Saturday 6 March 2010

Mayweather-Mosley bout can jump-start race to new market -- New York Post

By George Willis, New York Post

The question came up during the Floyd Mayweather-Shane Mosley press conference earlier this week: Name the last time a non-heavyweight fight this big featured two African-Americans?

Toss out bouts involving Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield, and you probably have to go back to Sugar Ray Leonard’s epic bout against Marvin Hagler way back in 1987.

You could get into all kinds of socio-economic reasons for the 23-year drought, and there are some in the boxing industry who suggest bouts between black fighters don’t sell. But Mayweather-Mosley offers a chance to re-engage fans that need to root for their own, and promoters of the bout are poised to react.

“We’re going to focus most of our marketing on the urban markets,” said Richard Schaefer, the CEO of Golden Boy Promotions. “The urban market, the African-American market and the Hispanic market, are two very important markets in boxing. Some of the greatest fighters come out of these markets. To deliver a fight of this magnitude between two of the best fighters, period, is great for the sport.”

Mayweather-Mosley is an easy sell. Both are multi-division champions who have appeared two dozen times each on HBO and are headed for boxing’s Hall of Fame when their careers are done.

But fighters such as Devon Alexander are battling for their piece of the spotlight. Alexander, the WBC super lightweight champion, challenges IBF junior welterweight champ Juan Urango of Colombia tonight on HBO from the Mohegan Sun. Alexander, an African-American, is unbeaten in 19 fights with

12 KOs, but largely is unknown despite his inspirational story.

He grew up in the rough streets of North St. Louis, but found boxing at age 7

and stayed in the gym, escaping the gangs and drugs that consumed other youths.

“I want to encourage and show young kids that they can do it, no matter what the situation,” Alexander said. “I definitely wasn’t born with a silver spoon in my mouth. If I can show them that they can do it, that’s what I want to do.”

Maybe the hype around Mayweather-Mosley will get people to look at fighters such as Alexander, who aren’t necessarily bangers, but epitomize the art of the Sweet Science. That’s Mayweather’s style.

“The reason why Hispanic

fighters have gotten the nod lately is they will sit there and punch and go toe-to-toe,” Mosley said. “That’s what a lot of people want to see: a blood bath. A lot of African-America fighters like to move around and box which is good. That’s what you’re supposed to do because the nature of the game is to hit and not get hit. But I’m not sure how well that sells tickets.”

Mayweather-Mosley figures to be a sellout at the MGM in Las Vegas, but to reach the goal of 3 million pay-per-view buys that Schaefer predicted, it will need a strong following from all nationalities and ethnic backgrounds, but particularly in the urban market.

“Over the last three years, the increase in interest measured by pay-per-view buys, measured by media activity, measured by hits on the internet, in the urban communities has been astronomical,” HBO PPV boss Mark Taffet said. “A lot of credit goes to Floyd Mayweather. His star has risen to meteoric heights, and the African-American community has come with him. It literally has added another leg to the stool as far as the boxing audience.”

george.willis@nypost.com

Source: nypost.com

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Blast from past carries less hype for Holyfield -- Las Vegas Review-Journal

By STEVE CARP, Las Vegas Review-Journal

When Evander Holyfield fought Lennox Lewis at the Thomas & Mack Center on Nov. 13, 1999, in a rematch of their first bout nine months earlier, more than 17,000 filled the arena.

Holyfield lost that bout, dropping a 12-round unanimous decision.

Now, 11 years later and at age 47, Holyfield will return to the Thomas & Mack looking for a better outcome, even if it comes before an audience half the size of the one that watched him fight Lewis.

The former four-time world heavyweight champion will face 41-year-old Frans Botha on April 10. The two originally were scheduled to fight in February in Uganda, but the bout fell through for financial reasons.

"I've been preparing for a while," Holyfield said Friday. "I'm working with Tommy Brooks in Los Angeles, and we'll be ready."

Tickets, priced from $25 to $250, will go on sale at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Thomas & Mack box office and online at unlvtickets.com. The fight, which is being promoted by Crown Boxing, will be televised on pay per view but blacked out in Las Vegas. Capacity for the fight will be 9,500, with only the lower bowl being used.

The fight will be Holyfield's first in Las Vegas since Oct. 4, 2003, when James Toney stopped him in the ninth round at Mandalay Bay. In his most recent fight, Holyfield (42-10-2, 27 knockouts) lost a 12-round majority decision to WBA champion Nikolai Valuev on Dec. 20 in Switzerland.

"Seeing the fight on tape, I could see everything coming back," Holyfield said. "My jab was crisp. My timing was good. My shoulder wasn't giving me any problems. In my mind, there's no reason why I shouldn't still be boxing."

The Nevada Athletic Commission apparently agrees. Despite Holyfield having lost five of his past nine fights, the commission on Monday granted him a license based on his medical data that said he was fit to compete and was competitive against Valuev.

Holyfield will receive $150,000 plus a percentage from the pay-per-view telecast. Botha (47-4-3, 28 KOs), whose last fight was a 12-round draw against Pedro Carrion on Oct. 24 in Germany, will make $100,000.

Holyfield said Botha's awkward style in the ring shouldn't pose any serious threat to him. "I just have to box him, and that should be enough," Holyfield said.

Considerable speculation in the past couple of days suggested Holyfield would face Mike Tyson for a third time instead of Botha. But Holyfield dismissed the reports, saying he's not interested.

"No one's presented anything to me," he said. "I hear things about Tyson all the time. But he keeps saying he's through with boxing, and me, I've moved on. I'm trying to win a championship, and Tyson doesn't have a belt. Right now, it's a joke."

Holyfield, whose 1999 fight with Lewis at the Thomas & Mack generated the second-biggest gate in Nevada history at $16.86 million, said it isn't about money this time around.

"This is about winning the title again," he said. "When I fought Lennox Lewis, it was about trying to become the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. (In 2010) the goal hasn't changed. I want to be the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. When I do that, then I'll leave (boxing)."

Contact reporter Steve Carp at scarp@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2913.

Source: lvrj.com

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Heated Interview with Floyd Mayweather Jr - "Money" Gets Agitated over Drug Question -- Doghouse Boxing

By Gabriel Montoya, Max Boxing (Special to Doghouse Boxing)

The following interview with Floyd Mayweather Jr. was conducted by Gabriel Montoya. The interview gets very heated and deals with Manny Pacquiao and the drug testing issue and more. Gabriel caught up with Mayweather at Thursday's press conference in L.A.

Gabriel's article with Interview starts now/ Gabriel writes: The question I found most pressing today, beyond fight strategy, was “why now”? Why demand now that the sport of boxing and one fighter in particular come clean or prove their cleanliness. I mean, I don’t disagree that the sport should clean up its act and that a grand gesture from two top fighters would be huge for that movement. What I am curious about thought is why now for Floyd? In the midst of my ongoing search for answers to the PEDs in boxing questions, it seemed only logical that when presented an opportunity to get answers from the man that started this firestorm of change: Floyd Mayweather, Jr.

Before I do, I’d like to preface this next section by saying that while I absolutely support better drug testing in all sports, the more I explore this topic, the more I question if the prohibition of performance enhancing drugs will ever work and if we should even bother trying anymore which is again, a question for another bag.

I had heard a rumor that the drug testing in the Mosley/Mayweather fight might be a dog and pony show; that the testing, while agreed to, was not actually going to happen. Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaeffer assured me it was not a sham and that in fact, the testing would begin at the start of training camp which an unnamed source told me meant the moment after the last presser. That’s as of yet unconfirmed.

So that question answered, I spoke with Shane on the subject as it pertained to him. That’ll be in the story, too.

And finally, I went and talked to Floyd, surrounded by a lot of people I didn’t know, flanked by Leonard Ellerbe and talking to intrepid L.A. Times scribe Lance Pugmire. After a couple answers about how he gets labeled boring and how he doesn’t pick and choose opponents ( from now on just assume the report will have the quotes so I don’t have to keep saying it), I finally got around to asking Floyd my question. Here’s the Q n A version of what went down.

GM: You’ve been in the sport your whole life, been a champion for years and have been at the top of the sport for several years, what made you decide to clean up the sport and do the blood testing? Why now?

MM: Because I’m the face of boxing. I just want to show the world that my sport, that I’m in, is a clean sport. That’s all I’m saying. And you’ve got to realize this. I don’t read negative articles but you know I hear the fans say “Floyd don’t listen to the media, don’t listen to the writers because of this.” The thing is this. I’m fighting against the media, I’m fighting against all the writers, all the photographers, I’m fighting against everybody. I’m fighting against all the internet blogs AND I’m fighting against the opponent. You have to be mentally strong to be able to do that and to be able to hold up fifteen years as a professional and dominate in the professional ranks. But I was trying to fight Mosley when he was undefeated. And then I tried to fight him again. He said he had a toothache. But I told Mosley one day, I said “Listen. All roads will lead to me. You will make your biggest payday facing me.” He said “Awww no. You’re not really getting the money you say you’re getting. You’re not getting thirty million. You’re not getting forty million. Aww no, you’re not getting seventy million. That’s just talk. The thing is this with Mosley. He beat Oscar twice. He says he’s a partner in the company but then he was just fighting on the undercard of Marco Antonio Barrera. But then he went to ESPN. Not saying that there’s nothing wrong with ESPN but I’m just saying that shows you how history has went.

Then Floyd answered a question about Latinos by saying “I love the Mexicans. I love the Latinos” and I thought “As long as they’re not asking me questions.”

Now, he didn’t really answer my question at all and so I was stuck with the problem of having to ask it again. I’m not a confrontational type of reporter. I tend to hate reporters who act like a one- man angry mob. But I wanted an answer and on a nice segue cue from Floyd about being the “Face of Boxing” I jumped right back in with:

GM: You became the face of boxing when you dominated Oscar De La Hoya__

MM: Before then I’ve been the face of boxing___

GM: You became a crossover star when you beat De La Hoya.

MM: Well the thing is this. Floyd Mayweather is versatile. I’m able to go to something else and dominate. I’m a household name___

GM: But you weren’t that until after Oscar. My question is this: Why the Pacquiao fight? Why that fight? Why did you wait until then to do the blood testing?

MM: Well, well, it’s, it’s, because, it’s, it’s out with the old and in with the new. At one particular time, fighters didn’t have to take a urine test at all.

GM: I fully support this. Why then?

MM: At one particular time, fighters didn’t have to take HIV tests. But they do because somebody had to make a stand. So I’m making a stand. That’s all I’m saying.

GM: Why that moment?

MM: Why not?

GM: But why not before?

MM: But why not?

Leonard Ellerbe (who I have been trying to get an interview with Floyd through for about a month now after telling him I fully support blood testing in the sport and want to give Floyd and him a chance to voice their opinions on the subject in a feature article): Things change. Ten years ago, you weren’t doing the same thing you’re doing now, right?

GM: Absolutely.

LE: OK.

Now during the rest of this exchange, Floyd began to get more and more agitated as I continued to try and get my answer. He first put one hand on my chest to make a point as he advanced closer to me. Then again. And again. Then a hand resting around my shoulder. Then two hands on my chest. And again and again and again. It was to say the least strangely aggressive, very funny, and downright disrespectful. It was also a first for me. Had we been two strangers in a bar and not a fight junkie boxing reporter and the best boxer of the last ten years, this might have ended ugly but as it was, it ended oddly.

MM: Ten years ago everything wasn’t on the internet like it is now, right? So one day___

GM: But was there anything specific about that particular fighter that brought this on?

MM: I’m just saying__it’s not one particular fighter. I’m making [Mosley] do the same thing. What are you talking about?

GM: But he’s the first guy you asked.

MM: But he’s not the first guy that__listen, listen. The thing is this___

GM: That’s not the first guy you asked?

MM: The thing is this about boxing, a guy don’t come from, and understand I am saying any guy in the sport, he’s not going to be ordinary and then get to the age of twenty-five or over twenty-five and then become extraordinary. So you should ask yourself that question. As a reporter, you should know that.

GM: (smiling) Maybe I’ll answer it.

MM: (something unintelligible) baby.

GM: You don’t have to put your hands on me, though.

And then reporters jumped in with more questions as Floyd said something I couldn’t hear and stepped back. Soon after, Floyd ended the interview session.

Now I ask you, Floyd, Manny and boxing fans in general, did Floyd answer the question? For a guy who constantly reminds boxing writers that we know nothing about boxing because we’ve never boxed, he sure has a lot of advice about how to be a reporter. Ask myself? I never thought of that. That’ll make this job so much easier. Smaller phone bills, less time getting information. I’ll just ask me. Genius. Though since I know nothing about boxing having never been a boxer, I’d have to say from here on out, my takes might be questionable.

You know, if you asked why I became a writer, I’d be able to tell you the exact moment it began. Hell, if you looked deep enough, you could find the first urine test and why it happened. You’d think that if you asked the leader of a new reform movement when he first got the idea to go for it, he’d 1) Be able to tell you and 2) Wouldn’t be defensive about doing so. Floyd was unable to pull off either of those things on Thursday. And it left me with another why unanswered.

Comments/disputes/questions?e-mail

Gabriel at: maxgmontoya@gmail.com.

Source: doghouseboxing.com

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Mayweather publicist denies she banned Philippine media from interview -- The Examiner

By Paula Duffy, Examiner.com

On Friday, Floyd Mayweather's publicist from Swanson Communications categorically denied a report that she refused media members the opportunity to interview Mayweather after his Los Angeles public press conference with Shane Mosley on Thursday.

Dennis "d Source" Guillermo, the Filipino Sports Examiner had reported earlier Friday that Philippine media members were told they would not be allowed to interview Mayweather because he wouldn't speak about Manny Pacquiao.

Ms. Kelly Swanson remembers that, "Two individuals approached me about talking with Floyd after all other television crews had finished. Floyd was already off the stage signing autographs with fans."

Swanson had asked that TV media members assemble behind the stage after the public portion of the program was over. The Los Angeles appearance ended a three-city tour during which both Shane Mosley and Floyd Mayweather appeared in person in front of large crowds to promote their May 1 bout.

The TV crews were to get access to Mosley and Mayweather first prior to print and electronic media having their chance to ask questions and shoot photos.

After Mayweather finished with the media he left the stage, according to Swanson and went into an area where fans had waited to speak with him and obtain autographs.

Swanson remembers the two journalists and she said that, "They arrived after other TV crews were gone. I told them that Floyd was not going to answer questions related to Manny Pacquiao and drug testing." According to Ms. Swanson, that is what the media members were interested to discuss with her client.

She continued, "I at no time refused them the opportunity to speak with Floyd Mayweather. They were welcome to go down to where he was with the fans and wait to see if he would give them an interview. But he would have told them what he has told many other media members this week about keeping to the topic at hand."

Throughout the week of this three-city tour to promote the May 1 fight with Mosley, Swanson said that Floyd Mayweather has refused to talk about Manny Pacquiao, the break-down in negotiations between their two sides for what would have been a fight in Dallas this month between the two and any issues related to Mayweather's demands that Pacquiao accept random blood testing prior to a proposed fight.

Swanson insists that her client loves the media and would not have refused to speak with anyone "no matter what their ethnicity, including the Filipino press".

She added, however, that the reporters wouldn't have gotten very far with Mayweather if all they wanted to talk about was Manny Pacquiao.

Source: examiner.com

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Press conference notes: Mosley says he can box Mayweather -- The Ring

By Doug Fischer, The Ring

There was nothing but respect at the final stop of the three-city press tour for the Shane Mosley-Floyd Mayweather Jr. welterweight showdown, which wrapped up at the NOKIA Plaza at L.A. LIVE in downtown Los Angeles on Thursday afternoon.

That’s not out of the ordinary for Mosley and his trainer, Naazim Richardson, but it is for the Mayweathers, especially Floyd’s uncle and trainer Roger.

However, the former two-division titleholder, who is known for making disrespectful and often crude comments about any individual that happens to pop into his mind, is obviously aware that his nephew will be fighting a worthy opponent on May 1.

“This is going to be a tremendous fight,” Mayweather said when it was his turn to take the podium during the press conference. “You have two tremendous fighters. This is what makes history. You have to challenge someone people think you can't beat.”

Richardson concurred, stating that Mosley and Mayweather are boxers and competitors of the highest order.

“You have people who are champions, you have people who are elite and you have people who are special,” Richardson said. “On May 1, you have two of the most-special guys in the history of the sport facing off.

“At 147 pounds, Mosley can knock anyone -- anything -- out, but on the other hand, with Mayweather’s defense it’s hard to hit him in the ass with a handful of rice.”

MOSLEY CAN BOX, TOO

Despite Richardson’s podium comments, neither he nor Mosley want fans to believe that the May 1 welterweight clash is a simple puncher-vs.-boxer matchup.

“I punch so well that people don’t realize that I’m a master boxer,” Mosley told a small group of boxing writers after the press conference. “I’d love to win by knockout, so if I catch him with a good shot and he wobbles, we’ll see a knockout, but if that doesn’t happen, I’ll have to do whatever it takes to beat Floyd round by round.”

A writer asked Mosley if his body punching is one of his keys to victory.

“There’s a lot of things I can do,” Mosley answered. “I’m not going to do just one thing. I’m not just going to press him, or look for a knockout. My job is to be prepared for everything that Mayweather does that night.

“This is my chance to show people that I’m a complete boxer with skill, defense and footwork. This my chance to prove that I‘m the best welterweight in the world.”

Helping Mosley make that case on May 1 is one of the game’s best strategists.

“Richardson is already studying tapes on Mayweather,” Mosley said. “He’s up all night watching film. In the morning he’ll say ‘Let’s go watch it.’ And while we’re looking at the fight, he’ll ask me ‘Do you see what I see? Good.’ We’re watching Mayweather’s fights going back to his lightweight days. Naazim has a long history with Mayweather. He remembers watching him back in the amateurs. Floyd’s got the same basic style but it has changed over the years. As a lightweight, he was more on his toes and he was busier. As he’s become heavier he’s become more flat footed and more of a pot shotter.”

So how will Mosley exploit the style of the welterweight version of Mayweather?

Richardson obviously wasn’t going to go into specifics but he does believe that Mayweather can be exploited, although he was quick to add that it isn’t easy to do so.

“He has flaws but they’re not abundant and there isn’t a big window to take advantage of them,” Richardson said. “What I mean by that is you can’t get comfortable in any set position with Floyd. Whatever’s working in one round may not be working in the next round.”

SKILLS KILLS

Roger Mayweather remained respectful of Mosley after the press conference but he couldn’t envision the 38-year-old fighter outboxing his nephew.

“I’m takin’ nothing away from Shane,” he said. “He’s one of the best fighters Floyd has faced because he’s got the biggest amateur background of anyone Floyd has fought. But I trained a boxer who beat Shane in the amateurs. Shane’s good. He’s strong and experienced but skills still win fights and Floyd’s got better skills.”

Mayweather was asked whether it is possible that Mosley can simply outwork Mayweather, or win close rounds with his aggression.

He didn‘t think so, but then he was given recent examples of busy and aggressive fighters getting the benefit of the doubt from the official judges in bouts against slicker and more accurate boxers (Juan Diaz over Paul Malignaggi in their first fight, Paul Williams over Sergio Martinez and Beibut Shumenov over Gabriel Campillo).

“Well, I guess it could happen,” he said, “but Shane’s activity has also dropped as he’s gotten older.”

THE RIGHT TIME

Floyd Mayweather claims that he pursued a fight with Mosley in 1998 and 1999, when he was a 130-pound beltholder and Mosley held a 135-pound title, to no avail.

Roger was asked whether he thought the fight should have happened at that time.

“Hell no!” he said. “It’s a much bigger fight now. You got two seasoned multiple world champs who have beat (Oscar) De La Hoya. Now the fight defines who’s the best. The fight is much better now.”

BETTER MAYWEATHER THAN BERTO

Richardson says that he’s “more comfortable” with Mosley fighting Mayweather than he was when his fighter was scheduled to face undefeated titleholder Andre Berto on Jan. 30 (before the young Haitian-American boxer pulled out of the fight because of the devastating earthquake in Haiti, the homeland of his parents).

“I was worried about that fight,” he said. “No matter what a fighter says at a press conference it’s hard for him to be motivated to fight a guy who hasn’t accomplished as much as he has. Like I said during the press conference, Shane and Floyd are special fighters. Mayweather is on Shane’s level and he’ll bring out the best in him.

“It’s hard for a special fighter to get up for a champion, even a promising one like Berto. Shane’s on a higher level than (Ricardo) Mayorga and yet that was a difficult fight for him. You gotta keep these guys where they belong. You don’t ask (Mikhail) Baryshnikov to come to the dance club down the street and then be mad that he didn’t win the contest. That’s not his thing.”

BUSY BROTHER NAAZIM

Richardson has a packed schedule this spring. Before Mosley steps between the ropes to face Mayweather, he’ll work the corners of former cruiserweight titleholder Steve Cunningham and Bernard Hopkins in pivotal bouts for the Philadelphia natives.

On March 26, Cunningham takes on Matt Godfrey in an ESPN2-televised bout for a vacant cruiserweight belt. On April 3, Hopkins fights Roy Jones Jr. in their bizarre rematch. And then less than a month later he’ll work Mosley’s corner in the biggest fight of the year.

If Richardson’s fighters win all three bouts, he’ll give Freddie Roach a run for his money for this year’s Trainer of the Year award.

LEONARD ELLERBE

While I was engaged with Richardson, I missed the opportunity to join my fellow fight scribes in interviewing Floyd Mayweather after the press conference (poor me), but CEO of Mayweather Promotions Leonard Ellerbe was sure to get my attention as I was on my out of the event area.

Ellerbe told me to get ready to cut my ponytail off. (Evidently, he reads my mailbags. A reader recently asked me if I’d be willing to bet my ponytail that Mayweather can’t KO Mosley. I told him if that happened, I’d cut it off at the press conference and present it to Ellerbe on the silver platter.)

“I want you to give him credit for what he does,” Ellerbe told me. “I know you’re a man of you word.”

I told him if Mayweather beat Mosley, even if it’s by a razor-thin decision, I’ll give him full credit. (Heck, I’ll give him credit if he loses in competitive fashion.)

Then I added: “If Mayweather stops Shane, tell Floyd he can cut the ponytail off himself.”

MAYWEATHER PROMOTIONS

Mayweather’s fledging promotional company isn’t licensed to promote shows yet, but it does sign fighters and Ellerbe told me that three of their boxers will be in action on the non-televised portion of the May 1 pay-per-view show.

The guy I’m most excited about is 20-year-old welterweight Jessie Vargas (9-0, 4 knockouts), a smart pressure-fighting Mexican-American from Las Vegas who has trained with Roger Mayweather since he was a kid.

Along with junior lightweight Eloy Perez and light heavyweight Ismayl Sillakh, I believe that Vargas is one of the best non-televised prospects in the sport. He is definitely worth keeping an eye on.

Fringe contenders Cornelius Lock and Said Ouali will likely be in with tough Golden Boy-promoted opposition, Ellerbe said.

Ellerbe’s trying to make a featherweight bout with Lock and former 122-pound titleholder Daniel Ponce-DeLeon, and a welterweight showdown between Ouali and highly touted Mexican prospect Saul Alvarez.

Those are darn-good fights if they can be made.

Source: ringtv.com

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"Floyd would never ban a media member", says publicist Kelly Swanson

Boxing News World

Recently, there has been an intriguing story circulating around the web that two Filipino media men - one was Chino Trinidad, a well respected sports news correspondent and son of highly regarded Philippine newspaper columnist Recah Trinidad - were denied access to interview boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles during the final promotional stop of the 3-city tour for the May 1 Mayweather-Mosley showdown. The story was penned by Dennis ‘dSource’ Guillermo of The Examiner.

In the article entitled ‘Philippine media BANNED from interviewing Floyd Mayweather Jr. at LA Press Con', Mr. Guillermo reported:

“According to Chino (Trinidad), he waited in line together with another Filipino media personnel to be taken up the stage from the back by the publicists. He wondered why it was only he and fellow Pinoy Jason Pimentel remaining when Floyd and Shane were almost done.

“Finally when Chino got up the stage, he looked for Floyd immediately but was told by a lady named Kelly Swanson that he can't interview Floyd because he refuses to talk about Pacquiao close to the fight. Chino was baffled at the incident and that some people were crying out racism. He also told me that this was the first time in his many years of covering sports, from the NBA to the Olympics to all the many big events he has participated in, that he has ever been denied to interview somebody and is still in shock regarding the incident.”

The lady “Kelly Swanson” Mr. Guillermo mentioned is Floyd Mayweather Jr’s veteran publicist.

Having had correspondence with Ms. Swanson before as she had participated in some of my boxing polls (blogs) in the past, I asked her side of the story. Her response was:

“The story is not true. I never refused them (Trinidad and Pimentel) the right to talk to Floyd, but rather I told them that he (Mayweather) had already left the stage and was not interested in talking about anything related to Manny Pacquiao or the drug testing issue as it related to Manny Pacquiao. They could have gotten off the stage and gone to where Floyd was signing autographs and tried to get an interview but they didn't. Floyd would never "ban" a media member as he has been gracious to all media, including the Filipino press, throughout his career.”

It seems to me that this whole issue is just a simple case of miscommunication. I hope that true facts come out soon especially that the malicious notion of racism has already been entertained by some careless scribes.

- Marshall N. B., marx7204@lycos.com

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The Accidental Trainer -- The Sweet Science

By George Kimball, The Sweet Science

NEW YORK --- You don’t hear much about it otherwise, but the Kingsway Gym periodically gets its moment of fame whenever there’s a big fight in New York -- and sometimes even when the big fight is in, say, Dallas. Its location, at Fifth Avenue and 28th Street, makes it easy to reach for Manhattan-based media types, many of whom are prone to developing allergies at the very mention of words like “Bronx” and “Brooklyn,” and, as boxing gyms go, you’d have to say that it borders on the hygienic, in that the toilets flush and nobody spits on the floor. The interior is sufficiently bright that photographers and TV crews know they won’t have to hump in a bunch of lighting equipment up a flight of stairs from street level, so they like it too.

Of course, the very factors that make it an ideal location for these Media Day extravaganzas are counterintuitive to boxing tradition. A boxing gym is supposed to be dark and dank and, if not foul-smelling, exude that blend of 40 year-old cigar ash, human body odor, rodent excretia, and backed-up plumbing that provides a gym with its own distinctive aroma.

In that respect the Kingsway can only function as an impostor. It doesn’t smell like a gym, feel like a gym, or even look much like a gym in any traditional sense.

On the other hand, on this day at least, Lenny DeJesus looks every inch a trainer: As he waits for Joshua Clottey to go to work he is wearing clean dungarees a zippered jacket over a t-shirt, a jaunty black Kangol cap on his head, and a white towel draped over his left shoulder.

DeJesus is a 64 year-old boxing lifer, one of those guys most boxing fans have seen climb up and down the steps for years without ever knowing his name. On the other hand, you’ve probably read his name a lot in the last two weeks. That was when the March issue of ESPN: The Magazine hit the stands, with a story (“The Substitute”) on Clottey that described DeJesus as a “part-time locksmith and long-time boxing satellite” and conveyed the distinct impression that as he heads into he biggest fight of his life against Manny Pacquiao, the supervisory role in Clottey’s corner had been entrusted to the Village Idiot.

Now it looks like one of the PR minions had instructed Lenny to drop by the wardrobe department and pick up a trainer’s uniform.

1:15: Josh is in the ring

DeJesus stands off to one side and watches Clottey go through the motions while a large Ghanaian named Bruce wields the mitts. The other one-third of the corner DeJesus will be running, an even larger Ghanaian named Kwaku Gyamfi, keeps time. Lenny just watches. He seems to be paying attention, but he issues no instructions.

“Look,” says one member of the fight mob as he watches Clottey’s workout, “Clottey is 32 years old. He’s had almost 40 fights. There’s nothing you can tell him now that’s going to turn him into a different fighter. You just wind him up and let him go.

“And what’s the corner going to tell him during the fight -- other than “Get up, Josh!”

Maybe “Josh! Stay down!”?

1:35: Josh hits the double-end bag

Irish middleweight John Duddy has had a place on the Pacquiao-Clottey undercard since its inception, but he was just added to the Media Day lineup this morning. Half the photographers and most of the print guys seem more interested in Duddy, and they keep watching the door behind Clottey.

In December of 2007 De Jesus was in Duddy’s corner at the King’s Hall in Belfast when the Irishman beat former Commonwealth champion Howard Eastman. Irish Ropes had just begun to shake up the Duddy corner; Don Turner had replaced Harry Keitt, and Lenny was the cut man, taking George Mitchell’s place. Both Keitt and Mitchell are back and De Jesus long since moved along. That is the live of a vagabond cornerman. Hell, earlier in the Filipino champion’s career he even worked as Pacquiao’s cut man.

“There are five things you can do in a corner and I’ve done all of ‘em,” says Lenny. “Not even Freddie Roach can say that. I’ve been the bucket guy, the stool guy, the advisor, the cut-man, and I’ve been the head guy before, too. But mostly I’ve been a cut man.”

It has been nearly 22 years, in fact, since the last time De Jesus was the chief second in a world title fight. He was in charge of Miguel Santana’s corner, and led the celebration when IBF lightweight champ Greg Haugen, his face bloodied from a deep cut to his right eyebrow, failed to answer the bell for the 12th round.

“We had the title for about 15 minutes,” he recalled. “The fight was in Seattle [Tacoma, actually], and after they’d raised Santana’s hand they decided that the cut had come from a butt, so they went back to the scorecards.”

Referee Jim Cassidy said that he was aware of the rule, but assumed that Santana was ahead on all three cards anyway. As it turned out he was ahead on only one of them, and, long after most of the crowd had gone home, a “stunned” Haugen was awarded the decision. The headline in the local paper read “Santana ‘robbed’ as Haugen gets bizarre win,” and the story noted that “Santana’s trainer, Lenny DeJesus, of New York City, thought his fighter had been robbed. ‘My fighter’s hand was raised in victory, and my fighter was awarded this fight!” said the distressed DeJesus.”

“They never looked a replay or nothing. Even the referee told is he knew it was a punch and not a butt,” adds Lenny. “The reason they did it was everybody knew Haugen had already signed to fight Jim Watt in London -- for a lot of money.”

Lenny has been doing pretty well until he says that. And here we thought cut men didn’t have to worry about taking too many blows to the head.

Watt had retired after his 1981 loss to Alexis Argello -- seven years before Haugen-Santana.

1:40: Josh hits the heavy bag

When the gloves are pulled off Clottey, the towel comes off Lenny’s shoulder for the first time all day. He vigorously sets about drying the fighters forearms and hands, sending a spray of sweat that glistens beneath the lights. Joshua is wearing a dark red t-shirt with a baseball on the front. On the back it says “Baseball.”

Does Clottey play baseball? DeJesus is asked.

“I don’t think so,” says Lenny.

After a January press tour that opened at Cowboys Stadium and moved on to New York, Clottey returned to Accra, where he hoped to secure a visa that would have allowed his trainer, Godwin Nil Dzanie Kotey, to work his corner against Pacquiao. Kotey’s previous visa expired in December of 2009, and the security regulations involved in the process had changed dramatically between then and the time he applied for a new one; over Christmastime a Nigerian passenger had attempted to turn himself into a Roman candle on approach to Detroit.

So when Clottey flew back in February to open camp in Fort Lauderdale barely a month before the Pacquiao fight, De Jesus had more or less by default become his trainer.

“I guess I’m it,” he told ESPN’s Chris Jones at the time. Jones did not, it should be noted, seem exactly bowled over when Lenny explained that his “first job will be getting this kid up those stairs and into the ring.”

Lenny assumes that Clottey must have worked while he was back in Ghana. DeJesus, in any case, was there to meet him in Florida, and claims that over the last several weeks the challenger has sparred close to 90 rounds.

“I got the sparring partners,” he says. “They was all lefthanders, too.”

1:45: Josh hits the speed bag

John Duddy shows up, in street clothes, and announces that he is not going to work out.

“Nobody told me about this until it was too late,” he explains. “I already did all my work this morning.”

He does pose for a few pictures with Clottey, and chats amiably with boxing writers. Around the gym, grumbling photographers begin to pack away their equipment.

Over on the other side of the gym, Media Works’ Ed Keenan describes the Clottey camp in Florida.

“I finally went to Lenny and said ‘Look, you have to give me your phone number. I keep setting up these interviews with Clottey, but then he won’t answer his phone.”

“Lenny tells me ‘Aw, mine won’t work either. A few days ago I fell in the swimming pool with my clothes on and my phone was in my pocket.’

“That was last week. He still hasn’t gotten a phone.”

This might mark Lenny as old school, or maybe just stubborn. Just imagine for a moment, for instance, having to make a split second decision which to carry out of a burning building, his training mitts or his cell phone. It wouldn’t even be close.

But Lenny, we felt like asking him, doesn’t a locksmith need a phone, too?

1:50: Josh talks

Albeit briefly.

For the past month the question has been whether DeJesus or anyone else actually had enough time to get Clottey ready for this fight. The groundwork in Florida was by all accounts preliminary jousting, and from a preparation standpoint, the dog-and-pony show at the Kingsway has largely been a wasted day.

Now Joshua Clottey says “I have done all the work I need. I wish I did not even go to Texas for the next eight days. I want the fight to be now.”

Is the tail wagging the dog here, or what?

1:53: Josh done talking

Josh says he’s ready. Lenny says he’s not.

“But that’s not exactly what I’ll say to him,” says Lenny. “Dealing with fighters is dealing like little kids sometimes. If you don’t want them eating candy, you can try to show them how it’s harmful, but if you give them an order -- Don’t eat candy! -- the first thing they’re gonna do is go eat even more when you’re not looking.

“Sure, he needs more work between now and March 13th. He’s fighting Manny Pacquiao! I just gotta figure out a way to make him think it’s his idea.”

Source: thesweetscience.com

***




Mosley plans to make most of opportunity -- The Ring

By Michael Rosenthal, The Ring

SANTA MONICA, Calif. -- Shane Mosley wondered less than two months ago whether he would ever again take part in a huge boxing event.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao appeared to be close to a deal for an enormous March 13 showdown and Mosley, left out of the equation at 38, had signed to fight talented, but less-established Andre Berto on Jan. 30 in Las Vegas.

Then events suddenly turned in his favor. Mayweather and Pacquiao couldn’t come to terms and Berto pulled out of the fight because of the devastating earthquake in Haiti, the homeland of his parents. That opened the door for Mayweather-Mosley on May 1 in Las Vegas.

Now, Mosley is talking about beating Mayweather on May 1 and then again in a contract-required rematch before ending his career with a victory over Manny Pacquiao.

“There were three of us, me, Mayweather and Pacquiao” said Mosley, who had just finished a video shoot for Yahoo! Sports on Thursday afternoon. “Any of us could fight the other and it would be the biggest fight of the year. And it looked I was left out. That would’ve been a crime. I’m the oldest one, the one who has been around the longest. I believe I’ve given a lot to boxing. I thought I should’ve been the one in the big fight.

“This is what I wanted, to be in this position. Some of it’s the money. I definitely could use the extra millions of dollars to put in the bank for my kids. That’s not really the issue here, though. I just love to do this, to fight these type of fights.”

Yes, Mosley (46-5, 39 knockouts) got his big fight. Oscar De La Hoya, whose company is promoting the event, boldly predicted that the fight would generate a record 3 million pay-per-view buys. That would provide Mosley with those millions he mentioned.

However, the dream scenario he laid out –- beating Mayweather twice and then closing out his career against Pacquiao -– must start with a victory on May 1.

Thirty nine fighters have tried to beat the sublimely talented Mayweather over his remarkable 13-plus-year career and 39 have failed. Only a few -– including Jose Luis Castillo and De La Hoya -– were able to put up a competitive fight.

What makes Mosley think he’ll be different?

“The difference is going to be that I’m faster than the guys he’s fought,” he said. “I have better movement than the guys he’s fought. He’s used to fighting guys who aren’t on his technical level. I will be. I will be on his technical level and do the things he can do. Yet I’m stronger than him and I have more punching power. He might have a little more speed but we don’t know that yet, either; I’m very fast.

“He just hasn’t seen anybody like me but I’ve been in there with people like him before.”

And both he and his trainer, Naazim Richardson, even suggested the unthinkable could become a reality: Mosley knocking out Mayweather.

Richardson, who worked with Mosley when he KO’d Antonio Margarito in his last fight in January of last year, wouldn’t predict a knockout at a news conference to promote the fight earlier in the day Thursday but seemed to come pretty close.

"At 147 pounds, this dude's lethal,” he said. “He's a weapon. He can knockout any welterweight in the world. If I wasn't Shane's trainer and I thought I had a dude who could beat him, I wouldn't fight him at 147 pounds."

Mosley wouldn’t argue with Richardson. He pointed out that he has had as many knockouts as Mayweather has had opponents.

“If I hit anybody just right on the chin, if I get in a good, clean shot, it could be happen,” he said. “If I get in a shot like (Juan Manuel) Marquez landed, it might be good night Floyd. Marquez is a lightweight coming up. I’m bigger than Marquez. And I’m faster. And my arms are longer. Nobody was able to knock out Margarito. He has a great chin. Everyone knows that. What happened when he fought me?

“If I can knock out a guy like Margarito, a guy who had never been stopped even by guys like (Miguel) Cotto, I can knock out anyone.”

Mosley said during the video shoot that he could see himself fighting for 10 more years. If his dream three-victory scenario comes true, though, he later confessed that there would no point in fighting into his 40s.

No fighter in history will have gone out with a more-spectacular flourish if he can pull it off. He admitted it would be anything but easy.

“If I fought those two guys,” he said with a smile, “I would probably need to retire. Those would be some brutal fights.”

Michael Rosenthal can be reached at RingTVeditor@yahoo.com

Source: ringtv.com

***




ESPN Video: Mayweather says Mosley is insecure

ESPN.com



Source: sports.espn.go.com

***





Pacquiao media day not the zoo it once was -- The Ring

By Doug Fischer, The Ring

I woke up with a sense of dread on Wednesday morning.

The media day for Manny Pacquiao’s March 13 fight with Joshua Clottey took place at the Wild Card Boxing Club that afternoon and it was the last place I wanted to be.

It was nothing personal against Pacquiao or the famous Hollywood, Calif., gym.

I know that media days -- workouts that are open to the sports press to help publicize up-coming fights -- are integral parts of any promotion, especially big events such as Pacquiao’s pay-per-view showdown with Clottey at the new Cowboy Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

However, some of Pacquiao’s past media days have been so unorganized and overcrowded they seemed like sick experiments to determine how many human beings can be crammed into a small room before spontaneous combustion occurs.

You think I’d be used to it by now. I’ve covered every one these press events since they started doing them (either before the first Juan Manuel Marquez bout or the first Erik Morales fight). I’m a veteran of Pacquiao media days, but I’m one who suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

I dreaded the search for a parking place (which I found two blocks away from the gym at the corner of Cahuenga Boulevard and Fountain Avenue). I dreaded waiting around for hours in the Wild Card’s parking lot before Pacquiao and his promoter Bob Arum arrived. I dreaded being packed inside the hot, stuffy little gym with members of the media and more than a few nutty fans disguised as working press. I dreaded tripping over video crew equipment, stepping over photographers, and listening to amateur internet bloggers ask the most inane questions.

But I grudgingly made my way to the gym anyway because I’m a full-time fight scribe with a Thursday column to write, and hey, Pacquiao is the man right now.

I arrived to the already packed parking lot at 11:00 a.m., two hours before Roach and Arum were scheduled to meet the media. Three hours before Pacquiao was to arrive. There I ran into Rob Peters, the head of Pacquiao’s security and somebody who dreads media days more than I do.

Peters, who has worked for Pacquiao since the Marquez rematch, has the unenviable task of clearing the gym out so the pound-for-pound king can train in private.

It’s a tough job but somebody’s got to do it, and Peters is physically imposing but friendly enough to pull it off without too many altercations. However, even he has his limit, and he’s found it during past media days when he has had to deal with belligerent boxing writers and huge pushy crowds inside and outside the gym.

“I got up this morning with a tight feeling in my chest, like a pain in my heart, and I thought to myself ‘This isn’t good,’” Peters said. “I fear this day the whole training camp.”

Media days are the only time the normally collected Peters has lost his cool.

“It used to really get to me,” he said. “There were a few times I got so mad I didn’t know what I was going to do. A couple years ago I was trying to navigate traffic in the parking lot and the lady from the Thai TV station next to the gym ignored me and ran over part of my foot. I went totally crazy. I was spittin’ mad. It took me half an hour to calm down.”

Ola Afolabi, a long time Wild Card patron, exited the gym about half an hour before the doors opened to the media. The cruiserweight contender took a look at the ever-growing throng of desperate-looking people holding cameras and notebooks in the parking lot and he shook his head.

“If I had known today was Pacquiao’s media day, I wouldn’t have bothered showing up,” Afolabi said. “There’s no point in trying to get a workout in on these days. It’s just too crazy. It might as well be (Barack) Obama’s inauguration. Even before the media is allowed in it’s too packed to do anything because all the fighters are there at the same time, trying to get their workouts in before the gym closes down for Manny.”

Not all of the Wild Card’s regulars dread Pacquiao media days. Pepper Roach, Freddie’s older brother who has worked at the gym as an assistant trainer for more than 10 years, views them as a necessary evil.

“The gym is Freddie’s business and Manny and his media days have been great for business,” Roach said. “Yeah it’s a pain in the ass for everybody for one day but it puts the Wild Card’s name out there on TV and in the papers. People see the gym, they hear about it and read about it and if they want to start working out they come here. If they’re at another gym, they quit that place at come to the Wild Card.”

Roach says the gym’s reputation and respect for his older brother have grown along with Pacquiao’s fame.

“When Manny first came here it was a regular boxing gym and there were two guys who helped Freddie, me and Macka Foley,” Roach said. “Now we got a dozen people working behind the desk, as assistant trainers, and photographers, and we got 200 people trying to workout here every day.”

If the media days are an indication of Pacquiao’s popularity, his trainer and his gym will continue to crossover into mainstream consciousness.

Peters says the media event has grown in terms of numbers and diversity during the past 18 months.

“It’s bringing in much broader types of media coverage now,” he said. “I remember that it was mostly internet writers and Filipino TV for the Marquez rematch, but it’s not such a niche event anymore. Now there are American sports writers from newspapers and magazines. There’s a lot of local TV crews, and it’s not just the sports reporters coming out it’s the news crews.”

“It’s the De La Hoya effect. As soon as Manny beat Oscar everyone took notice. No one thought he could beat De La Hoya, but the folks at the Wild Card knew he would win, and we knew his popularity would skyrocket after the fight. But we weren’t prepared for how much attention Freddie and the gym would get from that point on.”

With only a few months between mega bouts with De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto and now Clottey, it seemed that things would inevitably spiral out of control.

However, a funny thing happened on the way to what I thought would be Clusterfest 2010; the media was treated to a civil and orderly press event that run quite smoothly.

I was pleasantly surprised. Marie Spivey, the gym manager and Roach’s personal assistant, was not.

She says she used to dread Pacquiao’s media days more than anyone but was confident that the employees of Top Rank and Wild Card had enough experience with the event to make this one tolerable.

“I admit, in the past, I woke up with anxiety on media day,” Spivey said. “I would get up and say out loud ‘I don’t want to go to the gym!’ But I woke up feeling fine today because I knew I’d have help with Rob, Miguel (Salazar) and Fred Sternburg,” she said. “Fred has been a tremendous help during the entire camp. He’s scheduled most of the TV and radio interviews and all of the gym visits from writers.”

Sternburg, a veteran publicist who was hired by Top Rank to handle the media during the Clottey camp, has worked every Pacquiao media day since the first Morales fight. He says just a few alterations made the difference on Wednesday.

“It has been a zoo in the past but we’re a little more organized these days,” Sternburg said. “We convinced Manny to do interviews before his workout so writers who just wanted that didn‘t have to stick around and take up space and we had Roach and Arum go an hour before Manny arrived so everything wasn’t so scattered once it began.

“We’ve also been spacing out exclusive time with Manny and two or three writers from different publications since camp began and I think that’s helped. Some writers got what they needed weeks ago and didn’t need to show up today. We don’t have the same pent-up demand for Manny on media day that we used to have.

“It’s all been done out of necessity because the demand for Manny has become so big.”

How big? Sternburg, who has been in PR business since the mid-1980s, says he hasn’t seen anything like it since Sugar Ray Leonard‘s heyday.

Sternburg worked for Leonard beginning with the hall of famer’s 1987 comeback fight against Marvelous Marvin Hagler until the end of the decade.

He says Pacquiao’s recent run against De La Hoya, Hatton, Cotto and now Clottey remind him of Leonard’s late-career events with Hagler, Donny Lalonde, Thomas Hearns and Roberto Duran. As it was with Leonard, the demand for the Filipino icon is so constant that the Colorado-based publicist has spent most of his time on site since Pacquiao’s camp began.

“This is the closest I’ve been to being an in-camp publicist since I spent several weeks in Leonard’s camp for the Hearns rematch,” Sternburg said. “This camp reminds me of those days because of the celebrities that come by to see Ray, who trained at a PGA resort in Palm Beach, Fla. I remember guys like Burt Reynolds dropping by to watch him.

“We have that sort of thing with Manny now. In the past four or five weeks we’ve had Robert Duval, Ron Perlman, Jeremy Piven, Steven Segal and Jean-Claude Van Damme come by the gym to watch him train.

“They come by to see Roach, too. They all want to talk to Freddie. They think he’s great. And he is!”

As great a guy (and as good a quote) Roach is, even he took a backseat to Pacquiao when the man of the hour (or two) entered the gym with his entourage around 2:35 p.m.

His smile instantly lit up the gym and quickly elevated the mood of what had been rather routine proceedings up until that point.

Within one hour every writer, photographer and video crew in the gym got their time with the humble international star. Pacquiao made it all seem easy, just like he does in his fights.

I wondered if the guy who actually gets in the ring and dukes it out ever feels the kind of anxiety and dread that I felt and discussed with the gym’s employees? If he does he sure doesn’t show it.

RingTV.com co-editor Michael Rosenthal asked Pacquiao if the expectations and pressure ever get to him.

“The pressure is always there,” Pacquiao answered, “but I pray to God, train hard and know that He will guide me.”

Pacquiao’s not the most articulate fighter around but there’s a nobility to his simplicity, and every now and then he says something that can open the eyes of even the most jaded sports writer.

Boxing -- heck, life -- is not as complicated as we tend to make it. I left the gym feeling a lot lighter than I did when I arrived.

Source: ringtv.com

***




HAPPY BIRTHDAY FREDDIE ROACH! -- PhilBoxing

PhilBoxing.com

Hall of Famer, 4-time Trainer of the Year and coach and 'master' to pound for pound king and fighter of the decade Manny Pacquiao, celebrates his 50th birthday today, March 5, 2010, in Los Angeles, CA. Pacland and PhilBoxing.com would like to join thousands of others in greeting the well-beloved trainer a happy birthday.

Freddie, born Frederick Roach on March 5, 1960 in Dedham, Massachusetts, is very close to the Filipino's hearts as aside from Pacquiao, he has been training other well-known Filipino fighters and made his world-famous Wildcard Gym in Hollywood always open to Filipino fighters.

If it's not too late, fans in LA area could come to the Wildcard Gym after 4 pm today to join the celebrations. Suggestion: please bring something for Freddie (food, etc) to show gratitude to the person who has done so much to us as a people.

Source: philboxing.com

***




Mayweather: "I'm the best fighter to ever live" -- The Examiner

By Ramon Aranda, Examiner.com

No one can deny that Floyd Mayweather Jr. is as gifted a boxer as we've seen in recent memory but "Greatest of All Time"? Despite being 40-0, that might be a stretch even at this point in his career. Not so, says Mayweather who recently said he was just that on ESPN Radio. He repeated that sentiment in a sit down interview on ESPN.com.

Mayweather spoke on SPORTSCENTER this week about his upcoming fight with Shane Mosley. He explained that he took the fight because Mosley is one of the best welterweights of this era, along with himself before following it up by saying "I'm one of the best fighters to ever live."

"I take my hat off to Sugar Ray Robinson and Muhammad Ali and Sugar Ray Leonard and all those legendary champions but I gave the sport of boxing my whole life to be the best and I think I've earned the right to say that I'm the best fighter to ever live," explained Mayweather.

Bold statements that's for sure.

As for the fight, Floyd said that Mosley has been out of character during their press tour by talking trash; something he's not known for. He also said that with five losses on Mosley's resume, he feels there's an obvious blueprint for beating him while one doesn't exist for him.

Asked about Manny Pacquiao, Mayweather refused to answer the question as to whether or not he'll watch his fight with Joshua Clottey next weekend and also reiterated that he wants to help clean up the sport.

"I'm here to clean up the sport of boxing. My sport isn't like any other sport. We're not cheating over here. We want to separate the ordinary from the good from the great. I'm a great one because I ain't ever used any performance enhancing drugs. All these fighters in today's time and all these athletes are cheating. If you gotta cheat to win, I don't think that's cool at all. How you gonna call yourself an all-time great if you're cheating?"

Your thoughts?

Source: examiner.com

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Bob Arum Charges Golden Boy Promotions With Racism Against Filipino Reporters -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

CEO Bob Arum of Top Rank Promotions, which promotes seven-division champion, Manny Pacquiao, of the Philippines, has charged Golden Boy Promotions with being racists for allegedly denying Filipino reporters the opportunity to interview Floyd Mayweather near the end of a press conference in Los Angeles on Thursday.

According to a story that was first reported by Dennis "dSource" Guillermo of Examiner.com, several Filipino media members, including the legendary Chino Trinidad, were not allowed to interview Mayweather (40-0, 25 knockouts) near the end of the promotional event touting a WBO welterweight (147 pounds) title matchup against champion, Shane Mosley (46-5, 39 KOs) at LA Live.

"The banning of the Filipino press had not emerged until I heard about it at the Wild Card Gym yesterday afternoon. Manny was training, and had another appointment, and I had to leave before he finished training. So I can't even say that he knew about it, but he probably knows about it now," said Arum, whose negotiations with Mayweather for a potential fight with Pacquiao fell apart over Pacquiao's refusal to be subjected along with Mayweather to Olympic-style drug testing.

"I think when I made the statement about, 'Why didn't he agree to take the test 14 days out from the fight, etc., etc., and I said, and 'Manny endorsed, that he's a proud Filipino, and that he wasn't going to be bullied by anybody.' Between the lines of what made the statement was -- and Manny understood it -- was this is racism," said Arum.

"And Manny was like, 'You're not going to push me around, and give me orders, and tell me what I'm going to do when it's not the rules just because I'm a Filipino," said Arum. "He didn't say those words, but that, I believe, was underlying it all."

Pacquiao has filed a lawsuit charging defamation of character, seeking damages from Golden Boy Promotions, Mayweather promotions,Floyd Mayweather Jr., Floyd Mayweather Jr., and, Roger Mayweather, the latter of whom is the fighter's trainer.

Pacquiao said, however, that he was made aware of the recent developments only recently.

"I was not aware of that situation, but if it is true, I am very disappointed for everyone," said Pacquiao in a statement. "It is simply not a nice thing to do. I do not understand that kind of thinking."

Pacquiao is set to face Joshua Clottey (35-3, 20 KOs) in defense of his crown on May 13 at Dallas Cowboys' Stadium in Arlington, Tex. Mayweather and Mosley will meet at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

"I don't care about all of this sh**. All that I care about right now is that at a press conference in my country, that people from another country were treated so horribly," said Arum, "and were descriminated against. That's what makes my blood boil, and thats's what makes me angry."

Schaefer, of Golden Boy, said that he didn't know about the sitituation.

"I don't really have time to read the secondary sites. I know that Floyd Mayweather gave interviews. And I don't want to get involved in a back and forth with Bob Arum," said Schaefer. "I have nothing else to say about it."

In a second story written by Guillermo, Arum stated the following.

"I am personally very, very upset, becausee I got reports over at the Wild Card Boxing Club from Filipino media that had come back from the Mayweather-Mosley press conference that they were up in arms because they told me that they were forbidden to have any access like all other journalists had to Floyd Mayweather, and that he wouldn't answer any questions or even talk to or give any interviews to any Filipino.

"Now, whoever's responsible for this ought to be ashamed of themselves. This is the worst kind of racism that can be imaginable. And I put this at the feet of the promoter, Golden Boy, Richard Schaefer and Oscar De La Hoya. They're the ones in charge of the press conference, and they're the ones who permitted this outrage to happen. And any person who prevented a journalist from asking a question or doing an interview because of his race or nationality should be fired, and banned from the business of boxing.

"This kind of stuff can not be permitted to go on. It's terrible for the sport, it's terrible for the United States for it to happen. It happened in the United States. And an o rus an apology is due to all of the Filipino people."

On it being a double-standard.

"Manny has graciously responded to all questions when asked of the American Media. I can see a P.R. person telling a client or a fighter telling a fighter, 'Don't answer any questions pertaining to 'X,' whether an American journalist, or a Danish journalist, or an English journalist, or a Filipino journalist. The same standard has to apply to journalists from every country. Somebody ought to teach these people what it means to be an American and what the free press means. It's not just words. The free press means equal access for any journalist.

In an earlier post, Arum was quoted on FanHouse as saying he thought the charges of steroid use against Pacquiao were xenophobic.

"When this whole issue emerged about this extra drug testing, etc., I smelled xenophobia directed at him, Manny
Pacquiao, because he's a Filipino. And wasn't that substantiated when Floyd Sr. and Floyd Jr. came up with this
proposterous story that Filipino soldiers took hundreds of years ago to prevent them from feeling the affect of bullets? Or Floyd Jr.'s remark that he knows that the Philippines are the center for producing performance enhancing drugs. That has no basis in anything. Just made up. This kind of crap has got to stop.

"I really believe that somebody has to educate these people, and to teach them what it is to be a responsible promoter toward journalists. For Shaefer and De La Hoya to have permitted this to happen, they have to call a press conference and apologize for the entire Filipino and to the Americans for having treated people from another country this badly."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

***




Mayweather's zany antics carefully scripted, Arum says -- The Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

HOLLYWOOD—It's a bridge too far to label Floyd Mayweather a racist. He may be jealous, may be envious of the widening popularity gap between he and Manny Pacquiao, but he doesn't harbor any hatred for any or all Filipinos including Pacman.

The “60 Minutes” crew from CBS has been following Manny for a profile to air in September. Jay Leno's Tonight Show (NBC) is sending a crew to Dallas to shoot in and around Pacman's March 13 title defense against Joshua Clottey and, so as not to be left out, ABC will air a “Good Morning America” piece on the Pinoy Idol on the fight date.

Not to mention how Crooner Manny is becoming a regular on the Jimmy Kimmel late night talkfest.

The media interest goes beyond boxing, as Pacman is the only active athlete I know of right now who is running for a high political office in his homeland.

I don't think there was any discriminatory intent regarding the Pinoy reporters who went to Thursday's thiird and final leg of the Mayweather-Mosley media tour. It does not seem crystal clear that Mayweather spurned all Filipino media as a group.

Maybe he just didn't feel like speaking on Pacquiao because ESPN's Mike Wilbon, at his prosecutorial best, could not get a single word about Manny to fall from Floyd's lips on Wednesday, either.

The odd thing about Mayweather's churlish behavior is that he started babbling to AOL Fanhouse's Lem Satterfiield when Lem The Gem did not even ask him anything about Manny at the media event in Washington.

What does seem clear is that everything Mayweather does outside the ring is like WWE, professional wrestling as entertainment and not an actual sport.

No less than his former promoter, Bob Arum, thinks Mayweather's antics are scripted carefully.

“I think they are,” Arum said. “Mayweather is not exciting in the ring so I think Al Haymon (Mayweather's boss) made the decision to seek out controversy outside the boxing ring. I think all these crazy things that Floyd does, including throwing out $100 bills in nightclubs, are designed for public attention.

"He makes for boring fights but tries to be exciting away from the ring."

Switching gears, happy 50th birthday to Coach Freddie Roach. Manny, Arum and friends are hosting a private shindig for the occasion.

Roach is a complete boxaholic, toiling 10-12 hours every day but Sunday at his thriving Wild Card Gym.

I asked him what he does on Sundays.

“I go to a movie, get a box of popcorn and enjoy that. I just saw Avatar.”

As far as his health, Roach said the prestigious Cleveland Clinic just gave him high grades despite his Parkinson's Disease

Many happy returns, Coach.

And Manny happy returns, Coach.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com


For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV

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'It's prejudice against Filipinos': Exclusive interview with Bob Arum -- The Examiner

By Dennis "dSource" Guillermo, Examiner.com

xen·o·pho·bi·a
[zen-uh-foh-bee-uh, zee-nuh-]

–noun
an unreasonable fear or hatred of foreigners or strangers or of that which is foreign or strange.

I spoke to Top Rank chief Bob Arum just moments ago after he read my report on some of our friends in the Philippine media getting banned from interviewing Floyd Mayweather Jr. in their press conference yesterday at the Nokia Theater in LA.

Arum was upset, embarrassed and disgusted at the way Philippine media was treated.

"To me it borders on racism and nationalism, this is absolutely not the American way. As an American I have to apologize to all the Filipino people and the Filipino media. This is absolutely outrageous."

Arum further elaborated, "It starts with the promoter because the promoter has caused this type of atmosphere, particularly if you noticed in their first press conference when they emphasized that this is a great fight -- Mayweather vs. Mosley -- because it's two Americans fighting each other. Once that [expletive] starts, it's the prejudice against Filipinos, it's the prejudice against other nationalities, it's xenophobic and it is absolutely intolerable and it's not the way Americans view the world."

Arum also said, "I am personally very, very upset, because I got reports over at the Wild Card Boxing Club from Filipino media that had come back from the Mayweather-Mosley press conference that they were up in arms because they told me that they were forbidden to have any access like all other journalists had to Floyd Mayweather, and that he wouldn't answer any questions or even talk to or give any interviews to any Filipino.

"Now, whoever's responsible for this ought to be ashamed of themselves. This is the worst kind of racism that can be imaginable. And I put this at the feet of the promoter, Golden Boy, Richard Schaefer and Oscar De La Hoya. They're the ones in charge of the press conference, and they're the ones who permitted this outrage to happen. And any person who prevented a journalist from asking a question or doing an interview because of his race or nationality should be fired, and banned from the business of boxing.

"This kind of stuff can not be permitted to go on. It's terrible for the sport, it's terrible for the United States for it to happen. It happened in the United States. And an o rus an apology is due to all of the Filipino people."

On it being a double-standard.

"Manny has graciously responded to all questions when ask of the American Media. I can see a P.R. person telling a client or a fighter telling a fighter, 'Don't answer any questions pertaining to 'X,' whether an American journalist, or a Danish journalist, or an English journalist, or a Filipino journalist. The same standard has to apply to journalists from every country. Somebody ought to teach these people what it means to be an American and what the free press means. It's not just words. The free press means equal access for any journalist."

Arum was also quoted on FanHouse.com about detecting xenophobia a while ago.

"When this whole issue emerged about this extra drug testing, etc., I smelled xenophobia directed at him, Manny Pacquiao, because he's a Filipino. And wasn't that substantiated when Floyd Sr. and Floyd Jr. came up with this proposterous story that Filipino soldiers took hundreds of years ago to prevent them from feeling the affect of bullets or Floyd Jr.'s remark that he knows that the Philippines are the center for producing performance enhancing drugs. That has no basis in anything. Just made up. This kind of crap has got to stop."

"I really believe that somebody has to educate these people, and to teach them what it is to be a responsible promoter toward journalists. For Shaefer and De La Hoya to have permitted this to happen, they have to call a press conference and apologize for the entire Filipino and to the Americans for having treated people from another country this badly."

Source: examiner.com

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Schaefer: Give Mayweather respect he deserves for drug-test request -- Telegraph

By Gareth A Davies, Telegraph.co.uk

Should Floyd Mayweather be admired for insisting he wants to clean up boxing with random blood testing prior to major fights ? Richard Schaefer, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, certainly thinks so…insisting that Mayweather should be afforded respect for his stance…

Schaefer, speaking exclusively to telegraph.co.uk, said the schism between his promotional group, and that of Top Rank, who promote Manny Pacquiao, may never heal. Yet it is a fight the boxing world wants to see.

“Mayweather/Pacquiao going forward is a matter of discussions, and negotiation. There is nothing to do with the Nevada Commission. The testing is just a belief of Floyd Mayweather that boxing needs to clean up its act, and I think he should get great respect for that,” Schaefer told me this week.

“It was a non-issue for Shane Mosley. I think it might be the beginning of a change in boxing. It is impossible for that [issue] to go away because Floyd Mayweather has made it clear that he will require it [a drug testing procedure, presumably blood-testing] in all future fights.”

“But Mayweather is now facing a much more powerful man than Pacquiao, more dangerous and not for more money. This guy really believes it is time to introduce proper drug testing into boxing, and he has put his money where his mouth is. Look – he was willing to walk a way with a smaller purse against a lesser opponent. That’s how much he believed in it.”

“In my eyes, Pacquiao has also moved to a smaller purse against a less dangerous opponent in Joshua Clottey. Love Floyd or hate Floyd, I said it the first time when we did de la Hoya versus Mayweather.

“He has fans who admire his skills in the urban markets – they look up to him and admire him – and there is the other group who really don’t like him because of his bragging and what he stands for with the money throwing. They don’t like him, and want to see him lose. Those who watch Floyd either love him or hate him, and he continues to win. This is a guy who always finds a way to win.”

“Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather could never happen, but my answer is not because I think there is not the will to do it. It is more that I think that Sugar Shane Mosley is going to win that fight. I have never seen Shane so hungry to win a fight.”

“It will become an issue if Mayweather wins because he made it clears that any opponent he faces will have to be tested …there is one thing in boxing, you never say never, but I have not seen in 30 years in professional business have I seen two sides with such and conviction that they were right. There is a deep divide right now – andI really don’t think suddenly, somehow later this fall everything will be nice and peachy…between the Mayweather and Pacquiao camps.”

Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

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