by David P. Greisman - The fight between Miguel Cotto and Canelo Alvarez would have been a significant event just for what it represented, never mind for its ramifications. But the possibility of what could come next only added to the allure of what was to come first.
There was hope that the winner of Cotto vs. Alvarez would go on to face Gennady Golovkin. And fortunately there was more than just that hope. There also was a mandate.
The mandate went beyond the sentiment of boxing fans. It came from the sanctioning body that bestowed the world title Cotto held and for which Alvarez was vying. The mandate said that Cotto had postponed the prospect of facing Golovkin for long enough. He’d pushed it off and was willing to pay for the privilege, an investment that let him keep the World Boxing Council belt and set up the fight with Alvarez. The WBC obliged. If Golovkin was willing to take the money to wait, then the WBC could get a fight it wanted and collect six figures in fees from the fighters involved, then potentially collect even more were the winner to go on to face “GGG.” [Click Here To Read More]
There was hope that the winner of Cotto vs. Alvarez would go on to face Gennady Golovkin. And fortunately there was more than just that hope. There also was a mandate.
The mandate went beyond the sentiment of boxing fans. It came from the sanctioning body that bestowed the world title Cotto held and for which Alvarez was vying. The mandate said that Cotto had postponed the prospect of facing Golovkin for long enough. He’d pushed it off and was willing to pay for the privilege, an investment that let him keep the World Boxing Council belt and set up the fight with Alvarez. The WBC obliged. If Golovkin was willing to take the money to wait, then the WBC could get a fight it wanted and collect six figures in fees from the fighters involved, then potentially collect even more were the winner to go on to face “GGG.” [Click Here To Read More]
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