Sunday 20 June 2010

Exclusive interview: Jeff Mayweather "pessimistic" on the making of Pacquiao - Mayweather -- Examiner

By Lorne Scoggins, Examiner.com

I recently had the pleasure of talking with Jeff Mayweather about his nephew, Floyd Jr, Manny Pacquiao, and more. Jeff expressed why he has doubts that the mega-fight between Pacquiao and Mayweather will ever come to fruition.

LS: The biggest buzz in boxing right now is the possibility of a matchup between Floyd Jr and Pacquiao. Do you feel optimistic that the fight will take place?

Titanium Muscle Gain TM 3 Months Supply, Professional and Recreational Muscle Building, body buildingJM: Nope. I'm very pessimistic.

LS: You're very pessimistic?

JM: Yep. And I think that it's one of those situations, that when and if it doesn't happen, everyone's going to point the finger at Floyd, when the finger shouldn't be pointed at Floyd. It should be pointed at Pacquiao because Pacquiao is the reason why the fight didn't happen in the first place, and it'll be that same reason why the fight don't happen this time. It has nothing to do with Floyd. I mean, this guy went into all these demands on Floyd, what he wanted.

You know, [Pacquiao] said, 'Ok. Every pound you're over, that's going to cost you 10 million dollars'. Floyd said, 'Ok'. Then he said, 'I want to wear these kind of gloves'. Floyd said, 'Ok'.

[Floyd said], 'Now, I want you to take the drug tests, random drug testing.' See, Manny's still trying to get around that whole issue. Recently, now he's trying to say, 'Ok. Well, I'll do it up until 14 days'. But that's not random then, because you know when they're going to stop testing you. Random is actually...that's what the word "random" means--that they can test you at any point, at any given time.

LS: I understand that with Floyd and Shane Mosley, they stopped testing at 18 and 19 days, but they didn't know when they were going to stop. As far as they knew, they might have still tested them at any time, right?

JM: Right. I mean, don't get me wrong. That's important, I think. Actually, I think that's a very, very important stand to take in boxing, with the state of boxing now and so many fighters using these performance enhancing drugs. This is boxing. It's already bad enough.

You know, I'm not saying that Pacquiao's using them, but if he's not using them, he should have no problem at all taking the tests. To be honest, this is my logic, and I think this is the logic of almost every person that's sane; If I haven't done anything, I'm going to be bold to prove myself.

This is the example that I always use: I've never drank alcohol in my life. Of course, I can be driving my car and be very sleepy, but being sleepy and being drunk are two different things. Since I know for a fact that I've never drank alcohol, I'm going to be bold about being tested. I'm going to be like, 'Hey, you can test me any way you want to'. There's no chance that I'm not going to pass.

LS: Right. I see your point.

JM: And that's what you do when you don't have nothing to hide. When you have something to hide, you create so many different diversions, so many different smokescreens. The strength trainer, he wants to be the fall-guy, in case anything happens. He comes out and says, 'Well, Manny doesn't know what I give him'. Well, I don't think anybody's going to just take something, and not know what it is, and not going to ask. That was the first excuse. Then the next excuse was, 'Oh. I'm afraid of needles'. You're afraid of needles, but you have tattoos everywhere.

LS: I think Pacquiao actually came out and said that he feels like it weakens him. He said that before the Morales fight, the last fight that he lost, they took blood from him on the day of the fight. He feels that it weakened him, and that's the reason that he lost.

JM: Well, it seems to me that it's just another excuse. If they did the same thing to Erik Morales, the playing field was even. That's all Floyd's trying to do. He's trying to make the playing field even. I mean, you have a guy that started at 106 pounds, got knocked out at 106 pounds (Note: Pacquiao was knocked out at 113, and 110 pounds), moved up 41 pounds, and until the Clottey fight, had a 100% knockout ratio. That's never happened before in boxing. Never.

I mean, can you imagine Michael Carbajal, who was 112 pounds, can you imagine him beating Ray Leonard, Donald Curry, Lloyd Honeyghan, Tommy Hearns, you know, guys on this level? These are questions that, when you ask someone who knows about boxing, and has been around long enough to see Michael Carbajal, and the other names that I put out there, the first thing he's going to say is, 'No. He has no chance'.

Well if he don't have a chance, how does Pacquiao have a chance? He came from a smaller weight class, and he's not just beating guys, he's knocking them out.

JM: When [Pacquiao] went to 130, his knockout ratio was 50%. How all of the sudden did he move 17 pounds north of that and his knockout percentage was 100%, like I said, until the Clottey fight?

Like I said, can you conceive of Michael Carbajal beating Donald Curry? Most people are going to say you're out of your mind. Well, Manny Pacquiao beating De La Hoya is the exact same thing. It's no different.

LS: Well, I just hope that somehow Floyd and Manny can work everything out, and that the fight can happen. It's such an exciting possibility. Since Floyd came back from his layoff, he totally dominated Marquez, and I'll be honest with you, I've been critical of Floyd, but he took on Shane Mosley, a guy that a lot of people thought he was scared of, and he totally dominated him too.

JM: I mean, it's like this: Are you going to turn down $40 or $50 million? They ain't doing anything but taking blood. It's not going to kill you. Most fighters have to take blood 2 or 3 days before the fight anyway. That's part of the sport. Floyd's not afraid of Pacquiao at all, but at the same time, if I have suspicion about someone who is doing things that I can't believe, and I've given the most power to him, I'm going to use my power as well.

I mean, at the end of all this, no matter how good Floyd does as a fighter, you know, he might be one of the greatest fighters to ever put on a pair of gloves, but even if he don't, this will be a part of his legacy: Maybe, he might be the guy that cleaned up boxing on that higher level. It may become mandatory in championship fights to do Olympic style drug testing. On that level, those guys can afford it. It's not a big deal, and the promoters can pay for it.

That might be the biggest significance of Floyd's career, whether he goes on to beat Pacquiao, and does whatever else beyond that.

He will probably be more remembered if he changes boxing on that level, where for championship fights, these guys have to be tested in that way. That will be more powerful than anything that he can achieve in the ring.

LS: Let's say they do manage to make the fight. The way that Floyd has dominated almost everybody he's fought, do you think that Pacquiao has the tools to make it a good, close fight?

JM: Well, Pacquiao has good hand-speed himself, so that makes him dangerous. But If Pacquiao agrees to the random testing, I think he will get knocked out. I would say, probably within 5 rounds, Pacquiao will get knocked out, because he can't get out of the way of anything.

One thing that Floyd has always shown; once they start saying that somone's going to beat him, Floyd don't just beat them, he dominates them. He shows that they don't even belong in the same ring with him. He did it with Mosley, he did it with Marquez, and everybody else they've said that about.

Floyd's got a gift. Once he figures you out, check, and checkmate. He's mastered that probably better than any fighter I've ever seen, and I'm not saying that because he's my nephew. I'm saying that because I've seen it.

LS: And he does that in the ring, during the fight.

JM: Yeah. He makes those adjustments. I mean just like with Zab Judah. Zab Judah started out like he could just run through Floyd, but the second Floyd figured him out, game over. Now he's being dissected. He's like a science project. And it didn't just happen with him. It happened with all the guys that were supposed to give Floyd a challenge. Once he figured them out, it was over.

LS: In the Mosley fight, what was running through your mind in round 2? Did it worry you when Floyd got stumbled? That looked pretty serious for a while.

JM: It's funny because when I was there, I had a good seat, but I wasn't ring-side. From the seat where I was at, it didn't look like Floyd was as hurt as he was when I seen it on TV. I would have probably been more panicked if I'd seen it on TV.

LS: (laughing)

JM: It didn't look like Floyd was really hurt that bad, but when I saw it on TV, I got a chance to see it for myself. Sometimes when you watch a fight and you're actually there, you get so caught up and involved that you actually miss things.

LS: Floyd came out of that and fought aggressively. He was backing Mosley up. It was kind of a different style for Floyd. I thought he was going to knock Mosley out in the latter rounds.

JM: I think he would have knocked Mosley out if Mosley wasn't doing so much holding. I've never seen Mosley do that. Have you ever seen him hold like that?

LS: I've never seen him perform anything like that. He seemed so tense and scared. Floyd would feint and Mosley would nearly do a back-flip.

JM: Yeah, and this was the same guy who was supposed to be fearless. He's supposed to be a fierce puncher and super strong, but yet, Floyd was pushing him around. Floyd's supposed to be a boxer, and supposed to be the one running, but Floyd was fighting his fight. Floyd was coming at him.

LS: The way that Floyd fought that fight led Freddie Roach to say that he thinks Floyd's legs are gone. I don't think Roach really believes that. I think he's just playing mind-games.

JM: (laughing) His legs are gone because he got hit in one fight? How can he say that when Floyd thoroughly dominated Mosley after being hurt in that round? I don't even understand that comment. And this is the same guy where they got a video where Shane asked, 'Why won't you let me fight Pacquiao', and he said, 'Oh no. You're too dangerous'. If you think Shane's too dangerous, what the hell do you think Floyd's going to do to him?

LS: I really appreciate you taking the time to talk with me, Jeff. I hope we can talk again some time.

JM: Likewise. Thank you.

Source: examiner.com

Antonio Tarver to Make Ring Return As a Heavyweight -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Tarver, Antonio - Signed 8x10Former light heavyweight (175 pounds) world champion, Antonio Tarver, said that he plans to return to the ring soon -- but as a heavyweight.

"I definitely wanted to move up to cruiserweight [200 pounds,] where there was one guy in particular that I wanted to fight. So I feel that if I'm going to stay in the game of boxing and give it my all, then I've got to set big goals for myself. And as you see, I'm looking a little full right now," said Tarver, a 6-foot-2 southpaw who will turn 42 in November.

"So I'm going to put on some muscle and the champ is going heavyweight," said Tarver, who will target the Klitschko brothers, WBO and IBF king Wladimir (54-3, 48 KOs), WBC champ, Vitali (39-2, 37 KOs), and, WBA titlist, David Haye (24-1, 22 KOs). "So, to the Klitschkos and to David Haye, be on the look out, because I'm coming."

The 41-year-old Tarver (27-6, 19 knockouts) made his announcement following Saturday night's unanimous decision by WBA super middleweight (168 pounds) champion, Andre Ward (22-0, 13 KOs) over Allan Green (29-2, 20 KOs) that was televised on Showtime from The Oracle Arena, in Oakland, Calif.

A Showtime boxing color commentator, Tarver has lost his last two bouts, respectively, to Chad Dawson by unanimous decision in October of 2008, and, May of 2009.

Among the biggest victories for Tarver are those over Roy Jones, against whom he is 2-1, with one second-round knockout victory.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Andre Ward Wins Unanimous Decision Over Allan Green -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

His challenger, Allan Green, bore the alternate nickname, "Ghost Dog," but it was WBA super middleweight (168 pounds) champion Andre Ward who set out to prove there was more bite in his own bark than there was in that of his opponent.

Making the first defense of the crown he won by 11th-round technical decision over current WBC king Mikkel Kessler (43-2-2, 32 KOs) in November, Ward simply outclassed Green and beat him literally from one side of the ring to the other throughout the fight.

Judges Glenn Feldman, Marty Sammon and Alfredo Polanco all had it for Ward, 120-108, meaning that he won every round.

FanHouse had it for Ward, 120-106, giving him two 10-8 rounds.

The 26-year-old Ward rose to 22-0 with 13 knockouts while the 30-year-old Green dropped to 29-2 with 20 KOs as part of group stage No. 2 of Showtime's Super Six Super Middleweight World Boxing Classic before Ward's hometown fans at The Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif.

Ward out-landed Green, 267-to-148 in total punches, including 214-to-131 in power punches, 53-17, in jabs, and, 43-6, in combinations.

In victory, Ward locked up a position in the early 2011 semifinals of the tournament, even as his next opponent in the round-robin prior to the semis is slated to be his switch-hitting, 26-year-old former Olympic teammate and bronze medalist, Andre Dirrell (19-1, 13 KOs), of Flint, Mich, on Sept. 25.

"It will be difficult. I've been putting it off saying that we'll cross that bridge when we get there. But we're here, so we'll have to deal with it and do what we've got to do," Ward said of Dirrell, whom he considers to be a personal friend. "I'm going to take a rest and then we'll go back to the drawing board. I don't like giving away too much of what I'm going to do. It was a long training camp, I just want to rest and regroup, and then we'll come back and figure out how we're going to get through the next round."

Ward-Green was originally scheduled for April 17, and then on April 24, before Ward suffered a knee injury that forced their bout's postponement yet again.

At the time of the last postponement, however, an angry Green openly questioned the legitimacy of Ward's injury, saying, "I hope it's valid," as well as, "I honestly don't think he will ever get in the ring with me," and, "I don't think this is a fight Andre Ward and his people ever wanted."

"I feel like Kobe Bryant did the other night, I don't know how we got it done," said Ward. "We just worked hard, we prepared for Green, and he's a hard puncher. We couldn't tell him that we thought that before the fight, but he's a hard puncher. He's very skilled, and I'm happy to come away with the victory.

"His demeanor coming in just motivated me because I don't pick fights and I don't mess with anybody. But when I feel like I'm backed into a corner, I want to defend myself."

But it was Green who was constantly fighting in retreat from the opening bell, taking right crosses, uppercuts and overhand lefts and rights -- all from behind Ward's jabs and lead left hands.

"Last week of training, that wasn't the game plan. We planned on going inside against him, but not as much as we did. But after the second round, he obliged me, and so I said, 'Man, okay,'" said Ward.

"I said, if he wants to fight inside, let's fight inside, and I thought that he did a good job. He hung in there longer than I thought that he would. I did expect a little tougher fight, but every fight is tough. I don't care what it looks like. This guy is to be respected, and you've got to be mentally alert. That takes a lot of energy out of you, but we were just well-prepared, and I take my hat off to him, and I hope that he does well in the second round of the Super Six."

Ending was a six-bout winning streak that included four knockouts for Green, who was in his first fight of the tournament, having replaced former middleweight (160 pounds) champion Jermain Taylor (28-4-1, 17 KOs) in January. Taylor pulled out following a 12th-round knockout loss to Germany's Arthur Abraham (31-1, 25 KOs) in October.

Green's presence in the championship bout marks the first time since Tommy Morrison in 1993 that a fighter from Oklahoma has been involved in a world championship bout.

Green was coming off of October's unanimous decision victory over previously unbeaten southpaw Tarvis Simms (25-1-1, 11 KOs).

Green had not lost since March of 2007, when he was beaten by unanimous decision over 10 rounds by Edison Miranda, whom Green floored in the eighth round before himself hitting the canvas twice in the 10th.

"You know what? Andre Ward fought a helluva a fight," said Green, who must next face Kessler at a site and on a date to be determined. "I don't want to harp on what he did too much, but the three training camps that I've done really sat me, and I had a hard way in training camp.

"I feel a little worn out. I came down to 166, which is a little lower than I expected, so by the time I got into the ring, I felt dead. You've got to understand that I've had three training camps since December. So that kind of really, really, really made me feel weak."

"You can ask my trainer. I had to stop running a few weeks ago because I felt so weak. I wasn't feeling right and I knew coming into this fight that I wasn't feeling my best," said Green. "Andre Ward showed me a lot of things, and a lot of experience. There were a lot of things that I couldn't deal with or react to."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Mayol loses fight, crown to Mexican Romero -- GMA News

By Ryan Songalia, GMANews.TV

For the second time, Filipino boxer Rodel Mayol couldn’t get the job done against Mexican rival Omar Nino Romero.

His first match ended in a technical decision, Mayol lost a more painful setback, this time via a controversial unanimous decision against the Mexican slugger Saturday (Sunday in Manila) in San Juan del Rio, Queretaro, Mexico.

The first of their two bouts saw Mayol ending up in stretcher after he received a low blow from Romero. The second bout had the Filipino dominating, but fading down the stretch.

As a result, Mayol lost his World Boxing Council (WBC) light flyweight championship to Romero, who won in all three judges scorecards, 115-112, 117-109 and 115-111.

It was the second time Romero won a world championship and the second against a Filipino.

Romero was the conqueror of former Filipino world champion, Brian Viloria. The Mexican had to relinquish the crown after testing positive for amphetamines in the rematch.

Mayol, who is promoted by Manny Pacquiao Promotions, began the fight in a disciplined manner, taking full use of his height and reach advantage.

Romero circled and tried to land wildly from the outside, but missed a lot of them.

The first meaningful punch of the fight landed in the third when a counter left hook from Mayol opened up a cut on Romero's right eye. Looking to capitalize, Mayol began to bull Romero to the ropes and land to the body and head.

Head butts began to mar the fight in the fourth as both men started to lunge from the outside with their heads low.

Romero seemed to get the worse of the clashes and appeared to be distracted momentarily by the butts.

The head butts continued into the fifth and opened up a bad cut on Romero's left eye. As per Mexican rules, the combatant that wasn't cut (Mayol) had a point deducted despite the absence of intent. A ringside doctor was summoned to check out Romero but deemed the challenger fit to continue.

Shortly before the end of the round, Romero was warned for head butting as well.

The action became less of a boxing match and more of a brawl in the sixth as both men began trading in close quarters.

Mayol's uppercuts, which were his most effective weapons in the first fight, began to find their target and so did Romero's body assault. Head clashes reappeared in the seventh as the ring doctor was once more summoned to examine Romero.

The tide turned big time for Romero in the eighth as he began to make the fight more physical.

In what was a near flashback of the first fight. Mayol reacted to a punch south of the border from Romero and found himself on the receiving end of a torrent of blows from the hungry challenger. Romero landed several unanswered blows as Mayol struggled to compose himself.

In the ninth round, Romero continued to seize the initiative and land cleaner counter hooks from the outside.

Mayol's accuracy and confidence seemed to disappear by the second as the partisan crowd continued to chant "Nino!"

Needing a big finish, Mayol's accuracy returned in the form of his right crosses that knocked some sweat off Romero in the opening moments of the final stanza and pushed him back to the ropes.

Romero closed the round stronger with left hooks and both men raised their hands in anticipation of victory at the final bell.

Romero raised his record to 29-3-2 (11 KO). Mayol is now 26-5-2 (20 KO) and 1-4-2 (1 KO) in world title matches.

Source: GMANews.TV