Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Mayweather has consistently avoided the best available opposition (Great Article)

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Mayweather has consistently avoided the best available opposition (Great Article)




    A great piece by renowned boxing writer Thomas Hauser

    Here are some snippets from the article

    It’s starts with Mayweather’s skill as a fighter.

    Mayweather seeks to control every aspect of his life. Thus, it’s ironic that his chosen sport is boxing. In baseball, everyone waits for the pitcher. A golfer does what he can do with the laws of physics as his only adversary. Boxing is the hardest sport in the world for an athlete to control.

    Over the course of twelve rounds, Mayweather controls the confines of a boxing ring as few men ever have.

    The most admirable thing about Floyd is his work ethic and dedication to his craft.
    The same can be said of Mayweather. He and Bernard Hopkins have two of the highest “boxing IQs” in the business. Like Hopkins, Floyd shuts down his opponent, taking away what the opponent does best.

    “Floyd has man strength and he knows how to use it,” Hopkins says.

    Also, as great a fighter as Mayweather is, there’s one flaw on his resume. He has consistently avoided the best available opposition.

    A fighter doesn’t have to be bloodied and knocked down and come off the canvas to prove his greatness. A fighter can also prove that he has the heart of a legendary champion by testing himself against the best available competition.

    Mayweather has done neither.

    Floyd said earlier this month, “I push myself to the limit by fighting the best.”

    That has all the sincerity of posturing by a political candidate.

    Mayweather has some outstanding victories on his ring record. But his career has been marked by the avoidance of tough opponents in their prime.

    There always seems to be someone who Mayweather is ducking. The most notable example was his several-year avoidance of Manny Pacquiao. Bob Arum (Pacquiao’s promoter) might not have wanted the fight. But Manny clearly did. And it appeared as though Floyd didn’t.

    Mayweather also steered clear of Paul Williams, Antonio Margarito, and Miguel Cotto in their prime. He waited to fight Cotto until Miguel (like Shane Mosley) was a shell of his former self. Then Floyd made a show of saying that he’d fight Cotto at 154 pounds so Miguel would be at his best. But when Sergio Martinez offered to come down to 154, Floyd said that he’d only fight Martinez at 150 (an impossible weight for Sergio to make).

    “Mayweather has picked his spots in one way or another throughout his career. Floyd got over big time on Juan Manuel Marquez with his weigh-in trickery at the last moment. He fought Oscar De La Hoya and barely won when Oscar was a corpse. Shane Mosley was an empty package when he finally fought him seven years after the fight truly meant anything. As terrific as Mayweather is, he's not the Bible of boxing the way he projects himself as being. He came along when there were some other outstanding fighters at or near his weight. Yet, aside from the late Diego Corrales, he has never met any of them when the fight would have confirmed his greatness. It would be great to write about Mayweather and laud all that he has accomplished as a fighter without bringing up these inconvenient facts. But it can't be done if you're being intellectually honest.”

    Will avoiding the best fighters available harm Floyd's legacy?

    #2
    Bulls****t, he fought he dangerous Baldi who was the lineal champ...enough said.

    Floyd beating Corrales > SRR entire career

    Comment


      #3
      Very poor and revisionist article.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by IronDanHamza View Post
        Very poor and revisionist article.
        When you get nominated for a Pulitzer Prize or win Sports Book of the Year or maybe just chair Boxing Writers Association of America's membership committee, then you can comment on what is a poor article or not.


        Great piece of work by one of the best boxing writers out there.

        Comment


          #5
          Guess when he couldn't prove the rumors about PED positiives he had to go a different route. So he writes an opinion piece that non floyd fans will take as gospel just like they did the announcement of floyd khan 24 hours ago-which proved to be false and illuminated the sheep like mentality that develops when one commits to hating floyd in a "tea partyesque we hate *****" way.

          With all the positive press floyd has been recieving post Canelo and the fact Hauser' last article was pretty much laughed at and he was exsposed as a TR shill-I doubt this article or the points raised will affect floyd's legacy outside the anti floyd crowd bubble.

          Comment


            #6
            The best names of Floyd's era, Floyd has not fought and have only fought them once they are past their prime.

            This cannot be denied.

            Comment


              #7
              You can tell who knows what they're talking about just by seeing if they mention Stevie Johnston.

              Every time I see an article criticizing Floyd, I search for the name Stevie Johnston. If it doesn't appear, the author has no credibility on this issue to me and is just regurgitating what other people say.

              IMO, that is the only true "duck" of Mayweather's career.

              Comment


                #8
                i wonder what's his screenname on nsb

                if delahoya was a corpse and shane a shell what were when manny fought them i wonder

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by IronDanHamza View Post
                  Very poor and revisionist article.
                  Once you see the lie about floyd saying he'll only fight Sergio at 150 you kind of realize what Hauser is doing. The whole point of the article is to delegitimize the fact floyd and canelo sold so much.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by illmaticfighter View Post
                    i wonder what's his screenname on nsb

                    if delahoya was a corpse and shane a shell what were when manny fought them i wonder
                    The dude is a elite writer, I don't think he would be hanging out in this joint.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X
                    TOP