Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ESPN P4P Rankings: Floyd Mayweather JR Number 1 P4P

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ESPN P4P Rankings: Floyd Mayweather JR Number 1 P4P

    ESPN

    1. Floyd Mayweather Jr

    Hits: Even after 16 months out of the ring following his near shutout of Shane Mosley in May 2010, Mayweather returned to action on Sept. 17 and showed not the slightest bit of rust. Still fast and possessing great defense and underrated power, Mayweather knocked out Victor Ortiz (albeit in controversial fashion) in the fourth round to reclaim one of the titles he had previously given up. Now, instead of disappearing on another long layoff, Mayweather has announced plans to return on May 5, ideally against Manny Pacquiao -- if Pacquiao's people will come to the bargaining table.

    Misses: It's great that Mayweather seems to be showing real interest in finally facing Pacquiao, but since Pacquiao just fought, how about giving him a little bit of time to unwind before insisting on a negotiation right now? Where was that kind of urgency at any point in the past few years?

    2. Manny Pacquiao

    Hits: Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez, who had already produced two memorable battles in featherweight and junior lightweight title bouts, met for the third time Nov. 12 and gave fight fans a worthy trilogy with another outstanding and highly competitive fight. With Pacquiao's victory, the path is wide open for him to at long last meet Mayweather in the fight the world wants to see.

    Misses: Pacquiao, who was a massive favorite to beat Marquez because they were fighting at welterweight, looked as vulnerable as he has in a long time. Although he eked out a majority decision, few would have quarreled had Marquez gotten the win or had the fight been ruled a draw. Pacquiao looked confused at times and lacked snap on his punches in a less-than-stellar outing. It just wasn't the kind of performance we have come to expect from Pacquiao, especially in light of the fact that Marquez had been wiped out by Mayweather in 2009 in his only other welterweight fight. Although a fourth fight with Marquez is certainly warranted at some point, it absolutely should not be next, which is what Top Rank's Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter, is talking about pursuing. Mayweather should be next, and it's going to have to be up to Pacquiao to stand up to Arum and tell him to make a deal. Period.

    http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/id...boxers-nos-1-3


    SPORTS ILLUSTRATED

    1. Floyd Mayweather JR

    The Latest: Mayweather says he's secured the MGM Grand for May 5 and wants to make "the biggest fight out there" -- and it's no secret what that is. But will Pacquiao be in any hurry to make it happen after getting touched up by an opponent who is stylistically identical to Floyd?

    2. Manny Pacquiao

    The Latest: The only eight-division champion in history won a razor-thin decision over Marquez on Nov. 12. Bob Arum says a fourth Marquez fight should (and could) be next, but most fans would rather see a showdown between the fighters who rank 1-2 on virtually every pound-for-pound list.

    Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...#ixzz1e5BDy9Ef

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/201...sct=mma_t2_a13

    YAHOO SPORTS

    1. Floyd Mayweather Jr.

    Points: 419 (29 of 44 first-place votes)
    Record: 42-0 (26 KOs)
    Title: WBC welterweight champion
    Last outing: KO4 over Victor Ortiz on Sept. 17
    Previous ranking: 2
    Up next:Nothing scheduled
    Analysis:Will the Pacquiao fight ever be made?

    2. Manny Pacquiao

    Points: 407 (15 of 44 first-place votes)
    Record: 54-3-2 (38 KOs)
    Title: WBO welterweight champion
    Last outing: W12 over No. T4 Juan Manuel Marquez on Nov. 12
    Previous ranking: 1
    Up next: Nothing scheduled
    Analysis:Reputation took a hit with performance against Marquez

    http://sports.yahoo.com/box/news?slu...pacquiao111711
    Last edited by Come∂ian; 11-18-2011, 01:25 PM.

  • #2
    The way it should be

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Come∂ian View Post
      1. Floyd Mayweather Jr

      Hits: Even after 16 months out of the ring following his near shutout of Shane Mosley in May 2010, Mayweather returned to action on Sept. 17 and showed not the slightest bit of rust. Still fast and possessing great defense and underrated power, Mayweather knocked out Victor Ortiz (albeit in controversial fashion) in the fourth round to reclaim one of the titles he had previously given up. Now, instead of disappearing on another long layoff, Mayweather has announced plans to return on May 5, ideally against Manny Pacquiao -- if Pacquiao's people will come to the bargaining table.

      Misses: It's great that Mayweather seems to be showing real interest in finally facing Pacquiao, but since Pacquiao just fought, how about giving him a little bit of time to unwind before insisting on a negotiation right now? Where was that kind of urgency at any point in the past few years?

      2. Manny Pacquiao

      Hits: Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez, who had already produced two memorable battles in featherweight and junior lightweight title bouts, met for the third time Nov. 12 and gave fight fans a worthy trilogy with another outstanding and highly competitive fight. With Pacquiao's victory, the path is wide open for him to at long last meet Mayweather in the fight the world wants to see.

      Misses: Pacquiao, who was a massive favorite to beat Marquez because they were fighting at welterweight, looked as vulnerable as he has in a long time. Although he eked out a majority decision, few would have quarreled had Marquez gotten the win or had the fight been ruled a draw. Pacquiao looked confused at times and lacked snap on his punches in a less-than-stellar outing. It just wasn't the kind of performance we have come to expect from Pacquiao, especially in light of the fact that Marquez had been wiped out by Mayweather in 2009 in his only other welterweight fight. Although a fourth fight with Marquez is certainly warranted at some point, it absolutely should not be next, which is what Top Rank's Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter, is talking about pursuing. Mayweather should be next, and it's going to have to be up to Pacquiao to stand up to Arum and tell him to make a deal. Period.

      http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/id...boxers-nos-1-3
      Indeed although you can tell it killed Dan Rafael to give Floyd any props.

      Comment


      • #4
        Odd, one fight and hes number 1

        Fair though.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Come∂ian View Post
          1. Floyd Mayweather Jr

          Hits: Even after 16 months out of the ring following his near shutout of Shane Mosley in May 2010, Mayweather returned to action on Sept. 17 and showed not the slightest bit of rust. Still fast and possessing great defense and underrated power, Mayweather knocked out Victor Ortiz (albeit in controversial fashion) in the fourth round to reclaim one of the titles he had previously given up. Now, instead of disappearing on another long layoff, Mayweather has announced plans to return on May 5, ideally against Manny Pacquiao -- if Pacquiao's people will come to the bargaining table.

          Misses: It's great that Mayweather seems to be showing real interest in finally facing Pacquiao, but since Pacquiao just fought, how about giving him a little bit of time to unwind before insisting on a negotiation right now? Where was that kind of urgency at any point in the past few years?

          2. Manny Pacquiao

          Hits: Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez, who had already produced two memorable battles in featherweight and junior lightweight title bouts, met for the third time Nov. 12 and gave fight fans a worthy trilogy with another outstanding and highly competitive fight. With Pacquiao's victory, the path is wide open for him to at long last meet Mayweather in the fight the world wants to see.

          Misses: Pacquiao, who was a massive favorite to beat Marquez because they were fighting at welterweight, looked as vulnerable as he has in a long time. Although he eked out a majority decision, few would have quarreled had Marquez gotten the win or had the fight been ruled a draw. Pacquiao looked confused at times and lacked snap on his punches in a less-than-stellar outing. It just wasn't the kind of performance we have come to expect from Pacquiao, especially in light of the fact that Marquez had been wiped out by Mayweather in 2009 in his only other welterweight fight. Although a fourth fight with Marquez is certainly warranted at some point, it absolutely should not be next, which is what Top Rank's Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter, is talking about pursuing. Mayweather should be next, and it's going to have to be up to Pacquiao to stand up to Arum and tell him to make a deal. Period.

          http://espn.go.com/boxing/story/_/id...boxers-nos-1-3
          Based on last 2 fights for each fighter you have to put floyd #!.

          Comment


          • #6
            I love it. PacJuice should be #4, not 2. Oh well, phuck him, at least he's not #1. Mabuhay.

            Comment


            • #7
              Anyone know where Rafael has Marquez at?

              Mayweather was also moved up in the Sports Illustrated list.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by DoktorSleepless View Post
                Anyone know where Rafael has Marquez at?

                Mayweather was also moved up in the Sports Illustrated list.
                Ringside seems to be the only ones who dont see the light

                Comment


                • #9
                  Makes sense, I agree although it seems like it was based more on Pacquiao's performance rather than Floyd's.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Boxingtech718v2 View Post
                    Indeed although you can tell it killed Dan Rafael to give Floyd any props.
                    Nah I'm actually starting to think Rafael actually likes Floyd. He gave Floyd nothing but props after the Mosley win and defended Floyd after the Ortiz fight saying Mayweather did nothing wrong. He also ended the rumors about Floyd fighting Morales and called Bob Arum out on his ****.

                    I think many of Floyd's haters are actually his fans. They just hate his out of the ring antics. Some of Floyd's Fans/Haters are like Girls who are mad at their boyfriends for forgetting their anniversary. One moment the hate you but then you do something nice for them and they love you again.

                    Comment

                    Working...
                    X
                    TOP