Sunday 6 June 2010

Did Manny Pacquiao award send Floyd Mayweather over the edge? -- Telegraph

By Gareth A Davies, Telegraph.co.uk

The Mayweather Files continue.Was it an off-the-cuff remark from Floyd Mayweather Jr that he is taking two years off, or was it simply a protest at Manny Pacquiao’s award of Fighter of the Decade from the Boxing Writers Association of America on Friday in New York?

Equally, it could be a ruse from Mayweather in the stakes for a negotiation ahead of the proposed showdown between Congressman Pacquiao and ‘Money’ Mayweather. Either way, Mayweather’s intriguing signals in his fight with Pacquiao continue to draw the headlines.

Hard to GetMayweather has insisted he wants Pacquiao to take drug tests in the lead-up to their fight. The respective promoters are currently settling those terms.

I tend to agree with Bob Arum on this one. The promoter of Filipino boxing whirlwind Pacquiao does not believe the undefeated American is planning to go into retirement again.

I spoke to Arum last week, and he insisted that he was gagged on talking about the scene-shifting going on behind the scenes in the Pacquiao-Mayweather talks at present – as indeed Richard Schaefer of Golden Boy is – as they go ahead and try to nail down all aspects of the fight for November 13.

Arum said he is not taking the reports seriously since most people believe Mayweather “was just babbling.”

“I can’t say anything about the fight other than we are trying to put it all in place,” said Arum.

Mayweather’s admission from Las Vegas came in a video posted on YouTube that he would be taking a two-year break from boxing. “I’m taking a couple years off… away from the sport of boxing. I want to devote my time to my boxing gym,” he said.

Mayweather has retired before, of course. He ‘retired’ after fighting Oscar De La Hoya; he went into ‘retirement’ after defeating British Ricky Hatton in 2007, only to return to defeat Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez in September 2009.

Last month, he was brilliant in beating Shane Mosley, in a contest which may have earned him in the region of $40 million. My view is that he is just playing hard to get, as he will have to be ‘tempted’ out of retirement to fight against Pacquiao, in a contest that is estimated already to be capable of grossing around $200 million.

For his part, Mayweather could earn over $50 million with the meeting of the best two fighters from the last four years in boxing likely to break television pay per view records of 2.25 million buys set when Mayweather fought Oscar De La Hoya in May 2007.

Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

Hype couldn't help Foreman in ring -- ESPN

By Michael Woods, Special to ESPNNewYork.com

NEW YORK -- Three days before the Miguel Cotto-Yuri Foreman clash at Yankee Stadium, we asked Foreman if it was possible that the press had hyped the rabbi-in-training angle to kingdom come, if he considered that maybe his superlative backstory was making pundits overlook the fact that his résumé wasn't sterling.

So many fightwriters and fans were picking the WBA 154-pound champion to upset three-time titlist Miguel Cotto -- whose résumé was beyond reproach -- that the Puerto Rican was no longer the favorite in the court of public opinion.

Foreman answered, We'll see Saturday night.

We did indeed. And the résumé theory held true.

Foreman fought a better grade of athlete than he had previously, maybe two steps better. Team Foreman, like seemingly everyone else, gave Cotto the Mark Twain treatment heading in to the tussle, exaggerating his demise. But we saw from minute one that Cotto's legs were bouncy, he held the weight at 154 well, and his punches had snap.

Ref Arthur Mercante Jr. saw enough 40 seconds into the ninth, as a left hook to the body shifted Foreman's internal organs to an excruciating degree.

This was no Daniel Santos, the man Foreman had wrested the title from last November. Even if wars with Antonio Margarito and Manny Pacquiao have sapped some vitality from Cotto, he's still a formidable pugilist, in the pound-for-pound top 15.

Cotto rises to 35-2, while Foreman is 28-1.

Boxing held up to its rep as the theater of the unexpected, when Foreman trainer Joe Grier threw in the towel in the eighth, sensing that his fighter's right knee was in bad shape after he'd slipped on the wet canvas. But Mercante disregarded the towel, believing that Foreman was in decent shape to continue, and said after that he didn't know who had thrown in the white flag of surrender.

"It was a lot of pain, it was very sharp," Foreman, 29, said of the balky knee. "I didn't want it to stop, I wanted it to continue. I'm a world champion, now a former world champion. I'm not just quitting. We need to fight."

Foreman will get the knee checked out, thinking there might be ligament damage. He said he had a similar injury as a kid in Israel but didn't have health insurance, so he never had it correctly diagnosed.

Promoter Bob Arum said if the injury is bad, Foreman will need to do rehab and will come back against sub-Cotto-level competition.

With the loss, Foreman's cred doesn't dip that much. He showed grit, fighting on a bum knee, and started to trade with Cotto when the Puerto Rican's power shots sapped his ability to keep up the constant movement. From the opening bell, the 29-year-old Cotto's power edge stood out. His jab buzzed the Brooklyner, and his counter left hooks had Foreman fighting to keep his equilibrium several times.

Foreman's best round was the fourth; he appeared to be getting his range. But though he made Cotto miss, he didn't make the now-four-time-titlist pay. Foreman's movement was too often without purpose. His jab needed to be an offensive weapon, as the rest of his arsenal won't make anyone cringe in fear, let along Cotto, who's faced men with chainsaws for fists and kept coming forward.

Cotto, after the ludicrous delay for the "mystery towel" incident, finished the job with a left hook to the body. The loser -- who said after, "Thank God for keeping us both healthy, more or less," winning points for perspective -- needed to be busier to convince the judges that his brand of boxing was better. But it was Cotto who had the volume edge 115-329 to 71-281, and no judge had Foreman winning more than two rounds.

Foreman can take solace in the knowledge that he is not likely to hear the "Yuri Boreman" slam in the near future, seeing as how he stood in the pocket late in the game, and was in it to win it. And he will forever by associated with the strange scenario at the Stadium, Towelgate In The Bronx; there was nothing boring in that bizarre eighth-round interlude.

Michael Woods is a contributor to ESPNNewYork.com and ESPN The Magazine and editor of TheSweetScience.com.

Source: sports.espn.go.com

Miguel Cotto Dethrones Yuri Foreman by Ninth-Round TKO -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

NEW YORK -- Concerning challenger Miguel Cotto, there were a number of major questions to be answered entering Saturday night's challenge for the WBA junior middleweight (154 pounds) title owned by Yuri Foreman.

Among them, how much did the 29-year-old former three-time champion have left, given the bloody wars he had during an 11th-round knockout loss to Antonio Margarito in July 2008, a split-decision victory over Joshua Clottey in June 2009 and November's 12-round stoppage loss to Manny Pacquiao that dethroned him as WBO welterweight (140 pounds) king?

All three bouts left Cotto with severe cuts and bruises, including one particularly cavernous gash over a left eye that routinely streamed blood down his left cheek.

There was also the question of whether or not Manny Steward, Cotto's third trainer in five fights, could adequately improve the Puerto Rican fighter's ability to punch cleanly and effectively from close range as an aggressive pursuer of the elusive Foreman.

There was also the question of whether or not Cotto could handle the rise in weight, being at the highest division of his career, where he weighed a half-pound less than the 154-pound Foreman.

Cotto (35-2, 28 knockouts) answered all of those questions with Saturday night's ninth round, technical knockout victory over Foreman (28-1, eight KOs), before 20,727 in the first-ever boxing show at the new Yankee Stadium.

Cotto dropped Foreman with a left hand to the body 42 seconds into the ninth round, after which referee Arthur Mercante stepped in and waved an end to the bout.

"I came to win the fight, and my goal was to put pressure on him all along. After the fourth round, which Foreman may have won, I went to the corner and Manny Steward told me to stay focused," said Cotto. "Even when he went down, I thought, 'I still have to fight.'"

Foreman had already injured his right leg twice in the eighth round, going down twice in pain after twisting and apparently re-injuring a leg on which he wore a knee brace.

A towel from the direction of Foreman's corner had been thrown into the ring, but Mercante overruled it, saying that it came from a source other than Foreman's trainer, Joe Grier.

"I heard that someone was yelling, 'Stop the fight, stop the fight,' and then, the towel was thrown in. At that moment, I didn't know who threw the towel in, although I have a pretty good idea who did it now," said Mercante.

"When I resumed the fight, I called time to let both guys rest," said Mercante. "Yuri was always game to fight. Both men showed the mark of champions in a great fight tonight."

But the towel was thrown in by Grier, responding to Foreman's wife, Leyla Leidecker, who pleaded for him to stop the fight.

"I saw the replay on the screen, and I saw the towel come in," said Cotto, who earned $2 million plus upside to Foreman's $750,000.

"And I thought, 'Fight's over, this is wrong. The fight should be stopped,'" said Cotto. "But hey, he was hurt, working on one leg, and I still kept on fighting. This is a world title fight."

But as a result, the fight continued into the ninth, where Cotto ended things.

"I was surprised. I thought that the corner would have stopped the fight, but there were a lot of bad decisions going on in there," said Manny Steward, Cotto's trainer.

"I knew where the towel came from, and it came right from their corner. The fight was over, and it was wrong to have continued," said Steward. "But I thought that Miguel Cotto fought the perfect fight -- good jab, good right hand. I was very pleased with his effort."

Foreman said he wanted to continue despite injuring his knee.

"I was there the entire fight. The brace is for an old injury. I was making side-to-side movements, however, and it just gave out. I felt a sharp pain and that's why I went down," said Foreman.

"Arthur Mercante let me try to work it out. I'm a world champion, or a former world champion," said Foreman. "I would have never quit. I did not want the fight to be stopped."

Cotto also improved to 8-0, with three knockouts in bouts in New York, including a mark of 6-0 at Madison Square Garden, with four of those contests taking place on the eve of the Puerto Rican Day Parade.

At Madison Square Garden, Cotto defeated former world champions Clottey, Shane Mosley, Paulie Malignaggi and Zab Judah, the latter, by 11th-round knockout.

Foreman-Cotto brought a fight to a Yankee Stadium for the first time since 1976, when Muhammad Ali defeated Ken Norton at the former venue by 15-round decision.

Cotto, who stood 5-foot-7 to Foreman's 5-11, crowded the taller man throughout the fight.

Cotto will now weigh his options on whether to move up into the higher weight class and defend his crown, or to return to welterweight for other opportunities.

"I have to wait and see," said Cotto. "What's better, to go back down or to stay here. But I'm always ready to fight the big fights."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Cotto triumphs over injured Foreman at Yankee Stadium -- USA Today

By Bob Velin, USA TODAY

NEW YORK — The unquestioned star of the show Saturday night was the massive, $1.5-billion glittering home of the New York Yankees and the 20,272 fans that rocked it.

But the way the show ended was as bizarre as anything the new Yankee Stadium, or its predecessor, "The House That Ruth Built," had seen since hosting its first fight 87 years ago.

Miguel Cotto, fighting before a nationalistic and electrified crowd of supporters waving Puerto Rican flags, stopped WBA super welterweight champion Yuri Foreman, who had his own sizable Jewish cheering section, with a crushing body shot that dropped the champion at 42 seconds of the ninth round, and referee Arthur Mercante Jr. stopped it. With his new title, Cotto became a four-time world champion, in his third weight division.

But Cotto thought he had won the fight in the previous round when Foreman's trainer, Joe Grier, threw in the towel after his fighter, limping badly, had injured his knee. The fight appeared stopped in that eighth round, the ring filled with people and Cotto celebrated his return as a champion.

Or so he thought. Mercante, much to everyone's surprise, announced that the fight was not over and ordered all but the fighters out of the ring.

Cotto and Foreman finished the wild round, then came out for the ninth. Cotto (35-2, 28 KOs) smelled blood and attacked the limping Foreman full force. Foreman, who had slipped or whose knee had buckled several times earlier in the fight, tried unsuccessfully to avoid Cotto's onslaught. The Puerto Rican caught Foreman with the final left hook that dropped the champion, and Mercante stopped it.

"I knew the towel came from that corner, and the fight should have been stopped (in the eighth round)," said Cotto's new trainer, Emanuel Steward. "There were a lot of bad decisions going on in there."

Mercante said he didn't know where the towel came from, thinking it was thrown by someone not connected to Foreman's corner. But it was indeed Grier who tossed it in.

"There was no need to stop the fight. They were in the middle of a great fight," Mercante said. "That's what the fans came to see. I thought I did the right thing. You see a white towel thrown, and if you noticed I called time. They had an extra minute to rest. I went over to Yuri and said 'suck it up, kid.' "

Cotto, who had suffered recent brutal beatings at the hands of Antonio Margarito and Manny Pacquiao, who was at ringside, landed 115 of 329 punches, while Foreman, the rabbi-to-be and first Israeli world champion, landed 71 of 281. Foreman's first career loss dropped his record to 28-1, with 8 KOs.

"I proved this night, everybody who said Miguel Cotto was finished, everybody failed," Cotto said. "Miguel is back."

Cotto was well ahead on the scorecards when Foreman's knee twisted awkwardly in the seventh round. He was already wearing a knee brace from a bicycle injury he suffered as a teenager in Israel, and his family lacked health insurance to get it checked out at the time.

"I was making side-to-side movement and it gave out," said Foreman, who had suffered an earlier cut over his right eye. "It was very painful, a sharp pain," he said. "I couldn't really do a lot of movements."

Steward, a Hall of Fame trainer, said he thought Cotto, who earned $2 million for his night's work, "had fought a perfect fight."

Cotto, who wore Yankee pinstriped shorts, said he simply followed the instructions of Steward, who has trained such champions as Thomas Hearns and Sugar Ray Leonard, and currently Wladimir Klitschko.

"My jab is back, my movement is back, my left hook to the body is back," Cotto said.

Foreman said he thought the fight was over when the towel was tossed in, but kept fighting because he was the champion. "We're the world champion," he said. "We're not quitting. We need to fight."

Foreman, the Belarus-born fighter who was raised in Israel and emigrated to the U.S. just before his 19th birthday, is about a year and a half away from finishing his rabbinical studies. He had to wait at his hotel until the Jewish sabbath ended at sundown Saturday, then received a police escort to the stadium.

He said last week he would wait to see what happens Saturday night before he decides on his future.

Cotto said he was undecided whether to stay at 154 pounds or go back down to 147. "I'm always ready to fight the big fights," he said.

This was a big fight simply because it was the first time in 34 years the Yankees' home field hosted a fight. The new stadium with the old facade towered around the ring, which was set up behind second base. Many fans, especially those in the cheaper seats, arrived for the earliest of the undercard fights. The four levels of the stands were filled from the first-base said to the third-base side, as well as the 7,000-8,000 seats around the ring.

The energy level was palpable, even for the undercard fights. Cameras flashed continually as fans preserved their memories of the first fight at the New York Yankees since Muhammad Ali and Ken Norton fought for the heavyweight title in 1976. Ali won that controversial decision in his rubber match with Norton. Ironically, it was Mercante's late father, Arthur Mercante, who refereed that fight.

Fans waved Puerto Rican and Israeli flags throughout the stadium, though the former greatly outnumbered the latter. Three national anthems were played—Puerto Rico, Israel and the U.S.

The fans were clearly happy just to be witnessing history.

William Block of New York, a Yankees season-ticketholder, said, "It's a perfect place for a boxing match. I wanted to see what the place looked like at a boxing match, quite frankly. I know what it looks like during games and the World Series. This is pretty impressive."

Billy Childress, from central New Jersey, said the fight was attractive to him because it was the first fight there in 34 years. "It is a must-see event," he said. "It's pretty amazing that we're sitting in the middle of center field. You can almost imagine how the Yankee players feel out here. It's pretty magical right now."

His friend, Jason Jones, of Hoboken, N.J., said he wasn't pulling for either fighter, he just want to see a good fight. He called himself a Floyd Mayweather fan. "I want to see Mayweather-Pacquiao," he said. "But if it happens, I doubt it will be here."

On the televised (HBO) undercard between two undefeated fighters, former U.S. Olympian Vanes Martirosyan scored a unanimous 10-round decision over New York's own "Mean" Joe Greene.

In a physical fight that saw Greene (22-1, 14 KOs) knocked down in the 10th, Martirosyan (28-0, 17 KOs) won by scores of 96-93, 96-93 and 98-91.

In the first fight at the new stadium, Christian Martinez of New York scored a technical knockout over Jonathan Cuba at 1:18 of the fourth and final round of their super lightweight bout.

Source: usatoday.com

Sylvester-Karmazin draw -- FightNews

By Karl Freitag, FightNews.com

IBF middleweight champion “Hurrikan” Sebastian Sylvester (33-3-1, 16 KOs) and mandatory challenger Roman “Made in Hell” Karmazin (40-3-2, 26 KOs) battled to a twelve round split decision draw on Saturday night at the Jahnsportforum in Neubrandenburg, Germany. As expected, a very close and hard fought fight. The 37-year-old Karmazin was very active, but Sylvester showed good defense, better technical skills and was generally more effective, landing clean right hands throughout the fight. Scores were 118-111 for Sylvester, 117-111 for Karmazin, and 114-114. Sylvester retains his title with the draw. Fightnews scored it 116-113 for Sylvester, but many rounds were close. There was a skirmish at ringside when a member of Team Karmazin objected to the tally of the 114-114 card.

In a clash for the vacant IBF cruiserweight title, Steve Cunningham (23-2, 12 KOs) recovered from a fourth round knockdown to get a fifth round stoppage over “Contender: Season 4″ winner Troy Ross (23-2, 16 KOs). Referee Bill Clancy waved off the fight due to a deep cut under the left eye of Ross that was ruled to be caused by a punch (a thumb to be precise). It will be the second reign for Cunningham as IBF cruiserweight champion, who was recently signed by Sauerland Event. With the win, Cunningham positions himself for a rematch with stablemate WBO cruiserweight champion Marco Huck. There is also talk of a Super Six tournament in the cruiserweight divison, in which Cunningham and Huck would particiate. Both attractive propositions.

Heavyweight Oleg Platov (29-1, 22 KOs) won by sixth round TKO over Gbenga Oloukun (18-6, 11 KOs). Platov dropped Oloukun in rounds one, two and five and got the TKO at 2:27 of the sixth.

Cruiserweight Yoan Pablo Hernandez (22-1, 11 KOs) never let upset artist Zack Page (20-29-2, 7 KOs) in the fight, winning 80-72 on all cards in an eight-rounder. Hernandez is rated #5 by the WBC and IBF, #8 by the WBA and #11 by the WBO.

40-year-old journeyman light heavyweight Demetrius Davis (20-21-5, 7 KOs) stunned previously unbeaten Artur Hein (12-1, 7 KOs). Hein suffered an injury to his right knee after slipping, which caused the fight to be stopped at 1:08 of round four. Beneficiary Davis wins by fourth round TKO.

Cruiserweight Lukas Schulz (7-0, 5 KOs) scored an eighth round TKO over Christophe Dufaux (4-1, 1 KO).

Super middleweight Harry Weber moved to 10-0, 2 KOs with an eight round unanimous decision over Vasyl Kliusa (11-1, 7 KOs).

Middleweight Mariusz Cendrowski (19-2-2, 7 KOs) outpointed previously unbeaten Thomas Troelenberg (21-1, 10 KOs) over eight.

Source: fightnews.com

Floyd Mayweather May Not Be Fighting Manny Pacquiao Anytime Soon -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Floyd Mayweather is taking a one or two year break from boxing and thus will not be fighting Manny Pacquiao anytime soon, if at all. Floyd's hiatus announcement was reported on Philboxing.

The Coward's Guide to Conflict: Empowering Solutions for Those Who Would Rather Run Than FightFight fans will wonder if he's dodging Manny and how he can lay claim to being the greatest of all time if he is not eager to meet Pacquio. If his heart is not in the sport then of course he is within his bounds to take another lengthy break. But he will not do his legacy any favors if indeed his announcement is the real deal.

Update: As of 6:30 pm, we are hearing that Top Rank is not taking Mayweather's hiatus statement seriously. Until it is communicated to them officially, spokesman Lee Samuels said Bob Arum will not be responding to the possibility that Mayweather is going on break.

Update 2: Now the video has been scrubbed from YouTube. What's the deal here?

SPEEDBAG Man, I hate self righteous media types who portray themselves as the ultimate in squeeky clean, this paragon of virtue, when they work in a climate that is so screamingly rife with conflict of interest. Some of these guys can't keep it real...Are they ignorant? Deluded? They can't even concede that sportwriters, and really all media covering a beat, have to wrestle with balancing relationships, and access and sources? Maddening. Can't name a name here but one guy in particular burns my biscuit.

Source: thesweetscience.com

Pacquiao-Mayweather: Mayweather to take 'year or two off' from boxing instead -- Examiner

By Charles Indriolo, Examiner.com

Floyd Mayweather Jr. stated in an interview Friday that he now plans to take a ‘year or two off’ from boxing before his next fight. This comes as shocking news for fans that’ve been waiting for a Pacquiao-Mayweather mega-fight announcement.

The interview took place during a “Make a Wish Foundation” charity appearance. Mayweather was in attendance to meet the wish of a young fan with Hodgkin’s disease named Armando. During the appearance, a reporter asked Armando who he’d like to see Mayweather fight next. Armando quickly stated Manny Pacquiao.

MANNY PACQUIAO CUSTOM T-SHIRT NEW DESIGN!Then things got interesting. It was after that answer when Mayweather announced that he plans to take another leave from boxing. In 2007, Mayweather left the sport for almost two years, only to return in 2009 and crush top pound-for-pound fighters Juan Manuel Marquez and Shane Mosley. But if Mayweather does go ahead and take another leave from boxing, then he may never overcome the criticism that would come with it.

When Mayweather first ‘retired’ in 2007, after defeating Ricky Hatton, many fans questioned his motivation. Floyd was still in the prime of his career and the clear #1 fighter in boxing. However, he started to take criticism for ‘ducking’ fighters. In 2007, new welterweight star Miguel Cotto was trying to position himself for a bout with Mayweather. But Mayweather opted for retirement.

If Mayweather opts for a ‘retirement’ again, with a mega-fight versus Manny Pacquiao hanging in the balance, then he will be surely branded as a ‘ducker’. Team Pacquiao, and their legion of fans, already think Mayweather doesn’t want to fight Pacquiao. They feel his demand for strict blood-testing is simply a coward’s tactic, and that Mayweather has no intention of making the fight. If Mayweather leaves boxing again, they may all have been right.

It will be interesting to see what comes out of this though. Floyd’s comments could simply mean nothing. Sometimes Floyd just talks to talk. A gag order has supposedly been put in place for negotiations between Team Pacquiao and Team Mayweather, however Mayweather can obviously still say whatever he wants. Hopefully it’s just gamesmanship, and that the fight the world is waiting to see will eventually happen.

Source: examiner.com

Pacquiao cancels meeting with Senator Reid -- Associated Press

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Manny Pacquiao's whirlwind trip to the United States apparently will not involve a meeting with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

The Good FightThe champion boxer and newly elected Congressman from the Philippines was supposed to meet Reid on Monday, but a spokesman for the senator says that Pacquiao canceled due to a scheduling conflict on his end.

Pacquiao made the long trip to the United States to accept his third Fighter of the Year award from the Boxing Writers Association of America on Friday night in New York.

He was scheduled to attend the first fight at Yankee Stadium in more than three decades, when Yuri Foreman defends his junior middleweight title against Miguel Cotto on Saturday night.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: google.com