Dude give it up. I understand that Mayweather didn't always do what fans wanted him to do, but that's also the case of many fighters, not just Mayweather. He still accomplished more than most other fighters of the modern era.
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Floyd Mayweather NEVER DARED TO BE GREAT
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Putting you on ignore cuz you are clearly not worth reading. And its not for making the customary Floyd post all the rookie or subpar trolls here like to make to win friends & influence dummies, but because I was expecting some humor & "Colon McTapper" did not make me even crack a fake smile on your behalf nor did anything else you said.
I hope your ability to entertain (assuming that was your goal here) or to better put together an argument about something as dated as Floyd's greatness or lack thereof improves in the future. I'm rooting for you.
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Originally posted by SonnyboyReturns View PostHe only dared to be elite, but not a Great. He just dared to be elite long enough to be a Great, but never intentionally dared to be Great. Moreover he never fought a great fighter in his prime. 50-0, but rather hollow.
Facts about age
- It's ring age that matters, not 'age'. Pipino Cuevas HOF was finished by 24 years old, Wilfried Benitez also in his 20's, Morales approaching 30. Hopkins was at the elite level in his 40's.
Defensive styles and higher weight classes add to longevity.
Mayweather didn't rise up the weight classes in order to fight greats.
Floyd RETIRES when he doesn't want to fight stylistic threats. He was surrounded by prime Pacquiao, prime Williams, prime Margarito and prime Cotto during 2007-2009 but fought none of them.
Juan Manuel Marquez
1. Outweighed by 4lbs in the weigh in, being involved in one of the biggest catchweight frauds in boxing history.
2. Put on weight the incorrect way. Was slow, chubby. He later put on the weight properly (some boxing ****ysts say potentially by cheating, with him showing visible signs of an HGH gut).
3. Completely stylistically disadvantaged.
Conclusion: Marquez in this condition was poor. Not a great win at all.
Shane Mosley
1. 38 year old, ancient artefact. Relied on speed and athleticism in his younger days - this is what made him great.
2. 1.5 years after his winning performance against tailor-made Antonio Margarito.
3. Shane Mosley of 2007 = razor close war with Cotto.
Shane Mosley of 2000-2003 = razor close war with ATG De La Hoya.
There are many levels between prime De La Hoya and Cotto. That's how far Mosley had fallen since 2007. Now add another 3 years, and you have an archaeological discovery from the Neolithic period.
(Pacquiao gets no credit for this win, either).
Oscar De La Hoya
1. 2007 version of Oscar. He was completely past prime. This was 3 YEARS after his clear loss to Felix Sturm.
2. Oscar had been in wars throughout his whole career, fought so many Great fighters at-or-near their primes. He was war torn and wasn't even seen as much of a boxer anymore.
3. He was depressed, coke addicted. Not bothered about boxing anymore, and was more interested in promoting. He had an awful showing against Steven Forbes immediately after.
(Manny Pacquiao gets no credit for the win over a dead Oscar).
4. Regardless of whether Floyd had to fight at 154, that doesn't actually change the fact that Oscar was completely past prime and couldn't pull the trigger anymore. Floyd had major speed advantages.
5. Prime Oscar had a reputation of losing stamina across the stretch. Now imagine a 2007 version, this effect was even greater. This is what allowed Mayweather to win the last four rounds (I had it 8-4 Mayweather), not any adaptive ability.
Manny Pacquiao
Pacquiao was semi-shot for the following reasons:
NB: Semi-shot doesn't mean 'sucks'
1. Aggressive Style, being well over age 30.
2. The expiration dates of fighters spending the majority of their career in the lower weight classes is far quicker. Manny Pacquiao was from the Light Flyweight, Flyweight, Bantamweight, Featherweight divisions.
3. Manny Pacquiao was completely and utterly war torn. He fell from prime since 2010! He had been in so many wars...against ATG's and elite fighters. The Margarito fight took the prime out of Pacquiao. I can't think of any great fighter in the last 25 years who has been in wars against as many great fighters. He looked so lacklustre against Mosley and Marquez. It was consensus that he was fading, and that he had lost the 'killer instinct'.
4. Mayweather's prime weight was 130 (where he started). His speed, power etc. was greater in those weight classes, he was also younger then.
Pacquiao actually started at 106lbs (Light Flyweight). 6 weight Divisions from 106-130.
Pacquiao's speed, power, athleticism etc. was ECHELONS GREATER at the lower weights. Manny Pacquiao hasn't even knocked anyone out at welterweight since Cotto. So Floyd fought the softest possible Pac.
Mayweather is the naturally bigger man with the considerably bigger frame. I am DISGUSTED he couldn't knock little Pac out, shame on him. To make it worse, he only "beat" him on the basis of a couple of light jabs.
5. Pacquiao's killer instinct was already lost, but the KTFO6 by Marquez 3 YEARS PRIOR to the Mayweather fight, had eliminated all traces of killer instinct. He became so cautious. He was no longer the fighter who would take shots from bigger, HARD PUNCHERS like Cotto, Margarito, Morales, Barrera, Marquez and Hatton, to land his own. Pac at this stage of his career couldn't even walk over a featherfist in Mayweather.
6. Increasing emphasis on pure boxing in his career, especially after being KTFO6 by Marquez. This makes his game more predictable to 'boxers'. His crudeness was decreased, his unorthodox manner of aggression had wilted. KTFO6 made Roach turn a lot more towards pure boxing.
The very thing that Manny had when prime, was lost. His very threat was in his killer instinct, his ability to take punches to land his own, and his crudeness. All three had been diminished.
- This is actually a key point in such discussions.
7. Pacquiao had been more devoted to his career as a congressman, focussing on big boy careers, not mere boxing.
8. Pacquiao had a legitimate shoulder injury that Ellerbe was aware of. Pacquiao had a bad camp due to the injury, unable to take a legal painkiller, too. The OFFICIAL MEDICAL STATEMENT is that Manny Pacquiao had surgery for a torn rotator cuff, a 'significant tear'.
9. Mayweather was apparently so dehydrated that he needed IV's (which are known to be used in sports to mask PED use). Mayweather had the T/E ratio of a 128.5 year old man.
Mayweather is not worthy of much credit for this win over 'number 48'.
Miguel Cotto
1. The late resurgence in Cotto's career has been due to new tactics under Freddie Roach. Cotto wasn't Roach-trained for Mayweather.
2. Cotto before Roach went on to look so flat and mediocre against gatekeeper Austin Trout.
3. This isn't the killer 140lb or 147lb Cotto, by the way. Cotto is past it. War torn.
4. Cotto would be LUCKY to make HOF, and a large part of it will be due to his popularity. Even if he does I don't consider him a great fighter.
Ricky Hatton
1. Mayweather dragged Ricky up to welterweight. Ricky said he didn't feel good there.
2. Ricky Hatton should have lost to Collazo - it was at 147 and he looked bad. Went back down, looked good.
3. Ricky Hatton is no HOF'er. If he gets in, it's largely on the basis of popularity. Definitely not a great fighter.
Jose Luis Castillo
1. In the opinion of many, Mayweather lost the first fight.
2. Rematches always favour the boxer, by the way.
3. Mayweather knows what it's like to have a torn rotator cuff, hence him losing to Castillo. Yet Pacquiao is talked down on for his SIGNIFICANT torn rotator cuff. Where is the medical statement to prove Mayweather had a torn rotator cuff/got surgery for it? Was it even a SIGNIFICANT tear?
4. Mayweather did very well to beat this major stylistic threat in the rematch. Castillo would be LUCKY to make HOF, in my opinion he's definitely not. But if he does, he's on the lowest possible tier and not a great fighter.
Diego Corrales
1. Not a HOF'er. Just very good.
2. Corrales was heavily overweight and had to crash diet, he took the fight because he needed money to pay lawyers. He was severely drained.
Canelo Alvarez
1. Green. Only 22-23 years old.
2. Catchweight king antics by Floyd. Canelo is a real middleweight who was making a mockery of boxing fighting at 154. Floyd dragged him to 152lbs.
3. Canelo was massively stylistically disadvantaged. Can't cut off the ring, plodder with telegraphed punches.
4. Good win despite all of this tbh.
Marcos Rene Maidana
1. Marcos arguably beat Mayweather. Mayweather fanboys consistently have differing views on what rounds Maidana won, thus making a case for a Maidana victory. I had it a draw. A draw against a B grade fighter.
2. Mayweather won the rematch, well done, you beat a B grader.
Genaro Hernandez
1. Clearly aged over night. At 32 years old, he looked very old. He had a long career. Lacked any sort of sharpness or energy.
2. Massively stylistically disadvantaged.
Colon McTapper
1. Self explanatory
Everyone else are just chumps like fat, blown up featherweight Guerrero, quitter Ortiz, Andre 440k PPV Berto, past prime Sharmba Mitchell, Zab Judah who Mayweather should have lost to by disqualification (Roger ran into the ring).
good post and thanks for supporting your opinion... this is a forum and I don't get why people always get mad at ur opinion... just rebuttal and keep it flowing....i see why so many take long to post anything or dont post at all....why get mad at someone's opinion? smh....
floyd in my opinion the TBE in the business aspect of the sport but falls short as being the TBE at the boxing side of things.
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sure floyd could have done some different match ups to further expand his greatness but what he did achieve was still incredible for you to sit there and break down almost every fight he had and make reasons why you consider it a nothing victory smacks of hate you can rip apart ANY fighters resume if you really are that picky
the guy went undefeated in over 2 decades of pro boxing and retired at near 40 claimed belts in multiple weight classes fought countless champions and title fights he was the best of his era hands down just accept it and move on its history now you can't change it in 50 years time your thread will be internet dog**** and floyd will be in the history books and praised more than he is now
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Look, Floyd's the best fighter of his generation by a large margin, but didn't take the risks that we as fans wanted him to.
I got no problem saying that he's top 10-15 all-time, but can't break into the top 5 because of his matchmaking.
Why he either has to be GOAT or a bum is beyond me.
Yes, he was great, one of the greatest ever, but he could have been greater had he taken more risks.
Why can't we just leave it at that?
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Originally posted by PanchoGomez View Postgood post and thanks for supporting your opinion... this is a forum and I don't get why people always get mad at ur opinion... just rebuttal and keep it flowing....i see why so many take long to post anything or dont post at all....why get mad at someone's opinion? smh....
floyd in my opinion the TBE in the business aspect of the sport but falls short as being the TBE at the boxing side of things.
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Add to this he arguably lost to De la Hoya and Pacquiao. Arguably is here to make his fans happy, it's proved he lost
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Originally posted by SonnyboyReturns View PostHe only dared to be elite, but not a Great. He just dared to be elite long enough to be a Great, but never intentionally dared to be Great. Moreover he never fought a great fighter in his prime. 50-0, but rather hollow.
Facts about age
- It's ring age that matters, not 'age'. Pipino Cuevas HOF was finished by 24 years old, Wilfried Benitez also in his 20's, Morales approaching 30. Hopkins was at the elite level in his 40's.
Defensive styles and higher weight classes add to longevity.
Mayweather didn't rise up the weight classes in order to fight greats.
Floyd RETIRES when he doesn't want to fight stylistic threats. He was surrounded by prime Pacquiao, prime Williams, prime Margarito and prime Cotto during 2007-2009 but fought none of them.
Juan Manuel Marquez
1. Outweighed by 4lbs in the weigh in, being involved in one of the biggest catchweight frauds in boxing history.
2. Put on weight the incorrect way. Was slow, chubby. He later put on the weight properly (some boxing ****ysts say potentially by cheating, with him showing visible signs of an HGH gut).
3. Completely stylistically disadvantaged.
Conclusion: Marquez in this condition was poor. Not a great win at all.
Shane Mosley
1. 38 year old, ancient artefact. Relied on speed and athleticism in his younger days - this is what made him great.
2. 1.5 years after his winning performance against tailor-made Antonio Margarito.
3. Shane Mosley of 2007 = razor close war with Cotto.
Shane Mosley of 2000-2003 = razor close war with ATG De La Hoya.
There are many levels between prime De La Hoya and Cotto. That's how far Mosley had fallen since 2007. Now add another 3 years, and you have an archaeological discovery from the Neolithic period.
(Pacquiao gets no credit for this win, either).
Oscar De La Hoya
1. 2007 version of Oscar. He was completely past prime. This was 3 YEARS after his clear loss to Felix Sturm.
2. Oscar had been in wars throughout his whole career, fought so many Great fighters at-or-near their primes. He was war torn and wasn't even seen as much of a boxer anymore.
3. He was depressed, coke addicted. Not bothered about boxing anymore, and was more interested in promoting. He had an awful showing against Steven Forbes immediately after.
(Manny Pacquiao gets no credit for the win over a dead Oscar).
4. Regardless of whether Floyd had to fight at 154, that doesn't actually change the fact that Oscar was completely past prime and couldn't pull the trigger anymore. Floyd had major speed advantages.
5. Prime Oscar had a reputation of losing stamina across the stretch. Now imagine a 2007 version, this effect was even greater. This is what allowed Mayweather to win the last four rounds (I had it 8-4 Mayweather), not any adaptive ability.
Manny Pacquiao
Pacquiao was semi-shot for the following reasons:
NB: Semi-shot doesn't mean 'sucks'
1. Aggressive Style, being well over age 30.
2. The expiration dates of fighters spending the majority of their career in the lower weight classes is far quicker. Manny Pacquiao was from the Light Flyweight, Flyweight, Bantamweight, Featherweight divisions.
3. Manny Pacquiao was completely and utterly war torn. He fell from prime since 2010! He had been in so many wars...against ATG's and elite fighters. The Margarito fight took the prime out of Pacquiao. I can't think of any great fighter in the last 25 years who has been in wars against as many great fighters. He looked so lacklustre against Mosley and Marquez. It was consensus that he was fading, and that he had lost the 'killer instinct'.
4. Mayweather's prime weight was 130 (where he started). His speed, power etc. was greater in those weight classes, he was also younger then.
Pacquiao actually started at 106lbs (Light Flyweight). 6 weight Divisions from 106-130.
Pacquiao's speed, power, athleticism etc. was ECHELONS GREATER at the lower weights. Manny Pacquiao hasn't even knocked anyone out at welterweight since Cotto. So Floyd fought the softest possible Pac.
Mayweather is the naturally bigger man with the considerably bigger frame. I am DISGUSTED he couldn't knock little Pac out, shame on him. To make it worse, he only "beat" him on the basis of a couple of light jabs.
5. Pacquiao's killer instinct was already lost, but the KTFO6 by Marquez 3 YEARS PRIOR to the Mayweather fight, had eliminated all traces of killer instinct. He became so cautious. He was no longer the fighter who would take shots from bigger, HARD PUNCHERS like Cotto, Margarito, Morales, Barrera, Marquez and Hatton, to land his own. Pac at this stage of his career couldn't even walk over a featherfist in Mayweather.
6. Increasing emphasis on pure boxing in his career, especially after being KTFO6 by Marquez. This makes his game more predictable to 'boxers'. His crudeness was decreased, his unorthodox manner of aggression had wilted. KTFO6 made Roach turn a lot more towards pure boxing.
The very thing that Manny had when prime, was lost. His very threat was in his killer instinct, his ability to take punches to land his own, and his crudeness. All three had been diminished.
- This is actually a key point in such discussions.
7. Pacquiao had been more devoted to his career as a congressman, focussing on big boy careers, not mere boxing.
8. Pacquiao had a legitimate shoulder injury that Ellerbe was aware of. Pacquiao had a bad camp due to the injury, unable to take a legal painkiller, too. The OFFICIAL MEDICAL STATEMENT is that Manny Pacquiao had surgery for a torn rotator cuff, a 'significant tear'.
9. Mayweather was apparently so dehydrated that he needed IV's (which are known to be used in sports to mask PED use). Mayweather had the T/E ratio of a 128.5 year old man.
Mayweather is not worthy of much credit for this win over 'number 48'.
Miguel Cotto
1. The late resurgence in Cotto's career has been due to new tactics under Freddie Roach. Cotto wasn't Roach-trained for Mayweather.
2. Cotto before Roach went on to look so flat and mediocre against gatekeeper Austin Trout.
3. This isn't the killer 140lb or 147lb Cotto, by the way. Cotto is past it. War torn.
4. Cotto would be LUCKY to make HOF, and a large part of it will be due to his popularity. Even if he does I don't consider him a great fighter.
Ricky Hatton
1. Mayweather dragged Ricky up to welterweight. Ricky said he didn't feel good there.
2. Ricky Hatton should have lost to Collazo - it was at 147 and he looked bad. Went back down, looked good.
3. Ricky Hatton is no HOF'er. If he gets in, it's largely on the basis of popularity. Definitely not a great fighter.
Jose Luis Castillo
1. In the opinion of many, Mayweather lost the first fight.
2. Rematches always favour the boxer, by the way.
3. Mayweather knows what it's like to have a torn rotator cuff, hence him losing to Castillo. Yet Pacquiao is talked down on for his SIGNIFICANT torn rotator cuff. Where is the medical statement to prove Mayweather had a torn rotator cuff/got surgery for it? Was it even a SIGNIFICANT tear?
4. Mayweather did very well to beat this major stylistic threat in the rematch. Castillo would be LUCKY to make HOF, in my opinion he's definitely not. But if he does, he's on the lowest possible tier and not a great fighter.
Diego Corrales
1. Not a HOF'er. Just very good.
2. Corrales was heavily overweight and had to crash diet, he took the fight because he needed money to pay lawyers. He was severely drained.
Canelo Alvarez
1. Green. Only 22-23 years old.
2. Catchweight king antics by Floyd. Canelo is a real middleweight who was making a mockery of boxing fighting at 154. Floyd dragged him to 152lbs.
3. Canelo was massively stylistically disadvantaged. Can't cut off the ring, plodder with telegraphed punches.
4. Good win despite all of this tbh.
Marcos Rene Maidana
1. Marcos arguably beat Mayweather. Mayweather fanboys consistently have differing views on what rounds Maidana won, thus making a case for a Maidana victory. I had it a draw. A draw against a B grade fighter.
2. Mayweather won the rematch, well done, you beat a B grader.
Genaro Hernandez
1. Clearly aged over night. At 32 years old, he looked very old. He had a long career. Lacked any sort of sharpness or energy.
2. Massively stylistically disadvantaged.
Colon McTapper
1. Self explanatory
Everyone else are just chumps like fat, blown up featherweight Guerrero, quitter Ortiz, Andre 440k PPV Berto, past prime Sharmba Mitchell, Zab Judah who Mayweather should have lost to by disqualification (Roger ran into the ring).
Wow, that's a lot of excuses. Can you name a single welterweight that went undefeated through a tougher stretch than Mayweather did in the last decade? Is your life that hallow that the guy who beat better competition than anybody else is the one you're obsessively picking apart to prove he didn't beat great competition?
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