ESPN article on Ricky Hatton

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  • SMC
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    #1

    ESPN article on Ricky Hatton

    Ricky Hatton doesn't have to be here.

    He doesn't have to be training in the Nevada desert, 5,000 miles from home and his beloved Manchester City Football Club. He doesn't have to be in the United States while his son celebrates his sixth birthday in England. He could easily be fighting in Manchester, close to family and friends, in a city where he is adored and where he could probably attract 20,000 fans to a sparring session.

    Instead, he is in Sin City, preparing to wrest the IBF junior welterweight title from Juan Urango at the Paris Las Vegas casino on Saturday (HBO, 9:45 p.m. ET). Hatton said it is something he has to do if he wants to follow in the footsteps of those who have gone before him, if he wants to move to the next level, from being a big fish across the pond to a star on the biggest stage of all.

    "It's the pinnacle nowadays for a boxer's career," he said of fighting in Las Vegas. "To be perfectly honest, all the superstars, all the big fights are in Vegas, and I'm absolutely delighted to be here. It would break my heart if I finished my career without fighting at Madison Square Garden or on the Strip. I'm sad to leave my hometown; I love the support there, it makes me proud to be British, proud to be a Mancunian, but I'm here flying the flag."

    Hatton feels "very, very proud to be able to walk down the streets of Manchester and be recognized. It's a very hard and very rare thing for a boxer." But while he is by no means leaving his city or his country behind, in England, it is "hard to be any more popular than I am already." So the next goal of his career is to replicate his success and popularity in the U.S.

    Hatton believes that one factor above all others gives him a good shot at doing just that.

    "You'll never be bored out of your skull watching a Ricky Hatton fight," he said.

    "I have a very high work rate, I never take a backward step, I take on all comers. This will be -- if I win -- my fourth world title belt in my last four fights, at two different weights. It's like my hero Roberto Duran. I'm not sitting on belts, I'm going out to win new ones."

    Hatton's nonstop fighting style, in which he grinds down his opponent behind a constant fusillade of punches, has been compared to that of former WBC bantamweight champion Wayne McCullough, in whose gym Hatton is preparing for his bout against Urango. McCullough knows something about succeeding on both sides of the pond, having won Olympic silver in 1992 for Ireland before spending his entire professional career based out of Las Vegas. And he agrees that the way Hatton fights gives him a better chance than most British boxers to make it big in America.

    "It's why people took to me, because I went in there to fight," McCullough said. "There's no fancy dancing around. You go in there and stand toe-to-toe and get the fight over as quick as you can. That's what Ricky does. He gets in there and he's all business. He's exciting. The Americans love that style, and I think that's why they'll take to him."

    That style wasn't always in evidence in Hatton's last contest, his first headline appearance on U.S. soil, in May last year. Having thrust himself into the international limelight with a thrilling victory over Kostya Tszyu to lift the IBF junior welterweight title in June 2005, and then added the WBA strap by stopping Carlos Maussa that November, he dropped both belts and stepped up to welterweight, to challenge little-known Luis Collazo for the WBA 147-pound crown in Boston.

    Hatton started brightly enough, knocking Collazo down in the first frame, but the awkward southpaw pulled himself back into the fight, frequently frustrating the Englishman and rocking him in the final round. Hatton won the fight, and another title, but the decision, although unanimous, was controversial.

    "That wasn't the real Ricky Hatton that night," Hatton confessed. "I was hyped up. It was my first fight for HBO, my first big fight in America."

    In fact, he said, he had never really wanted to fight at welterweight in the first place. He had been scheduled to defend his 140-pound crown against Juan Lazcano, but when Lazcano injured his hand less than two months before the bout, Collazo emerged as a possible opponent.

    "I only had seven weeks, but I liked the challenge," he said. "I wouldn't have missed it for the world. But it was all a bit rushed. Sometimes it takes two or three fights to grow into a new weight class."

    As a result of the difficulties he experienced at that weight, Hatton relinquished the strap he snatched from Collazo to return to the 140-pound division, but he hasn't ruled out eventually revisiting welterweight, for a possible clash with a big name such as Miguel Cotto or Floyd Mayweather Jr.

    In the meantime, there is an abundance of available opposition among the junior welters, not the least of them former lightweight champion Jose Luis Castillo, who is making his debut in the division against Herman Ngoudjo in the co-main event on Saturday night. If both Castillo and Hatton win, they are expected to meet later in the year.

    For now, however, Hatton is concentrating on Urango, and on reclaiming the IBF belt that the Colombian holds.

    "Yes, I do have one eye on Castillo," Hatton admitted. "But make no mistake, on Saturday night, I will have both eyes focused squarely on Mr. Urango. I will be using the prospect of a fight with Castillo as motivation, but I'm not taking Mr. Urango for granted. I've seen quite a lot of him: he's a solidly built fella, a handful to say the least. He's young and hungry. People say they don't know much about him, but they said that about me before I fought Kostya Tszyu, and we all saw how that turned out."

    According to McCullough, Hatton is the same person now that he was when the two men first met in 2002, unaffected by the success he has experienced in the five years since. then

    "He still hangs out in the same pubs, hangs out with the same friends. He's just Ricky. When he's in the gym, he's joking around. He's just a down-to-earth guy."

    Hatton is also, in the opinion of the man from Belfast, already "the best fighter ever, past or present, to come out of Britain. He's won belts in different divisions, he's beaten the best. And now he wants to come to America and prove himself as well. Everybody wants to make it in America, in the boxing world. Back home you can be known pretty quick. It's pretty small over there. Over here, it's a big, big place."

    The enormity of it all is certainly not lost on Hatton. At times, he seems scarcely able to believe he has made it to the bright lights of boxing's biggest stage.

    "It makes me very, very proud to see my name in lights on the Strip," he said. "It's fantastic. I never really had thought, you know from where I come from, boxing at the working men's clubs or social clubs in and around Manchester around the council estates, to this. It's unbelievable. And also, because I know when my family comes over and my very close friends, my boyhood friends are going to walk down the Strip and see my name up on the big screen and the flashing lights.

    "It's really quite emotional, to be honest."
  • GEOFFHAYES
    Juy Hayes
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    #2
    Hatton is DEFINITELY the best-ever British boxer in terms of ability and talent (technical skill, handspeed, footspeed, agility etc). But Calzaghe has a better resume as of now, and Calzaghe is the heart fighter of the two - a real warrior who's always wanted to fight the best. But Ricky is lucky that he has the best fighter ever near his weight in Floyd Mayweather, which is the ultimate, if he beats Mayweather (or even runs him close) there's nothing Calzaghe can do.
    Last edited by GEOFFHAYES; 01-18-2007, 06:48 AM.

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    • The Wire
      West Ham til I die
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      #3
      Originally posted by GEOFFHAYES
      Hatton is DEFINITELY the best-ever British boxer in terms of ability and talent (technical skill, handspeed, footspeed, agility etc). But Calzaghe has a better resume as of now, and Calzaghe is the heart fighter of the two - a real warrior who's always wanted to fight the best. But Ricky is lucky that he has the best fighter ever near his weight in Floyd Mayweather, which is the ultimate, if he beats Mayweather (or even runs him close) there's nothing Calzaghe can do.
      I'd have to disagree. Wins over Tszyu, Collazo, Tackie, Phillips, Oliveira and Maussa are better than Calzone's wins over Lacy, Mitchell, Brewer, Veit, Woodhall and Eubank.

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      • GEOFFHAYES
        Juy Hayes
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        #4
        Originally posted by myunksafied
        I'd have to disagree. Wins over Tszyu, Collazo, Tackie, Phillips, Oliveira and Maussa are better than Calzone's wins over Lacy, Mitchell, Brewer, Veit, Woodhall and Eubank.
        Can't go along with that. Wins over Brewer, Mitchell, Reid, Woodhall and Lacy are much better than any of Rick's wins away from Tszyu

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        • Shanus
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          #5
          Originally posted by GEOFFHAYES
          Hatton is DEFINITELY the best-ever British boxer in terms of ability and talent (technical skill, handspeed, footspeed, agility etc). But Calzaghe has a better resume as of now, and Calzaghe is the heart fighter of the two - a real warrior who's always wanted to fight the best. But Ricky is lucky that he has the best fighter ever near his weight in Floyd Mayweather, which is the ultimate, if he beats Mayweather (or even runs him close) there's nothing Calzaghe can do.
          I think the complete opposite, Hatton has a better resume than Calzaghe (Minus the title defenses) and I think Calzaghe is the better boxer in terms of ability and talent.

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          • Brother Blues
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            #6
            What is a Juan Urango???

            If Hatton wants to be big in the US of A,he must fight someone with name recognition.Until then,in most eyes he will be considered a fraud...which I,and most of the fans I know think of him as.
            Last time I saw him,they were giving him the Collazo fight,after he took an ass-whupping.
            If he ever got in the ring with Mayweather...lights out.

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            • GEOFFHAYES
              Juy Hayes
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              #7
              Originally posted by Brother Blues
              What is a Juan Urango???

              If Hatton wants to be big in the US of A,he must fight someone with name recognition.Until then,in most eyes he will be considered a fraud...which I,and most of the fans I know think of him as.
              Last time I saw him,they were giving him the Collazo fight,after he took an ass-whupping.
              If he ever got in the ring with Mayweather...lights out.
              He'll beat up Castillo, Mayweather, Cotto and Collazo, all in Las Vegas (or one at MSG), then bash up Junior Witter at City of Manchester Stadium and call it a day.

              He may lose to Mayweather though, but win the hearts of the American's in the process.
              Last edited by GEOFFHAYES; 01-18-2007, 07:18 AM.

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              • The Noose
                AKA Bologna Panini
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                #8
                Originally posted by Brother Blues
                What is a Juan Urango???

                If Hatton wants to be big in the US of A,he must fight someone with name recognition.Until then,in most eyes he will be considered a fraud...which I,and most of the fans I know think of him as.
                Last time I saw him,they were giving him the Collazo fight,after he took an ass-whupping.
                If he ever got in the ring with Mayweather...lights out.
                Urango is a title holder. Hatton has to have a title to get the big fights. Which other Light Welter could he fight which would be more of a worthy opponent?
                They're all not big names.

                But he desperatly needs to fight somone of worth. Castillo is the natural choice.
                I think Hatton has a better resume compared to the other title holders at the moment.

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                • squealpiggy
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                  #9
                  If Hatton wants to be big in the US of A,he must fight someone with name recognition.Until then,in most eyes he will be considered a fraud...which I,and most of the fans I know think of him as.
                  So Kostya Tszyu doesn't count then? I mean he was the recognised champion, and rated second on the P4P list (after Mayweather) and a shoe-in for the boxing Hall of Fame. Juan Urango is less than stellar in terms of branding but he's a good choice for a show-fight because of his style. And then Rick is down to fight Castillo and that's a big big name and an awesome fight!

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                  • The Noose
                    AKA Bologna Panini
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by GEOFFHAYES
                    Hatton is DEFINITELY the best-ever British boxer in terms of ability and talent (technical skill, handspeed, footspeed, agility etc).
                    Better than Hamed?

                    Id say Hamed (as much as i dislike him), was a better all round natural talent. But grew undisiplined and lazy.

                    Hatton must show in this fight he still has boxing ability. He was a better boxer wen he was younger. He now sems to have become an out and out pressure fighter, with a poor defence.
                    Hopefully he will put in a great performance. But need to be convinced he is still as good as he was.

                    His fight against Tszyu, he won with his strength and conditioning, not with clean accurate punches and boxing ability.

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