- Nov 5, 2013
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In all honesty, I'd like to see someone pull out a baseball bat and pound the living sh!t out of Mayweather. The guy is scum.
ChewbaccaDefense said:In all honesty, I'd like to see someone pull out a baseball bat and pound the living sh!t out of Mayweather. The guy is scum.
Jspear said:ChewbaccaDefense said:In all honesty, I'd like to see someone pull out a baseball bat and pound the living sh!t out of Mayweather. The guy is scum.
Right and whoever would do that would be becoming just like Mayweather.
Floyd Mayweather’s history of misogyny, expressed—as he is wont to do—through violence, is well-documented and reprehensible. It extends over a dozen years and includes at least seven separate physical assaults on five different women that resulted in arrest or citation, as well as several other instances where the police had to be summoned in response to an actual or perceived threat from Mayweather.
Merckx index said:Watching this fight brought me new respect for Marquez. He's a counter-puncher with a style somewhat similar to Floyd's, but all his fights with Pacquiao have been exciting, I think one or two were FOY candidates. He lets Manny start it, but he doesn't back away. He stands his ground and counters. Maybe that's because he isn't fast enough to back up, dodge, and do the shoulder roll, but for whatever reason, he makes a great opponent for Pacquiao.
If you think Floyd and Manny are fast now, watch some films of them in their prime. And if you really want to see speed, watch some fights in the flyweight or bantam weight division. Some of those guys are just a blur. Their fists may have all the impact of a popgun, or a swarm of mosquitoes, but they are blazing fast.
It isn't just the woman abusing that makes Mayweather despicable, though that's enough. His ostentatious show of wealth, buying 100 cars, throwing $100 bills around in public, etc., is disgusting. He flaunts his riches, is totally addicted to materialism. And a couple of years ago he made a video with a racist rant against Manny, calling him a "yellow chump", and stereotyping Asian eating habits. I'm sure that motivated Manny, though obviously not enough. You'd think an African-American would be beyond this.
But FMJ is perfectly capable of blowing the $200 million and ending up poor after he retires. He came out of retirement once because he had all these taxes to pay, and Manny is also being aggressively pursued by the Philippine government for taxes. It's sad--maybe not so sad in Floyd's case--that a large number of boxers end up broke despite winning millions, now hundreds of millions. No doubt when Floyd retires he will become a promoter, he's already his own promoter, but if he doesn't succeed at that, his life could go downhill in a hurry.
Yep, I think he will retire soon,but I hope not after september fight (I still hope for fight with thurman or golovkin...yeah I know - Im dreamingmovingtarget said:Merckx index said:Watching this fight brought me new respect for Marquez. He's a counter-puncher with a style somewhat similar to Floyd's, but all his fights with Pacquiao have been exciting, I think one or two were FOY candidates. He lets Manny start it, but he doesn't back away. He stands his ground and counters. Maybe that's because he isn't fast enough to back up, dodge, and do the shoulder roll, but for whatever reason, he makes a great opponent for Pacquiao.
If you think Floyd and Manny are fast now, watch some films of them in their prime. And if you really want to see speed, watch some fights in the flyweight or bantam weight division. Some of those guys are just a blur. Their fists may have all the impact of a popgun, or a swarm of mosquitoes, but they are blazing fast.
It isn't just the woman abusing that makes Mayweather despicable, though that's enough. His ostentatious show of wealth, buying 100 cars, throwing $100 bills around in public, etc., is disgusting. He flaunts his riches, is totally addicted to materialism. And a couple of years ago he made a video with a racist rant against Manny, calling him a "yellow chump", and stereotyping Asian eating habits. I'm sure that motivated Manny, though obviously not enough. You'd think an African-American would be beyond this.
But FMJ is perfectly capable of blowing the $200 million and ending up poor after he retires. He came out of retirement once because he had all these taxes to pay, and Manny is also being aggressively pursued by the Philippine government for taxes. It's sad--maybe not so sad in Floyd's case--that a large number of boxers end up broke despite winning millions, now hundreds of millions. No doubt when Floyd retires he will become a promoter, he's already his own promoter, but if he doesn't succeed at that, his life could go downhill in a hurry.
I can't remember seeing a boring Marquez fight. As for Mayweather, like Tyson his personal life was a mess, the only difference is that Tyson was in jail for longer. He is the sort of personality that might not cope without the fame, adulation and huge money and like you said many boxers go bankrupt or simply get taken advantage of. I lost count of how many people were trying to sue Don King but Chavez and Tyson were two of them. De La Hoya seems to have a done a good job post retirement but he would be in the minority unfortunately. Tyson is a pauper compared to what he made and King cost him some of his fortune. I had the feeling during the fight and watching Mayweather between rounds, that he could have won more convincingly but he just could not be bothered and he was not listening to his corner at all. He was doing a bit of showboating in the final round and knew he was way ahead on points. It seems that the rumours that he has lost interest are true. Even his demeanour before and after the fight were much more low key than usual.
Some call Mayweather’s strategy cowardly, others call it boring, but no one can dispute its effectiveness.
Pacquiao threw just 429 punches in the fight, landing 81. That’s approximately half the number he typically throws. Pacquiao plays for knockouts, and it was clear from the beginning that he had no intention of even attempting to bring Mayweather down.
Spectators expecting a fight on Saturday night have Pacquiao, and only Pacquiao, to blame for the mundane spectacle they witnessed. Mayweather executed his plan to perfection, and Pacquiao was happy to oblige.
Merckx index said:Mayweather never goes over I think 150-152, so you couldn’t ask him to fight at a weight higher than that, and GGG really isn’t going to be comfortable at that weight
Not many bouts to attract my attention.Apart from GGG knockoutmovingtarget said:
Merckx index said:Hard to believe, but it’s being reported that Mayweather is open to fighting Pacquiao again, even if he’d have to wait—long past his scheduled retirement this fall—for Manny to recover from rotator cuff surgery. Maybe the lure of money is too much. Word is that the PPV audience was over 4 million, maybe over 4.5 million. That means the revenue from just that exceeded $400 million, about $250 million of which went to the fighters. Add in the live gate, the international sales, etc., and they divvied up around $400 million, of which about $250 million went to Floyd. Even less than half of it the second time around might be hard to resist. Speculation is that if they fought a second time they'd still sell more PPV than any other match possible for either fighter, and even if the lowered the PPV cost, they'd rake in a lot.
Another factor to keep in mind is that fighters frequently retire, then come out of retirement. Floyd did it a few years ago. In this case, he wouldn't have to be inactive any longer than he would if he didn't retire, since he normally doesn't fight more than about every six months, anyway. Another possible incentive for Floyd is that a fight next year would be his 50th, he could retire with a 50-0 record.
But never underestimate the ability of Bob Arum to get in the way. When he was asked if he thought it was fair that Mayweather, having won this fight, get a larger than 60-40 share of a rematch, Arum replied that Mayweather's share should actually be less, not more. Good luck taking that position to the bargaining table.
By the way, Arum also said Manny has had a rotator cuff tear since 2008, when he fought de la Hoya in his first fight ever at more than 135. He claims that it has flared up off and on over the years. I find it incredible that Manny lived with this all those years, it never seemed to affect his performance in a fight, no one ever knew about it, and he never considered having surgery before. After he was KOd by Marquez at the end of 2012, he didn't fight again for something like 9-10 months. At that time, there didn't seem to be any possibility of a fight with Mayweather, That might have been a good time to have the surgery.
I found a very interesting post on a forum in which a guy watched the entire fight in slow motion, and lists every single punch thrown and the result. He then totals up the results:
http://www.boxingnews24.com/2015/05/mayweather-vs-pacquiao-replay-tells-another-story/
Detailed round-by-round analysis here:
http://forum.philboxing.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=265799&start=255
According to him, the total punches thrown were 471 for Floyd and 416 for Manny, not too far off the 435 and 429 according to compubox. But he claims Manny landed more, 98 to 68, about 23% to 14%. The % Manny landed is a little higher than what compubox had, about 19%, but the % he claims Floyd landed is far lower than the 32% according to compubox.
As a result, he has Manny clearly winning 6 rounds, Floyd 3, with 3 very close. So even if all three of the close rounds are given to Floyd, it’s a draw, whereas if any are given to Manny, Manny wins. Another interesting thing about this analysis is that it shows no evidence of Manny’s getting worse after round 4, when he said he reinjured his rotator cuff. By this analysis, he won 4 of the final 8 rounds, Floyd won 2, and 2 were very close. His average numbers of punches thrown per round were also virtually identical in rounds 1-4 and rounds 5-12, about 35.
I don’t know what to make of this. Fights are not supposed to be determined just on the basis of compubox, and one could argue that the judges believed Floyd landed the cleaner, more damaging shots. Most people experienced in watching fights thought Floyd clearly won. The summary of this analysis just considered whether a punch landed, not where, and how hard.
But compubox data are being used by commentators to argue that Floyd was clearly the better fighter, and the huge difference, particularly for Floyd, between compubox and what this guy found is very hard to explain. Depending on the camera angle, it may be difficult to tell sometimes whether a punch landed, but most cases should be pretty clear. And in principle, the guy watching the fight later in slow motion should be more accurate than someone doing it live as is the case with compubox. You also have to wonder that if the compubox guys might have gotten it that wrong, couldn't the judges as well?
To broaden this discussion, I wonder if judging can't be automated. In principle I think it would be possible to record electronically every time one boxer's fist makes contact with his opponent's body, and how hard. Combining that with where on the body the punch landed, and every landed punch could be assigned a number value. The fighter with the highest total wins, absent a KO.
This guy is a beastmovingtarget said:
Alpe d'Huez said:Which brings up an interesting point. Why didn't he call out Floyd after the fight, saying he'd meet him at 154? Instead, he said he wanted to fight Miguel Cotto or Canelo Alvarez next. Floyd is where the greatest money, and challenge is. He can't expect Floyd to fight at 160, but 154 would be ideal.
