Originally posted by Reloaded
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Comments Thread For: Floyd Mayweather Sr: Where Did Pacquiao's Power Go?
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Originally posted by D4thincarnation View Posthttp://www.maxboxing.com/news/max-bo...-mess-part-one
http://www.maxboxing.com/news/max-bo...-mess-part-two
On May 20, 2012, a rumor filtered through the drug-testing community that Mayweather had tested positive on three occasions for an illegal performance-enhancing drug.
Thank you kindly for the interesting reads!!!!!
Speaks volumes when this idiot family screams peds but their son/nephew is the one failing exams.
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Originally posted by ThePrince View PostMargarito was 165 lbs on fight night:
Mosley vs Manny's nonexistent power:
Bradley after 'beating' Pacquiao:
This is what Marquez looked like after a KO win in just 6 rounds:
Ask Algieri if Pacquiao lost his power:
If Sr really thinks Pac's power is gone just because he's not getting KOs, then he's in for an even bigger surprise than he got when he was working Hatton's corner.
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Originally posted by brown_knight06 View PostThank you kindly for the interesting reads!!!!!
Speaks volumes when this idiot family screams peds but their son/nephew is the one failing exams.
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Shane V Manny
"His foot doe..."
"I can't move..." ~Shane
"His foot was bothering him..."~ Nazeem.
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Originally posted by D4thincarnation View PostAriza is a smokescreen, Memo is the one that will get results with Floyd.
Ariza is just there so Floyd can say, Pacquiao used Ariza when he come in looking like Bane for fight night.
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Originally posted by Bolopunch68 View PostOh no!!! Why did you post that? Were having so much fun.... Anyways, let's see how they'll spin that crap.
Its crazy how fraud can have fans and yet a reputable reporter like Hauser conducted such an investigation. How this report did not go widespread is even stranger then these absurd allegations.
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Originally posted by brown_knight06 View PostLMAO!!!
Its crazy how fraud can have fans and yet a reputable reporter like Hauser conducted such an investigation. How this report did not go widespread is even stranger then these absurd allegations.
Then the things he pointed, even he said were RUMOR. Which is usually gossip out of thin air.
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Originally posted by radioraheem View PostBecause Hauser is not as 'reputable' as you think. Second, he's made a number of quite biased articles. He's not a great journalist that keeps opinions out of a piece, and instead shines his opinions all over it rather than letting facts speak for themselves. You'll find his articles flooded with hearsay, opinions, anonymous sources, etc. The very ingredients of 'cooked' pieces.
Then the things he pointed, even he said were RUMOR. Which is usually gossip out of thin air.
Thomas Hauser
Thomas Hauser has been called “one of boxing’s greatest writers". The Boxing Scene, Hauser’s provocative new anthology, contains all of his trademark insights and candor as he peels away layers of hypocrisy to reveal the men who make up the contemporary boxing landscape.
Hauser exposes the inner workings of HBO Sports; examines the phenomenon of mixed martial arts as it relates to boxing; and records the amusing encounter between his 81-year-old mother and larger-than-life boxing impresario Don King. The Boxing Scene also updates Hauser’s personal and professional thoughts on superstars like Oscar De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto, and Bernard Hopkins as well as fight promoter Bob Arum, announcer Bob Sheridan and a host of others.
The Boxing Scene recreates another year in professional boxing and adds to Hauser’s definitive record of the sport.
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Excerpt
Reviews
"Thomas Hauser is back with his latest compilation of boxing features and columns, this one entitled 'The Boxing Scene'. The boxing insider’s insider, Hauser continues to amaze with hard-hitting pieces that get right to the heart of this sometimes seedy business. But it’s not all doom and gloom, as evidenced by in-depth looks at John Duddy, Kelly Pavlik, Bernard Hopkins, and Miguel Cotto, along with more lighthearted pieces such as those on press conference food spreads and the time Hauser’s mother met Don King. While you may not always agree with his take on things (I particularly take issue with his piece on mixed martial arts), you will always be captivated by his work. Highly recommended."
— Maxboxing.com
"[Hauser's] fascination with boxing began in the late 1970s.... What draws him to the fight game is his fascination with the people who populate the business: fighters, trainers, promoters, broadcasters, and even strippers, one of whom, Tempest Storm, a sharecropper's daughter who counts Elvis and JFK among her lovers, is the subject of one of this volume's most affecting profiles.... Hauser remains one of the best [boxing writers]...this volume...[is] damn good."
— Booklist
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About the Author(s)
Thomas Hauser is the author of 36 books, including Missing, which served as the basis for the Academy Award-winning film: Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times; and co-author (with Ali) of Healing: A Journal of Tolerance and Understanding. He has won numerous awards for his work, including the prestigious Prix Lafayette Award, the William Hill Book of the Year Award and the Nat Fleischer Award for Career Excellence in Boxing Journalism. He has written articles for The New Yorker, The New York Times and numerous other publications.
Gee, who am I going to believe? Some dweeb named radioraheem, or the prestigious Temple University?
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