2008 NT Boxing Post Vol. Oscar De La Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao 12/6/08 HBO PPV

The fight of the summer is signed, sealed and delivered.

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[h3]That's why we're calling it 'The Battle.' It's a tough-@#* fight. Two real men fighting. There won't be any playing around. No ducking or dodging. These are two guys who will go at it. That is their style. And don't forget the element that it is Mexico vs. Puerto Rico, which is the great rivalry in boxing.
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-- Bob Arum

Welterweight titleholder Miguel Cotto will face Antonio Margarito on July 26 in an HBO PPV bout at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas now that both have signed forthe much-anticipated fight, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum told ESPN.com on Thursday.

"I get really excited about a fight like this because I know it can't be anything but great," Arum said. "That's why we'recalling it 'The Battle.' It's a tough-@#* fight. Two real men fighting. There won't be any playing around. No ducking or dodging. These are twoguys who will go at it. That is their style. And don't forget the element that it is Mexico vs. Puerto Rico, which is the great rivalry inboxing."

The fight matching two of boxing's most exciting fighters has been on track since April 12, when they both knocked out opponents on the same card.

Cotto (32-0, 26 KOs), of Puerto Rico, stopped "Contender" star Alfonso Gomez in the fifth round to retain his 147-pound belt for the fourth timeand Margarito blew out Kermit Cintron via sixth-round knockout in a rematch.

"These guys both have great chins, great determination and great power," Arum said. "It's going to be some battle. I just hope that theyare not ruined from a fight like this."

Mexico's Margarito (36-5, 26 KOs) won a world title from Cintron, but he will relinquish it in order to face Cotto rather than fight Joshua Clottey in afar less lucrative mandatory match. Arum said Margarito would officially renounce his title "within the next week."

Before Margarito, 30, defeated Cintron, he had already agreed to terms for the Cotto fight as long as they both won on April 12, Arum said. Cotto, 27, wasalso committed to the fight, but did not sign until Wednesday night, Arum said.

"Margarito signed off before his fight with Cintron," Arum said. "Cotto wanted the fight but we were going over terms and minutia, andfinally Miguel and his team agreed on everything last night."

Arum would not divulge their purses, which will eventually be public when the contracts are filed with the Nevada State Athletic Commission. However, Arumsaid each would receive "by far the biggest purse they have ever gotten." Besides the purse, each fighter will receive a percentage of the profitsfrom the pay-per-view revenue.

Cotto's biggest purse was $3.2 million for his November victory against Shane Mosley. Margarito earned a $1.2 million purse when he lost a version ofthe title to Paul Williams last summer.

The fight will officially be announced during a four-city media blitz next week. They'll kick off the promotion with a news conference Monday in MexicoCity followed by a stop Tuesday in Los Angeles, Thursday in New York and Friday in San Juan.

The fight will mark Cotto's first bout in Las Vegas since he knocked out Randall Bailey in a junior welterweight title defense on the December 2004undercard of the Vitali Klitschko-Danny Williams heavyweight fight.

Since then, Cotto has fought either in Puerto Rico, New York or Atlantic City, N.J. Arum said he felt it was important to establish Cotto on the West Coast,where Margarito has a following.

"Based on Cotto's fights with Zab Judah and Mosley, he has established a good East Coast base on pay-per-view," Arum said. "We felt hisbase would be loyal and we needed a big West Coast presence. We think the great Mexican fans will come out for Margarito, so it made sense to do the fight inthe West rather than the East. We couldn't do it in Las Vegas until they changed the rule on the gloves."

A few weeks ago, the Nevada commission amended its rule on glove size. It had in place a provisional rule that mandated welterweights wear 10-ounce glovesrather than the traditional 8-ounce gloves worn in virtually every other jurisdiction in the world. Cotto and Margarito both prefer the 8-ounce gloves and Arumrefused to put the fight on in Nevada until the temporary rule, which was up for review, was changed.

Arum said he has not set the undercard yet but said he wanted to include rising junior welterweight contender Mike Alvarado on the card.

"Alvarado is one guy I really want on the card in a good fight," Arum said. "After that, we're open. I'll be discussing it with mymatchmakers."

Dan Rafael covers boxing for ESPN.com.
 
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I needed this fight to be in NY/NJ tho
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I wanted to see this live.

ahh wherever Cotto/Mayweather (yes looking ahead
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) is held, I'M THERE!
 
Originally Posted by GUNNA GET IT

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I needed this fight to be in NY/NJ tho
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I wanted to see this live.

ahh wherever Cotto/Mayweather (yes looking ahead
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) is held, I'M THERE!

Oh you can be sure Cotto-Mayweather will be in Vegas. Also, Roger Mayweather said in an interview that "Floyd WILL fight Cotto. Why wouldn'ther?" Like i've been saying, Floyd is just waiting for the money to be right. Cotto's name is finally gaining some traction in the mainstreammedia, regular people are finally hearing about him, and if he comes away with a good performance against Margarito, and maybe gets the DLH fight, thenFloyd-Cotto would be REDICULOUSLY huge.
 
Originally Posted by GUNNA GET IT

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I needed this fight to be in NY/NJ tho
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I wanted to see this live.

I thought for sure this would be at MSG. I really wanted to go to this fight but with weddings this summer I have to pick my spots. Damn.
 
You guys talking ahead about Cotto and Mayweather but you overlooking a very difficult opponent for Cotto..i mean.i like Cotto and am rooting for him to winbut i wouldnt be surprised if Margarito comes out with the W..
 
I needed this fight to be in NY/NJ tho
grin.gif

I wanted to see this live.
I know...I've been wanting to see a fight at MSG and this would have been perfect.

Apparently Las Vegas threw their morals out the window for money because they decided to drop the glove weight, something they did safety studies on before.
 
Was lookin' forward to this fight being at the Garden, but oh well...

We know that Cotto can sell out the Garden with the quickness, it's gonna be interesting to see him headline a Vegas card. I mean, the dude sold out thehall in Atlantic City fightin' Alfonso Gomez, so
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shouldn't be aproblem. Taking steps towards Mr. Mayweather...


Good article on Gamboa. Can't wait till tomorrow night. Ever since Friday Night Fights, i've been waitin' to see more of this cat...
Luis Barragan hears the same story from just about every manager, promoter and booking agent he ever speaks to that he heard from the handlers of Yuriorkis Gamboa.

The story rarely changes. My guy, they say, will fight anyone anywhere at any time and is simply looking for an opportunity.

The truth, though, is usually diametrically opposed to those words. They're almost always looking for the easiest opponent at the most money.

And so, when Barragan, the director of programming at HBO Sports, was approached about Gamboa, a 2004 Olympic gold medalist from Cuba, he expected more of the same.

"Every promoter says their kid will fight anybody, but I rarely believe them," Barragan said, chuckling.

But it's rare that a promoter has a talent like Gamboa. The 26-year-old is 9-0 as a professional, but will headline a show, a "Boxing After Dark" card on HBO Saturday at Buffalo Bill's Casino in Primm, Nev., when he takes on Darling Jimenez.

Barragan was shocked to hear names of experienced and highly regarded fighters like Rocky Juarez and Jorge Barrios mentioned as potential opponents for Gamboa.

And it's likely that Gamboa will fight Juarez later this year, assuming he gets past Jimenez on Saturday.

Before his 10th professional fight, Gamboa is probably already good enough to be fighting for a super featherweight title. In less than a year, he's likely to be regarded as one of the world's 20 best fighters.

"I think he's more skilled than Manny Pacquiao right now," said Gary Shaw, who is co-promoting Saturday's bout about a 40-minute drive down I-15 from the bright lights of the Las Vegas Strip. "It can take a while in boxing for someone to develop. He's extremely advanced compared to the average guy with nine fights, because he's had this unbelievable amateur background. I think he's going to be sensational, but he has to fight the fights, too. There have been a lot of heralded Cubans who haven't panned out, because maybe they haven't been able to put their noses to the grindstone.

"This guy seems to be the real thing. I'd fight him with pretty much anyone right now. But he's still developing."

Gamboa has blazing hand speed which, in large part, is responsible for his pulverizing power. But in his haste to score knockout after knockout - after winning a decision in his pro debut, he's reeled off eight consecutive stoppages, including four in the first round - he frequently leaves himself open.

But Gamboa, who defected while the Cuban national boxing team was in Venezuela in December 2006, insists he's prepared to plug whatever holes exist in his game.

"It's something I'm fundamentally aware of," said Gamboa, who decided to leave Cuba because of disenchantment with his treatment by the government after winning the gold medal. "But my best defense is always my offense."

It didn't take long to convince Barragan and Kery Davis, the senior vice president of sports programming at HBO, to accept Gamboa-Jimenez as a main event despite Gamboa's lack of experience and name recognition.

Outside of the hard-core fans, there are probably less than a handful of people in the U.S. who are aware of Gamboa.

Davis got a clip of Gamboa and was convinced, but had to get the blessing of his boss, HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg. And so Davis ventured down the hall and stuck his head into Greenburg's office.

"I told him I just needed him to see something for 30 seconds," Davis said.

Davis stuck the DVD in the player and then watched Greenburg watch Gamboa. He knew as soon as he saw the look on Greenburg's face what the answer would be.

When the clip finished playing, all Greenburg could say was, "Wow." Davis and Barragan went ahead and bought the fight.

"To me, this kid is a special and unique talent," Davis said. "He has such an extensive amateur background, but he's clearly made to be a pro fighter. The first word that came into my mind after seeing him was explosive. He has lightning-fast combinations with explosive power. He's almost got this disdain for what's incoming. I felt I was looking at a special talent. He jumps off the screen at you."

He shares the bill on Saturday with a pair of other explosive talents, in James Kirkland and Alfredo Angulo, but expect Gamboa to be the star not only of this show but many to come.

It's not a stretch to suggest that he's the guy that may one day usurp Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s position as the consensus best fighter in the world.

To Gamboa, those are the kinds of things which push him forward.

"You should always want to challenge yourself and I always try to challenge myself and push myself," he said. "The people who don't know me now, I think they will, because I'm not going to back away from anybody. I'm here, ready to fight the best fighters alive."

Already talk of Barrios or Juarez? Wow. Movin' him along faster than Berto...
 
Originally Posted by LESGodSonC0

Already talk of Barrios or Juarez? Wow. Movin' him along faster than Berto...

Huh? Berto wasn't moved all that fast at all. Berto hadn't fought anyone on the level of Darling Jimenez until he took out Estrada in his 20thfight. Berto isn't necessarily being moved slow, but i'd hardly call his progression fast.
 
That's my point.

Gamboa is gettin' the same amount of hype that Berto did.

He's fighting Jimenez in his 10th fight. Berto has beaten Estrada and Rivera and now he's fightin' Miki Rodriguez (WHO?) movin' backwards, Ithink.
 
Originally Posted by Jagshemash

I needed this fight to be in NY/NJ tho
grin.gif

I wanted to see this live.
I know...I've been wanting to see a fight at MSG and this would have been perfect.

Apparently Las Vegas threw their morals out the window for money because they decided to drop the glove weight, something they did safety studies on before.


Not true, Vegas put in the glove weight rule so they can then perform a study on it. It was an experimental thing, and is still in place in a way. Forfighters between 135 and 154, they have the option to use 8 or 10 oz gloves, but both fighters have to agree. If the fighters can't agree, both have touse 10 oz gloves. Margarito and Cotto have no problem with 8 oz gloves, so thats what they're gonna use. Besides, brain problems most of the time resultin repeated blows to the head, not single big punches. Thats why dudes who suffer those redicuclous one punch knockouts end up fine, relatively speaking. Thetragedies like Leavander Johnson and Duk Koo Kim weren't from one punch, but a ton of punches. Maybe if those fights are with 8 oz gloves, they getKO'd quicker and both are alive today.
As for the Gamboa clip, dude is just a beast. As much as Gunna is on the Berto bandwagon, i'm on the Gamboabandwagon. He will rule 130-140 for the foreseeable future.
 
Byrd needs to hang it up.

Should've done so after Wlad.

He looks to be in great shape, though. Props to him...

P.S. His footwork is HORRIBLE.
 
George is a pretty solid fighter a bad guy to come in agaisnt , Byrd is done he lost too much weight , his legs where dry and very thin
 
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