Friday, May 29, 2015

The Top 5: Puerto Rican Boxing Super Welterweights of All-Time

The Top 5: Puerto Rican Boxing Super Welterweights of All-Time
 by M.DeTyrone

1.     Wilfred “The Bible of Boxing” Benitez 53-8-1 (31KO)

WBC World Light Middleweight Champion: May 23, 1981 – December 3, 1982

Defeated Roberto Duran UD15, Carlos Santos UD15, and Maurice Hope TKO12
Lost to Thomas Hearns MD15


2.     Felix “Tito” Trinidad 42-3 (35KO)

WBA World Light middleweight Champion: March 3, 2000-December 2, 2000
WBA Super World Super Welterweight Champion: December 2, 2000-May 12, 2001
IBF World Light Middleweight Champion: December 2, 2000-May 12, 2001


Defeated Fernando Vargas KO12, Mamadou Thiam TKO3, David Reid UD12


3.     Miguel Cotto 39-4 (32KO) Still an Active Boxer

WBA World Light middleweight Champion: January 5, 2010
WBA Super World Super Welterweight Champion: 2010 – May 5, 2012

Defeated Antonio Margarito TKO9, Ricardo Mayorga TKO12, and Yuri Foreman TKO9
Lost to Floyd Mayweather Jr. UD12 and Austin Trout UD12


4.     Daniel “El Pillin” Santos 32-4-1 (23KO)

WBO World Super Welterweight Champion: March 16, 2002 – December 3, 2005
WBA World Super Welterweight Champion: July 11, 2008 – November 14, 2009


Defeated  Antonio Margarito TD10, Michael Lerma UD12, Fulgencio Zuniga UD12, Mehrdud Takaloo UD12, Luis Ramon Campas TKO11, and Joachim Alcine KO6

Lost to Yuri Foreman TKO9 and Serhiy Dzinzinruk UD12


5.     Carlos Santos 41-3 (28KO)

IBF World Super Welterweight Champion: November 2, 1984-1986

Defeated Mark Medal UD15 and Louis Acaries UD15
Lost to Buster Drayton MD15



Friday, May 15, 2015

Breaking Down: Saul “Canelo” Alvarez

Breaking Down: Saul “Canelo” Alvarez
By M.DeTyrone




Saul “Canelo” Alvarez is the current boxing rave and his fans claim that he’ll defeat by KO Miguel Cotto and Gennady “GGG” Golovkin. Well let’s analyze and break down “Canelo” Alvarez. I don’t see “Canelo” Alvarez possessing all-around boxing and punching skills. From what I’ve seen is a “Canelo” Alvarez that is limited to being a one-dimensional slugger with repetitive combinations with a certain degree of speed, which diminishes after his stamina becomes a problem.

I have yet to see above average technical boxing skills displayed by Alvarez. His technical skills are limited to the opposition that he has faced vs. Mayweather Jr. and Erislandy Lara, he showed little if no technical skills at all, because he doesn’t possess the footwork, speed, or mobility to match or competes with a pure-boxer or boxer-puncher. His defense is average, which showed some improvement vs. Austin Trout. However, he can’t fight on the inside his infighting is composed of covering up with his gloves backpedaling to the ropes and holding an opponent.

Is he a KO artist or does he possess one-punch KO power? No. The majority of his KO’s have been TKO’s against old boxers, blown up welterweights, and unskilled sluggers that he outweighed by more than 10 lbs. in many of the fights. The last two true KO’s have been vs. the 39-year-old Carlos Baldomir in 2010 at the super welterweight division and the inactive, no trainer, no chin, slugger James Kirkland at middleweight catchweight in 2015. In world title fights Alvarez has, TKO’d the opponents Josesito Lopez, Kermit Cintron, Alfonso Gomez, and Ryan Rhodes.

In 2011, “Canelo” Alvarez was given a title shot for the Vacant WBC Super Welterweight title vs. the unranked Matthew Hatton that weighed in at 148 lbs. It’s not as if “Canelo” had fought up the ranks to gain a WBC Super Welterweight title shot like other boxer have. No, he earned it by defeating the old worn down, out of their division boxers Lovemore N’Dou (UD12), Carlos Baldomir (KO6), and the boxer Luciano Leonel Cuello (TKO6). Nevertheless, “Canelo” won a UD as was expected vs. a smaller Matthew Hatton in California. Should anyone be surprised since then Hatton has been fighting back in the welterweight division.

In 2011, the UK boxer Ryan Rhodes had his opportunity for the WBC World Super Welterweight title in Mexico vs. “Canelo” Alvarez in a fight in which he was TKO’d in 12 rounds. Since then Rhodes in 2012 was TKO’d in seven against the prospect Sergey Rabchenko.

In September of 2011, the Mexican-American welterweight Alfonso Gomez given a WBC Super Welterweight title shot in Los Angeles, California, and he was TKO’d in six by “Canelo” Alvarez. Since then Alfonso Gomez has been fighting back at in the welterweight division. How Gomez earned a super welterweight title shot? I don’t know.

In November 2011, the washed up Kermit Cintron given the opportunity for the WBC Super Welterweight title in Mexico vs. “Canelo” Alvarez in a fight that resulted in Cintron being TKO’d in five rounds. Since then Cintron has been fighting back in the welterweight division vs. sub-par opposition.

In 2012, it was an old Shane Mosley’s turn at the WBC Super Welterweight title in a fight, which he lost to Alvarez by UD. Since that, fight Shane Mosley went back down to welterweight and won a fight versus a c class boxer then moved up back to Super Welterweight where he was TKO’d in seven rounds by Anthony Mundine in Australia, Mosley has not fought since then.

In September 2012, the WBC granted the welterweight Josesito Lopez a WBC Super welterweight title shot vs. “Canelo” Alvarez  and was TKO’d in five rounds, since that fight Lopez has been back down to the welterweight division and has been TKO’d by Marcos Maidana in 2013 and Andre Berto in 2015 both in the six round. How Josesito Lopez ever earned a title shot at super welterweight is beyond explanation. Maidana and Berto TKO’d Lopez in the sixth round and “Canelo” who significantly outweighed Lopez only managed to TKO Lopez in five rounds.


In 2013, Austin Trout coming off his victory over Miguel Cotto in 2012 fought a unification bout of the WBA World Super welterweights and WBC World Super Welterweight titles vs. Alvarez in a fight that Trout hit the canvas in the seventh round and lost a UD in Texas. It was a fight, which many boxing observers seen as very close contest and not the scores of 109-118 and 111-116. Since that fight Trout’s career has been in a steady down fall losing to Erislandy Lara where dropped once, dropped two times vs. a journeyman, and recently has won two fights vs. sub-par opposition. Later that year after much hype and talk about “Canelo” knocking out and out boxing Floyd Mayweather Jr., they faced each other for the WBC World Super Welterweight title and WBA Super World Super Welterweight title at a catchweight. In this fight, Mayweather Jr. exposed “Canelo” for his lack of footwork, power, and repetitive combinations. Mayweather Jr. Won a Majority Decision but strangely, according to the Judge CJ Ross, the fight was 114-114.

In March 2014, Canelo returned to face Alfredo Angulo in a last minute arrangement for a middleweight catchweight of 155 lbs. Angulo was TKO’d in 10 rounds in a fight which Alvarez hit Angulo with every single of his combinations, and Angulo but never dropped. Angulo was coming off a 10 round TKO defeat at the hands of Erislandy Lara, however those in boxing knew that Angulo was never the same after his beat down at the hands of James Kirkland in 2011, where Angulo was TKO’d in six rounds. Since, his defeat vs. Alvarez in 2014 Angulo lost and dropped vs. an unknown James De la Rosa. Later in 2014, Erislandy Lara the WBA Regular Jr. Middleweight champion faced “Canelo” Alvarez at a middleweight catchweight fight of 155 lbs. In a fight where Alvarez again showed his lack of footwork, skills and ability to cut off the ring, and the fight ended up in controversy with a SD in favor of Canelo” Alvarez thanks  to the score of the Judge Levi Martinez of 117-111.

After a long period of inactivity, “Canelo” returned to fight James Kirkland that hadn’t fought in two years in a middleweight division catchweight. In a fight in which “Canelo” showed, his inability to fight on the inside and every time Kirkland would pressure in some dumb man kamikaze boxing “Canelo” would back pedal to the ropes and hold Kirkland to escape by the second round “Canelo” showed physical fatigue, however, “Canelo” KO’d Kirkland in the third round. It took the light puncher Nobuhiro Ishida to TKO Kirkland in one round without Anne Wolfe and it took Saul “Canelo” Alvarez 3 rounds. Everyone except Kirkland’s team understood that without Wolfe, he stood no chance. Nevertheless, that’s boxing and a pattern of Canelo’s opponents.


At any rate, “Canelo” Alvarez has fought in eight world title fights and has a record of 7-1 (4KO) vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr., Austin Trout, Josesito Lopez, Shane Mosley, Kermit Cintron, Alfonso Gomez, Ryan Rhodes and Matthew Hatton. He’s one of the most marketable sluggers now due to the boxing media, the ethnic demographic and casual fans. 

The Destruction of Kirkland

The Destruction of Kirkland
By M.DeTyrone


“We all make choices, but in the end our choices makes us.” – Ken Levine

Kirkland a slugger with great potential twice in boxing didn’t make the right choice and on Saturday May 9, 2015 the boxing world witness the destruction of the slugger, James Kirkland in what was Canelo’s third fight in a middleweight division catchweight.

In my honest opinion, Kirkland had no business in a boxing ring with no defense, no chin, no trainer, and was inactive since his victory over Glenn Tapia in December of 2013. Yeah! A great performance of the Human PiƱata Style, which is, hit me in the face and I’ll hit you back and let’s forget defense. The problem was that “Canelo” had better skills countered an extremely reckless Kirkland.

The blown up welterweights Josesito Lopez and Alfonzo Gomez had better rounds vs. “Canelo” than what we witness from Kirkland. In all honesty, I’ve see better boxing displayed in the streets fights and the UFC. It was a shameful display of slugger not in fighting shape and not at his full potential being set-up for failure. There are plenty people to blame but it all falls on Kirkland’s choices…

The boxing world understood and those boxing fans that understand the ins and outs of the sport identified very early on that without Anne Wolfe, Kirkland would suffer a KO defeat and a humiliating performance. It took the light puncher Nobuhiro Ishida to TKO Kirkland in one round without Anne Wolfe and it took Saul “Canelo” Alvarez 3 rounds. Everyone except Kirkland’s team understood that without Wolfe, he stood no chance, but that was the choice, which he made and was humiliated, and brutally Ko’d by another boxer with limited power.

Nevertheless, that seems to have been the strategy by Golden Boy Promotions, and team Canelo. In his biggest fight Kirkland, his advisor during the negations, which seems to have been Cotto’s advisor and his promoter the rapper 50 Cents at no point, realized that Anne Wolfe was necessary for the success of Kirkland or a better performance worthy of the hype.

From an earlier, posts about Kirkland vs. Canelo:

On paper, I would pick Kirkland to hurt or KO Canelo early and finish him within 6th rounds.
I could also see Canelo winning via KO after the 4th round…

 Kirkland must work Canelo’s body and impose his will on him by making it into a dogfight by not giving Canelo any space. The key is to avoid Canelo’s repetitive combinations and his right hand early in the fight. If Kirkland can work Canelo’s body early and take it past the 6th round… then Kirkland can punish Canelo and take him out.

Basically, this fight is going to come down to various elements among them will be which boxer will impose their will and power on the other, which boxer chin can endure the power of the other, and stamina.

Will Canelo’s stamina hold up to Kirkland’s onslaught past the 3rd round if goes past the 6th round it will be a miracle.

The biggest factor of the fight will be will if Anne Wolfe trains Kirkland. Again, without Anne Wolfe, in my opinion, Kirkland will not be the same and will be defeated.

All indicates and points to a Kirkland set up for an epic failure resulting in a “Canelo” looking like this elite boxer-puncher, and give his blind fans something to follow.

Without Anne Wolfe training Kirkland and an unknown trainer on his corner, and the long layoff of inactivity, the boxing fans expect a Kirkland defeat.


I expected that the referee would stop the fight at the sign of Kirkland being hurt, however I wasn’t wrong about this fight being a set-up fight to make “Canelo” look good as some elite boxer puncher. It was shameful and it’s shameful the boxing media promoting this fight as some redeeming fight for the hype they were culpable of creating the Pac Man “Threat” and fueling the anti-Floyd Jr. propaganda and anti-pure-boxers sentiment with the casual fans.

I give some credit to the HBO network with its 24/7 and commentators during the fight tried to warn everyone and explain what was going on with Kirkland and the consequences of not having a key element in his overall game. However, this is the boxing business an extremely shady where many boxers are exploited and used up for the satisfaction of casual fans, which seek entertainment in a sadistic manner, and they think it’s the Roman Gladiator games from some fictional movie.

The casual fans and the “Canelo” fans ate it all up, as I expected it to happen. On the social network boxing pages, and online boxing pages “Canelo” is now a vicious KO artist and will KO GGG if given the opportunity. The reality is that this was his first true KO since his KO victory over the 39-year-old once Jr. Welterweight Carlos Baldomir in 2010.


On a side note as for “Canelo” it’s already established that Lara & Mayweather Jr. have already laid down the blue print; control the distance, momentum, and timing. This will allow any boxer-puncher too methodically and systematically breakdown “Canelo” Alvarez with body shots and strategic combinations. Wait until the fifth and sixth round when “Canelo” Alvarez’ stamina begins to fade and at that precise moment when he begins to back pedal with his hands down towards the ropes. That’s when any boxer-puncher with power will capitalize. “Canelo” Alvarez is just force due to him being physically strong and has the same repetitive combinations power within the first fifth rounds; if a boxer controls that momentum with ring generalship then he’ll have a good chance to TKO or even KO Canelo.


That’s why “Canelo” will continue to fight pressure boxers or sluggers. You won’t see him versus Demetrius Andrade, Daniel Jacobs at middleweight or any true middleweight, Jermell Charlo, Jermall Charlo, or rematch Erislandy Lara. It’s very likely that he’ll fight the likes of Cornelius Bundrage.

The Casual Boxing Fans

The Casual Boxing Fans
By M.DeTyrone

What are the things you will find in these so-called casual boxing fans? They don’t care if the boxer uses performance enhancement drugs, weight advantages, illegal hand wraps, illegal gloves, or any dirty tactics. They will rationalize any situation to justify the illegal actions of their boxer, they are very pseudo-nationalistic and racist, sadistic to the point that they enjoy the suffering of another boxer under unfair circumstances; they lack boxing knowledge from knowing how to score a boxing match to its history. They create fictitious records of victories and defeats, and they are void of any reality or any reason. They don’t know the differences between boxing styles, and they want entertainment, which is at many times sadistic in nature. Above all, the boxing media easily manipulates them. They love to create boxing juggernauts and monsters, especially, if they strongly hate a particular boxer in a division.

The perfect example was the casual fans and the Pac Man fans, which suckered and played by the boxing media and the boxing business into believing Pac Man was this threat for Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Everyone that followed boxing and understood boxing had the mindfulness; that once Juan Manuel Marquez had savagely KO’d Pacquiao it was over and done. The true boxing fans also understood that Pac Man had been in a steady decline since 2010 right after the allegations began to surface about the use of performance enhancement drugs. That never stopped many in the boxing media really focusing on personal attacks and promoting “Pac Man” as this big giant threat. Ranking Pacquiao, in many of the pound for pound list as #2 best boxers in the world, which was all part of the propaganda.

Many in the boxing media beholden to the boxing industry pushed forward the narrative and many times hateful articles that had nothing to do with boxing against Floyd Jr. The Pacquiao fan base and casual fans ate it all. Thus, creating an environment and a consensus reality that Pacquiao was “The Man.”

After the fight was over the boxing media, the boxing industry needed an excuse or various excuses, immediately. Why was their chosen boxer and media darling Pacquiao dominated so convincingly? Thus, the narrative pushed by some in the boxing media “Floyd Jr. was running” “The fight was boring” “that’s not boxing” blah… blah…blah… Within hours came the damage control you’ve to understand that the boxing media needs to be relevant year’s back they reported on boxing the current majority of boxing commentators, journalist no longer report boxing events. They influence and manipulate the regular fans casual fans with good old fashion bandwagon propaganda, and through social media, the more casual fans become the target.

They understand that the casual fans don’t understand Ring Generalship, which is the skill of exercising command and control of the boxing ring and opponent’s attack. For them boxing is a street fight on television with two people that train for 3 months and beat up on each other senseless. Casual fans don’t understand defense, footwork, bobbing and weaving, parrying, counter- punching etc… They can’t comprehend that boxing is about the control of distance, space, timing, and momentum.

The casual fans since played and suckered into believing a false reality had no other reason and being ignorant, they begin to hate a boxer and a boxing style, helped by the boxing media claiming that Canelo vs. Kirkland (a glorified street fight) was the redeeming fight of boxing. According to some in the boxing media, they’re in the clear and boxing can move on James Kirkland sacrificed to the boxing Gods and now things will back to normal.

The problem is that the boxing media seems to create these boxing monsters to gain more fans that are casual and generate interest and money. They have sold out the sport, they are killing the sport from the inside, and they are making it more entertainment for nationalist or jingoist and low boxing IQ casual fans.

There’s a long history of many in the boxing media. Creating all this hyped boxers to generate money and further their careers that were then defeated by sound intelligent boxing.

Nonito Donaire was once this invincible boxer the darling of the many in the boxing media. He was a superstar ranked top three in the pound for pound lists the heir apparent to this Pacquiao legacy. Until he fought, the pure boxer / boxer-puncher Guillermo Rigondeaux making those commentators and boxing journalist look stupid when Rigondeaux schooled him.

Lucas Matthysse once created into this monster juggernaut KO machine the majority in the boxing media. You would hear the commentators on the networks scream “The Machine” “The Rise of the Machine” the boxing magazines declared him the best 140 lbs. fighter in the world with no world title. Until he fought Danny Garcia and he shut all the jingoist racist fans that can’t stand a Puerto Rican boxer win anything, and the casual fans all shut down. 

This will continue the casual fan base creates their own standards for scoring fights, invents fictitious records for boxers, and is irrational to the point of insanity. They are void of any reality or any reason and in their mind; the boxing media, which promote glorified street or tough man contest, validates it all. 






Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Cotto vs. Geale, GGG vs. Monroe, and Kirkland vs. Canelo

Cotto vs. Geale, GGG vs. Monroe, and Kirkland vs. Canelo
By M.DeTyrone


Miguel Cotto 39-4 (32KO) will be facing his 20th ex or current world champion and will be in his 23rd  world title fight defending his WBC Middleweight title for the first time vs. Daniel “Real Deal” Geale 31-3 (16KO) on June 6, 2015 at the Barclays Center in NYC in a catchweight of 157 lbs. This is an interesting fight because Geale is a legit middleweight with a height and reach advantage over Cotto.  Geale’s a solid veteran within the middleweight division being once a champion. However, Geale’s been dropped multiple times throughout his boxing career and not so long ago lost via a third round TKO vs. the casual fan and boxing media heralded GGG. 

In Geale’s last six fights he has a record of 4-2 (1KO) vs. opponents with a combined record of 165-12-3 and versus ex or current world champions he has a record of 4-3 (1KO). There are questions about Cotto’s victory and power by a section of boxing fans, which don’t recognize Cotto’s victory over Sergio Martinez, has a legitimate victory commenting that Martinez was with one leg and one arm, which cause his defeat. 

On June 6, Cotto will have an opportunity to demonstrate his power and boxing skills in the middleweight division vs. Daniel Geale, which is one of the only two ex-champions, which the boxing media darling GGG has ever faced in his career. A convincingly win will place Cotto in line for a possible rematch vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. or a fight vs. the alleged new Mexican star “Canelo” Alvarez in September 2015.

Geale is a solid boxer with good footwork and he’ll give a small Cotto a strong fight, but I see Cotto winning via decision. Cotto could come out and surprise everyone and KO Geale, or Geale can end up winning a split decision. This fight maybe more competitive than what many are lead to believe.

Gennady “GGG” Golovkin 32-0 (29KO) faces yet another opponent that he can walk down and slugs upon on that has no power to keep him honest and can expose his bad defense. His next opponent will be Willie Monroe Jr. 19-1 (6KO) Yes! Monroe Jr. has only six KOs and before that Murray had only 12 KOs making GGG’s current two opponents with a combined KO record of 18 KOs. Monroe’s last six opponents have a record of 91-57-2! Well the casual fans will enjoy the KO and claim GGG is the greatest Middleweight of all time that has only faced two ex world champions.

Boxing is business with many interest involved and the boxing media, social network, and online sites are just mere propagandist tools promoting boxers based on emotions and business marketability not current accomplishments or abilities etc…  

The result “Canelo” Alvarez vs. Kirkland has taken a life of its own with the same boxing media that exaggerated up Manny Pacquiao’s skills as an extreme threat for Floyd Jr. These are the same people in the boxing media accountable for creating overwhelming expectations and a false reality for “The Fight of the Century” and are now claiming with an anxious desire that Kirkland vs. “Canelo” will save boxing or bringing it back.


Kirkland must go into this fight with the intent too methodically hurt Alvarez badly and destroy him on the inside with a body attack without giving any space for Alvarez to move. The light puncher Nobuhiro Ishida has hurt before Kirkland and so did Angulo, Canelo’s team understands this weakness, and they are strongly relying on that fact. Maybe relying on this fact a bit too much and are over confident in Canelo’s power. Will Canelo’s power will be enough to hurt Kirkland? Maybe, although Canelo’s power is exaggerated his last true KO was against a 39-year-old former Jr. Welterweight Carlos Baldomir in 2010, and made to cut weight after their fight weighs in.

Alvarez hit Angulo with all he had, yet Angulo never visited the canvas. “Canelo” been badly hurt before by a blown up lightweight journeyman named Jose Miguel Cotto, and he’s build a pro record defeating blown up welterweights that fought at the Jr. middleweight division, and those boxers have since then moved down to the welterweight division.

Kirkland can match Alvarez in physical strength and can overwhelming in power and brutality, but I comment again that this fight has the looks of a step up for a Kirkland failure. I could be completely wrong and I hope that I’m. Because motivated Kirkland is an extremely dangerous boxer an unrelenting force of ruthless power. If Alvarez doesn’t hurt Kirkland and Kirkland comes in motivated and finds a way to fight Alvarez on the inside and land power shots then expect Kirkland to send “Canelo” to nearest Texas Medical Center or Hospital in Houston.


All indicates and points to a Kirkland set up for an epic failure resulting in a “Canelo” looking like this elite boxer-puncher, and give his blind fans something to follow. Many don’t seem to understand is that the boxing media and business need a Mexican boxer, which can generate money of a huge ethnic demographic that supports its boxers blindly. Without Anne Wolfe training Kirkland and an unknown trainer on his corner, and the long layoff of inactivity, the boxing fans expect a Kirkland defeat. We can end up with a surprise and Kirkland comes in gangbusters and hurts “Canelo” badly, but I expect the referee and judges will protect “Canelo” Alvarez. I wouldn’t be surprised that if Kirkland is slightly hurt they will prematurely stop the fight.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Suckers of the Century by M.DeTyrone

Suckers of the Century
by M.DeTyrone



David Hannum once said, “There’s a sucker born every minute.” On May 2 2015, there were millions of suckers throughout the world suckered into believing the boxing media’s propaganda fuelled by their hatred for Floyd Mayweather Jr. and ranking Pacquiao as the second best boxer in the world on the various mythical pound for pound list. Let’s be honest P4P list are nothing but a propaganda tool used by magazines, social network and online boxing sites, and boxing writers. Ranking Pacquiao as number two in a pound for pound list was a cruel joke and strategy by boxing writers to legitimize a boxer, which was nowhere near the level he once was. Sadly, there are plenty of boxing writers, announcers, and commentators, which advanced their career on this fight and mislead the gullible boxing fans and public into believing what was not the cold reality.

The truth is that Manny “Pac Man” Pacquiao had been in a steady decline since 2009. It all started right after he defeated Miguel Cotto. In addition, when all the rumors of steroid use by Pacquiao became a topic of discussion within the media and boxing. Pacquiao as a threat for Floyd Jr. was over and done when Juan Manuel Marquez 56-7-1 (40KO) savagely knockout him out to sleep in 2012.

However, the sports media, the boxing industry, and the boxing media, the casual fans, the online and social media boxing pages kept Pacquiao alive in a respirator with their steady feeding of propaganda that the bandwagon fans and the casual fans ate continuously. They had to keep this dream alive of a mega fight or “The Fight of the Century” in 2015 the fan truly believed Pacquiao was the same explosive KO artist boxer of 2008-2009 and that was not the case. I don’t know what made people think that defeating Brandon Rios, Timothy Bradley, and Chris Algieri demonstrated that Pacquiao was a threat for Floyd Jr. 


The cold reality is that Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. 48-0 (26KO) vs. Manny “Pac Man” Pacquiao 57-6-2 (38KO) is finally finished. Resulting in Mayweather Jr. remaining undefeated, and winning what will be well over 100 million USD. Thanks to the millions of people throughout the world that paid one of the highest ppv prices in boxing history and giving life to a live event that became a spectacle for the privileged and elites of current society. However, the common boxing fans, which had no other choice but to buy a highly priced PPV with a horrible undercard. Let’s not forget that this event was a fictitious creation by the media for the casual fans and the Pacman fans.


Pacquiao was easily defeated after the countless years of talk, rumors, lawsuits, allegations, and all sorts of crap about the Pac Man’s style and Mayweather Jr. “The Chicken.” The reality of the matter is that Pacquiao failed miserably, he could not adjust during the fight, and couldn’t close the distance. Add that it looked like he had no second game plan. One thing is to defeat sluggers and infighters and another is to defeat a defensive pure-boxer. Yes, there will be excuses by Pac Man’s camp and those that bought the PPV will be let down because many don’t comprehend and appreciate boxing. According to the NYSAC Rules 1929: “Such points as the ability to quickly grasp and take advantage of every opportunity offered, the capacity to cope with all kinds of situations which may arise; to foresee and neutralize an opponent’s methods of attack; to force and opponent to adapt a style of boxing at which he is not particularly skillful.”

Sadly, for many that view the sport of boxing a street fight is boxing. Many bought a PPV expecting a slugfest, they didn’t get to see Floyd Jr. lose, and they’re mad that they didn’t get what they paid for “Entertainment.” Boxing is a brutal sport which is not played nor is it entertainment unless you have a sadist tendency and wish to see two boxers beat each other senseless for your viewing pleasure. That’s another story.


Like it or not Floyd Mayweather Jr. is currently the best of this boxing era. However, there’s one opponent which Mayweather Jr. has stated was his strongest opponent and his name is Miguel Cotto 39-4 (32KO) the current middleweight champion. If Cotto KO’s Daniel Geale 31-3 (16KO) in June 6 he makes a strong statement to have his rematch vs. Mayweather Jr. Many will dismiss Cotto as another opponent but he has the power, ring generalship to give Floyd Jr. a run for his money… Unlike Pacquiao, performance, which was a total embarrassment for all the build up to the fight and the high expectations, created.  

According to Floyd Jr. September will be his last fight in the sport of boxing. Pacquiao in all honestly who knows what he’ll do, in my opinion, he should retire or end up KO’d by a young lion moving up the ranks. Pacquiao will likely continue with Top Rank and used later on to build up a promising boxer.