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  • Money's worth

    Here is a great read that tells is exactly how it is. Short and sweet.


    MONEY'S WORTH: NO MATTER WHAT HE DOES, FANS WILL NEVER BE SATISFIED WITH MAYWEATHER
    By Nick Xouris - 27 September 2011 - FightHype


    Floyd Mayweather just can't win. It is a remarkable statement considering Mayweather does nothing but win, but the public reaction following Saturday nights masterpiece against Victor Ortiz was another indication that no matter what Mayweather does inside the ring, the general sports fan will never be satisfied. They say Manny Pacquiao is better. Floyd returns from a two-year layoff to shut out Juan Manuel Marquez, an opponent whom many believe beat Pacquiao twice. They say Floyd will not fight a big puncher. He annihilates Shane Mosley, after Mosley brutally knocked out Antonio Margarito. They say Floyd only fights washed up veterans. He challenges Victor Ortiz, a 24-year-old WBC welterweight champion in his prime. They say Floyd's fights are boring. He scores a fourth round knockout after walking down his opponent for much of the fight in his greatest offensive showing in years. They say Floyd landed a cheap shot; They try too hard. Lost amidst the complaining and controversy following last weekend's victory over Ortiz, is the fact that Mayweather delivered his finest performance since moving up to the welterweight division.

    In an atmosphere that could have quickly gotten ugly, Mayweather acted as the consummate professional-the most competent of the three men who occupied the ring. He could have retaliated to Ortiz' roughhouse antics in many an illegal fashion; instead, he waited for the fight to resume-and he said good night. He did exactly what we wished Pacquiao did to Mosley, each time Mosley extended a glove to touch.

    When warranted, criticism is an excellent tool. We expect the most out of our finest athletes and there are few in the sports recent memory as fine as Mayweather; If we did not think so highly of him, we would not have discussions with our friends about his inactivity, opponent selection, or in this case, the morality of a legal punch. But the fans who feel Mayweather was in the wrong this time around are off base. This was a savvy veteran goading a rookie into a false sense of security to expedite his inevitable victory. It was no different than feinting a jab.

    The Monday after Mayweather's victory, the St. Louis Rams picked up big yardage against the New York Giants by running their no-huddle offense, an offensive scheme designed to catch the defense off guard. It was not Sam Bradfords responsibility to check with Corey Webster or Aaron Ross to make sure that the defense was ready. They were on the field, so Bradford snapped the ball. Mayweather snapped the ball. When Mayweather will next snap the ball is the billion-dollar question. Against Ortiz, Mayweather walked to the ring with 50 Cent. He walked out of it with 50 million.

    Suffice to say we may not see him for a while. But when we do, will it finally be against Pacquiao? It is far too early to tell-for now, Amir Khan seems more likely. Bob Arum would not be signing Timothy Bradley if Pacquiao intended to agree to Olympic-style drug testing. But one thing is for sure: If we are promised the offensive-minded Floyd Mayweather who fought Victor Ortiz, boxing fans will undoubtedly be getting their Money's worth.

    http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content10862.html

  • #2
    You are one of the worst *****'s on this site.

    It seems like FightHype is the new ***** Wikipedia.

    You will totally love the North Korean website, they post alot of good articles on there how good NK is doing.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Medved View Post
      You are one of the worst *****'s on this site.

      It seems like FightHype is the new ***** Wikipedia.

      You will totally love the North Korean website, they post alot of good articles on there how good NK is doing.
      Do I intimidate you?

      Comment


      • #4
        Its just something that is part of boxing culture with fans and pundits...theres always a way to slant something either in a positive way or negative way. No matter the fight theres always a story why it wasn't that great afterall.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by WESS View Post
          Here is a great read that tells is exactly how it is. Short and sweet.


          MONEY'S WORTH: NO MATTER WHAT HE DOES, FANS WILL NEVER BE SATISFIED WITH MAYWEATHER
          By Nick Xouris - 27 September 2011 - FightHype


          Floyd Mayweather just can't win. It is a remarkable statement considering Mayweather does nothing but win, but the public reaction following Saturday nights masterpiece against Victor Ortiz was another indication that no matter what Mayweather does inside the ring, the general sports fan will never be satisfied. They say Manny Pacquiao is better. Floyd returns from a two-year layoff to shut out Juan Manuel Marquez, an opponent whom many believe beat Pacquiao twice. They say Floyd will not fight a big puncher. He annihilates Shane Mosley, after Mosley brutally knocked out Antonio Margarito. They say Floyd only fights washed up veterans. He challenges Victor Ortiz, a 24-year-old WBC welterweight champion in his prime. They say Floyd's fights are boring. He scores a fourth round knockout after walking down his opponent for much of the fight in his greatest offensive showing in years. They say Floyd landed a cheap shot; They try too hard. Lost amidst the complaining and controversy following last weekend's victory over Ortiz, is the fact that Mayweather delivered his finest performance since moving up to the welterweight division.

          In an atmosphere that could have quickly gotten ugly, Mayweather acted as the consummate professional-the most competent of the three men who occupied the ring. He could have retaliated to Ortiz' roughhouse antics in many an illegal fashion; instead, he waited for the fight to resume-and he said good night. He did exactly what we wished Pacquiao did to Mosley, each time Mosley extended a glove to touch.

          When warranted, criticism is an excellent tool. We expect the most out of our finest athletes and there are few in the sports recent memory as fine as Mayweather; If we did not think so highly of him, we would not have discussions with our friends about his inactivity, opponent selection, or in this case, the morality of a legal punch. But the fans who feel Mayweather was in the wrong this time around are off base. This was a savvy veteran goading a rookie into a false sense of security to expedite his inevitable victory. It was no different than feinting a jab.

          The Monday after Mayweather's victory, the St. Louis Rams picked up big yardage against the New York Giants by running their no-huddle offense, an offensive scheme designed to catch the defense off guard. It was not Sam Bradfords responsibility to check with Corey Webster or Aaron Ross to make sure that the defense was ready. They were on the field, so Bradford snapped the ball. Mayweather snapped the ball. When Mayweather will next snap the ball is the billion-dollar question. Against Ortiz, Mayweather walked to the ring with 50 Cent. He walked out of it with 50 million.

          Suffice to say we may not see him for a while. But when we do, will it finally be against Pacquiao? It is far too early to tell-for now, Amir Khan seems more likely. Bob Arum would not be signing Timothy Bradley if Pacquiao intended to agree to Olympic-style drug testing. But one thing is for sure: If we are promised the offensive-minded Floyd Mayweather who fought Victor Ortiz, boxing fans will undoubtedly be getting their Money's worth.

          http://www.fighthype.com/pages/content10862.html
          Human beings always hate what they can't be... Mayweather has never lost so basically they have to acknowledge his greatness (which they can't... he isn't very likeable) or it must have been because he fought nobodies...

          He fought nothing but champions almost his whole career - through 5 weigh classes - undefeated - best defensive minded offensive fighter ever - best or second best 130 pounder ever... you don't get that by fighting no ones... calling him not great because of his 147 run and 140 run (140 wasn't his fault at all... he wanted guys like Cotto and Hatton)... blaming him for his 147 run is like blaming Ray Leonard that his 160/168 run wasn't as good as his 147 run... who are we kidding here Wess *lol*

          Let them hate - they can't accept greatness... they were happy when Ali finally lost - a lot of ppl were happy when Leonard lost - when Robinson lost - it is just in their mind that they can be satisfied with the fact somebody isn't perfect - somebody has a fault just like themselves... basically it is their own weakness which makes them hate Mayweather's perfection in the ring... I mean they are hyping and celebrate if Mosley wins one round against him (if it's even matter) - they celebrate that Mosley, Corley hurt him (if it's even matter) - they are happy that Ortiz was coming on and winning the 4th round (it's not true but even if does it matter)

          PPL hate Mayweather because of their own weakness... a guy who has such a big mouth, who acts like a child at times, who has problems with the law and and and can't be better then them right? Mayweather gives them what they want and they pay him... it's the bottom line - no one cared for him as he was nice, smiling, shaking hands, beating top opponents... no one... now where he is the villain the ppl pay him for that and he continues with it... it is simple...

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by WESS View Post
            Do I intimidate you?
            YES YOU INTIMIDATE HIM.......LOL

            YOU REALLY DO, NOTICE HE DIDNT RESPOND TO THE TOPIC, HE WENT ON ABOUT YOU AND NORTH KOREA LOL!!!!!!

            NORTH ****IN KOREA!!!!

            I didn't see that **** coming I ain't gonna lie...lol

            Comment


            • #7
              if you're satisfied with ortiz-mayweather, you're a mayweather fan, not a boxing fan

              Comment


              • #8
                fighthype.

                im shocked!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Ugh! View Post
                  if you're satisfied with ortiz-mayweather, you're a mayweather fan, not a boxing fan
                  Do champions not fight champions? Was Ortiz not the #2 WW Champion at the time?

                  Who besides Pac, should have fought Floyd (@ WW)?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by WESS View Post
                    Do champions not fight champions? Was Ortiz not the #2 WW Champion at the time?

                    Who besides Pac, should have fought Floyd (@ WW)?
                    im talking about the ending no the choice of opponent

                    Comment

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