HEALTHY SLIMMING

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Flamboyant Mayweather takes humble approach with Marquez By J. Michael Falgoust, USA TODAY


LAS VEGAS — In the midst of the cameras, microphones and questions, Floyd Mayweather Jr. pauses to take inventory of what's ahead.

Saturday's showdown with Juan Manuel Marquez at MGM Grand is important (HBO PPV, 9 p.m. ET), as is the TV interview he's booked to do next, but neither comes before his 9-year-old daughter, Iyanna.

"I've got to pick up my daughter from school," he says, pausing to alert his publicist, who offers to find his mother to do it. "Don't worry about my Mom I'm picking my daughter up today. She's been going to school for a while and I haven't picked her up yet."

FAMILY TIES: Mayweather ties start to bind

This is the fighter, and the man, Mayweather wants to project: A thoughtful, considerate, responsible 32-year-old father of four, dressed down in a white T-shirt, sneakers and camoflauge pants. Not the cursing, trash-talking multi-division champion, flaunting the cost of his home, designer boots or visits to strip clubs.

"(Marquez) respects my fight game. He told me that a long time ago," says Mayweather of the low-key final press conference Wednesday, where he rose to shake hands with Marquez's trainer as the pair showered one another with compliments. "It's just a lot of fighters in the past I talk trash to have really disrespected me. … So I say bad things."

Mayweather (39-0, 25 KOs), regarded as the mythical No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter before leaving in 2007, has passed every test with flying colors.

He's solved master boxers like Genaro Henandez (KO 8), brawlers like Ricky Hatton (KO 10), tall, two-fisted punchers like Diego Corrales, southpaws like Zab Judah (W 12), crafty veterans like Emanuel Augustus (KO 9) and superstars like Oscar De La Hoya (W 12).

In Marquez (50-4-1, 37 KOs) he'll meet not only the best Mexico has to offer, but one of the sport's top three fighters pound-for-pound who is as skilled with both hands as he is gritty.

Mayweather's biggest challenge of the night, however, may be this: Can he carry a major PPV show without a major foil?

Marquez has only headlined a PPV card once, a 2008 decision loss to Manny Pacquiao that drew 405,000 buys.

Before Mayweather fought De La Hoya— the greatest draw in PPV history — Mayweather hadn't exceeded 375,000 buys.

There's also the perception that this is a fight between a great little man (Marquez has never fought above 135 pounds) and a great bigger man (Mayweather has gone as high as 154). It's being billed as a welterweight bout though it'll be below the 147-pound limit. Marquez also is four years older.

"I feel like I always was a pay-per-view star," says Mayweather, whose win vs. De La Hoya drew a record 2.4 million buys and almost 1 million with Hatton. "Marquez has a good following with his Mexican people. He's going to have a lot of support."

This bout was originally announced for July 18 but pushed back to Mexican Independence weekend. Since then the push to grow this into a superfight by co-promoter Golden Boy Promotions has been substantial:

•In conjunction with NCM Fathom, the card will be shown via closed circuit in 170 theaters nationwide, with $12.50 to $15 suggested ticket prices.

•Three major sponsors are on board that weren't for De La Hoya-Mayweather: Quaker State, Affliction clothing and AT&T's first venture into boxing.

•Tecate is offering a $25 mail-in rebate on the $49.95 show for viewers, with purchase of an 18-pack or larger, and a $30 rebate for food purchases at participating stores nationwide.

•An aggressive campaign through social networking sites and in the urban dotcom markets, BET.com, JayZtv.com and Allhiphop.com, among others, to reach out to Mayweather fans.

HBO is in on it, too, using this fight as a launching pad for its new approach to saturating the marketplace with digital content.

It's all part of "the hunger to go younger," says Mark Taffet, senior vice president at HBO PPV. "If you overwhelm that younger demographic with advertising, they tune you out. They want content. ... We're moving in a completely different direction than what we were doing a year ago."

Money matters:

Marquez's base salary is $2 million for the bout. TV undercard combatants Chris John will get $50,000; Rocky Juarez $80,000; Michael Katsidis $125,000; and Vicente Escobedo $90,000.

Mayweather's purse won't be known until Friday because of deductions, says Keith Kizer, executive director of the Nevada State Athletic Commission. The IRS is expected to attend to collect back taxes. According to Kizer, the agreed upon total is "unofficially $5 million."

USA Today SOURCE

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THIS SATURDAY NIGHT, THERE WILL ONLY ONE  THAT WILL COME OUT  VICTORIOUS ON THIS dubbed fight "NUMBER ONE VS NUMERO UNO"
WATCH ON PAY PER VIEW

jerome pagalan
http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/

MAYWEATHER VS. MARQUEZ FINAL PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES by PhilBoxing.com



 FLOYD MAYWEATHER

"To go down as a legend, you have to face the best in your era and Marquez is one of the best in my era.

"I have been around the sport and I have experienced many different styles, and I will adjust and adapt. Now I am back and September 19 is another big day for me.

"You can expect blood, sweat and tears on Saturday night. I predict one hell of a fight.

"I have a lot of respect for Marquez. He hasn't said anything bad about me, so I have nothing bad to say about him. How can I say something bad about someone who respects my fight game?

"This isn't going to be difficult. Nothing is difficult. I just had to get back into the groove. I had to keep working hard. I love to box. I love to go into combat.

"Roger watches all of the tapes, but Roger doesn't tell me how I am going to beat him (Marquez). He says to me that I just need to fight and adapt. And if I ask him, 'How am I going to do that?' Roger responds, 'because you are great.'

"I am not like other fighters. Other fighters have been beat. There is no blue print to beat me. There is a blue print to beat Marquez, because he has been beaten before.

"I am a strong individual and only the strong will survive. I have the skills to pay the bills. It is not about who is the biggest. It is about who is the most skilled. When I get in the squared circle, I am going to do what I have to do to win."

JUAN MANUEL MARQUEZ

"Everyone knows I don't like talking outside the ring, but I want to say three things. First, I am prepared physically and mentally. Second, I want to thank all of the Mexican people for supporting me and third, I want to dedicate this fight to the Mexican people who are going to be here and all of the Mexican people around the world.

"I want to thank God for helping me train very hard with no injuries. It is a great challenge for me and I am training very hard for this fight.

"In my mind, Floyd Mayweather is the number one pound-for-pound fighter, and to be number one, you have to fight number one.

"Mayweather is illusive and a counter puncher. I am going to go after him. There is a chance he might try to come after me, but I know I am going to go after him.

"This fight is a different weight for me. I worked very hard. I built up my speed and my strength.

"I know people are betting against me, but it doesn't matter to me. I have my mind and I have my concentration, and I have the motivation to win.

"This fight is the most important fight of my career, and I am going to put everything in the ring.

"I don't like to make predictions; I let my fists do the talking."

ROGER MAYWEATHER, Mayweather's Trainer

"Do you know what great means? Great is Michael Jordan, Floyd Mayweather, Muhammad Ali, Roberto Duran and Sugar Ray Robinson."

NACHO BERISTAIN, Marquez' Trainer

"There are not too many fighters who have had the privilege of fighting a great athlete like Floyd Mayweather. Now it is my fighter's turn. Juan Manuel Marquez is a great athlete in his own right. He has great technique and work ethic in everything that he does.

"I also want to say that Juan Manuel Marquez and I have always admired Mayweather because he is such a bright fighter and outstanding fighter. I feel that he is the number one pound-for-pound fighter along with Bernard Hopkins.

"We have worked so hard for this fight and we believe that we have the chance to win.

"I want to give the highest esteem to Mayweather's team because they have a great athlete and a great fighter and I hope that he stays humble. He has a great personality and I admire him very much. His uncle and father are great trainers and I admire them as well. Me myself being a trainer, I admire him very much."

LEONARD ELLERBE, CEO of Mayweather Promotions

"This has been the best promotion. Mayweather Promotions and Golden Boy Promotions working together hand in hand. When you have two teams coming together it is always going to work.

"The king is back. That is why we are all here.

"Floyd Mayweather what can I say? Since he announced his return to the sport of boxing, there has been tremendous buzz. No matter where you look, people are talking about Mayweather vs. Marquez.

"We have introduced a number of different platforms for this fight. There are many new avenues for consumer awareness so there won't be one person out there who is not aware of this great event."

OSCAR DE LA HOYA, President of Golden Boy Promotions

"This fight is going to be the biggest fight of the year. There is no doubt about it. The people are anxious, especially since it is falling on the Mexican Independence Day weekend. It is a special night because all of the world will be witnessing an upset.

"I am up here taking pictures from the stage, because I want to capture the moment when Juan Manuel Marquez dethrones the king. I couldn't do it, but I will tell you one thing--Marquez is ready. I want to freeze the moment of history in the making.

"The sport of boxing deserves this. We are showing the world that boxing is alive and well. We are selling unprecedented pay-per-view numbers and live gate numbers. We aren't up here gloating that Golden Boy Promotions and Mayweather Promotions are doing great things for ourselves, we are doing these things for the sport of boxing. We are showing the whole world that boxing is here to stay.

"I want to tell Mr. Nacho Beristain that I am sorry that I failed you. I didn't do you right in the ring. You are an amazing trainer. You have done a tremendous job working with 18 world champions, and I wanted to take the opportunity to say that to you.

"Marquez always does what is necessary not only to win fights, but to please his loyal fans. He is not your typical Mexican warrior. He comes in with no holds barred and attacks. He has some good school behind him. That is what makes this fighter different from every body else.

"Marquez is the number one Mexican fighter today, which is a big deal because you have had great fighters coming out of Mexico in the past who have created a loyal following throughout the country and that is what Juan Manuel Marquez has today."

RICHARD SCHAEFER, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions

"Mexican Independence weekend has really become THE fight weekend in Las Vegas. We (Golden Boy Promotions) have been here regularly on this great weekend in boxing bringing the biggest fights to fans around the world.

"This amazing promotion is going to conclude on Saturday. On HBO 24/7 we saw the vast differences between these two fighters in the way they train and the way they live.

"On Saturday night, Juan Manuel Marquez will carry the hopes and dreams of almost 100 million Mexicans on his shoulders and into the ring. A few minutes later, Mayweather the American superstar will make his entrance. Mayweather is here to put all doubters to rest and to make a statement that 'Yes I am still number one.'

"There is a tremendous amount of marketing power behind this fight with an excess of 700 million impressions. I couldn't believe it myself, I had to double check. It is true. There are over 700 million impressions out there for this fight.

"Mexicans around the world are looking to this fight. It is like when the Pope visited Mexico City. It is of that magnitude. This is like their religion.

"There was a poll on Yahoosports.com. Within 24 hrs of the poll being posted, 55,000 people responded. Forty-six percent chose Marquez to win, and 51 percent believe Mayweather will win. As you can see, the public knows this is going to be a close fight and it is going to be a great fight.

"Come and see the fight here at the fight capital of the world, Las Vegas."

MARK TAFFET, Senior Vice President of HBO Pay-Per-View

"When Oscar de la Hoya retired, people said 'What will boxing do now? What is going to happen next?' The answer is simple. Look at what has taken place in 2009. It is evidenced that the best is yet to come. We are in the midst of one of the greatest eras in the sport's history. This era's great welterweights are going to leave their mark on the history of the sport.

"There is no bigger story in boxing and one of the biggest stories in sports this year is Floyd Mayweather's return to boxing.

"America's number one fighter. Mexico's number one fighter. The two biggest fan bases.

Mayweather has ignited the urban markets the same way that De La Hoya ignited the Hispanic markets.

"HBO's 24/7 draws new fans to the sport of boxing in order to ensure boxing's future. The Mayweathers are must see TV that have our fans glued to their television sets. Juan Manuel Marquez has created an identity with fans that he didn't have before. And I want to say that we are all intrigued by your (Marquez') interesting training techniques.

"We have made it so that wherever consumers go, watch listen, read, tweet, text, they are going to be surrounded by Mayweather and Marquez."

RICHARD STURM, President of Sports and Entertainment for MGM Mirage

"MGM Grand welcomes the return of Golden Boy Promotions and Mayweather Promotions as we end the summer and welcome Mayweather back to the ring. We are also thrilled to host the return of one of the sports' favorites in Juan Manuel Marquez.

"Saturday night will be a memorable one for fans as Floyd Mayweather returns to the ring after a brief retirement. He has always called MGM Grand home after having fought here five previous times."
 
Mayweather vs. Marquez: "Number One/Numero Uno," is promoted by Mayweather Promotions and Golden Boy Promotions in association with Marquez Promotions and is sponsored by Cerveza Tecate, AT&T, Quaker State, Dewalt Tools, Affliction Clothing and Southwest Airlines. The 12-round bout will take place Saturday, Sept. 19 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, NV.

Tickets priced at $1,000, $750, $600, $300 and $150, not including applicable service charges, are on sale now and limited to 10 per person and ticket sales at $150 are limited to two (2) per person with a total ticket limit of 10 per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. Tickets also are available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com. Tickets previously purchased for the July 18 date will be honored.

The Mayweather vs. Marquez pay-per-view telecast, beginning at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT, has a suggested retail price of $49.95, will be produced and distributed by HBO Pay-Per-View® and will be available to more than 71 million pay-per-view homes. The telecast will be available in HD-TV for those viewers who can receive HD. HBO Pay-Per-View®, a division of Home Box Office, Inc., is the leading supplier of event programming to the pay-per-view industry. For Mayweather vs. Marquez fight week updates, log on to www.hbo.com.

HBO Sports' all-access reality series "Mayweather/Marquez 24/7" returns with the premiere of the finale on Friday, Sept. 18 at 9:30 p.m. ET/PT. HBO will replay episodes #1, #2 and #3 consecutively prior to the premiere of episode #4. The replays begin at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT on Sept. 18. Episodes #1-3 are also available on HBO ON DEMAND.
MAYWEATHER VS. MARQUEZ FINAL PRESS CONFERENCE QUOTES SOURCE
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A FIGHT LIKE THIS SHOULD BE WATCH.. AFTER THIS FIGHT THE STORY WILL STILL CONTINUES! KEEP UPDATED

jerome pagalan


http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/ 

http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/




MAYWEATHER-MARQUEZ FINAL PRESSCON! by PhilBoxing.com



Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather (Left) and Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez (Right) pose on September 16, 2009 at MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada at the final press conference for their September 19, 2009 fight at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View.



Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather (Left) addresses the media on September 16, 2009 at MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada at the final press conference for his September 19, 2009 fight against Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez (Right) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View.


Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez (Right) addresses the media on September 16, 2009 at MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada at the final press conference for his September 19, 2009 fight against Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather (Left) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View.

MAYWEATHER vs MARQUEZ SOURCE!


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BE UPDATED ON THE LATEST NEWS ON THIS FIGHT http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/


jerome pagalan
http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/
http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/

Prediction: Mayweather vs. Marquez, and the winner is . . .by Examiner Marv Dumon


September 19: "Number One vs. Numero Uno"


September 19: "Number One vs. Numero Uno"

The moment has arrived.  HBO's third episode of 24/7 was one of the best I have seen, featuring the returning Floyd Mayweather, Jr. and Mexico's Juan Manuel Marquez.  Floyd's unparalleled boxing and defensive abilities are matched by this conviction in which he holds himself as one of the best fighters in the history of the sport.

Swagger vs. National Pride

Marquez, on the other hand, is cut from a different cloth.  His humble beginnings in a small family apartment, to his rise as a national representative of the sport - to his religious roots, to the tribute of an entire stadium in a Mexican soccer game, all underscore his willingness to go to through blood, hell, and fury to win this fight.

Related Article:  Mayweather vs. Marquez: prelude to controversial decision

There might be controversy in this fight.  Marquez might use low blow and late hit dirty tactics to infuriate a level-headed master like Floyd - ala Zab Judah.  The scorecards could be close, or misaligned with punch counts.  In a previous article, Marquez's landed punch stats for his last three fights are materially higher than Floyd's last three fights.  (Related Article link, above)

The Yellow, Gobbling Shadow of Pacman

There is one over-arching, undeniable, and looming shadow on September 19th - and that is the yellow, gobbling, open mouth of Pacman.  Whether you choose to focus on the matter or not, "Number One vs. Numero Uno" all lead to Manny Pacquiao.  The road to ultimate boxing supremacy leads through a raucuous Pacific Storm.

To be sure, and driven by tremendous egos and promotional positioning, there will be controversy after the fight.  Fans that believe Marquez won at least one of his fights against Pacquiao will harbor that belief and bring it to their graves.  Marquez's improbable - and you can say, truly inspirational - upset of Mayweather - in the unlikely scenario in which that transpires this Saturday evening - makes Pacquiao vs. Marquez III the most anticipated rubber match since Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier III - the immortalized "Thrilla in Manila" that nearly killed both men in the squared circle, for the ferocious determination that led to a mutually-induced savagery; a war that would elevate itself to societal myth and legend for the baby-boomer generation, and generations since.



24/7's job is to sell tickets and PPV buys, not objectively analyze

It is skewed, promotional coverage.

While HBO's 24/7 coverage of Mayweather vs. Marquez has been highly entertaining, fight fans should not base assessments of upcoming bouts on this show.  Have a healthy degree of skepticism and ability to recognize motivational drivers from a business standpoint.  After all, HBO's and the promoters' agenda is to sell tickets and pay-per-view buys, and the financial and marketing hype distorts the objective facts.  As Thomas Jefferson would advice: analyze based on facts, logic, and reason - not on temperament or (fickle) emotions.  There is no spin.  Mayweather is highly favored to win this fight, he is a bigger and stronger man, and he is forcing a natural lightweight champion to meet him in the welterweight range of 144 lbs.  Floyd will step in the ring in the junior middleweight limit of around 155 lbs. while Marquez will be a diminutive 142 pounder on fight night.  My friends, while Marquez is the sentimental underdog and inspirer of many, 155 lbs. vs. 142 lbs. is very, very significant.

HBO tried to make us believe that Ricky Hatton would be highly competitive against Manny Pacquiao.  Get a timer and show how much they televised Ricky's training, strategy, and sparring - while on the other side, they focused on Freddie Roach and Pac-mom.  By directing the show in such a way (i.e., focusing on Ricky), HBO succeeded in helping most people to forget that Hatton's charging style will meet a lethal Pacquiao left that has the power of an angry horse kick - that punch could have knocked out 44 year old Bernard Hopkins into the hospital emergency room.  24/7 is entertainment, but not objective.  They want revenue, and their job is to convince potential customers that it will be a great fight - despite what logic and reason dictate - and get people to shell out $50.  Don't base your analysis on HBO.

source
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If you know your boxing histories of this two great fighters you already has the mind which one will win! Sept 19, 2009 watch for it Mayweather vs Marquez


jerome pagalan

http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/ 

PS. ENJOY THE FIGHT THIS WEEKEND


Floyd Mayweather - Juan Manuel Marquez: Keys To The Fight By Tim Starks

So continues our marathon coverage of one of the biggest fight of 2009, Floyd Mayweather against Juan Manuel Marquez, culminating in a live blog of the bout Saturday. Previously -- the importance of Mayweather-Marquez and a look at Mayweather's weaknesses, such as they are. Tomorrow -- previewing the (for once in boxing) stellar undercard.

There is very little suspense in how Floyd Mayweather and Juan Manuel Marquez will match up Saturday night, physically. Pull the lever on any athletic category, and it comes up Floyd, Floyd, Floyd. It gets a little more Hitchcockian, though, in the aspects of boxing that require more than physical gifts. (OK, maybe a little more DePalma-ian, but still.) The central tension of this fight is whether the underdog Marquez has enough edges in those other aspects, and not too much of a gulf in the physical aspects, to spring the upset.

Physical

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Size. If Mayweather and Marquez were the same size, nobody would have anything bad to say about this fight. They aren't, so they do. Marquez is a pure featherweight. He's the lightweight champion, but he's had the kind of moments against fellow lightweights that suggest he's pushing his physical limits as far as how high he can be effective. Mayweather really began as a junior lightweight, but fought Oscar De La Hoya at junior middleweight. He's not a big, big, welterweight, but he's big enough. They're reportedly fighting at 144 pounds, nine higher than Marquez has ever fought and a few pounds below Mayweather's comfy welterweight limit. Mayweather is 5'8" with a 72" reach; Marquez is 5'7" with a 67" reach. It's almost that easy.

But here are a few variables. Is it possible Mayweather suffers a little coming down to 144? Maybe, but I doubt it -- Mayweather always stays in shape and I bet he could make 140 if he wanted to. Marquez looks surprisingly ripped at 144, and the delay in the fight from July to September has given him time to grow into the weight a little, but is it possible that he's given away some speed by bulking up? His trainer, Nacho Beristain, seems extremely worried about that, and I think he has a point. Size was supposed to be a huge advantage for Oscar De La Hoya last year against Manny Pacquiao, who was leaping from lightweight to welterweight, so is it possible Marquez can do the same? Perhaps, but these are somewhat different circumstances; Mayweather isn't as old as De La Hoya was, and isn't coming down to a weight he hasn't made in seven years like De La Hoya was. If some of these "maybes" go Marquez' way, obviously his chances improve a good deal. But overall, edge: Mayweather.

Speed. Once upon a time, Marquez had above average speed. Not so much anymore. His hands and feet both have slowed as he's advanced in age and climbed weight classes. For comparison's sake, look at how much quicker Juan Diaz was than Marquez in February. Diaz is fast enough, but I wouldn't call him a speedster. Mayweather, that's a guy you'd call a speedster. It's arguably his biggest asset in the ring. If you were making a list of the fastest hands in boxing, you'd put Mayweather in, what, the top two? His feet are agile as hell, too. It's so not even close in the speed category that I'm not sure it would have even changed much if Marquez came in light and faster -- the gap wouldn't be closed hardly at all. Edge: Mayweather.

Power. Both men aren't what you would call "punchers," per se, in that they don't have crushing natural power. But both are so accurate that they can hurt people bad. It's not just what kind of cannon you have, it's where you shoot. Mayweather and Marquez shoot with precision. Marquez, strangely, has done pretty well in the power department at lightweight, knocking out two men, Diaz and Joel Casamayor, who never had been before. The Casamayor knockout was particularly impressive, as massive punchers like Diego Corrales didn't KO Casamayor. It's possible that by staying at a low weight so long, he was suppressing his raw power, and he'll be a hard hitter at 144, too. That's just conjecture. We know that Mayweather has good, solid power for a welterweight. I'm going to go edge: Mayweather.

Punch Resistance. Mayweather doesn't get hit that much for his chin to get tested very often, and he's only been on the receiving end of a knockdown ruling once, when he badly hurt his hand and touched it to the canvas. Zab Judah scored a real knockdown on Mayweather, albeit more the out-of-balance kind, but it wasn't ruled such. When Mayweather does get hit, he handles it pretty well. Even flush shots from pretty good punchers rarely bother him, and when he's been buzzed here and there, he's recovered very, very quickly. Marquez has also shown excellent recuperative powers, such as when he went down three times against Manny Pacquiao in the 1st round of their first fight and fought his way back to a draw. Good recuperative powers or not, Marquez does have a track record in the last few years of getting knocked down or buzzed with some regularity, even getting staggered by the relatively light-punching Diaz. Here's another one to go edge: Mayweather.

Age/Wear. Mayweather is 32, and has never been in anything you might call a slugfest. Marquez is 36, and he's been in some serious wars, especially as he's slowed down slash adapted his style to be more exciting and therefore make more cash. It would be straightforward enough if it ended there. Mayweather reportedly suffered a rib injury in camp to delay the fight from July to September, and before he retired, he'd complained about injuries all over his body; he also has been plagued by hand injuries. Mayweather's camp says he's healthier than ever as a result of taking almost two years off from the sport. No way of knowing if that's true. And he may have suffered a rib injury, but if you know Mayweather at all, there's very little to no chance that he'd risk his precious undefeated record by coming into a fight hurt, so he's no doubt healed. There may be some uncertainties here, but the totality goes edge: Mayweather.

Stamina. Have you ever seen either Mayweather or Marquez get remotely tired? Have either of them ever done anything other than get stronger as the fight goes on? Yeah, stupid category, in retrospect. Although at least it gives me a chance to write something besides edge: Mayweather. Edge: push.

Non-Physical

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Offense. Technically speaking, you'd be hard-pressed to find many better in the sport on offense than Mayweather or Marquez. Mayweather's straight right, which he can lead with or counter with, is his primary weapon. When he decides to jab, he's a good jabber, and he likes to jab to the body to paralyze his opponents. He hooks with both hands to the head and body and has a right uppercut that he brings out of the closet sometimes. If there's a knock, it's that he's so preoccupied with defense -- and has hurt his hands when opening up -- that he rarely takes the risk of throwing a combination anymore, at least the version of Mayweather before he retired. Marquez is anything but worried about throwing combinations. He may be the best combination artist in the world right now. Like Mayweather, his best punch is his straight right, but after that, in order of effectiveness, it's uppercuts with either hand, hooks to the body and a very stiff jab. Both Mayweather and Marquez are natural counterpunchers, but Marquez is a tad more comfortable taking the lead than Mayweather. For the first time, I can say edge: Marquez.

Defense. If speed isn't Mayweather's top asset in the boxing ring, then it's his defense. That L-shaped stance -- his left arm horizontal across his body, his right arm vertical from his side up to his head -- makes him very hard to hit, because he'll block, roll or step back to get out of harm's way. His reflexes are excellent and he has almost a sixth sense for when a punch is coming. When he gets cornered it's less reliable, but still excellent, and it really is remarkable to watch him stand in front of his opponent and never get hit. As for Marquez, he used to either focus on defense much more than he does now or age has made it harder for him to do so, because he gets hit a ton these days. His main defensive maneuver, such as it is, is to take a step out of range. But this is a whole lotta edge: Mayweather.

Experience. Mayweather has fought just about every kind of boxer, although I'm pretty sure he's never battled anyone who is as skilled Marquez. He's also not been in the ring in a serious way for more than a year and a half, and some observers have thought Mayweather has looked a tad less sharp than when last we saw him, so some kind of ring rust could come into play. Likewise, Marquez has fought just about every kind of boxer, including guys who were a little bit in the Mayweather mold. Joel Casamayor was a fleet-footed counterpuncher with good defense. Freddie Norwood had that "negative" style, like Mayweather. Pacquiao was close to as fast-handed as, if not faster than, Mayweather. Beristain points to Julian Wheeler as a taller, longer-armed guy that Marquez beat. And while there's been some tradeoff in ring wear, Marquez has fought a very high level of competition in Mayweather's absence. Edge: Marquez.

Trainers. Beristain is one of the preeminent trainers of his generation, a thinking man's bloodsport guru. He's taken lots of guys to the next level, and Marquez may be his masterpiece. He's doubted Marquez a bit, both for taking the Mayweather fight and reportedly with gripes in camp, and that's a knock, but for coaching, it's hard to get much better. Roger Mayweather hasn't taken anybody to any level besides Floyd, and that's a little like giving any nincompoop off the street an NBA team of Bill Russell, Tim Duncan, Larry Bird, Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson. You'll look like a really good coach. Roger may or may not be a good one, but there's just no proof of it, and what evidence there is isn't very favorable. Edge: Marquez.

Mindset. There is nothing weak of will about Marquez or Mayweather once they get into the ring. They exude focus and confidence, and they bounce back swiftly when they get in trouble. What I wonder about is what they're fighting for. Marquez seemingly fights for intense personal and national pride. Mayweather once did, and may still, love boxing. That's the story his camp is selling. But every week, new tales of Mayweather's money woes accumulate. I very much wonder if this return to the sport is exclusively related to needing cash to pay off his debts and the IRS. If that's his motive, the massive paycheck he gets for this fight may be ample to fill that hole, so losing becomes less of a problem. It's also just not the best way to think when you're going into the boxing ring -- "I'm doing this for the cash only." Because there's reasonable cause for skepticism of why Mayweather is fighting again, I'll go edge: Marquez.

Intelligence. As much as I appreciate the physical feats of boxers, I'm usually fans of boxers who have a high "boxing IQ." Again, you won't find many smarter than Mayweather or Marquez between the ropes. Mayweather and Marquez have "solved" all manner of fighters who posed formidable obstacles. Corrales could never lay a hand on Mayweather. When Judah gave him some trouble early, Mayweather adjusted. But he always, every step of the way, could count on terrific physical attributes he was born with to help him dig his way out. Marquez has used his intelligence to overcome physical attributes that are less scintillating. And he's solved puzzles, like Casamayor and Pacquiao, that nobody else even had a clue how to deal with. He's presented with a similar challenge Saturday night. If there is hope for a Marquez win, it may be that he finds some critical flaw in Mayweather that no one ever has, as in this category it is a slight edge: Marquez.

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Come saturday night - Watch on pay per view! MARQUEZ VS MAYWEATHER JR

Jerome Pagalan


http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/
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MAYWEATHER, MARQUEZ ARRIVE IN LAS VEGAS! by PhilBoxing.com




Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather (R) and Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez (L) each poses at the famed Lion Statue of the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas upon their arrival on September 15, 2009 for their September 19, 2009 fight at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View.


Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather is greeted by fans and media on September 15, 2009 upon his arrival at MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada for his September 19, 2009 fight against Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View.


Five-Time World Champion Juan Manuel Marquez is greeted by fans and media on September 15, 2009 upon his arrival at MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada for his September 19, 2009 fight against Six-Time World Champion Floyd Mayweather at the MGM Grand Garden Arena which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View. 


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Place your bets now!


jerome pagalan


http://sportspayperview.blogspot.com/