Wednesday 30 June 2010

Doomsday 2012 Prophecy: Manny Pacquiao, Mike Tyson & Floyd Mayweather, JR -- Ringside Report

By Geno McGahee, Ringside Report

We are now a year and a half away from what some believe to be the end of the world. The Mayans supposedly have predicted an end to the world on December 21, 2012, which doesn’t give us much time. Thankfully, we have 18 months until 2012 to clean up boxing and settle some scores. Now, I contend that my predictions are just as dependable as the Mayans’ call that the world will end, although there is some debate concerning what they meant. But for argument’s sake, we will go with the majority that lean toward the end of the world stuff.

The Ancient Maya, 6th EditionManny Pacquiao versus Floyd Mayweather, JR.
November 2010
Las Vegas, Nevada

Bob Arum announced the fight had officially been signed and that the two best fighters in the game would return to the ring in November and face off for all of the marbles. The boxing message boards become so flooded with conversation and debate that they begin to crash, and the media frenzy begin. Every boxing and MMA website begins running stories, reporting rumors, and claiming friendship and the inside track to both fighters. “Steroids or not, I’m going to send him to the floor,” Floyd Mayweather, JR., notes to a reporter during training camp, as Roger comments, “the boy’s in trouble.”

Freddie Roach is very happy with Manny’s performance in camp and predicts an 8th round stoppage for his fighter. The Pacquiao fans scream “destiny,” which becomes the tagline for the fight: DESTINY: Floyd Mayweather, JR., vs. Manny Pacquiao.

HBO’s 24/7 Series brings in its highest ratings and the PPV numbers do not disappoint as on fight night they report that they have indications that they have beaten the highest grossing PPV by 50%.

A sold out crowd stands on their feet as Pacquiao walks down to the ring. He is stone faced as he walks in and as he steps into the ring, he seems focused and ready. He begins throwing some shadow punches and looks out to the capacity crowd. Jim Lampley notes that “Pacquiao looks like a caged lion.”

Mayweather wastes no time as he makes his way to the ring. He too seems more serious than ever. “This is the most electricity I have ever felt,” notes Lampley as the crowd roars with anticipation. He makes his way into the ring and stares at Pacquiao. Manny glares back and they begin to walk to each other when their corner men step in, preventing a pre-fight fight.

With the prefight festivities out of the way, the two stare at each other from across the ring, eagerly awaiting the opening bell. Pacquiao storms out of his corner and throws a straight left that immediately lands, but Floyd takes it and begins dodging and deflecting the incoming. The first round belongs to the more active Pacquiao.

In the second round, Floyd begins landing and although they are not seeming to hurt Pacquiao, they are turning his face red. “You are standing in front of him…use angles,” Roach calmly states to a frustrated Pacquiao in the corner.

In the fifth round, Pacquiao strikes and drops Mayweather with a straight left hand. Mayweather arises and smiles, winking at the referee when he counts. It was a good shot that stunned Mayweather but didn’t necessarily hurt him. Pacquiao swarms but most of the shots miss and Floyd goes back to his corner with a smile on his face.

From the sixth round on, Floyd controls and amazingly begins to hunt down Pacquiao. Manny moves and attempts to counter Floyd, an interesting tactic for sure, but an ineffective one. In the 10th round, Floyd lands with two uppercuts and Pacquiao collapses to the floor. He sits down and looks at the referee as he counts. He arises at six, nods at Floyd and the bout continues. Pacquiao survives the round.

A late rally in the final round by Pacquiao impresses, but it is obvious to the commentary team that Floyd did enough to win. The judges come in and score it, 116-110, 114-111, and 113-112, all for the winner Floyd Mayweather, JR. Because of the success of the first outing, the two agree to a rematch, which takes place in May of 2011, Floyd once again winning a decision in similar fashion.

The Return of Mike Tyson
March, 2011
Foxwoods Casino, Uncasville, Connecticut

The former 2-Time Heavyweight Champion, Mike Tyson, returns to the ring in March of 2011, featured on a special broadcast on FOX, in their attempt to bring back boxing to network TV. Their prior cards in late 2010 brought in good ratings and now they were able to strike a deal with Don King, the promoter of Tyson for the upcoming telecast. Tyson signed to fight Mike Mollo, an aggressive heavyweight with a big punch that had gone the distance with Andrew Golota.

Tyson came in weighing a fit 225 pounds, and had reportedly looked sharp in training. The fight, itself turned out to be sloppy for the first few rounds with an obviously rusty Tyson missing many of his punches and Mollo progressing forward and doing some damage. In the fourth round, Tyson would jar Mollo with an uppercut, wobbling him. Tyson would pounce and land two more uppercuts, sending Mollo crashing to the floor. The referee would reach nine and wave it off. Tyson returns with a stoppage win in the fourth round. With the amazing ratings, ABC and NBC announce a planned fight schedule for the near future, and Tyson states interest in a title shot.

Tyson gets his title shot in August of 2011 against WBF Champion, Evander Holyfield. A PPV titled: “The Reunion” pits the two all time greats against each other with both men stating that there will be no excuses. Holyfield seems to dictate the action, but Tyson is actually fighting well. At the end of 12 rounds, the decision is in doubt. Holyfield was ahead, it seemed, but lost two points for intentional head butts. The judges would score it 113-113 across the board, ending in a draw and talk of a fourth encounter.

The Klitschkos

In November of 2010, Wladimir Klitschko finally defends his title against the eager Alexander Povetkin, winning a hotly disputed split decision in Germany. Teddy Atlas screams home cooking with the judges, and with David Haye fresh off his TKO 1st round stoppage of Audley Harrison, a Klitschko – Haye fight looms and Povetkin will be denied the rematch.

Vitali Klitschko signs to fight former WBA Champion, Nikolay Valuev, in Germany in December of 2010, and jabs his way to a wide decision, making the comment that there aren’t “many more worlds to conquer.” With Odlanier Solis knocking out Ray Austin in two rounds, he demands his crack, but there are other options like David Tua, a fight that Vitali has been entertaining.

In April of 2011, Haye-Klitschko becomes a reality, fought in neutral territory in Las Vegas, Nevada. Haye shocks the world by stopping Wlad in six rounds. Wlad could not keep off the swarming Haye once he hurt him and crumpled to the canvas, unable to beat the count. Vitali expresses his interest in the now unified champion (WBO/WBA/IBF/IBO) but Haye states that he has other plans.

Vitali would take on David Tua in June 2011 and survive some rocky moments to take the decision.

Super Six Results

With only one defeat in the Super Six, Arthur Abraham takes the title home with a stoppage of Andre Ward. He now looks forward to a showdown with Lucian Bute, a man that has been eagerly awaiting the winner since the inception of the tournament.

The End of Bernard Hopkins

Hopkins sees the potential of winning another title at light heavyweight and signs to fight IBF Champion, Tavoris Cloud. Cloud impressed the boxing world with an 9th round TKO battering of Glen Johnson in August of 2010, and a January 2011 showdown was signed with ring veteran Hopkins to be featured on HBO.

Hopkins wins the early rounds with his ring generalship and movement but a left hook would rattle the old warrior and he wouldn’t be able to fend off the aggression, succumbing to the punishment, rescued by the referee in the seventh round.

Cloud would sign to fight fellow champion, Chad Dawson, in a May 2011 showdown. Cloud once again surprises critics with a stoppage of Dawson in the later rounds, becoming one of the stars in boxing.

Paul Williams & Sergio Martinez

Without anyone eager to face either man, they turn to each other in September of 2010, an eagerly awaited rematch in a fight that saw Williams winning a majority decision. In the rematch for middleweight gold, Martinez turns the tables and wins a close majority decision of his own, leading to a third and final encounter in May of 2011, which disappointingly ends in a draw. The two decide to explore other options before agreeing to a fourth showdown.

This is only a possible look at the future and there are two things that will happen in 2012…either the world will end with explosions and natural disasters and all that stuff, or it will continue to go on, which is the favorite right now if you’re betting. Just like Y2K, this is another interesting thing that we create as humans to keep life fun and to keep Hollywood making bad movies with enormous budgets and ridiculous special effects. I believe the boxing world will keep on spinning and life will go on and be fun when 2012 comes along and passes.

Source: ringsidereport.com

Miguel Cotto's Trainer Talks Pacquiao, Margarito Rematches -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Trainer Emanuel "Manny" Steward works with WBO and IBF heavyweight champ Wladimir Klitschko, as well as newly-crowned WBA junior middleweight (154 pounds) titlist Miguel Cotto (pictured above, at left), whose ninth-round knockout victory dethroned Yuri Foreman (pictured above, at right) on June 5 during their first bout together at Yankee Stadium in New York.

Steward has been credited with helping the 29-year-old Cotto (35-2, 28 knockouts) resurrect a career that had been damaged during knockout losses to Antonio Margarito and WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king Manny Pacquiao.

Super-Heavyweights: Lennox Lewis, Teófilo Stevenson, Wladimir Klitschko, Audley Harrison, Aleksandr Povetkin, Odlanier Solís, Ruslan ChagaevIn this Q&A, Steward talks about Cotto's resurgence as well as potential rematches with Pacquiao and Margarito.

FanHouse: What do you think about potentially being in Miguel Cotto's corner for a rematch with Manny Pacquiao?

Manny Steward: Well, any time that anybody in the world fights Manny Pacquiao, they've got a hard fight, OK? That's just a fact. It would be a different fight, I'm quite sure. One reason is that they'd be fighting at 154 instead of 145 for Cotto the last fight that they had.

Do you believe that being forced to fight at a catch weight of 145 pounds against Pacquiao in some way hurt or hampered Miguel Cotto?

Well, when I talked to Miguel and I was asking him, 'What happened in the fight?,' he didn't say anything about having to lose weight or anything about that being a factor. All that he said was, basically, 'I couldn't handle his speed.'

And I said, 'You're kidding?' And he said, 'Nope. I couldn't handle his speed.' So he just couldn't handle Manny's speed.

So neither you nor Miguel Cotto believes that extreme weight loss had anything to do with the loss to Pacquiao?

You know, Miguel has never mentioned that. I don't think that he would ever say that. I just asked him what the difference in the fight was because he was doing so good earlier on in the fight in the early rounds with his jab.

Miguel just said, 'later on I couldn't keep up with his speed.' But with me in there, it would be totally different because Miguel is a different fighter right now than he was then.

How would you, as a trainer, neutralize Manny Pacquiao's speed against Miguel?

Well, that would not be a problem with me this time because I specialize in fast sparring partners. That's something that I insist on. I've never had a fighter come back at the end of a round and tell me that 'I've got a problem because I can't handle his speed,' you know?

But any time anybody's fighting Manny Pacquiao, you have your work cut out for you any way that you cut it.

Would you look forward to testing yourself as a trainer against his trainer, Freddie Roach, and Manny Pacquiao with yourself in Miguel Cotto's corner?

You know, I don't go into any fight really looking at it that way. I go into a fight trying to get my man in the best shape for the fight that I can. I've never gone into a fight anxious to face any other trainer or this guy or that guy.

If we did fight Pacquiao, though, that, I guess, would be good for boxing. But to be honest, I've never thought too much about it.

But you do have a history, by extension, having gone against the late Eddie Futch, who was Freddie Roach's mentor. Can you tell me about that?

Well, I went up against Eddie Futch with Evander Holyfield against Riddick Bowe in the second of their three fights, and I went against Eddie Futch with Tommy Hearns against James Shuler in a fight.

So that was twice that he had undefeated fighters. And that was twice where we won both of those fights [Holyfield by decision; Hearns by first-round knockout.]

How about a rematch for Miguel Cotto against Antonio Margarito?

These are questions that [HBO's] Jim Lampley brought up to him during the fighter meetings before we fought Yuri Foreman. He asked Miguel if, clearly, 'would he be interested in trying to settle the score with Margarito and Pacquiao?'

But Miguel doesn't show a lot of emotions, you know. He was like, 'they were just fights.' And he said that with very little emotion. It wasn't like 'Margarito just beat me.'

Do you have a preference for whom Miguel Cotto fights, whether it's Manny Pacquiao, Antonio Margarito or Julio Cesar Chavez?

No, not really. Whatever fight they make, I would just start training Miguel for the fight. I have no personal feelings about it at all. I think Margarito, even if you take away the badly taped hands, he's still one tough sonofab****, you know?

How so?

I'm down in Los Angeles while he was training once, and he just trains really, really hard. Regardless of what may have been in his hands, he was always in great shape.

When he lost to Shane Mosley, you may say that part of his confidence may have been effected. You may say that his confidence before that came from the fact that he may have felt that his illegal hands gave him an advantage.

But, emotionally, the night that he fought Shane, he may have been all confused and mixed up because of what went on with the commission that night. By the time that the fight came up, I mean.

But I have a lot more respect for him as a fighter than most people do, I think. It seems like everyone is saying that he got as far as he did because of the hand wraps. But as far as I'm concerned, he's always in unbelievable condition.

You and Miguel seemed to have really bonded during training and the night of the Yuri Foreman fight. How much fun was that?

Well, I learn from each one of my fighters. And I learned the art of being relaxed from Miguel Cotto. I've never had a fighter who was going into such a high intensity fight go into it as relaxed as he seemed to be.

During the promotion, everything was about Yuri Foreman and this and that, and I have to tell you that I was a nervous wreck at times. But Miguel Cotto, this guy, he was the definition of the word 'cool.'

Before the fight, he was out there watching the undercard fights. After the fifth round of the fight with Foreman, he came back to the corner and he gave me a little wink. He's just not one to get emotional about a lot of things.

He was not all wired up, you know? And he's not all wired up about getting revenge. With Miguel Cotto, it just seems like nothing bothers him.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Freddie Roach: Manny Pacquiao set to call Floyd Mayweather's 'bluff' on megafight -- Grand Rapids Press

By Josh Slagter, The Grand Rapids Press

With Top Rank CEO Bob Arum saying Sunday a resolution is coming "soon" on a potential fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, trainer Freddie Roach believes the newly sworn in Congressman is ready to make a deal.

“At this point I feel that Manny is going to agree to everything,” Roach told The Toronto Star. “That’s our bluff. We’re going to call his bluff. We’ll see ... I can’t speak for Manny, I can’t speak for (Bob) Arum but I feel the fight will happen because Manny is going to call his bluff and say ‘let’s do it.’”

Negotiations originally broke down in December over Mayweather's insistence on random urine and blood testing. Pacquiao didn't want to be tested as close as 14 days before the fight.

Pacquiao went on to fight Joshua Clottey instead in March and Mayweather dismantled Shane Mosley in May. Arum has reserved Nov. 13 in for Pacquiao's next fight, in either Las Vegas or Dallas.

Before beating Mosley, though, Mayweather said his 14-day cutoff window isn't in play anymore, and that blood testing must be allowed right up until the fight.

And after his fight with Mosley did 1.4 million pay-per-view buys, Mayweather also may not be willing to accept a 50-50 purse split, something the two camps previously had agreed upon.

Roach is in Toronto this week with Ana Julaton, who challenges for the WBO women’s 122-pound title Wednesday.

“Manny’s now a congressman. He’s going to agree with everything Mayweather wants,” Roach said. “That’s why I think the fight will happen.”

Source: mlive.com

Bob Arum Talks Marco Antonio Barrera, Mayweather-Pacquiao -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Promoter Bob Arum considers last Saturday night's Latin Fury 15 pay per view event at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Tex., a success partly because of the comeback of Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera.

The 36-year-old, five-time former world champion rose to 66-7, with 43 knockouts when he ended a 15-month ring absence by vanquishing lightweight (135 pounds) rival Adailton De Jesus (26-5, 21 KOs) of Brazil by unanimous decision.

Erik Morales vs Marco Antonio Barrera by unknown. Size 16.96 X 11.00 Art Poster PrintIn this, the second of a two-part Q&A series, the 78-year-old Arum discusses the future of Barrera and his effort to guide the future Hall of Famer to a fourth crown in as many different weight classes. If successful, Barrera would be the first Mexican to do so.

Also in this Q&A, Arum will discuss his relationship with three-time Trainer of the Year, Freddie Roach and will address the potential for a bout between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao coming to fruition.

FanHouse: Can you discuss briefly the performance of Marco Antonio Barrera?

Bob Arum: It was a great performance. It was a mixture of everything. It shows that he's back on track.

For a guy who is accustomed to being cut in his past two fights, didn't he escape with no marks on his face and relatively unscathed?

No marks on his face, right. One of the reasons I attribute that to is that he didn't come rushing back from the Amir Khan fight. He took off some time and allowed the cuts to heal.

What's next for Marco Antonio Barrera?

We'll be putting our heads together and seeing if his next fight will be against WBC champion Humberto Soto for the Lightweight championship of the world. Or whether he needs yet one more 135-pound fight.

We'll have to see. But my inclination is that he'll probably move into a fight with Humberto Soto. For the Mexicans, that would be a huge, huge fight to say the least.

As opposed to a fight with WBA champion Miguel Acosta?

Yes, the Humberto Soto fight would be as opposed to Acosta. Acosta's a possibility, but Soto is a bigger fight for the Mexican fans.

Can you talk about how the union between you and Marco Antonio Barrera came to fruition considering his past with rival promotional company, Gold Boy Promotions?

Well, yeah. Juan Carlos, a guy who works with and is the cousin of Fernando Beltran, he's a bright, young guy. And he is friendly with all of the fighters.

Marco Antonio was apparently in conversation with Juan Carlos hinting that he would like to have Top Rank and Fernando's company promote his remaining fights. The fact that we had been on the other side for so many years was sort of irrelevant.

How so?

Well, it's a business. And there was never anything personal. He was fighting fighters that I was promoting is all. What's wrong with that? Everybody made money. He was with Golden Boy. And Golden Boy is not very imaginative.

Their idea of promoting is to take money from HBO and to put on a fight. HBO had no need for or any use for Barrera. So, Barrera was somebody who was expendable for Golden Boy.

Don King was with him for a while, but Don King had no use for him. Don King tried to bilk him for one fight against Amir Khan. So we were the obvious choice for him.

Because, we'll find a way doing our own thing to get him some big fights. And the fight between Barrera and Soto in Mexico City will do 30-to-40,000 people.

What is it that makes you and Freddie Roach go so successfully, with his Parkinson's syndrome and your ageless passion?

It's the fact that we love all that we do. We both want to create the best that we can do and to do the best that we can and to get the best out of life. I try to be creative in my own field, and Freddie is creative as a trainer, training all of these guys into super stars.

What can you say about the negotiations between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao?

I think that one way or another, we're approaching the time of resolution. One way or another. I'm still very optimistic, and, you know, Manny and I want this fight to happen.

But as I've said before, it takes two to tango. And, though this is not going to go out to much longer, this is going to be resolved in the near term. Whether it's a week or two weeks, but it will be resolved one way or the other.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com