Fighters that beat mayweather....
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Mayweather was battling Castillo that year. Why in the heck would he call out Forrest? Think bro. Think.Comment
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More like junior welterweight (140). That was 3 years after Forrest beat Mosley, but then he lost to Mayorga twice and his stock dropped. Plus, Forrest had tons of injuries after Mayorga. Sadly, Mayweather-Forrest was never a realistic fight when you look at these circumstances and the financial viability of a potential bout. Mayweather wanted the big names and money around this time.Comment
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Seriously though, Starling is for my money better than anyone Floyd has ever faced at welterweight, maybe even throughout his career.
Secondly, you’re making a far bigger problem about Curry’s stance than really was the case. Sure, nobody would mistake him for Napoles, but he showed enough movement throughout his prime years for me to not classify it as an outright vulnerability. It worked for his particular style - no wasted motion, always remaining controlled and ultra-economical - although he probably could’ve benefitted from being a bit more reckless/aggressive when the moment called for it, somewhat more similar to Saldivar, but that’s more of a mental stubbornness than anything else IMO. His legs and balance was also the first things that went post-Honeyghan, which resulted in him spreading his feet even more to compensate for it. That is when his stance clearly was hampering his movement I would say.
Thirdly, even prime Mayweather was never at his best or most convincing when adopting a more mobile/pure-boxing approach in my opinion. He don’t really integrate his punching and movement to the degree of someone like Kalambay while dictating the mid-range with little steps, pivots and/or turns and piling up points behind the jab. Actually, most of his mid-range work is fairly Curry influenced - flat-footed at ring-centre, using his superior speed and punch-picking to get the best of the action - and has been like this even at his best weight/weights. In Curry he will meet someone who trumps him in those areas, and I don’t think he could utilize the necessary movement for twelve rounds at this weight and at the same time generate enough offensively to win. He simply hasn’t the kind of consistent point-scoring jab that is a must in that kind of scenario.
He needs to be planted to score points, which will hurt him against Curry.
I am not saying he was infallible, but prime Curry - which I presume is the version we are judging by - really got his schtick together for a while. He was always vulnerable against opponents that emphasized unorthodox and unpredictable aggression - preferably with some amount of power - where he's having a hard time decoding their rhythm.
That's the thing though - Mayweather doesn't pose any of those problems. In fact, Floyd is exactly the type of fighter Curry prosper against - technically polite without the power to ruffle him up as well as being physically outmatched at this weight.
It maybe wouldn’t end in a stoppage, but I don’t see the welterweight version of Floyd having the tools to take the Texan out of his element enough to snatch a decision. I think Curry is hell on wheels for the pure-boxing/defensive types, and I can't envision how a fighter above his best weight without any physical advantages is going to expose it as a myth.Comment
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