Cotto-Margarito this July for the REAL Welterweight Championship

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  • borikua
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    #1

    Cotto-Margarito this July for the REAL Welterweight Championship

    By Michael Montero: WARNING: Attention Floyd Mayweather lovers; this article contains facts that may be hard for you to swallow - please proceed with caution!

    After their impressive demolition victories over capable opponents last Saturday at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, the stage is set for the #1 and #2 welterweights in boxing, Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito, to do battle this July (according to promoter Bob Arum). While Floyd Mayweather is universally recognized as the linear welterweight champion, I personally consider the upcoming Cotto-Margarito clash to be for the real crown. Pretty Boy sympathizers - before you get your panties all bunched up, relax and allow me to explain myself…

    Nobody can deny that Carlos Baldomir was the linear champ at 147 after he upset defending champ Zab Judah in January of 2006. His follow up destruction of a shot Arturo Gatti six months later further raised his profile among the boxing public. So when Mayweather cruised to a unanimous decision victory over the Argentine later that November, he became the legitimate welterweight champ. That was a year and a half ago. Since then, he is yet to fight a single ranked welterweight and has instead elected to fight the most popular fighters at 154 (Oscar De La Hoya) and 140 (Ricky Hatton). He is yet to even be assigned a mandatory for his WBC welterweight title, let alone face one. Has Mayweather done enough to secure his status as “the man” at 147? Let’s take a look at his resume since moving up to welterweight:

    * Nov 19th, 2005: Mayweather beats a completely shot Sharmba Mitchell via 6th round TKO. This was a full year after Mitchell was completely ruined by Kostya Tszyu in just three rounds.
    * Apr 8th, 2006: Mayweather decisions Zab Judah, who just three months earlier lost to a career journeyman, Baldomir, in embarrassing fashion.
    * Nov 4th, 2006: Mayweather decisions Baldomir in one of the most boring linear championship fights in recent memory. The Pretty Boy was widely criticized for his lackluster performance.
    * May 5th, 2007: Mayweather decisions De La Hoya for a Junior Middleweight paper title in a fight that fails to live up to the hype it had received from the mainstream sports media.
    * Dec 8th, 2007: Mayweather wears down and finishes the linear 140-pound champ, Ricky Hatton, via 10th round TKO in arguably his best performance since moving to welterweight.



    Since then Mayweather has become a crossover star in the mainstream, having been on “Dancing with the Stars”, “Wrestlemania” and numerous sports/talk shows. He’s scheduled to face De La Hoya again later this year in a rematch NOBODY wants to see (provided Oscar gets past hand-picked opponent Steve Forbes, a natural Lightweight, this May). Keep in mind that by that time, Mayweather will have held the 147-pound WBC strap for two years and not faced a single mandatory. Its funny how these sanctioning bodies work isn’t it? Every year we see legitimate champions with lesser names than that of Money Mayweather get stripped for not facing bogus mandatories, while “faces of boxing” like Mayweather and De La Hoya seem to be exempt. Interesting indeed…

    Miguel Cotto moved up to 147 at the end of 2006, right around the time Mayweather became the linear champ. Since that time he has dominated Carlos Quintana to win the vacant WBA belt, defended against mandatory Oktay Urkal (funny how he was quickly assigned a mandatory isn’t it?), knocked out Zab Judah in his backyard of New York, out-boxed Shane Mosley to a decision victory and embarrassed easy touch opponent Alfonso Gomez. Now he’s set to face Margarito, the man the Pretty Boy ducked for what would have been his highest career payday at the time, this July. That will make for six fights over the past two years compared to Mayweather’s four, five defenses of his welterweight title compared to Mayweather’s one, and a mandatory defense of said title, while Mayweather is yet to even be assigned one. Let’s also keep in mind that all of the fights I noted were at 147 pounds, against ranked welterweights and that his July match with The Tijuana Tornado will unify alphabet titles, something that Mayweather has never done.

    Antonio Margarito is no slouch himself. He didn’t come up in the amateurs; he started boxing professionally at the age of fifteen and thus encountered many growing pains and learning lessons early in his career. This is typical of many Mexican fighters and is evidenced by Margarito’s early record, 9-3 (5), the boy was fighting men and literally “learning on the job”. Between 1996 and 2004 Margarito went undefeated, finally losing via Technical Decision (fight was stopped on cuts) in his lone fight at 154 pounds. He’s never been afraid to face young, avoided fighters as evidenced by his bouts against Kermit Cintron (back when Kermit was undefeated), Joshua Clottey and Paul Williams. The problem is that somewhere along the way, Antonio started to believe his own hype and came into fights unfocused and overconfident. He got away with his notorious late starts a few times, but finally paid for it in losing a close decision to Williams last July. This writer believes that should there ever be a rematch with Williams, as long as Margarito comes in focused and starts early, he stops The Punisher late. Anyway, with his second knockout victory over Cintron last Saturday, he became a two-time titlist at 147 (the IBF strap this time around) and is back on the scene in a big way. He is recognized by most boxing insiders as the 2nd best welterweight in the world behind Miguel Cotto.

    Considering all of the information presented, it will be difficult and irresponsible to continue calling Floyd Mayweather “the man” at 147 by the end of the year. In my opinion, Floyd either accepts a fight with the Cotto-Margarito winner in early 2009, or we (boxing fans and media) strip him as the welterweight champ and recognize the fighter who truly earned that distinction inside the ring. Who’s with me?
  • RodBarker
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    #2
    Floyd is in the box seat and considered the man because we all have eyes and his talents are undeniable ,,,,, but I agree the Cotto Margo fight is the welter championship fight ,,,Floyd must fight the winner to seal his position and the winner must fight Floyd to seal his as the best welter in the game , going to be an interesting year .

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    • Lazy Liberal
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      #3
      Floyd is the greatest fighter of all time. Anyone knows that Floyd would easily beat these guys , so why would he waste his time with them. Floyd continually proves it by taking on the best and toughest opponenst available , ducking no one and having no exemptions to his title.

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      • supermandathoe
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        #4
        Floyd Mayweather is better than Marg and Cotto, that being said this will be a GREAT fight. If you HAD to justify that it was real there must be a reason, because you have doubts about that yourself.

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        • 2501
          upinurgirlsguts
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          #5
          Originally posted by DavidValenzuela
          Floyd is the greatest fighter of all time. Anyone knows that Floyd would easily beat these guys , so why would he waste his time with them. Floyd continually proves it by taking on the best and toughest opponenst available , ducking no one and having no exemptions to his title.
          If there was a time machine and Floyd could go back in time, he wouldn't need to fight Robinson, Pep, Leonard etc because he can prolly beat them. OH AND HE WOULD BE A TRILLIONAIRE ALSO BECAUSE MONEY WASN AS INFLATED!!! SNAP!!

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          • 2501
            upinurgirlsguts
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            #6
            Originally posted by supermandathoe
            Floyd Mayweather is better than Marg and Cotto, that being said this will be a GREAT fight. If you HAD to justify that it was real there must be a reason, because you have doubts about that yourself.
            It doesnt matter if he is better than either because we wont know if he can beat them untill he steps in the ring with them. Floyd cant be continued to be called the best JUST because he most likely can beat them. Maybe YOU can because your standards may be lower. But just like its said a million times, just like its done in other sports, just like it works in the real world, the best is the best because they BEAT the best.

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            • Lazy Liberal
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              #7
              Originally posted by 2501
              If there was a time machine and Floyd could go back in time, he wouldn't need to fight Robinson, Pep, Leonard etc because he can prolly beat them. OH AND HE WOULD BE A TRILLIONAIRE ALSO BECAUSE MONEY WASN AS INFLATED!!! SNAP!!
              He would own his own banks and have his face on currency, In Floyd We Trust.

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              • fabzmm
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                #8
                I think cotto will beat margarito but margarito is the tougher fight for mayweather. Cotto has trouble handling speed, and margarito is a bigger welter who will walk through mayweathers punches. he has a head of steel. pbf vs margarito would look very similar to pbf vs ODLH....

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                • Gato2012
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                  #9
                  Cotto-Margarito is 100% "the fight" at 147 right now. Match both their accomplishments, ratings/standings, recent wins, and styles and you got a hell of a matchup. The winner deffinately deserves a shot at Mayweather.

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                  • Lazy Liberal
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                    #10
                    Originally posted by La Maravilla
                    Cotto-Margarito is 100% "the fight" at 147 right now. Match both their accomplishments, ratings/standings, recent wins, and styles and you got a hell of a matchup. The winner deffinately deserves a shot at Mayweather.
                    Both guys deserved a shot before this upcoming fight. I want to know how is it that Mayweather has not faced a manditory yet. Hatton's last fight before Mayweather was at 140, so how is it a mandatory to fight a guy going up in weight, when his last fight wasn't in that weight.


                    This fight is for the true champion, only guys that drool over belts will think otherwise.

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