Floyd Mayweather Jr. was probably sitting comfortably in his Las
Vegas mansion watching Manny Pacquiao battle – or, to put it better,
batter – Joshua Clottey for 12 rounds last Saturday in Dallas.
Mayweather liked what he saw in the sense that Pacquiao, according to
the ex-pound-for-pound champion, was exposed on that cold night as
being a “one-dimensional fighter” who he also described as “an amateur.”
In an article that just came out of cagereport.com,
Mayweather, hot on a comeback trail and out to regain the lofty title he
once held, mentioned things that might soon force Pacquiao to fight him
under any condition.
“Personally, I think Pacquiao got exposed in that fight for being
one-dimensional,” he said.
“You can have all (the) offense ability in the world but with no
defense you’re not going to last long against a good counter puncher
such as myself. Look at the way Clottey was getting through, each time
he threw something it landed.”
He may be
right that Clottey, despite spending most of the time covering up, did
land some beautiful punches that caught Pacquiao and his trainer Freddie
Roach by surprise, and that the Ghanaian would have done better if only
he threw more punches.
Mayweather said despite the low volume of punches Pacquiao took from
Clottey, the 31-year-old Filipino welterweight champion walked out of
the Cowboys Stadium bearing signs of a tough fight, with some swelling
and welts under his right eye.
“Then at the end Pacquiao was all busted up. When’s the last time
you’ve seen my face all messed up like that? That’s the difference
between an amateur and a true pound-for-pound boxer,” he said.
“I think Pacquiao gave the fans a boring fight. He was punching his
arms for all 12 rounds. At least when you watch Floyd Mayweather you
know you’ll be seeing non-stop action for 30 minutes straight and that’s
what you’ll see on May 1st,” the undefeated fighter said.
Mayweather said the 51,000 fans who came to watch “The Event” in
Dallas will see the difference when he gets to face World Boxing
Association welterweight champion Shane Mosley on May 1 at the MGM Grand
Hotel in
Las Vegas.
He said the people will have to judge for themselves.
“The attendance numbers ain’t nothing compared to what I have drawn
in the past or what I would have drawn if that was me in the ring that
night, everybody knows that. Half those seats were empty in the back and
people say Pacquiao is a draw?”
Mayweather, despite a long layoff which he ended with a knockout win
over Juan Manuel Marquez last September, now considers himself as the
biggest draw, and will again prove that once he gets into the ring with Pacquiao.
The fight almost happened but disagreements over the conduct of drug
testing derailed the fight that the whole world wants to see. Sooner or
later tough, it should happen simply because it’s too big to be ignored
and shelved.
“Let’s not forget who generated a revenue of $2.5 million in one
fight alone. The only reason why he’s popular is because he’s an ethnic
minority and from the Philippines so it’s something special. If he was
from Africa he
would be just another boxer,” he said.
Mayweather also justified his demand for Olympic-style drug-testing.
“The thing is I am just looking out for the good of the sport,
everyone should compete on a fair level but he (Pacquiao) doesn’t want
that. I’m not going to say what he is or isn’t on but lets just say that
HGH is one hell of a drug. All roads lead to Floyd Mayweather, we all
know that,” he said.
“If he wants to fight me, he doesn’t have to look far. Just look for
the biggest mansion in Vegas and that’s me. The matter of the fact is I
put the offer on the table. Once I get Mosley out of the way then we’ll
see what Pacquiao has to say. Until then I don’t want to hear about
him.”
When everything has been said and done, Mayweather has no choice but
to beat Mosley - if he can. And then he can call out Pacquiao’s name.
And the fight might just take place.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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