View Full Version : De La Hoya vs. Hopkins


Mr. Beelzebub
09-17-2004, 01:53 PM
http://www.hboppv.com/events/delahoya_hopkins/img/main760b.jpg

http://www.hboppv.com/

Two of the sport’s brightest stars will collide in the ring in the most anticipated boxing event of the year. With four world titles on the line, East Los Angeles’ Oscar De La Hoya takes on Philadelphia’s Bernard Hopkins in “Quest For History” on Saturday, September 18, 2004 at MGM Grand. The fight is being produced and distributed by HBO Pay-Per-View.

De La Hoya (37-3, 29 KO’s), an eight-time world champion in six different weight classes, is the holder of the World Boxing Organization (WBO) middleweight title. Hopkins (44-2-1; 1 NC; 31 KO’s) is regarded by many, as pound for pound the most feared champion in boxing today. Hopkins is the World Boxing Council (WBC), World Boxing Association (WBA) and International Boxing Federation (IBF) world middleweight champion.

“During my career, Top Rank has promoted some of the greatest, most exciting events in the history of our sport. I’m privileged and honored to promote another historic match with two future Hall of Famers on Sept. 18,” said Bob Arum, President of Top Rank, Inc.

“This is the Super Bowl of boxing, an event that is bigger than the sport, an event which will capture the attention of people from around the world…and yes against all odds
Oscar De La Hoya will prevail,” said Richard Schaefer, CEO of Golden Boy Enterprises.

“De La Hoya-Hopkins is one of those legendary match-ups between two great champions which will impact both fighters’ place in history,” said Mark Taffet, HBO Senior Vice President of Sports Operations & Pay-Per-View. “It is this generation’s Leonard-Hagler and a very special night for sports fans.”

“We look forward to hosting this historical championship boxing event at MGM Grand,” said Richard Sturm, President and COO for MGM MIRAGE Entertainment and Sports. “We anticipate another sensational evening and know these two great champions will show why they are two of the greatest fighters in the history of the sport.”

De La Hoya, the Golden Boy from East L.A., is regarded as one of the biggest attractions in the sport today, a superstar whose popularity transcends boxing. In the ring De La Hoya has defeated 17 champions, one of them twice and is a star performer in world championship bouts, with a record of 23-3 with a world title on the line.

“This is, by far, the biggest fight of my life,” said De La Hoya. “I am taking on the king of the middleweights. Hopkins is very, very strong. I will fight with all my heart on Sept. 18.”
At the age of 39, Bernard Hopkins (44-2-1; 1 NC; 31 KO’s) is the universally recognized middleweight champion of the world, and recognized by most observers as the best fighter at any weight - “Pound for Pound.” He is also one of the best middleweights in boxing history. A pro for more than 15 years, Hopkins holds the all-time record for the number of successful middleweight world title defenses with 18.

The two former middleweight world champions who follow Bernard in that category have already been inducted in the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York - Carlos Monzon with 14, and Marvelous Marvin Hagler with 12. Hopkins is also the first undisputed middleweight world champion since Hagler in the mid-1980s.

Bernard is unbeaten in 24 fights - 22-0-1, with 1 No Contest, dating back to August, 1993. His last loss was by decision against Roy Jones Jr. in May, 1993. His only other loss was in his pro debut in 1988.

"On September 18th I am going to show the world why I am the undisputed champion and best middleweight of this era," said Bernard Hopkins. "Oscar De La Hoya is standing in the way of completing my ultimate goal of 20 straight defenses and middleweight greatness.”
Tickets are priced at $1700, $1200, $800, $550 and $350 not including applicable service charges, are on sale now at any MGM Grand box office outlet.

Tickets are also sold at all Las Vegas Ticketmaster locations (Tower Records, Smith’s Food and Drug Centers, Robinsons-May stores and Ritmo Latino locations).
Ticket sales are limited to (8) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (702) 474-4000. Tickets are also available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com.

The De La Hoya vs. Hopkins pay-per-view telecast, beginning at 9pm ET/6pm PT on September 18, has a suggested retail price of $54.95, will be distributed by HBO Pay-Per-View and will be available to over 49 million pay-per-view homes. HBO Pay-Per-View is the leading supplier of event programming to the pay-per-view industry.

Mr. Beelzebub
09-17-2004, 01:56 PM
I can't wait to see this fight. I am not a big DLH fan, but Hopkins is horrible and I want to see him lose.
I think Oscar is gonna stick and move, very much like he did against Trinidad but hopefully this time he will be able to finish up the last couple rounds at full force.

Oscar De La Hoya by Split Decision.

DOGGx0
09-17-2004, 03:51 PM
Honestly, I want to see DeLa Hoya win. However, Hopkins will probably win IMO. DLH is the king of back peddlers, and with someone that pushes the fight forward as much as Hopkins, I don't see Oscar being able to peddle back as quick as Hopkins will bring the fight to him. Again, IMO, Hopkins is a little stronger and has a stronger stature than DeLa Hoya, however, I am pullin for Oscar.

I don't doubt this match going the full distance and going to a decision.

mmafanman
09-17-2004, 06:47 PM
Hopkins is bigger and stronger than De La Hoya. The guy's a natural middleweight. He's fought at 160 for his entire career, and he's the absolute best in his weight class. De La Hoya just doesn't have the same conditioning and power he had at 140 or 147. Take a look at his last few fights. Oscar couldn't put away Castellejo or even Sturm, and wasn't able to even hurt Mosley or Trinidad. Sure, he knocked Vargas out silly, but Vargas just came off the Trinidad butt-whipping and was severely damaged goods.

Hopkins should win this one by TKO. If, somehow, Oscar survives and the fight goes to a decision, then I'd say Oscar wins by points. Remember, two of three judges on Saturday night were the same ones used for Oscar vs. Sturm. A lot of people felt Sturm deserved to win that fight, including me.

mmafanman
09-17-2004, 06:51 PM
Also, the fact that Hopkins is able to stay at 160 and compete at a championship level at age 39 is a testament to his dedication and training. The guy wakes up and goes to sleep boxing.

Fallout
09-17-2004, 06:58 PM
Hopkins is the king of the middleweights and one of the best pound for pound in the world. Oscar is in for a world of hurt.

realkaps
09-19-2004, 01:19 AM
Hopkins wins by KO in round 9, a good body shot dropped De La Hoya and he never got up....

realkaps
09-19-2004, 05:31 AM
http://espn.starwave.com/media/boxing/2004/0918/photo/a_hopkins_ft.jpg
http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20040919/capt.nvab11209190428.hopkins_de_la_hoya_nvab112.jp g

GeNeRaL
09-19-2004, 11:37 AM
De La HoyOwn3D

Fallout
09-19-2004, 12:23 PM
Actually Oscar was winning on a lot of peoples cards although Hopkins was starting to take over. He caught Oscar with a shot right on the bottom of the ribs and Oscar admitted later he couldnt breathe. Both men were very classy. Hopkins said he thought Oscar might of been winning, and Oscar said although he felt he could of won, Hopkins caught him with a solid shot and beat him clean.

Kempo Chris
09-20-2004, 09:40 AM
oscar fought a good fight - he stood with Hopkins - Most people expected him to be doing alot of of moving

Well fought fight for both of them

Hopkins is one of the best pound for pound

mmafanman
09-20-2004, 02:30 PM
Two of the three judges had Hopkins winning before De La Hoya went down. Hopkins was on his way to victory, IMO.

De La Hoya surprised Hopkins early in the fight by not giving him too much space and not running. The reason why Hopkins lost the early rounds was because he wanted to prove that he could box with Oscar. He admitted this in his post-fight interview. That strategy didn't work out early on because Oscar had his jab working pretty well and he was scoring more with flurries. But I think in round five or six, Hopkins landed a left hook that sort of rattled Oscar. From that point on, Oscar started moving a bit more and Hopkins was landing lead rights and hooks at a higher rate.

Basically, the bigger, stronger guy showed up towards the middle of the fight. Hopkins started backing Oscar up, using his strength and size. The KO was inevitable.

Purity
09-20-2004, 02:35 PM
http://espn.starwave.com/media/boxing/2004/0918/photo/a_hopkins_ft.jpg

ok now is that gut photoshopped cause, damn, that muther****er looks bad.

mmafanman
09-20-2004, 03:50 PM
He actually looked even worse against Sturm