I can't find much thru google search , what I found points to ODLH which makes sense Bhop had no leverage to negotiate a catchweight.All these articles are from 2004
NY Times : From the Article The two men came into the fight looking trim and cut. De La Hoya weighed in at a trim 155, Hopkins a pound heavier, his lightest in 10 years. He said that he improved his speed, but kept his power.
Although De La Hoya was the challenger for Hopkins's three titles, De La Hoya held the leverage in negotiations for the bout.
https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/19/s...e-la-hoya.html
From Article : Handlers of De la Hoya, a relative newcomer to the middleweight ranks after claiming titles at 135, 140, 147 and 154 pounds, had pressured Hopkins to lower the top limit from the normal 160 pounds to 158, something Hopkins said made no difference to him.
"My whole career, I have been under 160," said Hopkins, 39. "It makes no difference. I know I will have to do a lot of chasing, so having less weight will help.
"The weight is not an issue," added Hopkins, who brings a record of 44-2 with one no-contest and 31 knock-outs. "I am faster than him, and I will catch him."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2004-09-...eigh-in/554624
Baltimore Sun from the article :This time, De La Hoya (37-3, 29 knockouts) fights at the MGM Grand, where Hopkins (44-2-1, 31 KOs) puts his International Boxing Federation, World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association titles on the line in what is expected to be the highest-grossing non-heavyweight fight. The two must meet a contract weight limit of 158 pounds (the actual middleweight limit is 160).
NY Times : From the Article The two men came into the fight looking trim and cut. De La Hoya weighed in at a trim 155, Hopkins a pound heavier, his lightest in 10 years. He said that he improved his speed, but kept his power.
Although De La Hoya was the challenger for Hopkins's three titles, De La Hoya held the leverage in negotiations for the bout.
https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/19/s...e-la-hoya.html
From Article : Handlers of De la Hoya, a relative newcomer to the middleweight ranks after claiming titles at 135, 140, 147 and 154 pounds, had pressured Hopkins to lower the top limit from the normal 160 pounds to 158, something Hopkins said made no difference to him.
"My whole career, I have been under 160," said Hopkins, 39. "It makes no difference. I know I will have to do a lot of chasing, so having less weight will help.
"The weight is not an issue," added Hopkins, who brings a record of 44-2 with one no-contest and 31 knock-outs. "I am faster than him, and I will catch him."
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2004-09-...eigh-in/554624
Baltimore Sun from the article :This time, De La Hoya (37-3, 29 knockouts) fights at the MGM Grand, where Hopkins (44-2-1, 31 KOs) puts his International Boxing Federation, World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association titles on the line in what is expected to be the highest-grossing non-heavyweight fight. The two must meet a contract weight limit of 158 pounds (the actual middleweight limit is 160).
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