Cotto: Judah is tougher than Mosley

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  • -Antonio-
    -Antonio-
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    #21
    It is what it is. I think Judah's left uppercut is more dangerous than Shane's best punch, but that's as far as I'll go. Just because Mosley is a future Hall of Famer doesnt mean Cotto needs to suck up to him.

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    • WLAD OWNS
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      #22
      This is one of the dumbest statements I have ever heard, Cotto will realize this when he is laying on the canvas on Nov.10.

      He thinks Zab "Gatekeeper" Judah is tougher than Shane "Hall of Famer" Mosley. I guess Cotto didn't watch Mosley's last 3 fights where he ruined Vargas twice and dominated Collazo.

      MARK MY WORDS, Cotto will get hurt, it's just a matter of finishing him off when he is hurt and Mosley is a great finisher.

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      • Knicksman20
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        #23
        Originally posted by BIGPOPPAPUMP
        There is no way that Cotto truly believes that. Mosley has only been down in one fight and has never been stopped. Mosley is the more gifted. Fought Collazo, Vargas 2X, De La Hoya 2X, Wright 2X and Forrest 2X. Mosley has four losses to the same two fighters who were much bigger than him. After years of working with heavy weights, Mosley is bigger than Cotto.

        Judah - 1-1 with Spinks, loss to Tszyu, loss to Cotto, loss to Mayweather
        Totally agree with you BPP. Moslet is a very strong Welter & I think Cotto will be surprised at that; not to mention the speed difference. And unlike Judah, Mosley will be dangerous the entire fight & won't clam up when he gets tagged.

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        • trips420
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          #24
          C@P of the things both sides have said over the past few days


          Miguel Cotto doesn’t have a scintillating public persona. The Puerto Rican steamroller is more comfortable letting his ring work speak for him, rather than engaging in Hopkins style trash-talking or staged press conference brawling. But in his own low-key way, in halting but ever improving English, Cotto does give a fightwriter something to work with in our neverending quest to fill space in an informative, entertaining way.

          On a conference call to hype his Nov. 10 showdown with Shane Mosley at Madison Square Garden, Cotto (30-0, 25 KOs) put forth a confident aura, as he asserted that Mosley will feel his power in NY, and that he will do anything necessary to insure victory.

          The call came a day after Shane’s father and trainer, Jack Mosley, spewed some provocative fodder at Cotto. He called Cotto a dirty fighter, a boxer who always aims for the groin when he gets in trouble. He also insinuated that Cotto or his promoter, Top Rank, had something to do with the release of specifics on Mosley’s use of performance enhancing drugs prior to his 2003 bout with Oscar De La Hoya. Not done there, the elder Mosley said he’s seen fear in Cotto’s eyes, and alleged that the boxer, nine-plus years younger than SSM, is running scared.

          Cotto didn’t seem scared on the call, and his promoter, Arum, said that he was giddy when he heard Papa Jack talkin’ smack.

          “The comments were music to my ears,” Arum said. “I heard the same music a month ago with Kelly Pavlik before his fight with Jermain Taylor. That’s music to my ears in the case of Emanuel Steward and Jermain Taylor and Jack and Shane. They’re afraid, they knew the kind of fighter Pavlik is. They say those things to demean fighters, to get their fighter more confident. They’re worried…Jack is worried about Shane’s confidence. Shane’s fought a whole host of easy opposition, and I’ve never heard Jack demean an opponent, never before heard Emanuel demean an opponent.”

          Cotto answered the dirty fighter charge.

          “I’m a fighter,” he said. “I have to do what I have to do to win. I have to do things like in the Judah fight that wasn’t on purpose.” Was or wasn’t, I asked? “It was not on purpose,” he reiterated.

          The steroid tipoff scandal is no scandal, Arum then said.

          “That’s preposterous,” he said. “That took place a year prior, it was grand jury testimony from a year ago. The idea that we had anything to do with it is absurd.”

          Arum said he thinks Shane is a clean fighter, and that he considers the steroid angle a non-issue.

          But Cotto, if I didn’t know better, tossed in a sly reference to Shane’s admitted usage of steroids, which he’s said were given to him unknowingly before the second bout with ODLH.

          Asked about what his advantages were against Mosley, Cotto said, “I always train pretty good. I go into the fight with my own energy, that’s an advantage I have over Mosley.”

          Cotto scored a verbal body blow when he brought up the age thing. Mosley is 36 (he turned on Sept. 7), while Cotto just turned 27 on Monday.

          “I was more worried about Zab Judah (than Mosley),” he said. “I don’t think at the age of 36 he can handle Miguel Cotto. Zab was more dangerous than Shane.”

          One writer put forth the theory that Mosley is bigger than Cotto, and Cotto put the kibosh on that reasoning.

          “Mosley is coming from 135 pounds, I’m coming from 140 pounds, who is bigger here?” he asked rhetorically.

          Cotto very nearly admitted that he will target the privates if need be, at one point.

          “Whatever it takes to get a win, I will do it,” he said. “This is professional fighting, you do what it takes to win.”

          SPEEDBAG Cotto’s list of sparring mates is pretty strong. Henry Crawford, Randall Bailey, Henry Bruseles and Hicklet Lau have been eating left hooks to the body in camp.

          --I love Arum’s saltiness. A writer asked three questions on the call in rapid fire, and Arum told his PR man, Lee Samuels, to nix that practice. That’s a pet peeve of mine. One question, sure, two, alright, but anything beyond that is veering toward piggishness. Same goes for getting in queue twice on a call, when you darn well know other writers are waiting to ask a question. Doesn’t matter if someone is from a small paper, or a smaller website…no one writer should think his piece is so much more important than everyone else’s that they monopolize a call. Let’s play nice, people, and give everyone a chance.

          --Arum cut off another writer who tried to debate Cotto on the size matter. Cotto said Mosley is coming from 135, not down from 154. The writer didn’t agree and started to speak up, when Arum took out the machete and ended the debate. Salty!

          Comment

          • Ray  Ray
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            #25
            Originally posted by trips420
            C@P of the things both sides have said over the past few days


            Miguel Cotto doesn’t have a scintillating public persona. The Puerto Rican steamroller is more comfortable letting his ring work speak for him, rather than engaging in Hopkins style trash-talking or staged press conference brawling. But in his own low-key way, in halting but ever improving English, Cotto does give a fightwriter something to work with in our neverending quest to fill space in an informative, entertaining way.

            On a conference call to hype his Nov. 10 showdown with Shane Mosley at Madison Square Garden, Cotto (30-0, 25 KOs) put forth a confident aura, as he asserted that Mosley will feel his power in NY, and that he will do anything necessary to insure victory.

            The call came a day after Shane’s father and trainer, Jack Mosley, spewed some provocative fodder at Cotto. He called Cotto a dirty fighter, a boxer who always aims for the groin when he gets in trouble. He also insinuated that Cotto or his promoter, Top Rank, had something to do with the release of specifics on Mosley’s use of performance enhancing drugs prior to his 2003 bout with Oscar De La Hoya. Not done there, the elder Mosley said he’s seen fear in Cotto’s eyes, and alleged that the boxer, nine-plus years younger than SSM, is running scared.

            Cotto didn’t seem scared on the call, and his promoter, Arum, said that he was giddy when he heard Papa Jack talkin’ smack.

            “The comments were music to my ears,” Arum said. “I heard the same music a month ago with Kelly Pavlik before his fight with Jermain Taylor. That’s music to my ears in the case of Emanuel Steward and Jermain Taylor and Jack and Shane. They’re afraid, they knew the kind of fighter Pavlik is. They say those things to demean fighters, to get their fighter more confident. They’re worried…Jack is worried about Shane’s confidence. Shane’s fought a whole host of easy opposition, and I’ve never heard Jack demean an opponent, never before heard Emanuel demean an opponent.”

            Cotto answered the dirty fighter charge.

            “I’m a fighter,” he said. “I have to do what I have to do to win. I have to do things like in the Judah fight that wasn’t on purpose.” Was or wasn’t, I asked? “It was not on purpose,” he reiterated.

            The steroid tipoff scandal is no scandal, Arum then said.

            “That’s preposterous,” he said. “That took place a year prior, it was grand jury testimony from a year ago. The idea that we had anything to do with it is absurd.”

            Arum said he thinks Shane is a clean fighter, and that he considers the steroid angle a non-issue.

            But Cotto, if I didn’t know better, tossed in a sly reference to Shane’s admitted usage of steroids, which he’s said were given to him unknowingly before the second bout with ODLH.

            Asked about what his advantages were against Mosley, Cotto said, “I always train pretty good. I go into the fight with my own energy, that’s an advantage I have over Mosley.”

            Cotto scored a verbal body blow when he brought up the age thing. Mosley is 36 (he turned on Sept. 7), while Cotto just turned 27 on Monday.

            “I was more worried about Zab Judah (than Mosley),” he said. “I don’t think at the age of 36 he can handle Miguel Cotto. Zab was more dangerous than Shane.”

            One writer put forth the theory that Mosley is bigger than Cotto, and Cotto put the kibosh on that reasoning.

            “Mosley is coming from 135 pounds, I’m coming from 140 pounds, who is bigger here?” he asked rhetorically.

            Cotto very nearly admitted that he will target the privates if need be, at one point.

            “Whatever it takes to get a win, I will do it,” he said. “This is professional fighting, you do what it takes to win.”

            SPEEDBAG Cotto’s list of sparring mates is pretty strong. Henry Crawford, Randall Bailey, Henry Bruseles and Hicklet Lau have been eating left hooks to the body in camp.

            --I love Arum’s saltiness. A writer asked three questions on the call in rapid fire, and Arum told his PR man, Lee Samuels, to nix that practice. That’s a pet peeve of mine. One question, sure, two, alright, but anything beyond that is veering toward piggishness. Same goes for getting in queue twice on a call, when you darn well know other writers are waiting to ask a question. Doesn’t matter if someone is from a small paper, or a smaller website…no one writer should think his piece is so much more important than everyone else’s that they monopolize a call. Let’s play nice, people, and give everyone a chance.

            --Arum cut off another writer who tried to debate Cotto on the size matter. Cotto said Mosley is coming from 135, not down from 154. The writer didn’t agree and started to speak up, when Arum took out the machete and ended the debate. Salty!

            Good article.

            Comment

            • No-mas-tias
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              #26
              Cotto doesn't believe that Judah is better than Mosley in no way but after yesterday's press confc. where the Mosley's took some shots at him he had to comeback with something and is obviously pissed at the comments made by the Mosley's.

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              • Undefeated
                MasterMind
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                #27
                Hype... Hype...

                Damn ya take it to the ass!!

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                • pesticid
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                  #28
                  Ha! Cotto is a dirty fighter. Did he hit Torres low who had him stumbling like a sick donkey? Did he hit Corley low, who emptied the contents of his ears with that right hook and made him jerk his legs around as if he were suffering from a mad cow disease? He hit Zab low but did nobody notice that Zab hit him just as many times low? Except that Cotto didn't dive face first to the mat as if it were his dear old mamma.

                  Cotto is ****ing right with what he's saying. That's what I've been saying all along about Mosley. Mosley will have that same disturbed, incoherent look that he had in his 4 fights with Shane and Vernon and his two fights with Cruz and Estrada, except that his body will hurt way more.

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                  • Ray  Ray
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                    #29
                    Originally posted by pesticid
                    Ha! Cotto is a dirty fighter. Did he hit Torres low who had him stumbling like a sick donkey? Did he hit Corley low, who emptied the contents of his ears with that right hook and made him jerk his legs around as if he were suffering from a mad cow disease? He hit Zab low but did nobody notice that Zab hit him just as many times low? Except that Cotto didn't dive face first to the mat as if it were his dear old mamma.

                    Cotto is ****ing right with what he's saying. That's what I've been saying all along about Mosley. Mosley will have that same disturbed, incoherent look that he had in his 4 fights with Shane and Vernon and his two fights with Cruz and Estrada, except that his body will hurt way more.
                    Dont you mean Winky. I agree with the first part of your debate but Cotto is no Forrest nor Winky.

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                    • lyrical
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                      #30
                      Judah punches harder than Mosely and Cotto took his power so i am confused as to why people question Cottos chin

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