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Comments Thread For: Cotto’s anti-establishment stance leaves GGG powerless

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  • joesaiditstrue
    replied
    i don't think anybody really wanted or expected Cotto to fight GGG, but what most of us wanted was for him to be stripped if he didn't

    hopefully this is what happens, cotto can go back down to 154 since he claims he isn't a middleweight, and can no longer hold the lineal title hostage

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  • The Problem Child
    replied
    Kneeguel Chocha is a ****ing coward. Nahul Can'telo Futuralvarez is another little bish coward as well.

    Golovkin MURDERS BOTH, on the same night.

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  • Barcham
    replied
    WOW! Another rehash of what we have been posting about around here for months now. And once again... here is the important part...

    The WBC’s president was smiling in the ring after the TKO and has suggested his alphabet group will sign off on a Cotto-Alvarez match – even though Alvarez holds no belts and has defeated no middleweight contenders – with the proviso that a pre-fight contract be drawn up guaranteeing Golovkin’s got next.
    Unfortunately Cotto and Canelo refuse to sign such a contract so I guess Cotto will be stripped. Now I'll sit back and wait for all the Cotto jockstraps to come in and ask for proof that Sulaiman actually said that, because every time I have posted that info over the past couple of weeks I have basically been called a liar.

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  • Comments Thread For: Cotto’s anti-establishment stance leaves GGG powerless

    By Lyle Fitzsimmons - For the contrarians who lament the muddled state of championship boxing and suggest we simply do away with sanctioning bodies and ignore their self-serving rules, you have a hero in your midst.

    Ladies and gentlemen, may I introduce Miguel Cotto.

    The World Boxing Council’s middleweight kingpin (for the time being, at least) struck a blow for title-level disorder Saturday night, but it wasn’t when he dispatched a bloated, non-combative Daniel Geale.

    Rather, the Puerto Rican star made his biggest statement after the fight, when he confirmed that his next trick would be to once again step through the Mexico-based organization’s mandatory challenger – Gennady Golovkin – to engineer a pay-per-view match later this year with Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.

    The WBC’s president was smiling in the ring after the TKO and has suggested his alphabet group will sign off on a Cotto-Alvarez match – even though Alvarez holds no belts and has defeated no middleweight contenders – with the proviso that a pre-fight contract be drawn up guaranteeing Golovkin’s got next. [Click Here To Read More]
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