By Tim Starks
5/8/09...................PART I
There are good things you can say about Floyd Mayweather, Jr., but only some of them are correct. His ring return has prompted some very fanboyish poster-worshiping, fawning behavior from people who may be very well affixed as if by glue to his fur-lined jockstrap, judging from the way they're defending Mayweather on the incorrect counts -- namely, that he wasn't "selective" about his opponents, among other things. Allow me to be the crowbar.
These claims have been circulating in reputable publications, by writers whose work I have often admired, and will no doubt admire again. My attack on their behavior in this case is not an attack on them as people.
I'll start with the sentiment that I find most ridiculous first: Mayweather's quality of opposition is unimpeachable.
The two articles I'll focus on are in BoxingScene and Boxing-Talk.
Here's BoxingScene, attacking HBO analyst Larry Merchant for criticizing Mayweather's choice of opponents, such as his refusal to fight Mosley:
Showing [promoter Bob] Arum's flair for revisionist history, Merchant unleashed a signature anti-Mayweather tangent during Saturday's broadcast, choosing
to dismiss an 18-0 record in championship fights and title belts in
five divisions as merely the product of a "smart" fighter... Of course, the pithy jab falls short of target when it's recalled that Merchant's Saturday example - Shane Mosley - actually pulled back from a fight with Floyd in 2006, and said recently that he'd prefer a match with the Pacquiao-Hatton winner to meeting Mayweather right away.
So if Mosley ducked Mayweather, not the other way around, what am I to make of this article on Sports Illustrated's website?
Most recently, Mosley has battled for recognition with young welterweights Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito. In November 2007 Mosley lost a narrow decision to Cotto, but rebounded in January to emphatically knock out Margarito in the defining win of Mosley's career. The victory entrenched Mosley at the top of the welterweight division, a position that should have earned him the right to handpick his next opponent from a talented field.
But it hasn't.
According to Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer, Mayweather, who recently gave his advisors permission to explore a comeback fight, has rejected overtures from Mosley's camp to lure the former pound-for-pound champion out of retirement.
"I was told by [Mayweather's manager] Al Haymon that Floyd was not coming out of retirement to fight Shane Mosley," Schaefer told SI.com. "I feel bad for Shane. It's as if he looked too good in his last fight. It was the best performance of his career and maybe it made some guys not want to face him."
Or what about this article from BoxingScene in February, where Mosley explicitly says he wants to fight Mayweather?
"I would like to fight all of the top fighters. Mayweather is out there. If he wants to come out of retirement to fight again - I've been hearing rumors of that."
You can point to articles where Mayweather has said he wanted to fight Mosley, and you can point to articles where Mosley has rejected the idea of fighting Mayweather. Right now, in fact, Mosley is on the record saying he would rather fight Manny Pacquiao. But you can just as easily -- hell, I just did it -- point to articles where Mosley wanted a fight with Mayweather and Mayweather didn't want a fight with Mosley. It's not entirely accurate to say that either man "ducked" the other. At various points in their careers, one has rejected the other, and vice versa. Most recently, Mayweather turned down Mosley, and Mosley has said he will move on to other things. What did Mayweather's boosters want Mosley to do, wait around for his shot? Mosley is the one who most recently made himself available to Mayweather, and because Mayweather most recently turned him down, if you're looking to say anyone was "smart" in choosing opponents when the subject is the possibility of a Mayweather-Mosley fight, you'd have to say it was Mayweather.
But it's part of a general thought out there that Mayweather has always fought the best. At the end of the Boxing-Talk piece defending Mayweather comes this:
What this all indicates is that it is ultimately not simply a case of Mayweather handpicking opponents but it is more likely his opponents who are careful about picking him.
The same piece says that it's contradictory for Pacquiao to be praised for fighting opponents that Mayweather is criticized for fighting. By way of example, the piece says Mayweather has been condemned for fighting Ricky Hatton, whereas Pacquiao won laurels for defeating him. The difference isn't a "double standard." It's that Pacquiao has been moving up in weight to fight top opponents in new divisions, while Mayweather asked Hatton to move up for the fight. And he is doing the same with Juan Manuel Marquez on July 11.
That goes to the root of the problem here. Mayweather, unquestionably, used to fight the top opponents in his division with regularity. Now, he doesn't. And it hasn't been that way since after his first two fights at lightweight.
Genaro Hernandez, Diego Corrales, Jose Luis Castillo and others were among the best opponents he could have tackled at the time at each division in which he fought. They weren't all of the best opponents he could have tackled at the time, however. Mosley, Joel Casamayor and Acelino Freitas were boxers Mayweather didn't end up in the ring with who were in or around his weight class, and all of them at some point wanted a Mayweather fight. Still, fighting the best was once something Mayweather did more often than not....
5/8/09...................PART I
There are good things you can say about Floyd Mayweather, Jr., but only some of them are correct. His ring return has prompted some very fanboyish poster-worshiping, fawning behavior from people who may be very well affixed as if by glue to his fur-lined jockstrap, judging from the way they're defending Mayweather on the incorrect counts -- namely, that he wasn't "selective" about his opponents, among other things. Allow me to be the crowbar.
These claims have been circulating in reputable publications, by writers whose work I have often admired, and will no doubt admire again. My attack on their behavior in this case is not an attack on them as people.
I'll start with the sentiment that I find most ridiculous first: Mayweather's quality of opposition is unimpeachable.
The two articles I'll focus on are in BoxingScene and Boxing-Talk.
Here's BoxingScene, attacking HBO analyst Larry Merchant for criticizing Mayweather's choice of opponents, such as his refusal to fight Mosley:
Showing [promoter Bob] Arum's flair for revisionist history, Merchant unleashed a signature anti-Mayweather tangent during Saturday's broadcast, choosing
to dismiss an 18-0 record in championship fights and title belts in
five divisions as merely the product of a "smart" fighter... Of course, the pithy jab falls short of target when it's recalled that Merchant's Saturday example - Shane Mosley - actually pulled back from a fight with Floyd in 2006, and said recently that he'd prefer a match with the Pacquiao-Hatton winner to meeting Mayweather right away.
So if Mosley ducked Mayweather, not the other way around, what am I to make of this article on Sports Illustrated's website?
Most recently, Mosley has battled for recognition with young welterweights Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito. In November 2007 Mosley lost a narrow decision to Cotto, but rebounded in January to emphatically knock out Margarito in the defining win of Mosley's career. The victory entrenched Mosley at the top of the welterweight division, a position that should have earned him the right to handpick his next opponent from a talented field.
But it hasn't.
According to Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer, Mayweather, who recently gave his advisors permission to explore a comeback fight, has rejected overtures from Mosley's camp to lure the former pound-for-pound champion out of retirement.
"I was told by [Mayweather's manager] Al Haymon that Floyd was not coming out of retirement to fight Shane Mosley," Schaefer told SI.com. "I feel bad for Shane. It's as if he looked too good in his last fight. It was the best performance of his career and maybe it made some guys not want to face him."
Or what about this article from BoxingScene in February, where Mosley explicitly says he wants to fight Mayweather?
"I would like to fight all of the top fighters. Mayweather is out there. If he wants to come out of retirement to fight again - I've been hearing rumors of that."
You can point to articles where Mayweather has said he wanted to fight Mosley, and you can point to articles where Mosley has rejected the idea of fighting Mayweather. Right now, in fact, Mosley is on the record saying he would rather fight Manny Pacquiao. But you can just as easily -- hell, I just did it -- point to articles where Mosley wanted a fight with Mayweather and Mayweather didn't want a fight with Mosley. It's not entirely accurate to say that either man "ducked" the other. At various points in their careers, one has rejected the other, and vice versa. Most recently, Mayweather turned down Mosley, and Mosley has said he will move on to other things. What did Mayweather's boosters want Mosley to do, wait around for his shot? Mosley is the one who most recently made himself available to Mayweather, and because Mayweather most recently turned him down, if you're looking to say anyone was "smart" in choosing opponents when the subject is the possibility of a Mayweather-Mosley fight, you'd have to say it was Mayweather.
But it's part of a general thought out there that Mayweather has always fought the best. At the end of the Boxing-Talk piece defending Mayweather comes this:
What this all indicates is that it is ultimately not simply a case of Mayweather handpicking opponents but it is more likely his opponents who are careful about picking him.
The same piece says that it's contradictory for Pacquiao to be praised for fighting opponents that Mayweather is criticized for fighting. By way of example, the piece says Mayweather has been condemned for fighting Ricky Hatton, whereas Pacquiao won laurels for defeating him. The difference isn't a "double standard." It's that Pacquiao has been moving up in weight to fight top opponents in new divisions, while Mayweather asked Hatton to move up for the fight. And he is doing the same with Juan Manuel Marquez on July 11.
That goes to the root of the problem here. Mayweather, unquestionably, used to fight the top opponents in his division with regularity. Now, he doesn't. And it hasn't been that way since after his first two fights at lightweight.
Genaro Hernandez, Diego Corrales, Jose Luis Castillo and others were among the best opponents he could have tackled at the time at each division in which he fought. They weren't all of the best opponents he could have tackled at the time, however. Mosley, Joel Casamayor and Acelino Freitas were boxers Mayweather didn't end up in the ring with who were in or around his weight class, and all of them at some point wanted a Mayweather fight. Still, fighting the best was once something Mayweather did more often than not....
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