By Jake Donovan - Mayweather by unanimous decision in a dull, and often ugly, affair.
That was the predetermined outcome from many major outlets heading into last weekend's "Undefeated" PPV show between Floyd "Money" Mayweather and Ricky "Hitman" Hatton . Such an outcome has become the norm for Floyd Mayweather fights in recent years. Such an outcome also suited the agenda most had going in before and angle from which they preferred to cover after the fight.
It provided the perceived obvious (Floyd would justify the 2-1 odds and win the fight), the question raised after old ones were answered (Is being great, good enough?) and Monday morning material for ongoing pound-for-pound debates (can Manny Pacquiao surpass Floyd with a clear and exciting win over Juan Manuel Marquez in their rematch next March?)
Somehow, the world's best fighter became its most predictable, at least in the minds of the media, online bloggers and message boarders.
Hatton was supposed to provide the traveling band, in the form of 16,000 enthusiastic (And at times, beyond tolerable, but more on that later) British aficionados. Check. [details]
That was the predetermined outcome from many major outlets heading into last weekend's "Undefeated" PPV show between Floyd "Money" Mayweather and Ricky "Hitman" Hatton . Such an outcome has become the norm for Floyd Mayweather fights in recent years. Such an outcome also suited the agenda most had going in before and angle from which they preferred to cover after the fight.
It provided the perceived obvious (Floyd would justify the 2-1 odds and win the fight), the question raised after old ones were answered (Is being great, good enough?) and Monday morning material for ongoing pound-for-pound debates (can Manny Pacquiao surpass Floyd with a clear and exciting win over Juan Manuel Marquez in their rematch next March?)
Somehow, the world's best fighter became its most predictable, at least in the minds of the media, online bloggers and message boarders.
Hatton was supposed to provide the traveling band, in the form of 16,000 enthusiastic (And at times, beyond tolerable, but more on that later) British aficionados. Check. [details]
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