But this ain't one of the close fights. And they don't brag about their perfect record that is the diff.
Get over it your boy ain't perfect brah.
I like how ppl try to make it seem as if Castillo just horribly dominated Floyd and was the biggest robbery of all time. In truth it was a close fight. They had a rematch Castillo got that ass taped the second time around and its settled.
Floyd is 41-0 deal with it homie.
Larry Merchant goes," I don't think there is much controversy. I think most people thought Castillo won."
@ 1:06
Larry Merchant goes, "Arum and I believe that Castillo won the fight."
Knowing that Castillo was Robbed, Mayweather has a questionable perfect record. Should have had a loss.
He keeps on bragging he has a perfect record when clearly he should have a loss in his record against Castillo.
So the saying should go, 41 had tried 1 has succeeded that is Castillo. The first to beat Mayweather.
He keeps on yapping he has a perfect record when we all know it is blemished. It is not how perfect your record is. It is how good your opponent and challenges that you face. All the legends had a defeat in their career, It doesn't , make them a lesser man.
But if a yapper keeps on bragging a questionable perfect record.. It just shows how insecure he is about his ability.
Page last updated at 04:22 GMT, Monday, 17 May 2010 05:22 UK
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Rogue Thailand general who backed protests dies
Gen Khattiya said he was helping the protesters' security
Renegade Thai general Khattiya Sawasdipol, who was shot on Thursday as he backed protesters in ****kok, has died, hospital officials have said.
The announcement came amid fresh fighting between the protesters and soldiers after Thai officials rejected a demand for UN-backed talks.
There was ******* and explosions outside upscale hotels opposite the protesters' fortified encampment.
Thirty-six people have been killed in the violence since Thursday.
Maj Gen Khattiya, known as Seh Daeng (Commander Red), was shot in the head on Thursday as he spoke to a New York Times journalist within the protesters' rally site.
He had been in a critical condition in hospital and had not been expected to pull through.
His shooting marked the beginning of clashes between soldiers and protesters that have raged on-and-off since then.
It is not clear who shot him, but some among the protesters were quick to blame army snipers.
A minute's silence was held for the general at the protesters' camp in the Ratchaprasong district, with some demonstrators in tears.
'A lot of shooting'
The fresh fighting overnight along a street of upscale hotels saw the first death among the soldiers, officials said.
Guests at one of the hotels, the Dusit Thani, were rushed from their rooms into the building's basement after ******* and explosions shook the area.
RED-SHIRT PROTEST
14 Mar: Red-shirts converge on ****kok, occupy government district
16 Mar: Protesters splash their own blood at Government House
30 Mar: Talks with government ends in deadlock
3 Apr: Occupy ****kok shopping district
10 Apr: Troops try to clear protesters; 25 people are killed and hundreds injured
13-17 May: 36 killed in ****kok clashes
Obituary: Thailand's 'Commander Red'
In pictures: ****kok violence
Thai protests: Eyewitness accounts
"Everybody was evacuated from their room and spent the night in the basement," a photographer for the Reuters news agency said. "There was a lot of shooting."
Besides the deaths, about 200 people have been injured in the clashes. Previous violence since the protests began in March have left more than 60 people dead and at least 1,600 wounded.
The Dusit Thani hotel is across from Lumpini Park in a district of expensive hotels, embassies and shopping malls that has been taken over by the protesters.
Army sharpshooters behind sand-bagged barricades have been firing live rounds at protesters.
Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said the troops were "not using weapons to crack down on civilians". He said armed "*********s" among the protesters were being targeted.
The protesters, called red-shirts after the colour they have adopted, have been throwing stones, petrol bombs and fireworks at the soldiers and setting barricades of tyres on fire.
There have been reports that some among them are armed.
The latest fighting broke out after the government rejected a call from a red-shirt leader, Nattawut Saikua, to hold UN-moderated talks to end the stand-off, providing that the army withdrew from the area around the red-shirt camp.
Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn insisted that no outside help was needed.
"We reject their demands for UN mediation... No Thai government has ever let anyone intervene with our internal affairs," he said.
Protests spread
A state of emergency has now been declared in 22 provinces across the country - mostly in the protesters' northern heartlands - in a bid to stop more demonstrators heading to the capital.
Protests have spread outside the capital with a military bus set afire in the northern city of Chiang Mai and demonstrations in two north-eastern towns in defiance of a government ban.
The BBC's Chris Hogg reports on the failure to negotiate an end to the unrest
About 5,000 people remain in the encampment in Ratchaprasong, where food and water are running low amid a blockade on the area.
The BBC's Chris Hogg in ****kok says the government has guaranteed safe passage to anyone who wants to leave the protest camp, but only until mid-afternoon on Monday.
It is not clear what will happen once the deadline passes, though a military spokesman said no decision had been made on what to do next.
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has declared Monday and Tuesday as public holidays and delayed the start of ****kok's school term, but a planned curfew was cancelled.
He has already said the army will not back down in its operation to clear the protesters.
Many of the protesters are from poor rural areas in northern Thailand where support is still strong for former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup.
He is living abroad to avoid a jail term on a corruption conviction.
The protesters say the current government is illegitimate, having come to power in a parliamentary vote after a pro-Thaksin government was forced to step down in December 2008 by a Constitutional Court ruling that it had committed electoral fraud.
Are you in or close to the protest camp in ****kok? What is the situation in the area? Are you worried there'll be more violence? Send us your comments using the form below.
i remember castillo saying he started to slow and lost the first 4 rounds. Then he lost a point..WTF thats already down 5 points..i had floyd winning close with 1 hand
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