Bragging Rights To Define A Career, Mayweather Pacquiao Confirmed For May 2

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Game On!!!! The much anticipated announcement of Floyd “Money” Mayweather (47-0 26 KO) and Manny “Pac Man” Pacquiao (57-5 38 KO) was made today by Mayweather himself via Shots App-

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The unification bout on May 2 from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada will be for the WBC, WBA, an WBO belts, but far more importantly the unofficial title of “Best Fighter Of Their Generation”.

The bout will be co-promoted by Mayweather Promotions and Top Rank Inc., and will be co-produced and distributed live by  both Showtime and HBO, PPV of course with the early rumors listing the buy at $100. There will be a few joint partnerships between Showtime and HBO here such as both ring announcers Jimmy Lennon Jr. (Showtime) and Michael Buffer (HBO) sharing the duties similarly as they did for the Mike Tyson Lennox Lewis bout.

Showtime and HBO on the mega bout-

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Both fighters released statements on the fight which will undoubtedly be the highest grossing fight ever.

“I am glad my decision to meet with Manny and discuss making this fight happen helped get the deal done,” said Mayweather. “Giving the fans what they want to see is always my main focus. This will be the biggest event in the history of the sport. Boxing fans and sports fans around the world will witness greatness on May 2. I am the best ever, TBE, and this fight will be another opportunity to showcase my skills and do what I do best, which is win. Manny is going to try to do what 47 before himfailed to do, but he won’t be successful. He will be number 48.”

“This is the right fight for boxing. Floyd Mayweather and I is the fight boxing fans have wanted for years and I am looking forward to it. I will be representing my fans and my country and trying to bring glory to the Philippines.” said Pacquiao. 

There is no rematch clause and Mayweather will be the A-Side here on the contracted 60-40 split.

Years and years of will they or won’t they can now be put to rest. The two best fighters of the past decade will knuckleup for bragging rights not seen in the sweet science in some time. A defining exclamation point to solidify a career. 

If the fight is anything like the build up of the past few years and more specifically like the past month, we are in for one hell of a night on May 2.

Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science This Week

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Trilogy, The Lord of The Ring

Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios (33-2-1 24 KOs)  dominated “Mile High” Mike Alvarado (34-4, 23 KOs) on Saturday night from the 1st Bank Center in Broomfield Colorado to win  the WBO International Welterweight Title. Rios looked beter than he has in some time controling the fight from the opening bell stalking Alvarado and landing strong combinations to the body and head. Alvarado began the fight with  a tight guard almost as if he didn’t know what to expect from the first punch.  We got our anwser as he seemed stunned by the first shot he took. Round One to Rios in a landslide. In the second,  Rios continued to attack and was only slowed by a low blow that made him take a knee momentarily.  Alvarado was landing a shot here and there but mostly only in a defensive and desperate effort to keep Rios off of him. In between rounds two and three, you could hear Alvarado tell his corner that he was having trouble seeing.

In the third, Rios was landing hooks to the body and following them with uppercuts.  The uppercut would be Rios’ weapon of choice as he dropped Alvarado with a right uppercut that was followed by a few glancing blows, but it was the uppercut that did the damage. As Alvarado got to his feet Rios continued his attack.In the corner between rounds, Alvarado was again complaining of vision problems. The ringside physician held up two fingers and asked Alvarado how many fingers he had up to which he replied “four”.  The ringside physician told Jay Nady, “I showed him two fingers, he answered four, fights over”.

CompuBox numbers showed that Rios landed 120 punches out of 290 to Alvarado’s 20 out of 87. Said Rios after the fight to HBO’s Jim Lampley, “I had to come prepared because this could have been the end of my career, I have a lot of gas in my tank still and I didn’t want that”. Rios did look good and better than he has for a while. Some have questioned if it was due to a lethargic opponent, I’d say somewhere in between, not Rios at his best and definitely not the version we saw against Manny Pacquiao.

As for Alvarado, when you get arrested three weeks before your fight at 4 AM in the morning, your dedication can be questioned on many levels especially after the effort that was put forth. Said Alvarado,  “It was all in the preparation, I wasn’t training like I should have been, this is what I get.”  You think?

Mike is a winner, he just needs to convince himself, deal with those demons outside of the ring and show the world.

So, the trilogy that was prematurely placed on the same level as Gatti Ward, fizzled as only one combatant showed up. That fighter, now the winner of two of the three and both by stoppage,  is The Lord Of The Ring.

Life Lessons

Gilberto “Zurdo” Ramirez (31-0 24 KOs) defeated Maxim Vlasov (30-2 15 KOs) by unanimous decision with scores of, 96-94 X2, 97-93. It was a workman like performance for the young kid. Ramirez destroyed Vlasov’s body but was unable to land a significant punch to put Vlasov in any serious trouble. As stated in Standing-8 after Ramirez’s last fight,  “If there was an area for critique, it would be in Ramirez’s tendency to fight “small” at times which has left him open for counter overhand rights which his opponents have been able to land from time to time. Although he has displayed a solid beard he would benefit by tightening up his defense a bit more.”  Again, Ramirez couldn’t protect from the right had as Vlasov landed them repeatedly.  This kid has the goods but he better guard against those right hands because as the competition gets stronger he may not be able to absorb the punches as easily.

There were a lot of close rounds in this fight but Vlasov slowed his activity in the middle of the fight, a product of the body shots no doubt, which allowed Ramirez to capture them. Vlasov did have a few strong rounds towards the end of the fight but it was a little too late. Ramirez is one of the rising stars in boxing but showed a bit of a porous defense not adjusting to being hit with repeated rights. His jab, usually a big weapon, was underutilized. The fight was there for Vlasov but he failed to sustain his attack. A tough test for the young undefeated Ramirez. He was pushed in this fight and while his string of four straight stoppages ended, what he learned here will be more valuable than a stoppage as he moves on in his career.

We Love The Commercials

It’s not a matter of if Pacquiao and Mayweather will fight it’s a matter of when. Pacquiao says he signed the contract,  Mayweather says there’s still more work to do because of the money. Maybe they’re going to announce it during a Super Bowl commercial, wouldn’t that be something? I can see it now, something out of Wayne’s World, “Game On”. In any event this site has had their hotel room booked since last August in anticipation of the May 2 date.

Junk Yard Dogs 

Picture a junk yard with two starving dogs, one named Cinnamon, one Mandingo. Now picture a steak being thrown in the middle of them, add a Wolfe and things may just get interesting. Coming May 2nd, or later if “The Fight” is made which will put the junkyard battle on hold for a moment.

Snippets On Arguably The Hottest Topics In The Sweet Science This Week

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Corn Husked

Terence Crawford (25-0 17 KO) dominated Ray Beltran (29-7-1 17 KO) in front of a raucous hometown crowd at the CenturyLink Center in Omaha, Nebraska on Saturday night. Crawford boxed beautifully switching stances with ease from orthodox to southpaw while keeping the slugging Beltran guessing all night. In the rare moments when Beltran was successful in landing a power shot, Crawford responded by coming back even harder and is so accurate in landing his own power counter shots that opponents have no choice but to pull back out of harm’s way and reset. Even though he was up by a large margin late in the fight, you have to love this guy’s warrior spirit as he continued to look for a stoppage. There are very few fighters in the game with the skill level and ring IQ of Crawford at the present time and he just may be the fighter of the year while entering all P4P lists. An amazing humble talent who will only get better.

Heavyweight Eliminated

Tyson Fury (23-0 17 KO) dominated Dereck Chisora (20-5 13 KO) in a WBO heavyweight eliminator bout and won by 10th round TKO when Chisora’s corner threw in the towel. Chisora was never in the fight. Fury dominated with his jab, fought from the southpaw stance at times, and landed multiple combinations when needed. For an eliminator fight for the right to knuckle up with undisputed champ Wladimir Klitshcko, this sure wasn’t what you’d expect from two heavyweights. Chisora could have benefitted from exhibiting a little “fury” and Fury could have made a statement by “personally” stopping an opponent who didn’t want to be there. The action got so dull it prompted Referee McDonnell to proclaim “ Either you fight or we go home”, not something you want to hear during a main event, especially one billed as “Bad Blood”. This was a rematch of their 2011 fight also dominated by Fury but not to the extent as was the case on Saturday. Thankfully, we will all be spared from a trilogy.

Sr. Was A Bit Off About Jr.

Leading into Chris Eubank Jr’s (18-1 13 KO) fight with Billy Joe Saunders (21-0 11 KO), Chris Eubank Sr. had made claims that Jr. could beat Gennady Golovkin, is comparable to Sugar Ray Leonard and will be better than Floyd Mayweather Jr. So on cue, Eubank Jr. promptly goes out and loses by split decision to Saunders. The fight was really a tale of two halves. Saunders did his best work early with Eubank coming on strong late, albeit not soon enough. Eubank has talent and may one-day achieve his father’s expectations but he has a ways to go. I believe Jr. will learn from this defeat and would win the rematch; however, he needs a solid trainer who will tell Sr. to leave the training business to the trainer and maybe, just maybe Jr. will achieve Sr.’s prophecy and be “simply the best”.  

2015, The Year Of The Sheep

Ever since Manny Pacquiao defeated Chris Algieri, the Pacquiao vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. talk resurfaced and reached levels not seen in some time. Both sides are verbally jabbing through social media and all indications are this fight will happen in 2015.  If so, we will all be like sheep following the herd to the fight venue or the nearest PPV feed. Baaaa Game On!

Biased Based Commentary

On the undercard of Crawford v. Beltran, HBO aired Evgeny Gradovich v. Jayson Velez. This fight was declared a draw and this snippet is less about the decision but more so about the increasing effort by HBO staff to favor a specific fighter regardless of what is occurring in the ring. It was clear that the HBO staff favored Gradovich.  Velez was doing very well in the fight but you would never have known that had your screen went blank and you only had audio to carry you through. HBO’s ring side scorer Steve Weisfeld was actually unbiased until his counterparts kept hyping up Gradovich apparently indirectly pressuring him to change his mind on what he was seeing as evident by his scorecard. After the fight, the HBO crew had Gradovich winning comfortably only to find out that the fight had been declared a draw. This snippet is not to argue if the decision was correct or not correct, but only to comment that Velez did well in a close fight and deserved at the very least some credit from the ringside crew.

The Wrestler,,,Uh, Boxer

Mickey Rourke won an exhibition fight at 62 years of age against 29 year old Elliot Seymour. This fight was all hollywood and not to be confused with the sweet science. Rumors are flying that Seymour threw the fight, is possibly a homeless man, or has medical problems. Unsure the validity of any of those claims but let’s just take the fight at face value, it was an exhibition for entertainment nothing more nothing less.

Don’t Underestimate Chris Algieri

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“Andddd newwww undefeated WBO light welterweight champion of the world, The Fighting Collegian, Chris Algieriiiiii” bellowed ring announcer Michael Buffer this past June as he informed all who watched that Algieri had just defeated Ruslan Provodnikov. Not many gave Algieri, 30, 20-0 8 KO of Huntington, Long Island, New York much of a chance to beat Provodnikov but that was nothing new for Algieri.

On November 22, Algieri will again be back in the role that he cherishes, that of the underdog, when he faces the pride of the Philippines, Manny Pacquiao 56-5-2 38 KO. This is classic David vs. Goliath only the roles are changed in that Algieri, the bigger man, is David in this scenario. With odds currently about 7-1 in Pacquiao’s favor, Algieri isn’t concerned stating, “I’ve been the underdog many times before in the past, so I think if I was the favorite I’d feel more uncomfortable. This is home for me.”

You would think that a win over one of the most feared men in the sport in Provodnikov would have garnered Algieri a little respect. Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s trainer was quoted as saying that Algieri isn’t in Pacquiao’s class, he’s jumping a bit too soon while insinuating that the sparring partners in camp will pose more of a threat. Recently on HBO’s 24/7, Roach finally gave “credit” to Algieri calling him a “tough kid” in one breath but then condescendingly stating “tough kids don’t win big fights” in the next.  It is nothing new for Roach to play mind games with a Pacquiao opponent but this time there is an edge here that seems personal. Maybe it’s because Roach is from Massachusetts, said Roach, “Remember, I’m from Dedham, Massachusetts. There is no love lost when Boston plays New York in any sport. I live for beating a New Yorker”

Truth is, Algieri is a tough kid and has won big fights as evident by the world kickboxing titles he won prior to making the switch to the sweet science. Undefeated as both an amateur and a pro, he collected a USKBA Championship and WKA and ISKA Championships respectively. While he has the resume of an MMA fighter, it’s the sweet science that he cherishes, entrenched in him from an early age while watching the sport with his grandfather on many occasions. Looking for bigger fame, paydays, and the national exposure that the world of kickboxing could not give him, he switched sports. It wasn’t moving quickly enough at the beginning as Algieri was fighting exclusively on local cards. As he stated on HBO’s 24/7, “It was extremely, extremely frustrating; I felt that I wanted to be on bigger stages, fighting on different cards, fighting on TV, I wanted national exposure, “I really wanted people to see what I brought to the table”.

Enter the Provodnikov fight, Algieri, down twice in the first round, weathered the storm and fought basically with one eye throughout the fight. Algieri showed the poise and ring generalship of a fighter well beyond his years and experience. Using excellent movement and showcasing blinding speed, he peppered Provodnikov with solid jabs, sneaky uppercuts and power shots while adding timely body shots keeping Provodnikov off balance.

Again, a tough kid winning a big fight confirming Roach may be a bit off in his assessment of the WBO Champion. I know, I know, some detractors will say that Algieri “ran” against Provodnikov but Algieri landed 83 more punches, threw 217 more, landed at a higher connect percentage, and beat Provodnikov at his own game landing 13 more power shots. Pretty hard to do all of that when you are “running” away from your opponent.

Thing is, Algieri is a new breed of fighter, 2.0 if you will, a strategic thinker with a personal approach to training and nutrition. A gym rat with a bachelor’s degree in health science and a master’s degree in clinical nutrition, Algieri prepares all his own food unlike most fighters in the game which allows him to fuel adequately and appropriately at all the right times. As Algieri put it, “I don’t eat anything crazy. I just eat the foods most people should eat: eggs, oatmeal, chicken, broccoli, sweet potatoes, fish and steaks.”  While most fighters loathe the nutrition and training aspects of the preparation, Algieri is energized by it. In fact, his training meals mirror his every day eating habits, a disciplined approach that doesn’t need to change due to a fight.

He trains six days a week and most times, twice a day, combining the typical sparring and bag work with exhaustive cardio sessions, explosive power movements, and mental conditioning. He chooses to watch little tape of his opponents before a fight believing it could be counterproductive, “It’s all about rhythm and you can’t find out a man’s rhythm on tape, I’ll find out in the first round”, said Algieri, the strategic thinker.

Algieri’s mental preparation may be his biggest strength. It would explain his resolve against Provodnikov when most fighters would have looked for a way out. Agieri is a big believer in visualization exercises when preparing for a fight. He will visualize everything about what fight night will be like, the packing of his bags, the ring walk, and the action in the ring. The mind is more powerful than the body. Algieri’s mind believes he is supposed to be here, supposed to win, critics be dammed. When having to dig deep, the mind will not let him fail empowering the body to carry on.

Continue to underestimate Algieri by making the betting odds lopsided against him, think that sparring partners provide a more formidable challenge, and call him names like “The Long Island Long shot”. Algieri doesn’t care; he’s just here to fight for the love of the game. It’s his passion; he could simply walk away and pursue his goal of becoming a doctor but there will be time for that later, he has business to attend to and goals to attain. Don’t expect Algieri to be intimidated by facing Manny Pacquiao, his confidence is unwavering, his mindset unmatched, and his nutrition and conditioning at the highest of levels.

So, Algieri wasn’t supposed to beat Ruslan Provodnikov, now he’s not supposed to beat Pacquiao. What if? What if he beats Pacquiao and it is him not the Pacman who is rewarded with a Floyd Mayweather fight? Of course, he will not be expected to win that fight either, but what if……….. What an epic run that would be.

This article contributed to Behind The Gloves.