By Jake Donovan - This Saturday will mark exactly 50 weeks since the last time Ricky Hatton last played the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was there that he lost his “0”, at the hands of then pound-for-pound best Floyd Mayweather Jr in their welterweight superfight last December.
It is where Hatton returns this weekend, this time one weight class lower for the fourth defense of his lineal junior welterweight crown when he meets top American challenger Paul Malignaggi (Saturday, HBO, 10PM ET/7PM PT).
Gone is the team that had accompanied him for that fight, but still lingering are the ghosts of what stands for the moment as the worst night of his professional boxing career.
“Whenever I walk through the MGM Grand the first thing that will go through my mind will be Floyd Mayweather knocking me out,” admitted Hatton (44-1, 31KO) during an international conference call Tuesday afternoon to discuss this weekend’s match.
A loss of any kind is often difficult to overcome; a knockout loss even more so. With Mayweather now claiming retirement, Hatton is forced to move on and settle for beating the best of the rest.
That journey began last May, when he returned home – and to the junior welterweight division – for a fight against faded American challenger Juan Lazcano. Despite the title lineage at stake, the show’s true purpose was a double-barrel showcase, with plans for the matchup this weekend so long as Hatton and Malignaggi emerged victorious.
Neither fighter was particularly impressive or even entertaining in their decision wins. Malignaggi overcame a weave malfunction to survive his mandated rematch with Lovemore N’Dou in the evening’s co-feature; Hatton had less difficulty with Lazcano, save for a brief scare in the 10th that was averted by a clinch and a time out for a shoelace re-adjustment. [details]
It is where Hatton returns this weekend, this time one weight class lower for the fourth defense of his lineal junior welterweight crown when he meets top American challenger Paul Malignaggi (Saturday, HBO, 10PM ET/7PM PT).
Gone is the team that had accompanied him for that fight, but still lingering are the ghosts of what stands for the moment as the worst night of his professional boxing career.
“Whenever I walk through the MGM Grand the first thing that will go through my mind will be Floyd Mayweather knocking me out,” admitted Hatton (44-1, 31KO) during an international conference call Tuesday afternoon to discuss this weekend’s match.
A loss of any kind is often difficult to overcome; a knockout loss even more so. With Mayweather now claiming retirement, Hatton is forced to move on and settle for beating the best of the rest.
That journey began last May, when he returned home – and to the junior welterweight division – for a fight against faded American challenger Juan Lazcano. Despite the title lineage at stake, the show’s true purpose was a double-barrel showcase, with plans for the matchup this weekend so long as Hatton and Malignaggi emerged victorious.
Neither fighter was particularly impressive or even entertaining in their decision wins. Malignaggi overcame a weave malfunction to survive his mandated rematch with Lovemore N’Dou in the evening’s co-feature; Hatton had less difficulty with Lazcano, save for a brief scare in the 10th that was averted by a clinch and a time out for a shoelace re-adjustment. [details]
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