Originally posted by gdub27
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Paul Williams: "I Want Mayweather, Hopkins, Mosley"
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Originally posted by boricuarn View PostIf Quintana found the way and controlled Paul Williams in 12 rounds, you will find other good boxer that can do the same thing.
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Originally posted by GRUSTLER View PostOk, I understand and hear you. I guess Williams will have to do some
more to warrant a big $ fight at WW then.Last edited by Dave Rado; 10-06-2009, 06:17 PM.
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Originally posted by Spray_resistant View PostWhy not 140 or 135 while we are at it if he can make the weight? If he wins the MW title would you still support him fighting WWs if he makes the weight? How would that look, the MW champion picking on WWs he has a clear advantage over?
The top WW's at WW come in at 160(Mosley, Cotto, Clottey, Berto) on fight night, they're not as small as you're making them out to be.
Maybe and if you do mean height & reach, there's no statistical proof that Height and reach always wins a fight. (Hearns-Hagler, Corrales-Mayweather, Quintana-Williams I, Etc.)
You're only saying this because Williams is that good.
If Celestino Caballero(5'11") goes up to 147 and then back down to Super Bantamweight(somehow), nobody would care or call it an "using his advantages against smaller fighters" cause he's just not that good for people to complain about that. And 5'11" is as big as an "advantage" at 122, as 6'3" is at 147.
These advantages you're trying to come up with, are myths that have been proven wrong again and again over the years, skill is what matters imo.
Edit: And yes i would still support him fighting WW's after winning the MW titles. He has already beat up on WW's after coming back down from MW like i said he started as a MW and has been switching from MW-JRMW-WW his whole career but now that he blew up, it's a problem for some reason.Last edited by Kevin Jesus; 10-06-2009, 06:04 PM.
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Originally posted by Iceta View PostAnd Williams didn't turn down Martinez, Clottey, or Dzinziruk. He had those guys as choices to fall back on if he didn't fight Pavlik. People need to get with the program.
But he turned down Clottey outright, saying that he didn't want to fight someone who was coming off a loss; and at that time there was no other fight being discussed for him at all other than Dzinziruk. Pavlik wasn't even on the horizon at that time. And HBO were pushing him hard to fight Clottey back then.
Strategically, given that he says he wants to fight Mosley and Mayweather at 147, I think turning down Clottey was a big mistake, because beating Clottey convincingly would have proved that he can still fight at his best at 147, and would have generated a lot of interest in the fights he says he really wants. Instead, now that he's taken the Pavlik fight, Mosley and Mayweather can just hide behind the excuse that he's not a Welterweight any more, and a lot of the boxing public are swallowing that excuse. He should definitely have taken the Clottey fight when he had the chance, IMO.
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Originally posted by Dave Rado View PostYou're trying to rewrite history. That's half true in the case of Martinez, but Clottey and Dzindziruk tried to make fights with him well before negotiations with Pavlik even started.
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Originally posted by Dave Rado View PostHe says he still walks around between fights at just over 150lb, which is lighter than most of the leading Welterweights. Until that changes, there is no reason why it wouldn't be good for his body.
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Originally posted by Dave Rado View PostDzinziruk and Clottey tried to get a fight with him before he even started to negotiate with Pavlik. You're right about Martinez but not the other two. He was in serious negotiations with Dzinziruk long before Pavlik started talking to him, and Dzinziruk thought it was a done deal, and that contracts were about to be signed; and then he got the opportunity to fight Pavlik and dropped Dzinziruk like a stone in order to take that opportunity, which I can't really blame him for, although it left Dzinziruk in the lurch, without a fight, and was a bit of a ***** move in a way.
But he turned down Clottey outright, saying that he didn't want to fight someone who was coming off a loss; and at that time there was no other fight being discussed for him at all other than Dzinziruk. Pavlik wasn't even on the horizon at that time. And HBO were pushing him hard to fight Clottey back then.
Strategically, given that he says he wants to fight Mosley and Mayweather at 147, I think turning down Clottey was a big mistake, because beating Clottey convincingly would have proved that he can still fight at his best at 147, and would have generated a lot of interest in the fights he says he really wants. Instead, now that he's taken the Pavlik fight, Mosley and Mayweather can just hide behind the excuse that he's not a Welterweight any more, and a lot of the boxing public are swallowing that excuse. He should definitely have taken the Clottey fight when he had the chance, IMO.
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Originally posted by gdub27 View PostThat is if his walk around weight remains at 150 between fights, if he has said so recently i wouldn't know. If he does the it's all good but what I wonder is if he allows himself to walk around heavier due to fighting larger opponents in his recent outings.
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Originally posted by inferno View PostWilliams was in negotions to fight Pavlik before he fought Winky, but they fell through which is why he took that fight. They then went back to the table to try to set up a fight with Pavlik again and this time they got a deal done.
The first negotiations with Pavlik broke down last year, long before the Winky fight.
He wasn't talking to Pavlik straight after the Winky fight. He was in serious negotiations with Dzindziruk, and HBO were trying to persuade him to fight Clottey instead of Dzindziruk, last July - well before the negotiations with Pavlik restarted. Back then, he wasn't even mentioning Pavlik as a possible opponent.
See here, for example.Last edited by Dave Rado; 10-06-2009, 06:38 PM.
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