lot of writers do, I simply got the true story from Floyd himself. I don't know how that makes me less credible than all of those other writers who got the story wrong. I guess the mere fact that I even speak to Mayweather makes me guilty by association, therefore I must be biased and not credible, right? LOL.

I just want to thank you for your indepth look inside Mayweathers life.  The After Dark series was literally what Mayweather needed to do and it was great work by you.  It seems the media no let me rephrase that the media always puts him down.  I read articles by a certain journalist who covers boxing over at ESPN and all they do is talk the negative bout Mayweather. (except for when Mayweather paid for Genero's funeral he did give him credit) Anyways its good to hear from the horses mouth bout the situation with all the drama between Mayweather and Pacaquio. Im glad Mayweather got his side out. Now to my question with all this about drug testing (which I totally agree with it should be done because I think something doesnt smell right) my suggestion is for Mayweather instead of doing blood testing swap it out with hair testing its less intrusive and it could go back months to find out what a person was using. Keep up the good work please put out the 2nd round of negotiations out on your website.  The 1st round timeline was great and very informative. Thanks for your time. - Adam

BT: Thanks for the kudos, Adam. People in the media are only human, and sometimes, certain individuals, like the one you mentioned at ESPN, let their personal feelings get in the way while they express their thoughts through writing. The majority of the people who write articles, however, are individuals who don't even speak to anyone in the industry. They're simply people who have started a blog or joined a "pay-per-click" website to express their opinions in hopes of becoming famous themselves, therefore, what better way to gain popularity than to write about all the negative headlines pertaining to Mayweather and the positive headlines pertaining to Pacquiao. It's basically a case of "monkey see, monkey do." Go figure. As for your suggestion regarding drug testing, I could be wrong, but I don't think hair samples are sufficient enough to test for all of the different performance-enhancing drugs. Obviously I'm no expert, so double check with Google, but I'm pretty sure there are some PEDs out there that can only be discovered using blood samples.

Hi Ben, Floyd has never asked anyone to take drug tests of anyone until his proposed match to Manny.  Doesn't that say that he 1)suspects Manny of using; 2) does not believe he can win based on Manny's current performance because otherwise, he would not ask for a drug test; 3) Is most likely using this as a recourse because he knows of Manny's reluctance to take any type of blood tests close to a bout?  I say this because if I were a confident fighter, I wouldn't have asked this of the opponent unless I have reservations about winning the fight. The fact he did this only starting with Manny says a lot. What do you think? Thanks! - Benjamin

BT: I don't think it really matters why Floyd asked for the drug tests. Whether he asked for them because he's suspicious of Pacquiao's performances or because he woke up one day and decided he wanted to clean up the sport, the fact remains, in order to make the fight a reality, he wants them done, period! I don't think he requested the tests in hopes of getting out of the fight. If that were the case, he would have never offered the 14-day cut-off when both sides entered into mediation. I can assure you that Floyd is extremely confident that he can beat Pacquiao, however, I do think that says a lot about Pacquiao's performances. Obviously, Pacquiao has looked so good that some people seem to think that he's using performance-enhancing drugs. Personally, I think that's a compliment, so if anyone should have the mental advantage, I would think it would be Pacquiao. I mean, if I was kicking ass the way he's been doing and someone asked me to take some tests, I'd look at that as fear, so I probably would have agreed immediately to take the tests, just to put a little more doubt into the mind of my opponent. Evidently, at the time that the request was made, Pacquiao's fear of giving blood too close to a fight far outweighed the opportunity to potentially have a phsychological edge over Mayweather. Go figure. But as far as Floyd having reservations about winning, I know that's not the case at all.

hey gayweather follower! why do you always have comments disabled when you have your anti-Pacquiao particle? lol... you're afraid to shit your pants reading all the moronic comments for you huh? that's becoz ur a moron. and how much did mayweather pay you to lick his balls? hahaha.... - Alfie

BT: Hahahahaha. That's simple, Alfie. Comments are disabled on most Mayweather and/or Pacquiao related articles and interviews because, for some reason, they seem to bring out some of the nastiest and most idiotic racist comments I've ever come across. Just take a look back at any one of our old Mayweather Sr. interviews (like this one, http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content5703.html) and you can find more than 20 pages worth of comments like, and I quote, "bem thompson still kissing nigger mayweather ass", "Fuck that Nigger! Stupid niggers always say uneducated things", "i dont know why some of the writers taking time to interview that black ass gorilla sr.", "Black assholes. First the nigger asks for tests, then wants to rob everyone of their money", BLACK PEOPLE always blame others but themselves. Its a BLACK THING", and "monkey Mayweathers should go back to Africa". We currently don't have the staff to moderate the comments on a daily basis, therefore, in order to minimize the problem, comments are disabled on anything that may cause that kind of response. Now, that doesn't mean you can't express your opinion. You're more than welcome to join the FightHype Community, http://www.fighthype.com/community, and express your opinions there, where we actually do have a team of moderators who stay on top of all racists comments like that.


Floyd Mayweather's comeback fight vs. Victor Ortiz set for MGM Grand in Las Vegas

The site of Floyd Mayweather's latest comeback, Sept. 17 against Victor Ortiz, will be at a place that's very familiar to the Grand Rapids native.

As expected, Mayweather-Ortiz is set for MGM Grand's Garden Arena, multiple outlets are reporting. It will be Mayweather's fifth consecutive fight at MGM Grand, dating back to his split-decision victory over Oscar De La Hoya in May 2007.

Mayweather and Ortiz will embark on a two-city press tour next week, starting Tuesday in New York and finishing Wednesday in Los Angeles.

HBO will televise the fight -- named "Star Power" -- on pay per view.

Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer told ESPN.com's Dan Rafael this week that Mayweather was involved in the negotiations with HBO, which had to work to keep Mayweather after losing the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley fight to rival Showtime earlier this year.

"Floyd was very much involved as it relates to the marketing strategy. He came with very specific ideas and requests as it relates to what he wanted to see," Schaefer said.

HBO is planning another installment of its award-winning "24/7" series featuring Mayweather and Ortiz, with the first episode debuting Aug. 27.

Replays of "24/7" episodes likely will appear across Time Warner's Turner networks, ESPN.com's Rafael reported, likely on TBS, TNT or TruTV.

Mayweather (41-0, 25 KOs) hasn't fought since a dominating victory over Shane Mosley last May. Ortiz (29-2-2, 22 KOs) last fought in April against Andre Berto, where he upset Berto for the WBC welterweight title.

Larry Merchant: Ortiz comes off big win, Mayweather off big vacation

It can now be revealed that, although they were living only a few miles apart in seaside Santa Monica, fugitive Boston mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger and HBO boxing sage Larry Merchant never crossed paths.

It might’ve been fascinating to hear the FBI “Most Wanted” poster boy, a serious fight fan when he wasn’t busy (allegedly?) murdering people, rap out with Uncle Larry about fights and fighters.

“Whitey had a very small circle of friends, it seems,” Merchant told me Friday by phone from Missouri, where he will comment on Saturday night’s Devon Alexander-Lucas Matthysse main event. “But he was a few miles up the road from me and, as a kid, they called me ‘Whitey’ because my hair was blondish.”

I pressed on, asking Merchant about pending fistic events, including the Sept. 17 Vicious Victor Ortiz-Floyd Mayweather Jr. show (HBO, probably from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on Mexican Independence Day weekend) and the Nov. 12 ‘’Chapter 3” event at the same location between Juan Manuel Marquez and Manny Pacquiao.

Merchant is keen on both of the big PPV shows but for different reasons.

“For Mayweather, who’s been fighting Marquez, (Shane) Mosley and (Ricky) Hatton, well now he’s fighting a guy 10 years younger than him, a guy coming off a big win while Floyd is coming off a big vacation,” Merchant said.

“There’s a certain kind of unknown factor in this equation. I like Mayweather-Ortiz and, if what Golden Boy is saying is true about having Canelo Alvarez and Erik Morales included, then it’s a huge event, particularly for the Mexicans and Mexican-Americans.

“I think it will outdo Pacquiao-Marquez in terms of the PPV numbers. I think you’ll see a huge HBO 24/7 buildup and that will be significant for Ortiz because he’s a fresh face and a vivid contrast in personality to Mayweather. He’s well spoken also.”

As for the third bout between Pacman and counterpuncher Juan Ma, Merchant certainly doesn’t begrudge the Mexican veteran the big payday.

“This is the first Manny opponent in some time who can say he’s fought him on even terms before. And I think it’s fair to say Juan Ma has earned this one. Question is, can he still fight as well being so much older and in a bigger division?”

As to more immediate ring business, Merchant thinks the inactivity of Timothy Bradley, in a promotional dispute with tracksuit and lawsuit loving Big Gary Shaw leaves Kevin Cunningham’s St. Louis fighter with room to make up “yardage” lost to Bradley when they fought on HBO in January.

“Since you said yardage, I will say that the field is wide open now with Bradley out. Bradley beat Devon but Bradley is off the field,” Merchant said. “If Alexander goes out there and beats Matthysse more convincingly than Zab Judah did, then Alexander and Khan might the guys standing out in this division.

“Devon’s got a real opportunity here with Bradley on the sidelines.”

Source: http://www.examiner.com

Little Floyd steps up BIG - Covers funeral cost for Genaro Hernandez family

Floyd Mayweather Jr love him or hate him will go down as one the best fighters of all time.  He's taken a beating by many boxing scribes over the years for things that he's said and done, but this time he deserves some respect.  The boxing community and more importantly Genaro's family lost a great man.  Genaro passed away after a long fight with cancer.

I had the honor of meeting Genaro at a boxing card in Tunica, Mississippi a few years ago.  It was an ESPN card at Fitzgerald's Casino.  He was a great guy who loved being in the boxing atmosphere.  He enjoyed signing autographs and taking photos with the fans.  Genaro was simply a kind man.

Funerals are not cheap.  For those people who don't make a lot of money, the cost of a funeral can create even more hardship on a family.

Floyd Mayweather Jr stepped up to the plate and paid for Genaro's funeral so that his family wouldn't have to suffer anymore than they were already suffering.  Floyd didn't have to do this, but he did.

Now I know some of the rabid Pacquiao fans will come out and say that Floyd only did this as a publicity stunt.  I highly doubt that he did it for any PR reasons.  Floyd feeds a lot of homeless folks in Vegas, and he doesn't have to do that either.  In Genaro's case, Floyd did something for a brother in boxing and he helped ease the pain that the Hernandez family is going through.

I got Floyd's back on this one.  This was a classy move no matter what anyone has to say.

Mississippians chimed in and shared their thoughts on Floyd's act of kindness.  I spoke with Keith Johnson of Jackson, MS.  He's a big Floyd Mayweather fan.  Keith pulled no punches, "Floyd isn't as bad as what most people think.  He does a lot for hungry people and homeless people.  I'm not that surprised that he would step up and pay for Genaro's funeral.  Floyd does a lot of stuff that helps people and it doesn't even make the front pages of websites."

Jimmy Tomlinson of Canton, MS also shared his thoughts, "I am not a Floyd Mayweather fan and I don't like how he's acted throughout the whole Pacquiao saga, but I must give him respect for doing a good thing here.  Paying for Genaro's funeral costs was a stand up thing to do."

Love him or hate him, Floyd definitely did a great thing and he deserves a nod for it.  This writer has no problem giving credit where credit is due.

Source: http://www.examiner.com

Schaefer: Mayweather-Ortiz Will Be Most Promoted Ever

Forgive Golden Boy Promotions' CEO Richard Schaefer if he sounds out of breath, for he's been an extremely busy man.

Not only are the fighters in his company winning at an alarming rate, but Schaefer has been landing one big deal after another, and, it seems, traveling from one side of the country or even out of the country for big match ups.

On Tuesday, Schaefor announced "Star Power," the promotional name bestowed upon the Sept. 17 return to the ring of 34-year-old six-time champion Floyd Mayweather (41-0, 25 KOs) against 24-year-old WBC welterweight king Victor Ortiz (29-2-2, 22 KOs).

"We just finalized [on Wednesday] the HBO deal for Mayweather-Ortiz, " said Schaefer, referring to story initially reported by ESPN that Golden Boy had reached an agreement with HBO pay per view network to broadcast Mayweather-Ortiz.

"I'm very happy with what we ended up with. HBO and Time Warner are going to put all of their different platforms and packages into play," said Schaefer. "It's going to be without a doubt the most heavily promoted event of all time. There is no question in my mind."

Schaefer said that the promotion will include features from HBO's parent company Time Warner, as well as assets from Turner Broadcasting and Time Magazine. Time Warner also governs online publications such as Sports Illustrated, People and Entertainment Weekly.

"In the coming weeks, there are going to be a lot of these promotional elements in play that are going to be announced," said Schaefer. "The promotion is going to be running from pretty much now until the night of the fight."

HBO's 24/7 series previews every pay per view fight, and will do the same for Mayweather-Ortiz through a wider range of exposure on the Turner's various networks, Schaefer said.

"You're going to have announcements of different promotional tools being used, many of them new to the sport of boxing," said Schaefer. "It's going to be interesting for fight fans, sports fans and the general public to really be part of that experience going into the fight."

The Mayweather-Ortiz touring festivities begin on Tuesday in New York, with an almost unheard of next-day stop in Los Angeles.

"I'm very, very busy and I'm going to be on tour in New York on Tuesday. We're all flying in on Sunday, and we have a lot of promotional activities on Monday. On Tuesday, we're going to do the press conference and fly back to Los Angeles on Tuesday night," said Schaefer.

"And then, on Wednesday, we'll have other promotional things lined up. On this Wednesday night, I think we will have one of the most exciting press conference we've ever had outdoors at LA Live," said Schaefer. "And then the following week, I'm going to be in England for David Haye versus Wladimir Klitschko. That means that I'm going to be gone for a week and a half."
The action follows what already has been a big year for Golden Boy Promotions, starting in March.

That's when Golden Boy's 20-year-old WBC junior middleweight belt-holder Saul Alvarez (37-0-1, 26 KOs) earned his crown with a unanimous decision over England's Matthew Hatton (41-5-2, 16 KOs).

In April, Ortiz rose from two knockdowns and scored two of his own during a unanimous decision that dethroned previously unbeaten WBC king Andre Berto (27-1, 21KOs).

In May, 46-year-old Bernard Hopkins (52-5-2, 32 KOs) became the oldest fighter in the history of the sport to win a significant world title, dethroning Canada's 28-year-old Jean Pascal (26-2-1, 16 KOs) as WBC light heavyweight champion.

Hopkins-Pascal was a rematch of December's controversial majority draw when the former undisputed middleweight titlist from Philadelphia had appeared to have out-boxed Pascal for the victory despite having been twice floored during the bout.

Alvarez returned for a June 18 clash to dominate his 12th-round knockout in a mandatory defense of his crown against England's 34-year-old Ryan Rhodes (45-5, 31 KOs), whom he dropped in the fourth round.

On the Alvarez-Rhodes undercard, Golden Boy's 21-year-old super featherweight sensation Adrien Broner (21-0) scored his 17th knockout, ending with a first-round stoppage that dethroned 27-year-old NABF king Jason Litzau (28-3, 21 KOs).

On June 25, there is a non-title, junior welterweight match up between Golden Boy's 28-year-old Argentinian Lucas Matthysse (28-1, 26 KOs) against southpaw former WBC titlist Devon Alexander (21-1, 13 KOs) of promoter Don King.

Golden Boy also handles the American affairs of 30-year-old WBA heavyweight champion David Haye (25-1, 23 KOs), who on July 2 will pursue his 16th straight victory and his 14th knockout during that run against 34-year-old WBO, IBF and IBO counterpart Wladimir Klitschko (55-3, 49 KOs) in an attempt to end a 13-fight winning streak that includes 10 knockouts.

"Another big one is Lucas Matthysse, and then we have David Haye in Germany," said Schaefer. "I'm happy with the way things are coming along, and the way that our athletes are performing."

On July 9, Golden Boy Promotions is matching 28-year-old Cuban native Erislandy Lara (15-0-1, 10 KOs) in a clash of southpaws opposite 29-year-old former three-time champion Paul Williams (39-2, 27 KOs) on July 9.

On July 23, Golden Boy Promotions is has 24-year-old WBA junior welterweight champions Amir Khan (25-1, 17 KOs) of England going against 33-year-old Bronx native and southpaw IBF titlist Zab Judah (41-6, 28KOs) of Las Vegas at the Mandalay Bay Hotel in Las Vegas.

"The Khan-Judah fight is yet another big, major fight," said Schaefer.

On August 27, Golden Boy has 27-year-old WBA interim junior welterweight king Marcos Rene Maidana (30-2, 27 KOs) of Argentina against 28-year-old southpaw WBO and WBA interim lightweight king Robert Guerrero (29-1-1, 18 KOs), who has 13 straight wins, nine of them stoppages, and is attempting to win his sixth belt in a fourth weight class.

Then on Sept. 17, there is Mayweather-Ortiz, a deal that was struck in the wake of a settlement between Golden Boy Promotions and southpaw eight-division and WBO welterweight titlist Manny Pacquiao (53-3-2, 38 knockouts) of a lawsuit that could pave the way for a smoothed over working relationship between Golden Boy and Pacquiao's Top Rank Promotions' CEO Bob Arum.

"Adrien Broner looked sensational and Alvarez looked sensational. All of our athletes are doing fantastic, and we're very proud of them. Whenever you have athletes performing at that level, then you want to make sure that you can continue to keep them busy," said Schaefer.

"You want to move them forward and to continue to give them the kind of opportunities. You see these young kids advance, and that's huge part of it," said Schaefer. "You want to continue to give them the opportunities, and that's why I am so busy with ensuring that we get the necessary television dates and exposure."

Schaefer had said that if Alvarez, slated to return on Sept. 17, defeated Rhodes, he could potentially land on a pay-per-view undercard to Mayweather-Ortiz and, perhaps, face the Mayweather-Ortiz winner.

But Arum recently told ESPN.com that he would scrap plans for his 25-year-old Mexican WBC middleweight king Julio Cesar Chavez (43-0-1, 30 KOs) if it mean an opportunity to face Alvarez perhaps at a catchweight of 158 pounds that would allow Alvarez to keep his belt.

Although Schaefer said that he is willing to entertain Chavez-Alvarez, and, even Pacquiao-Alvarez, his schedule simply does not permit him to devote much thought to it.

"The fact is that we want to do that fight [Chavez-Alvarez,] and Canelo is scheduled to fight on Sept. 17," said Schaefer. "So I don't have time to get into these back-and-forths about it right now. I'm toos busy now with all my other fights, so I can't go and engage now in these other things."

"Now all of a sudden he's a problem" - Floyd Sr. talks Mayweather vs. Ortiz

These days trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. has been spending a lot of time at Johnny Tocco's Ring Side Gym on the east side of Las Vegas, working with a select group of fighters including junior lightweight contender Mickey Bey Jr., welterweight hopeful Lanardo Tyner, and standout amateur Kevin Newman. With his brother Jeff out of town and in Panama as he helps Celestino Caballero ready for his July 2nd shot at WBA featherweight champion Jonathan Barros, Floyd Sr. has stepped up to help Bey and Newman, two fighters he had worked with previously. 

Despite a lung disease called sarcoidosis that has admittedly affected his health in recent years, Mayweather was pretty lively as he oversaw the duties of the three fighters and was more than happy to take a few minutes of his time afterwards to talk some boxing. At the moment people are still buzzing over the news of Mayweather's son Floyd Jr. and his recent announcement that he will be facing off with WBC welterweight champion Victor Ortiz on September 17th.

It was only natural for me to get Floyd's take on the matchup and he offered up a few forewarnings of his own, including his suspicions about Ortiz having previously worked with Manny Pacquiao out in Los Angeles.

"My thing is, and I would have to speak on that," said Floyd. "I know he's been around [Freddie] Roach's camp, but like I said, I feel that if Lil' Floyd will make them all take the Olympic tests, that's what they need. Because there's too much shit going on now. Too much bullshit going on now and it aint doing nothing but ruining boxing, period. Believe it or not, boxing is on its way out. Because of things like this. It's things like this that are ruining boxing."

Mayweather of course is referring to his belief that some of today's crop of fighters are using performance-enhancing drugs to boost their accomplishments in the ring. Floyd Jr. and Pacquiao saw the first round of negotiations for a possible encounter between them fall apart because of an indifference over Olympic-style drug testing and it is an issue that the elder Mayweather has never let up on.

But while everyone is entitled to their own opinion I tried to focus more on Floyd's impression of Ortiz as a fighter, including his upset over Andre Berto this past April.

"I got a chance to see a little of that," Sr. continued. "From what I've seen though, I see that Victor Ortiz is an aggressive young fighter, he's ten years Lil' Floyd's junior. Regardless to the style of fighting that he has, he's a left-hander and [Floyd] would do better with a right-hander but it doesn't make a difference; Lil' Floyd knows exactly what to do with Ortiz. He has too much knowledge up here. Where Ortiz doesn't really have."
  
Continuing further, the only real concern that Floyd Sr. seemed to hint at was over his son's recent inactivity, as he will have been out of the ring for over sixteen months by the time the Ortiz fight goes down.

"I do still believe that my son should stay more active or get out of the game, because I'm just saying that I don't care who you is, if you aren't being sharp, you lose that much sharpness and it can make a big difference. Of course if he aint fought as long as he has fought, he could have lost something. I don't care who you are; Mayweather, Cassius Clay or whoever.

"Sometimes when you lose things like that you will fight a guy like Ortiz who may cause you a problem where he normally wouldn't be a problem at all. But now all of a sudden he's a problem. Things happen. If you are a fighter you gotta keep yourself sharp. It's just like when people say 'tune up'. You need a tune up, whoever you are. It's just like car, there might be something wrong with it, it might be leaking oil, or whatever it is. It needs a tune up. You've got to stay tuned up all the time for whatever race or whatever it is you might be doing."

Reasonable thoughts from Papa Floyd, a man whose relationship with his son has often been checkered. Floyd will never shy away from his feelings towards his own child but he knows there is a definite sense of danger attached to his next ring endeavor.

"With my son, I feel that he's a great fighter. I feel that he's been the best fighter over the last ten or eleven years. He's still the best fighter today I belive. But I don't care who you are, how great you think you are, something can always go wrong." 

HBO PPV To Distribute September Mayweather Fight

HBO will distribute the Sept. 17 return to the boxing ring of undefeated fighter and mega pay-per-view draw Floyd Mayweather. 

Mayweather, who has not fought since May 2010, will fight World Boxing Council welterweight champion Victor Ortiz, according to HBO officials. It's the first marquee PPV boxing event for HBO, although the network did distribute an April 9 Erik Morales-Marco Maidana PPV event.

Showtime PPV has distributed the two biggest PPV events of the year, including the March 12 Miguel Cotto- -Ricardo Mayorga fight and the May 7 Manny Pacquiao-Sugar Shane Mosley fight. The Pacquio-Mosley event drew more than 1.3 million PPV buys. 

"The return of Floyd Mayweather is big news for the sport of boxing," said Mark Taffet, senior vice president of HBO Pay-Per-View. "September 17 is a terrific event for the industry."

Mayweather, along with Pacquiao, have been the biggest PPV draws in the sport over the past three years. Mayweather's last fight, a May 2010 bout against Mosley, drew 1.4 million PPV buys.  

The site for the fight has not been set, according to HBO. Press conferences to announce the fight will be held June 28 in New York and June 29 in Los Angeles, said network officials. 

Even Manny Pacquiao Knows Ortiz is a Tune-Up for Floyd Mayweather

Of course Floyd Mayweather Jr. wants to fight Manny Pacquiao. The ridiculous rumors about Mayweather “ducking” his Filipino counterpart in an effort to preserve his undefeated record have always been ludicrous, and by virtue of his recent statements, Pacquiao is admitting this much.


Speaking to ABS-CBN News’ Ginger Conejero, Pacquiao had this to say regarding why he feels Mayweather chose Victor Ortiz as his next opponent.


"Siguro (lalaban sa akin), dahil ang kakalabanin niya southpaw rin. [Maybe he's preparing for me because he chose to fight a southpaw],"


Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, echoed these sentiments.


"Of course, that's the first thing I thought," Roach previously said.

Mayweather has always been a far more talented boxer and skilled tactician than Pacquiao, but the idea that he could simply step back into the ring versus Pacquiao after a delayed absence is crazy. The September 17th bout versus Ortiz will serve as an excellent warm-up for Floyd, and allow him to return to his in-ring comfort zone against a capable boxer who has gone undefeated in his last six matches. That, coupled with 10-year age gap that works in Ortiz’s favor should be just what the doctor ordered in terms of getting Mayweather back into game shape.

On the other side of things, it’s funny to hear both Pacquiao and Roach admit that Mayweather is in fact keeping them in mind while choosing his upcoming bouts. After all, this is the same dynamic duo who along with Bob Arum have made it their mission in life to spread the propaganda about Floyd ducking them. The same group, mind you, that has switched their story regarding why the initially refused, then agreed to, then refused to, then agreed to Mayweather’s drug testing demands, all the while blaming the other camp for a superfight never happening.

It’s good that Pacquiao is finally admitting that Mayweather does want to fight him, though, and that Floyd is using Ortiz as a warm-up for the real big dance. Maybe if the Filipino pop star acknowledges this fact a few more times in the media, his delusional cult followers will take notice and stop slandering Mayweather’s name with untrue, false allegations.

FLOYD MAYWEATHER SR: "HE IS A STRONG KID, BUT HE CAN'T MATCH LIL FLOYD SKILLWISE"

FightHype.com briefly caught up with world-class trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. to get his thoughts on his son's return to the ring this September to face WBC welterweight champion Victor Ortiz. "I really don't know much about him, but I remember seeing him fight and he is a strong kid, but he can't match Lil Floyd skillwise. At the end of the day, any fighter out there has to match Lil Floyd skillwise and I just don't see anybody doing that," Mayweather Sr. commented when asked what he thought about Ortiz. Although he hasn't had an opportunity to watch too much footage on him, Mayweather Sr. is keenly aware that Ortiz is a southpaw, a fact that he doesn't think his son will have any problems with whatsoever.

"Let me tell you something, man, when you lose 2 or 3 rounds to a fighter and then dominate them the other 9 or 10 rounds and people say you struggle with that style, you know you are at the top of your game. People are basing that on Zab winning two or three rounds and Chop Chop stunning him. Come on, man. Lil Floyd is the best at figuring you out and picking you apart and it don't take him long either," he continued, dismissing the notion that Floyd has problems with southpaw fighters. Obviously Mayweather Sr. is confident that his son will come out victorious, however, he wasn't quite sure of how that victory would come about. "I don't know if Lil Floyd will knock him out, but he will whoop his ass for 12 rounds if nothing else," he remarked, making it clear that no matter the final outcome, he expects another dominant performance.

Whether or not he'll be a part of Lil Floyd's camp this time around is still up in the air, but he's more than willing to help out should the opportunity present itself. "He's my son and I want to see him do well. We will see," Mayweather Sr. added. Whether he's helping or not, something tells me you can expect to see Big Floyd in the gym when the 24/7 cameras start filiming.


Victor Ortiz: The Young Padawan

I can see how Victor Ortiz’ promoter, Oscar Dela Hoya is also his number one believer. They’re both Mexican-Americans with talent and skill to complement their power, and Ortiz has raw power in both hands. Victor is called “Vicious” for a good reason: he has a crowd pleasing fighting style and is very aggressive, always looking to force the action in the ring; And Victor has that charm and rugged good looks that could pull that star status like a halo up above his head. In a way, they are much alike. Whether he has the elements and that broad smile to capture an even wider market, we all have to wait and see. Around two years ago when Oscar Dela Hoya cashed in on these factors and predicted him as the next golden boy of boxing things were looking good up ahead and the stars were indeed starting to align in his favor. Everything seemed to glow yonder the horizon for Ortiz’ up until he unexpectedly hit that Argentine bloc of force in the form of Marcos Maidana, who knocked him off the path to success.

But for the Mexican-American prizefighter, Victor “Vicious” Ortiz the prize of winning against Andre Berto last April 16, 2011 shoots beyond the rewards of gaining the WBC Welterweight title and settles at a higher plateau of that much sought regained respect. Every fighter is as good as his last fight, so they say, and Ortiz’ last one is a running contender to fight of the year for 2011. In fact, he was so good in that fight that he is now regarded as among the top Welterweights in the world, and that prior knockout loss he suffered against Maidana in 2009 has become a wound in the distant past which time healed nicely.

At the age of 24, the young and volatile Ortiz has switched from being a strong up-and-comer to being touted as the next big name in boxing, down to being an exposed fighter and now ranked by many boxing sites as being one of the top two Welterweights in the world. Still riding that natural high of capturing the WBC Welterweight belt, the question that looms over the new champion is, will he finally be able to overcome that instability and show to the world his championship win was not a mere stroke of good luck? Is he ripe enough to be plucked from the common and placed amongst the elite in the sport? For certainly, his next opponent, Floyd Mayweather Jr., at this point in his career doesn’t need a belt around his waist to be considered one.

Ortiz brings a lot of interest with him each time he fights not only due to his personal and professional background, but ‘cause he carries so much passion as a fighter. Almost like Oscar, he always comes forward with his arms up, looking boxy and basic. He comes in with that strong upper body figure and a decent jab, and being a lefty could pose some difficulty against Mayweather Jr. to some degree. With the conditioning he had against Andre Berto maybe he'd have enough energy to fuel the same long pressured attack De La Hoya applied against Floyd Jr. and there's a possibility that Ortiz could actually finish the job Oscar De La Hoya nearly accomplished back in 2007. If only De La Hoya had not stopped throwing those jabs at Floyd Jr. many agree how he really could have won that fight, and just maybe the energetic Ortiz could attempt to finish what he had started with youth on his side.

Whether Floyd Mayweather Jr. has chosen to fight Ortiz, being a southpaw, as a preparation for his potential fight against Pacquiao, doesn’t really matter at least for now that neither party has found any solution to that blood testing bedlam. Nobody really knows how the future of that fight is going to unfold, if it all; however, against Victor Ortiz, the latter appears to be the young Padawan up against a master Jedi.

Even if the younger Victor Ortiz were to fight at a much later date against an older version of Floyd Mayweather Jr., one who’s a bit past his best years, even that match up would still be a tough fight to call. Coated with slick and armed with skill, it is actually the intangible that is going to be the toughest quality to overcome when he fights the black American. Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s experience will overshadow whatever physical advantages Ortiz hopes to bring at the day of the fight. Mayweather Jr. will come in with that uncanny ability to run over the fight in his head in a way Ortiz can only dream of. He has the gift of foresight, deception as well as strong anticipation, and timing not every fighter is ensured to develop over the years. Floyd Jr. is that type of fighter who doesn’t rely as much on the physical as on the mental aspect of the game, and he is very clever at what he does. He is unpredictable and, therefore, difficult to trap but very perceptive when he decides to lunge an offensive. He’s a natural fighter. Needless to say he is equipped with so much talent and superb skill sets as well, which makes him the undefeated fighter he is now.

From supreme talent we go back to the tangibles. Victor Ortiz seems to have successfully carried his power moving up to Welterweight, which will be very crucial in his next fight. That’s what he needs to keep the pressure on Floyd Jr. altogether with endurance and stamina, but fighting flatfooted won’t help to further his cause. He needs to step up on his speed to actually apply that pressure and keep up with Mayweather Jr., who can be very flitty and stings like a bee. Two of the many things Floyd Jr. is very good at are striking that lead straight and a left hook. That same left hook that knocked down Marquez, and that check hook that made Hatton bang his head at the ring post. Whether it is accountable to his fighting style or frigid fight stance and less upper body movement, Victor Ortiz seems surely to fall prey to Mayweather’s lead right hand straight. I can see him eating those shots all night. If he took too many of those from a slow and predictable Marcos Maidana he surely will be receiving more from an elite fighter this time around. In his past fights he has been very vulnerable to counter left hooks too, which Mayweather executes to perfection. He also needs a quicker snapback whenever he throws his left straight or he’ll get beaten to the punch with counterpunches each time.

Whether we attribute it to his enthused fighting style or mere unfettered youthful aggression, I personally think Victor is too vicious that he overly commits when he fights, so when he’s at it he tends to disregard keeping the technical aspect of the fight game. He is exciting to watch ‘cause he can knock you out anytime, but the same goes with him. I just hope he won’t leave too many windows open against a straight shooter like Floyd Mayweather Jr.

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