الثلاثاء، 22 سبتمبر 2015

Atlas Was Never in Military, But Remains Sternest Drill Instructor in Boxing



Teddy Atlas never served in the armed forces of the United States, but the longtime ESPN boxing commentator and occasional trainer always has felt a special affinity for the regimentation that is a major part of a soldier’s life. In many ways Atlas is a drill instructor or commanding officer who brooks no dissent on those occasions when he issues a Staten Island-accented order. Whenever Atlas aligns himself with a fighter, a process which he undertakes now only after painstaking investigation, his first directive is always that it’s his way or the highway.
It was only after such a laborious study of his newest pupil, Timothy Bradley Jr., that Atlas, 59, decided to return to the corner. It probably is no coincidence that Bradley (32-1-1, 12 KOs), who defends his 147-pound strap against Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios (33-2-1, 24 KOs) in the HBO-televised main event on Nov. 7 at the recently renovated Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, has dubbed himself “Desert Storm,” which suggests military precision, attention to detail and coolness under fire.
OK, so the 32-year-old Bradley also never wore a uniform or toted a rifle. His nickname, he says, owes in part to the fact he makes his home in the desert – that would be Palm Springs, Calif. – and in part because of his action-heavy style and respect for those who serve or have served their country with honor and distinction.
The pairing of Atlas and Bradley has the feel of an orderly chain of command that any veteran of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force or Coast Guard would recognize. When they begin preparations for the Rios bout, it’s Atlas who will be pulling rank because, well, that’s the way it has to be whenever he becomes involved with a fighter.
“It’s a big responsibility,” Atlas said of taking on a fighter for the first time since he parted ways, acrimoniously, with Alexander Povetkin in January 2012. “That’s the way I’ve always looked at these things. You’ve got somebody’s career – and their life, to an extent – in your hands. They put their trust in you so you got to be sure you can get the job done and done right.
“I spent several days thinking about it (accepting Bradley’s request for Atlas to train him). I went back and forth, going over so many things. It wasn’t an easy decision. It would have been very easy to say no instead of yes. I was hesitant at first, but what I knew about the kid in terms of his character – not only in the ring, but in his personal life – was a factor.
“Actually, my daughter Nicole helped convince me to do this. She also had a part in my deciding to train Povetkin. With Povetkin, I said no several times and he and his people continued to ask. Nicole said, `Why don’t you go to Russia and at least give it a chance? Because that’s who you are, Dad. You’re a really good commentator, but in your heart you’re still a teacher and a trainer.’”
Toward the end, after 2½ years together in which Atlas helped take Povetkin to the WBA “regular” heavyweight title, the fighter began to chafe at some of the trainer’s dictums. Povetkin didn’t want to travel from Russia to the U.S. to train as he been doing, which was a precondition of their working together because of Atlas’ broadcasting commitments to ESPN. Nor did Povetkin agree – or, at least, his manager, Vladimir Hryunov didn’t – with Atlas’ assessment that the still-learning fighter had not progressed enough to accept a title bout with IBF/WBO/WBA/lineal champion Wladimir Klitschko in 2010. Povetkin did wind up challenging Klitschko on Oct. 5, 2013, with Alexander Zimin as his chief second, and he demonstrated that he still wasn’t ready in being easily outpointed by Floyd Mayweathersque margins.
Atlas came away from the experience feeling “betrayed,” but then he had been down that road before and understood that loyalty in boxing is a fragile commodity. One notable example of the friction that is the byproduct of a relationship gone sour is the nasty falling-out in the early 1980s between Atlas and future light heavyweight champion Donny Lalonde.
“He ran things like an Army camp,” Lalonde complained of Atlas’ demanding training methods. Atlas doesn’t dispute that assessment. In fact, he’s rather proud of it. What was that recruiting slogan from a few years ago? Oh, yeah. There’s strong, and there’s Army strong.
“Donny Lalonde is not wrong,” Atlas said. “I do run things like an Army camp. But I will never apologize for doing things the way I did, and still do. And that way served Lalonde damn well. Yeah, I was in charge and there was a reason I was in charge. I was the trainer, and I had the responsibility.
“The strange thing is that Lalonde literally begged me to train him. He came all the way from Canada on his own dime. I told him no. He came to Gleason’s Gym (in Brooklyn, N.Y.) where I was training other fighters and he just pursued me. But I didn’t follow my best instincts, which was that there was something about him I just couldn’t trust.”
Atlas learned his craft during seven years of apprenticeship under the legendary Cus D’Amato in Catskill, N.Y. The pay wasn’t good – actually, nothing – but the education he received from the man who had guided Floyd Patterson and Jose Torres to world championships was so invaluable that maybe a price tag shouldn’t be attached to it.
“I have respect for the sport,” Atlas said. “I spent all that time learning my craft and making no money with Cus. I don’t regret spending those seven years in the gym. You lock yourself away, if you will, to make that commitment and that sacrifice.”
But although Atlas loved D’Amato almost like another father, he began to see another side to the old man after a teenaged Mike Tyson showed up, renewing Cus’ dream of having another heavyweight champion. A petulant Tyson acted out at times, but wasn’t reprimanded for it. Atlas, primarily responsible for training the young slugger, personally barred him from participating in an upcoming amateur tournament by way of punishment, then was stunned to see Tyson walk through the door anyway, with D’Amato’s approval. Atlas’ authority in the gym had been undercut, and he was left with the realization that there is no such thing as a trainer’s absolute control, unless both parties mutually consent to such an arrangement and stick to it no matter what.
Other fighters have drifted in and out of Atlas’ life, more often adhering to his mandates for only so long until they came to the conclusion that they were the bosses, not the ones to be bossed around. And any proposed changes in the relationship, Atlas made it clear, were non-negotiable.
“Before I had that safety net of the commentating, which I’ve had for 18 years, I felt that way to an extent,” he said of the pressure some trainers feel to stick with recalcitrant fighters who provide their primary or sole source of income. “I might have to think about something two or more times before I said no.”
Perhaps the most memorable example of Atlas at his prickly best was the night that Michael Moorer was in the process of dethroning IBF/WBA heavyweight champion on April 22, 1994, in Las Vegas. Moorer was winning, all right, but not following Atlas’ instructions to the letter.
“I just sat on the stool and said, `You don’t want to fight. You don’t want to win this damn thing, so I’ll fight,’” Atlas said at the time. “Get outside, give me the water and I’ll take your place.’ And I made him say to me that he wanted to fight before I would get up. I said, `You don’t want to fight.’ He said, `No, I do.’ Thank God.”
So what was it about Bradley, who recently parted ways with his longtime trainer, Joel Diaz, that swayed Atlas into again slipping into the trainer’s role he has been so reluctant to assume?
“He was a guest on my radio show (on Sirius XM) a couple of months ago,” Atlas recalled. “It was right after his fight with (Jessie) Vargas. There was a controversial ending to that fight in that (Bradley) got nailed and hurt by a really big right hand with about 30 seconds left in the last round. With Vargas going after him, the referee, Pat Russell, erroneously stopped the fight. He heard the 10-second clapper and he thought it was the bell. Everybody – including Vargas and Bradley – that the fight had been stopped and Vargas had won. Vargas even started celebrating.
“We talked about whether Bradley could have survived another 10 seconds, and being the gladiator he is, he said he could have. And then I asked him a question: `Do you know why you got hurt?’ He said, `Well, I got hit with a right hand, Teddy.’ I said, `Of course, but do you know WHY?’ He said, `No, Would you tell me?’
“I told him he had his left hand low, but he had a James Toney-type shoulder roll before he went to throw his own right hand. The problem was he did it a little prematurely sometimes before he got Vargas’ right hand out of the way. Basically, Timmy was telegraphing that his own right hand was coming. It gave Vargas a clear runway to catch him when his left hand was down.”
Bradley went back home to Palm Springs, studied the tape of the fight, spotted the problem and wondered why no one else had detected it. Not long after that, he called Atlas to ask if he would consider becoming his new chief second.
Burned in the past, Atlas was unsure whether he wanted to expose himself to another flame of disappointment.
“It’s become very easy for me to say no, especially after what happened with Povetkin,” Atlas said. “It would have been easy to say no again. But I was going out to California anyway, to do the PBC on ESPN fight between (Abner) Mares and (Leo) Santa Cruz. I spent two days after that fight with Bradley. I broke down tape of his fights with Vargas and (Ruslan) Provodnikov like I would for ESPN viewers. I pointed out some things to him that he hadn’t realized.
“I went home and spent several more days thinking about it. I went back and forth on so many things. I talked to my family again. Then I called Timmy up and said, `OK.’”
But it wasn’t the 32-year-old Bradley’s star status or potential for improvement that was the deciding factor for Atlas. He’s turned down other talented fighters without so much as a second thought. There was something about Bradley, though, that resonated.
“You are who you are,” Atlas said. “And what you are as a fighter is connected to who you are as a person, and that goes to your background, you past, your upbringing. I liked the way Timmy carried himself, with respect and a certain quiet toughness. He had a standard of conduct that was obvious and, quite frankly, you see less and less in society today.”
Bradley, the father of three children with his manager-wife, Monica, and the stepfather of two of her kids from a previous marriage, understands that he and Atlas share a bond that at least partly transcends boxing.
“Teddy don’t have a million fighters. Teddy was retired,” Bradley noted. “I told him, `Hey, man, you can’t hide all that knowledge. You got to pass it on.
“The reason why Teddy is doing this is because of the person that I am. I’m a family guy; he’s the same way. He’s also a guy with a high boxing IQ. He hasn’t trained fighters in years, but he’s trained some of the best in the world.
“He has the time. He’s going to work it out with his schedule. I’m his only fighter. It’s a great fit, man. I can learn a lot from Teddy.”
So it’s back to boot camp for Atlas, whose military experience, such as it is, has been limited to occasionally working with the West Point boxing team and his friendship with two-time Super Bowl winning coach Bill Parcells, who was an assistant at Army and the head coach at the Air Force Academy before moving on to the NFL.
“Someone told me that when Parcells left the Giants and Ray Handley took over, some of the players were asked at training camp what the difference between them was,” Atlas said. “They said, `Oh, it’s much better now, much nicer, much easier, much more player-friendly. Handley is not a dictator like Parcells was.’ It was very similar to what Lalonde said about me.
“Yeah, it was much better until the season started and they weren’t winning. Then those guys found out it wasn’t better. It was misery and a disaster.”
So what happens the next time a fighter in need of a make-over seeks out Atlas? Is there training life for him beyond Timothy Bradley Jr.?
“I saw how Timmy was in his house, as a husband and father,” Atlas said. “I saw what’s important to him, and to me. I decided if I was going to come back and train, it was going to be for a person like this.
“Timmy said, `Anything you ask me to do, I’ll do.’ I could tell it wasn’t just lip service. I think I’m pretty good at being able to read people. Lalonde told me some of the same things, but I didn’t follow my best instincts then, which was that there was something about him that I just shouldn’t trust.
“My experience with him affected me. I said to myself, `The next time someone comes to me unsolicited, I’m going to pay more attention to my instincts. So here we are, 30 years later. When Timmy told me he’d do what I told him to do, no questions asked, I believed it. There is a truthfulness to him. It’s kind of refreshing, really.”


Atlas Was Never in Military, But Remains Sternest Drill Instructor in Boxing

Gennady Golovkin Blog Part 1: Monday, September 21



What does it mean for your career to be making your headlining Pay-Per-View debut?
“Pay-Per-View to me means reaching the highest level in the sport. This has given me the opportunity for my first title unification fight.
“All the big names in boxing have fought on Pay-Per-View and I look forward to making my first Pay-Per-View on October 17 against champion David Lemieux.
“I want the biggest fights against the top names in the middleweight division and that means Pay-Per-View.
“I appreciate the support of my fans and I look forward to putting on another amazing show for them.
“Since I started fighting in the United States and on HBO three years ago my exposure has increased dramatically and I’m happy with my career.”
Road to Golovkin/Lemieux debuts Saturday, October 3 at 12:15 a.m. ET/PT on HBO.
Golovkin vs. Lemieux takes place Saturday, October 17 from Madison Square Garden and will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View beginning at 9:00 p.m. ET/6:00 p.m. PT.


Gennady Golovkin Blog Part 1: Monday, September 21

الأحد، 20 سبتمبر 2015

One of Southern California's Best 7 Year Old Boxers

Greetings TSS Friends, Some of you have asked about my son periodically because I have mentioned that he has been boxing since he was 4.5 years...

One of Southern California's Best 7 Year Old Boxers

الجمعة، 18 سبتمبر 2015

Statement of Thomas Hauser with Regard to the September 17, 2015, Comments by USADA



USADA’s response is long on verbiage and short on documented facts. I intend to write another longform article on this subject at some point in the future. For now, I note the following:
(1) The USADA statement goes to great lengths to discredit Victor Conte, attacking him on three separate occasions for past misdeeds (which I referenced in “Can Boxing Trust USADA?”). USADA also states that I “cherry picked Jeff Novitzky’s response to questions posed to him by Mr. Rogan regarding Victor Conte.”
Mr. Novitzky’s remarks came in an interview conducted by Joe Rogan last month (The Joe Rogan Experience #685). In that interview, Mr. Rogan and Mr. Novitzky also discussed IVs. Let’s pick a whole barrel of cherries:
Joe Rogan: “What’s the reason why they can’t use an IV? Is it to mask possible performance enhancing drugs?”
Jeff Novitzsky: “That’s the primary reason. I saw it up front and center in cycling. They were using IVs of saline solution to manipulate their blood level readings, which were being used to determine if they were blood doping. It could also be used to flush a system. It dilutes blood and urine so that natural steroid profiles are very hard to read after you’ve taken an IV bag. That’s the primary reason. WADA also prohibits them for some health reasons. When an IV is administered, especially close to a competition, there’s a possibility of blowing out a vein or having clotting after the IV is taken out. There could be some issues with edema and swelling. If the idea is to rehydrate, it’s much safer to do it orally. Studies show that orally rehydrating is better for you if you’re mildly dehydrated. There’s two things that they show consistently. Number one, it’s obviously safer to put something through your mouth than put it in a needle in your vein. Number two, your perceived rate of exertion, how hard you feel you’re working after rehydrating orally, is less than if you rehydrate via IV. If you rehydrate orally properly, the next day you’re going to feel a whole lot better when you’re exerting yourself.”
“Now that’s mild dehydration,” Novitzky added. As for extreme dehydration, Novitzky suggested, “You probably should go to a hospital. [And] I think you need to notify the commission where you’re fighting.”
If Floyd Mayweather was dehydrated after the May 1 weigh-in, the USADA doping control officer could have given him several glasses of water. USADA has yet to explain the medical justification and supporting data that led it to grant a retroactive therapeutic use exemption nineteen days after the fact for a procedure that's on the World Anti- Doping Agency’s "Prohibited Substances and Methods List".
(2) Most of the public attention regarding “Can Boxing Trust USADA?” has focussed on the IV that was administered to Floyd Mayweather one day before his fight against Manny Pacquiao. However, the article also references the two testosterone-to- epitestosterone-ratio test results regarding Mr. Mayweather that were made available to this writer. It would be instructive if Mr. Mayweather granted a waiver to USADA allowing it to release the testosterone-to-epitestosterone-ratio test results for each urine test administered to him by USADA for each of his fights beginning with Mayweather vs. Shane Mosley up to and including Mayweather vs. Andre Berto.
(3) The issues involved here go far beyond Floyd Mayweather. In that regard, I note that USADA’s contention that it advised the New York State Athletic Commission on October 17, 2012, concerning Erik Morales testing positive for Clenbuterol is rebutted by the statement of Laz Benitez (a spokesperson for the New York State Department of State, which oversees the NYSAC). On August 10, 2015, Mr. Benitez advised in writing, “There is no indication in the Commission’s files that it was notified of this matter prior to October 18, 2012.”


Statement of Thomas Hauser with Regard to the September 17, 2015, Comments by USADA

Triple G at 165 lbs at the 30 day mark

Nice to see Triple in shape right at the middleweight limit 30 days out.

Lemieux is right below the 30 day limit, at 175.8. The 30 day limit is 176 lbs.

Advantage Triple G


Triple G at 165 lbs at the 30 day mark

الخميس، 17 سبتمبر 2015

Enough About A Cheat, Another Ali Is Going To Bring The Heat

Money May is on his way out. And their is no doubt.

I've already put out the word about the teenage son of the late, great Smokin' Joe Frazier blazing through the amateurs. Now let me holla about the grandson of the GOAT Ali.

NO! I will just drop this video because the old, gray trolls are going to go into full-alert keyboard war. Maybe because in their youth, they didn't get far. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=LvOa72BUAi0. Holla!


Enough About A Cheat, Another Ali Is Going To Bring The Heat

الثلاثاء، 15 سبتمبر 2015

Hauser on Mayweather-Berto



There has been an outpouring of commentary about an article entitled “Can Boxing Trust USADA?” that I wrote last week for SBNation.com [http://ift.tt/1EOFIBf]. I plan on returning to the issues raised by that article at another time. This article is about Saturday night’s fight between Floyd Mayweather and Andre Berto.
Mayweather is one of the most gifted defensive fighters ever and also one of the most polarizing figures in boxing. He was raised by fighters and has amassed an unblemished record of 49 victories in 49 pro fights.
“Floyd knows everything there is to know about boxing except losing,” his uncle (former WBA super-featherweight and WBC super-lightweight champion Roger Mayweather) has said.
Mayweather is a fifteen-round fighter in a twelve-round era. He tires less than his opponent as a fight goes on. Ray Leonard (who most knowledgeable observers place comfortably above Floyd in historical rankings), acknowledges, “Mayweather is one of the best conditioned fighters I have ever seen, bar none. You have to give him his credit. Sometimes there's outrageous things he says and does. But when he goes into that ring, he's always in shape. That's what I respect about him.”
But there’s a downside to the Mayweather saga.
Floyd has a well-documented history of violence against women.
His conspicuous consumption and constant bragging about how much money he makes appeals to some. But given the reality of economic inequality in America today, it turns a lot of people off.
Recently, Mayweather bought a car called the Koenigsegg CCXR Trevita for $4,800,000. In recent years, he has bought more than one hundred luxury cars.
According to the University of Nevada Las Vegas website, the cost of living on-campus and attending UNLV for a full school year is $20,012. That includes tuition, fees, rent, utilities, food, books, other school supplies, transportation, and miscellaneous personal expenses.
Instead of adding that car to his collection, Mayweather could have taken the money and gifted 240 full-year scholarships to young men and women in his hometown of Las Vegas. And for readers who are saying, “Why doesn’t Hauser donate some money for scholarships,” I’ll note that, several years ago, I had a financial windfall and donated $6,700 to the Arthur Curry Scholarship Fund at St. Francis College in Brooklyn.
Where Mayweather’s in-ring performances are concerned, the most valid complaint has been his choice of opponents. Mayweather has never beaten an elite fighter in his prime. In recent years, he has avoided the best available competition, preferring to fight ordinary opponents or once-dangerous fighters who’ve seen better days.
Andre Berto fit into the Mayweather-opponent mold.
Berto’s father was a Haitian immigrant who competed as a mixed martial artist when Andre was a boy and ran a martial arts academy in Winter Haven, Florida, when Andre was growing up.
“I was exposed to a lot of things early, good and bad,” Berto told this writer several years ago. “Winter Haven is a rough town. Drugs, street gangs, AIDS; it’s all there. A lot of kids think there’s no way out, that there’s no way they can be better than what’s there. You see guys who could have been superstar athletes who gave in to drugs. I had a vision early that I could be great. In school, I was always a little stronger, a little faster, and a little better than the other kids. I wanted to be one of the ones who stood out. And I was living off the example that my father set for me. Self-respect, hard work, stay straight, stay focussed. When I was growing up, my father always told me, ‘The saddest thing in the world is wasted talent.’”
Andre played running back for the Winter Haven High School football team and ran the 100 and 200-yard dash in track. But his true love was boxing. “Running the streets” had a different meaning for him. He was doing roadwork. When he came to school with a black eye and puffed-up lip, it was from sparring, not a gang fight.
By the time Berto was a senior in high school, boxing had taken him to 22 countries. He was a decorated amateur, compiling a 260-and-12 record. He was knocked down twice in the amateurs but never stopped.
The knockdowns came at the 2002 National Golden Gloves.
“I’d won it the year before and was ranked number-one in the country at 152 pounds,” Berto recalls. “I got in the ring with a guy I didn’t know named DeShawn Johnson. I thought it would be an easy fight. He knocked me down twice in the first round and won a decision. I wanted to fight him again so bad. And a month later, he got jumped in a club. Some guys stomped him and shot him and he died.”
Berto turned pro in December 2004 and was regarded as a super-star in the making. At the close of 2010, he was 27-and-0 with 22 knockouts and the WBC welterweight champion.
“My spirit is to try to be dominant,” Andre told the media. “I want to be a superstar. I want to bring it back to the days when Mike Tyson would fight on television, and everybody got off work early so they wouldn’t miss it.”
But in recent years, Berto has regressed as a fighter. Like many Al Haymon clients, he was maneuvered around tough challenges and failed to develop his full potential. Since 2010, Andre has lost four of seven fights, including a knockout defeat at the hands of Jesus Soto Karass.
“The welterweight division is among the deepest in boxing,” Chris Mannix wrote for SI.com after Berto was named as Mayweather’s opponent for September 12. “There are established stars, rising stars, and compelling young talents. So of course, Floyd Mayweather picked one of the least qualified of them all. On the list of recent Mayweather opponents, Berto ranks among the worst.”
The match-up was so unappealing that Showtime entered into negotiations with Team Mayweather with an eye toward moving the fight from pay-per-view to CBS. Sources say that the idea failed for a number of reasons. Mayweather was reluctant to give up his contractual guarantee, and CBS-Showtime financial models predicted that advertising revenue would be significantly less than the projected income from even a diminished number of PPV buys. There wasn’t enough time to market the event to potential advertisers. And given Mayweather’s history of domestic violence, many mainstream advertisers didn’t want to be associated with him.
The odds varied widely. But generally, Mayweather was a 20-to-1 favorite.
The announced fight night attendance was 13,395, well short of a sellout. That number included quite a few complimentary tickets in addition to tickets that were sold at a discount.
From the opening bell on, Berto seemed resigned to his fate. He was a challenger who didn’t challenge. There were two guys in the ring, but it wasn’t much of a fight.
Mayweather isn’t a big puncher. But as Oscar De La Hoya has noted, “Every fighter has a punch.” Floyd’s punches might not stun. But they sting and are hard enough to keep opponents from coming forward with abandon.
Berto looked tight in the opening rounds and befuddled for most of the night. He came forward in a straight line, made zero adjustments, threw few meaningful punches, and fought as though Mayweather’s body was off limits.
Indeed, Andre talked more aggressively during the fight than he fought in it. Mayweather, as one might expect, responded to the verbiage. In round ten, referee Kenny Bayless stopped the proceedings briefly and told the fighters to stop trash-talking.
That led Showtime analyst Al Bernstein to observe, “Let’s be honest. The most interesting thing about this fight has been the debate.”
Blow-by-blow commentator Mauro Ranallo added, “The conversation might be more interesting than what we’re seeing in the ring.”
Mayweather outlanded Berto by a 232-to-83 margin. This observer gave Andre one round. The judges scored it 120-108, 118-110, 117-111 for Mayweather.
Prior to the fight, Mayweather and his team said repeatedly that this would be his last fight. Afterward, Floyd proclaimed, “My career is over. It’s official. You got to know when to hang ‘em up. I’m leaving the sport with all of my faculties. I’ve accomplished everything. There’s nothing more to accomplish in the sport.”
If Mayweather really doesn’t fight again, he deserves credit for standing by his word and leaving at the top (as Lennox Lewis did a decade ago). Most observers, myself included, think that Floyd will fight again.
There have been times in the past when Mayweather’s word was suspect. Time will tell whether or not he’s telling the truth now.
Thomas Hauser can be reached by email at thauser@rcn.com. His most recent book (Thomas Hauser on Boxing) was published by the University of Arkansas Press.
Photo Credit: Idris Erba/Mayweather Promotions


Hauser on Mayweather-Berto

Mayweather Is 49-0, Won't Go, and We Still Don't Know!



He's the pound-for-pound boxing champ and beat Andre Berto Saturday, to notch the 49th consecutive win of his stellar career without a single loss.
No, Floyd Mayweather 49-0 (26) won't retire for good and you can bet the mortgage that he'll fight at least once more before he hangs the gloves up for good.
And lastly, despite him being undefeated, it's still up for debate pertaining where he ranks among the greatest pound-for-pound fighters/boxers in history.
With Mayweather hitting the majestic 49-0 at 38 years old, I've seen enough and have all the needed data to assess his rank among the greatest fighters in boxing history......and here's why. Floyd has been fighting as a pro for 19 years and his body of work through those years is pretty much complete. Let’s face it, Floyd won. Regardless of what happens from this point forward, if he were to lose, being that he's five months shy of turning 39 it couldn't be held against him. So you might as well view Mayweather as being undefeated even if he were to lose fight number 50. Nothing could happen now that could tarnish his legacy - actually it can only be enhanced.
Think about it, Mayweather has defeated the system. For a majority of his career he's judiciously picked his opponents and fought every one of them at the perfect time when it worked to his advantage. With the exception of Miguel Cotto, every other outstanding or possible HOF opponent Floyd fought was either on the way up or out, or smaller than him (such as Marquez and Pacquiao). Couple that with his immense skill set, he had the advantage every time out.
Cotto is the only certifiable HOFer or great fighter who he fought and beat that was relatively close to his prime and achieved monumental accomplishments after fighting Mayweather. And even at that, Mayweather fought Miguel after he was thrashed by the allegedly loaded gloves of Antonio Margarito and the blazing rock hands of Manny Pacquiao on the best night of his career. If Floyd lost to Keith Thurman or Gennady Golovkin at age 39, it wouldn't and shouldn't be held against him.
Suppose Mayweather fights Thurman in fight number 50 and he lost? It's not like his detractors could say a-ha, he wasn't all that because he lost and is no longer undefeated. Regardless of what might happen in a future fight, Mayweather has to be judged as an undefeated fighter, which was his goal all along. Yes, I believe there are reasons that the record is manufactured, but, he is still undefeated....
I say, the data is in and you can now rank Floyd accordingly. He's bulletproof against a future defeat.
The title of this article cites three things, Mayweather's record, the fact that he will fight again despite retiring this past Saturday night after beating Andre Berto, and lastly, where does he ranks historically.
Let me address Floyd's retirement. It's a red herring. Mayweather will fight again because 50-0 is much easier to remember and cite than 49-0. Think about some of sports’ most revered numbers. Joe Dimaggio's 56-game hit streak, Secretariat's still-record time of 2:24 at the 1973 Belmont, the 1972 Miami Dolphins going 17-0, culminating with a win in Super Bowl VII, Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points in an NBA game, Sugar Ray Robinson going 128-1-2 before losing to Randy Turpin, Archie Moore’s record 141 knockouts and Rocky Marciano retiring for good at 49-0. You better believe Mayweather wants his own number and will not share the 49-0 mark with Marciano for more than eight or nine months. If you believe nothing else that's been said in this space regarding Floyd Mayweather, you can take it to the bank that "Money" is going to fight once more before hanging his gloves up for good.
In regards to where Mayweather ranks historically, that's very subjective especially when it comes to ranking fighters, make that tenfold regarding Floyd. He has a lot of impressive names on his record like Genaro Hernandez, Diego Corrales, Jesus Chavez, Jose Luis Castillo, Arturo Gatti, Zab Judah, Oscar De La Hoya, Juan Manuel Marquez, Shane Mosley, Miguel Cotto, Saul Alvarez and Manny Pacquiao. Yes, the names look impressive, but of the lot perhaps four were truly great fighters, Marquez, Mosley, Cotto and Pacquiao. Marquez was an overfed old featherweight, Mosley and Pacquiao were on their way out and only Cotto was a live fighter when Floyd fought the four of them. Based on Mayweather's record as a welterweight, the weight in which he fought the biggest name opponents of his career, I'm not blown away at all. In those four bouts he scored one knockdown against Marquez, the smallest fighter of the group. Mosley, who was on a severe decline, almost put him in press row with one punch, Cotto pushed him real good and Pacquiao had a torn rotator cuff when they fought.
As terrific as Mayweather is/was fundamentally and defensively, I don't see one bit of evidence to convince me that he could've bettered Sugar Ray Robinson, Kid Gavilan, Emile Griffith, Luis Rodriguez, Sugar Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns or Roberto Duran fighting as welterweights. I don't care that he's undefeated, if every great just mentioned fought every opponent that Mayweather did the night Floyd fought them, they'd retire 49-0 too. Just like if Muhammad Ali or George Foreman fought all 49 of Marciano's opponents the night Rocky fought them, Muhammad and George would've retired 49-0 also.
So in closing, if you're going to rank Mayweather, the data (49-0) is in and a loss at age 39 can't count against him. Yes, he will fight again and perhaps enhance his legacy if he beat Golovkin in a non-catch weight bout. And as far as ranking him, I'm comfortable saying 49-0 and we still don't know for certain how truly great he was....
Yes, he was a great fighter/boxer, but not nearly one of the greatest of the greats and "TBE" should be the moniker for the best evader rather than the best ever!
Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@Gmail.com
Photo Credit: Idris Erba/Mayweather Promotions


Mayweather Is 49-0, Won't Go, and We Still Don't Know!

Floyd "Money" Mayweather Concludes Remarkable Career With Win Over Andre Berto



FLOYD "MONEY" MAYWEATHER CONCLUDES REMARKABLE CAREER WITH WIN OVER ANDRE BERTO AND PERFECT 49-0 RECORD IN MAIN EVENT OF SHOWTIME PPV®
FOUR-FIGHT TELECAST FROM THE MGM GRAND GARDEN ARENA IN LAS VEGAS
Photo Credit: Esther Lin/SHOWTIME
LAS VEGAS (Sept. 13, 2015) - Floyd "Money" Mayweather performed one last masterpiece on Saturday live on SHOWTIME PPV® in what he insists was the final fight of his distinguished 19-year career.
Before 13,395 fans at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Mayweather improved to 49-0 (26 KOs), matching the record of the late heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano with a 12-round decision over former two-time welterweight world champion Andre Berto (30-4, 23 KOs). In total control from the outset, Mayweather was victorious by the scores of 120-108, 118-110 and 117-111.
Following the final bell, Mayweather dropped to his knees in reflection of his final act.
"You have to know when to hang it up,'' he told SHOWTIME's Jim Gray in the ring afterward. "I'm knocking at the door; I'm close to 40 years old.
"I've been in this sport 19 years, been a world champion 18 years, broke all the records. There's nothing else to prove in the sport of boxing.
"My 49-0 record is a part of boxing. Records are made to be broken. Hopefully someday we can find the next Floyd Mayweather.
"Now it's time to spend time with my family and children, make sure they get the proper education. I also want to help the fighters under the Mayweather Promotions banner.
"I'm leaving the sport with all my faculties; I'm still sharp and smart. I've accomplished everything in this sport, there's nothing else to accomplish.
"Money doesn't make me. I make money.
"I don't want to rank myself, but I am the best at boxing.
"I want to thank all the fans that came out to support this event. For 19 years I wouldn't be able to do it without these fans.
"Andre Berto has heart, a tremendous chin. He wouldn't lay down, it was a good fight. He was a tough competitor, but experience played a major role tonight. What can I say? I was the better man tonight. It doesn't matter if I hurt my left or my right hand, my career is over. It's official.''
Berto was satisfied with his performance, but conceded he was not at Mayweather's level.
"Experience played a big part in this fight,'' he said. "I want to thank my entire team, my family and all of Haiti that is watching.
"I was in shape for this fight; he was just difficult to hold on to. He's slippery. I used a lot of speed but he's real crafty. He was using little things to get me off my rhythm.
"A guy like me has a lot of pride. I told him that every time I caught him with a good shot that I was here to stay. I put on a great performance, pushed him to the limit. But, we fell short."
In the second of two world title fights on the pay-per-view undercard, Roman "Rocky" Martinez (29-2-3, 17 KOs) retained his WBO Junior Lightweight title with a thrilling 12-round majority draw in a rematch against four-time world champion Orlando "Siri" Salido (42-13-3, 29 KOs).
Picking up where they left off when they fought in a Fight of the Year candidate last April, won by Martinez, both fighters exchanged punches for 36 minutes of ferocious action. Each went down in the third round. At the end of a slugfest, in which more than 1,700 punches were thrown, one judge scored it for Martinez (115-113), one had Salido (115-113) in front and the other called it even (114-114).
Both Martinez and Salido thought they should have got the decision and are in favor of a third fight.
"I definitely won the fight,'' said Martinez, who was making the first defense in his third stint as WBO Junior Lightweight World Champion. "They counted a knockdown that wasn't really a knockdown.
"He threw a lot of punches but most of them didn't connect, they landed on my arms. Anywhere you want that third fight between us, I will take it."
Said Salido, a two-time featherweight world champion who was the aggressor throughout and delivered more than 1,000 punches, "I did all the work and I thought I won the fight. I thought the first couple of rounds were even but then I took control of the fight afterwards.
"I was definitely looking for the championship. As you all saw I threw more of the punches and I thought I won the fight.
"I dedicated so much for this fight, for them to take it away from me is not fair. Definitely, I am ready for a third fight."
In another world title fight, Badou Jack "The Ripper" (20-1-1, 12 KOs) successfully defended his WBC Super Middleweight World title with a hard-fought, crowd-pleasing 12-round majority decision over mandatory challenger "Saint" George Groves (21-3, 16 KOs). Jack, who dropped Groves late in the first round, triumphed by the scores of 116-111, 115-112 and 113-114. The hard-luck Groves, who abruptly fled the ring in disbelief after the announcement, fell to 0-3 in world title fights.
Jack was impressive in what may have been his toughest fight to date.
"Groves has a lot of heart,'' said Jack, who was making the initial defense of the WBC belt he took from Anthony Dirrell in April.
"Body work is becoming my signature. I wasn't effective enough because I couldn't knock him out. I felt like after the first round I could but I just couldn't. I didn't go to the body enough.
"I haven't thought about my next fight yet, but there's a lot of big fights for me. I heard Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. wants to fight me. I want to enjoy this win but I will fight anyone."
The victory was Jack's fourth in a row since suffering the lone loss of his career on a shocking first-round knockout loss to Derek Edwards in February 2014.
Groves, whose only other losses were in back-to-back fights against then-world championCarl Froch, didn't dispute the knockdown but had a problem with the decision.
"I thought I won the fight decisively,'' he said. "I thought I controlled the fight with my jab and that I was in control throughout, though, it appeared closer to the judges.
"It was a legit knockdown in the first round. He landed the right hand over the top, but I have good fitness and I thought I got back in control of that round. But all credit to him though scoring the knockdown in the first round.
"Congrats to Badou. I hope he has a successful reign as champion. I'd love to fight him again and hopefully I will do better next time. I am going to take some time to work out what's next. Losing a world title fight is the worst feeling in the world."
Puerto Rico's Jonathan "Polvo" Oquendo (26-4, 16 KOs) overcame a first-round knockdown, scored a knockdown of his own and upset former two-division world championJhonny Gonzalez (58-10, 49 KOs). Oquendo won a 10-round majority decision in a good action fight that opened the pay-per-view telecast. Oquendo won the biggest bout of his career by the scores of 95-93, an out-of-line 98-90 and 94-94.
For Oquendo, the victory in his sixth appearance at MGM Grand Garden Arena was the 12thin his last 14 fights.
"I feel very happy,'' said Oquendo, who was dropped by a left hook with about one minute left in the first. "Jhonny Gonzalez is a great champion. I knew I had to throw a lot of punches and work to get inside to get the victory. I was able to implement that game plan tonight."
Gonzalez, a former two-time WBC featherweight and WBO Bantamweight World Champion, was displeased with the scoring as well as all the unintentional headbutts. He was dropped by a straight right hand at about the 2:00 mark of the second.
"The judges favored him too much,'' Gonzalez said. "He kept head butting me. It just didn't go well. As soon as he knocked me down, nothing happened. I just got right back up."
In a fight Saturday that aired during "COUNTDOWN LIVE" on SHOWTIME before the pay-per-view telecast, longtime junior middleweight contender Vanes Martirosyan (36-2-1, 21 KOs), of Glendale, Calif., scored two knockdowns en route to winning a 10-round majority decision over former IBF 154-pound champion Ishe Smith (27-8, 12 KOs) of Las Vegas, by the scores of 97-91 twice and 95-95.
"I feel awesome. I worked hard and it paid off. I hadn't seen my family in 10 weeks. I was in training in the Bay Area,'' Martirosyan said. "Ishe was eating 100 jabs a round. I knew he was a Mayweather fighter and I was going into the fight already down five rounds.
"I knew I had to win. My corner told me to go in and have fun, but I wanted to knock him out.
"I knew as soon as I landed the first knockdown that I had to keep going. I didn't think he would get up from the second knockdown. He had never been dropped before. He has fought a lot of great fighters and I dropped him twice."
Smith, the first native Las Vegan to capture a world title, felt the fight was much tighter.
"The first knockdown wasn't serious. He just caught me in the back of the head. The second one was legit, but I got up ready to come back at him,'' Smith said.
"Six points is ridiculous. I thought it was closer to 95-95 or 95-94. I just thought it was a lot closer than those two judges, and my corner kept telling it was real close. But we expected a tough fight out of (Martirosyan). He's long, rangy and a good puncher, but that's why I wanted to get inside and fight him there.
"I just fought a hell of a fight against the No. 3-ranked fighter in our division. I have a lot left. I'm pushing these guys to the limit. I take nothing away from him. He's one of the best in the world and I'm a former world champion. We gave the fans a great fight tonight and I'll be back again soon."
Also on "COUNTDOWN LIVE," promising unbeaten lightweight Gervonta Davis of Baltimore improved to 12-0 with 11 knockouts by registering a 1:34, first-round TKO overRecky Dulay (8-2, 5 KOs), of Manila, Philippines.


Floyd "Money" Mayweather Concludes Remarkable Career With Win Over Andre Berto

الاثنين، 14 سبتمبر 2015

Fallen Warrior

DAVEY BROWNE JR. You deserve a SHOUT OUT, condolence to you & your family, you went out on your shield.


Fallen Warrior

EASY "WORK": Mayweather Gets Another Drama-Free Win, As Berto Is No Match For "TBE"



They hoped that the foe could push him, make the master look human...but no. It was what most thought it would be, another session of dominance for Floyd Mayweather, in what he purported would be his final in-ring effort.

The Best Ever, he told us he was, and certainly, defensively, he's in the mix. Andre Berto couldn't get a bead on the slipping, sliding, moving and grooving 38-year-old, who rose to 49-0 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. After 12 rounds, a couple minutes, maybe, of which were won by Berto, the judges told us what a blind man could see--Floyd Mayweather won another one. The scores were: 117-111 from Moretti, who should retire, because his vision is offfff, 118-110 from Weisfeld, 120-108 from Byrd.

Still champion, a superlative craftsman whose scientific take on fighting makes him a polarizing figure to those who like trading..but undeniably skilled.

The 32 year old Berto loaded up, tried to land anything...but Floyd makes you miss, just about every single time. There was never a moment where the outcome was in doubt, not from the anthems on.

Floyd went 232-410 to 83-495 for the loser.

And after, TBE told Jim Gray he was done, retired. No more fighting he said.

Was he the best ever? We will let the fans decide, he said...then admitted he thought he is No. 1 all-time.

There was more drama fight week, with IVGate, then on this fight night, which was expensive to watch sparring. Berto told us he had speed and power, and we saw neither, as Floyd once again showed himself to be of a different class.

In the first, Floyd was quick with the left. Berto was short on the jab, and Floyd jabbed to the gut and then head. He moved left and right, not running, but making it hard to get a bead on him.

In the second, Berto pressed more. He looked to ramp up aggression. He darted in and Floyd slid away. He backed, quick enough so it didn't matter if he backed up straight. Floyd held some, using the headlock, but not that much. The crowd buzzed when Berto sort of landed a right late. Floyd slipped like a master off the ropes and the smarts in the crowd liked it.

In the third, Floyd started aggressively. The jab was the focus, and then he backed to the ropes. Then, back to center ring..Berto missed, Floyd saw it all coming. Berto was headlocking now...Floyd slipped, his glove touching, no knockdown.

In the fourth, Berto tried to press and aggress. It got chippy, but still Berto missed. Then a stern right landed on Berto. This was Floyd mixing it up, here. The crowd enjoyed the scrappier tone to the round.

In round five, Berto bulled, and they clinched up a bunch. Floyd was moving, popping the jab, being an ultra master of defense. Berto, would he win a round?

In the sixth, Berto tried to jab his way in. Floyd gave the peeps some O here, and the pace was reasonable fan friendly, with more of an edge than in MayPac. A jab-hook by Berto scored clean on Floyd, but rights to the body by Floyd looked nastier.

In the seventh, it was Floyd being an aggressor. The left forearm was there to obscure Berto's vision, distract and help disarm. A jab and slide left move was so useful for TBE. Then Floyd was to the ropes, mixing it up, where he chose to be in the ring, how hard he wanted to work. Berto got off a combo or two and the crowd dug it.

To round eight..Floyd started jabbing, sliding left, Berto unable to track him down, cut him off. TBE saw everything coming, but drew boos when he backed off, walked around, didn't engage. Berto missed about 82 percent of what he threw.

In round nine, he'd jab and instead of sliding left, lay on the ropes, let Berto come to him, and blunt the offense. The scrummed inside, toe to toe, mostly targeting each others' body. Floyd's dad asked for more jabbing after, after Floyd told dad his left hand was hurting.


In the tenth, Floyd told Berto to stop yapping. Ref Ken Bayless told them to stop yapping, and start punching. Floyd clowned, stuck his tongue out, basically was goofing.

More clowning in the 11th and Floyd hurt the underdog in the 12th. But no KO, we'd go to the cards...for the last time?

Photo Credit: Esther Lin/SHOWTIME


EASY "WORK": Mayweather Gets Another Drama-Free Win, As Berto Is No Match For "TBE"

الأحد، 13 سبتمبر 2015

Berto worse than I thought- Berto to blame of Hunter?

I watched the fight for free thanks to the technology of the internet and I came away with one superior thought- good God Berto has NO boxing iq.

Berto smothered himself so much I myself felt claustrophobic.

Not ONE time when he had Floyd cornered did he step to his right when Floyd either bent to his right or we knew he would bend to his right as a response of whats to come, to throw punches at the body and try to land.

Instead he would totally smother himself or throw a huge right and just miss in embarrassing fashion.

I mean how can you be at the pro level of winning titles and not know or understand spacing?

I saw Berto land ONE right hand all night, it was to the body.

For those who say Berto fought better than Pac you have an agenda and lose all credibility.

Berto tried as far as coming forward, but he left his mind behind.


Berto worse than I thought- Berto to blame of Hunter?

السبت، 12 سبتمبر 2015

Hauser Fires At USADA and Floyd; USADA Then Floyd Respond



FRIDAY AM UPDATE: Manny Pacquiao, who himself has been under a spotlight, a big one held up by Floyd "Take The Test" Mayweather, reacted to the Thomas Hauser story. "Truth finally came out and I was vindicated," he told Abac Cordero of The Phillipine Star. "mayweather camp used to accuse me of using PED, now look what happened. I hope Floyd Mayweather would learn a lesson out of it."

Interesting stuff...

It is no secret in certain circles, many of them public, as people like Paul Malignaggi have been vocal about their suspicions of the Pacquiao power surge in later years, and then dropoff, that some presume Manny used.

Floyd himself toyed with the issue before they fought, needling--pun intended, I suppose--Team Pacquiao by pointing to ex strength and conditioning man Alex Ariza as an integral part of Manny's success. This was in the context of Pacman trainer Freddie Roach having accused Ariza of giving his guy "shady" drinks with undisclosed chemicals in them when he was with the Congressman.

Mud is still being slung, friends. No surprise, there is immense money, and pride, and legacies at stake here.

ALSO: Sides are being taken, and the messenger, Hauser, is being fired upon. Kill the messenger if the message is disagreeable, a time honored if not honorable tradition.

The catalyst for that can be varied; some writers, I think, like their Floyd access and are sucking up.

Others, I've seen this from a couple "young guns," might be suffering from envy issues. Rather than choosing to primarily parse the material, and ponder what it truly means IF the sport's marquee star, a vocal anti-PED activist, has in fact used PEDs, some are choosing to focus on what they perceive as a journalistic misstep. They say that Hauser is biased, being that he works for HBO. And he didn't disclose that, they rail. To the contrary, he did. See this: https://twitter.com/Woodsy1069/statu...53071247466498

We can check their, and for that matter, my archive in ten years, and if we make 25% of the impact Hauser has in his four decades in this sphere, then we will have done well. Investigative journalism is REALLY hard, and how it is done isn't really taught in textbooks. I'm seeing a lot of criticism at a superlative talent, but I suppose that comes with that territory...

Let me be clear, I question myself all the time about how to play a story. Go negative all the time and you get a rep as a toxic type, and you get avoided. Plus, it's too gloomy to always be looking for the bad. But journos are always doing a balancing act: how to do the right thing, keep sources, maintain a balance..and it is what it is. But I don't care for some of these guys out there acting like they are the gold standard of ultra-professionalism, telling you they only write the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, and are completely immune from political pressures, whether it be from sources, potential sources, or their employers. (You saw an ESPN non-boxing story get an after-posting edit to soften wording harsh versus the NFL, a partner to that cabler...so this happens, all the time. Writers get impacted by politics, overtly, or covertly, oftentimes subconsciously.) I call BS. All of us can simply do the best we can, at all times...and I think most do.

END RANT.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2:10 (ET) THURSDAY UPDATE: Thomas Hauser has released his own statement, responding to the one put out by USADA late Thursday morning. The author chooses a high degree of specificity in his comeback, you will note:

Statement of Thomas Hauser with Regard to the

September 10, 2015, Comments by Annie Skinner on Behalf of USADA

No amount of self-serving rhetoric from USADA can change the following unrebutted facts:

(1) The IV was administered at Floyd Mayweather’s home after the weigh-in on May 1. USADA learned about the IV on that date.

(2) The 2015 WADA “Prohibited Substances and Methods List” states, “Intravenous infusions and/or injections of more than 50 ml per 6 hour period are prohibited except for those legitimately received in the course of hospital admissions, surgical procedures, or clinical investigations.”

(3) The above-referenced prohibition is in effect at all times that the athlete is subject to testing. It exists because, in addition to being administered for the purpose of adding specific substances to a person’s body, an IV infusion can dilute or mask the presence of another substance that is already in the recipient’s system or might be added to it in the near future.

(4) Mayweather-Pacquiao was contested on May 2.

(5) Mayweather applied for a therapeutic use exemption on May 19 (seventeen days after the fight).

(6) USADA granted the therapeutic use exemption on May 20 (eighteen days after the fight).

(7) USADA did not notify the Nevada State Athletic Commission about the IV until May 21 (nineteen days after the fight).

Meanwhile, on May 2 (fight night), Manny Pacquiao’s request to be injected with Toradol (a legal substance) to ease the pain caused by a torn rotator cuff was denied by the Nevada State Athletic Commission because the request was not made in a timely manner.

It would be helpful if Travis Tygart or his spokesperson answered the following questions directly:

(1) What was the medical justification and supporting data that led to USADA granting the therapeutic use exemption for an otherwise prohibited IV procedure?

(2) On how many occasions has the “A” sample of a professional boxer tested by USADA come back positive for a prohibited substance?

(3) What was the testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratio for each urine test administered to Floyd Mayweather by USADA for each of his fights beginning with Mayweather vs. Shane Mosley up to and including Mayweather vs. Andre Berto?

(4) Does USADA still maintain that it handled the Erik Morales matter correctly?

2 PM (ET) THURSDAY UPDATE: Floyd Mayweather almost 24 hours after Thomas Hausers' scathing scrutinizer looked at USADA's testing record in boxing and their handling of Mayweathers' samples and the protocol involving the sport's marquee name, responded. His statement is brief:

FLOYD MAYWEATHER STATEMENT

"As already confirmed by the USADA Statement, I did not commit any violations of the Nevada or USADA drug testing guidelines. I follow and have always followed the rules of Nevada and USADA, the gold standard of drug testing.

"Let's not forget that I was the one six years ago who insisted on elevating the level of drug testing for all my fights. As a result, there is more drug testing and awareness of its importance in the sport of boxing today than ever before.

"I am very proud to be a clean athlete and will continue to champion the cause."

Thursday AM: Thomas Hauser wrote a lengthy report which scrutinized testing agency USADA and looked long and hard at "TBE" Floyd Mayweather, and his PED testing history, and recent handling of his testing.

The story, which conjured serious questions about the integrity of USADA and Mayweather, who has painted himself as a cleanup agent within the sport, blew up at lunch yesterday and continues to pick up steam, into the mainstream media today, two days before Mayweathers' supposed last-ever bout, against Floyd Mayweather.

Here is the Hauser piece:

http://ift.tt/1JWKMm2

I asked USADA to respond and they did. That follows.

I also asked Mayweather publicist Kelly Swanson to respond, soon after the Hauser story came out, and she didn't reply. (Her office sent out a release on Thursday, at about 1:30 PM ET.)

I messaged the Nevada commission to seek their take and am awaiting a response.

I will also post some responses to questions I had from Hauser, who frequently contributes to this site, shortly.

Here is the USADA response, which arrived before noon ET on Thursday.

USADA Statement on Inaccurate News Reports Regarding the Sport of Pro Boxing

Whether due to a genuine misunderstanding of the facts or an intentional desire to mislead, numerous unfounded and false accusations have been leveled against USADA in recent on-line articles. Since our inception, USADA’s sole mission has been to protect clean sport. As such, it is unfortunate and extremely disappointing to have to address articles riddled with significant inaccuracies and misrepresentations based on unsubstantiated rumors as well as anonymous or self-interested sources that have recklessly called our integrity into question. It is simply absurd to suggest that we would ever compromise our integrity for any sport or athlete.

Although the articles in question contain a multitude of errors, all of which will be addressed at the appropriate time, we believe it is important to immediately correct the record regarding the false suggestion that Mayweather violated the rules by receiving an IV infusion of saline and vitamins.

As was already publicly reported in May of this year by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC), Mr. Mayweather applied for and was granted a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) by USADA for an IV infusion of saline and vitamins that was administered prior to his May 2 fight against Manny Pacquiao. Mr. Mayweather’s use of the IV was not prohibited under the NSAC rules at that time and would not be a violation of the NSAC rules today. Nonetheless, because Mr. Mayweather was voluntarily taking part in a USADA program, and therefore subject to the rules of the WADA Code, he took the additional step of applying for a TUE after the IV infusion was administered in order remain in compliance with the USADA program. Although Mr. Mayweather’s application was not approved until after his fight with Mr. Pacquiao and all tests results were reported, Mr. Mayweather did disclose the infusion to USADA in advance of the IV being administered to him. Furthermore, once the TUE was granted, the NSAC and Mr. Pacquiao were immediately notified even though the practice is not prohibited under NSAC rules.

Over the past six years USADA has conducted anti-doping programs for over 45 fights in the sport of professional boxing, and each of those programs has been conducted in accordance with the WADA Code and the International Standards. As a result, every athlete who has participated in one of our programs has voluntarily agreed to abide by the rules of the WADA Code and willingly subjected themselves to substantially more stringent testing protocols than they otherwise would have been subject to.

There are certainly those in the sport of professional boxing who appear committed to preventing an independent and comprehensive anti-doping program from being implemented in the sport, and who wish to advance an agenda that fails to put the interests of clean athletes before their own. Despite that opposition, we will continue to demonstrate to the clean athletes we serve, the sport partners we work with, and all those who share the ideal of fair competition, that we remain committed to our mission of protecting the rights of clean athletes and the integrity of competition.


Hauser Fires At USADA and Floyd; USADA Then Floyd Respond

الجمعة، 11 سبتمبر 2015

LOTIERZO: Now You Have All Reasons Needed To Boycott Mayweather-Berto



This Saturday night, boxing's biggest star, Floyd Mayweather 48-0 (26) takes on Andre Berto 30-3 (23) in defense of his WBC welterweight and WBA super welterweight titles.
The fight hasn't gone over well at the box office and interest in the bout isn't even lukewarm. And a lot of that has to do with the residual stench of the faux fight of the century between Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao this past May. The fight with Pacquiao was the ultimate letdown from an action perspective. And the choice of Berto as his follow- up opponent, a guy who is 3-3 in his last six bouts, doesn't help.
On May 31st 2015 it was stated in this space:
"The biggest revelation pertaining to the showdown occurred at the post fight press conference when Manny Pacquiao announced that he went into the fight with an injured shoulder. The injury occurred during training in early April. However, during training Pacquiao was allowed to get injections of toradol for his shoulder and was able to proceed with his preparations for the fight. Pacquiao's camp cleared getting the shots with USADA, the drug-testing body that Mayweather's side insisted upon. USADA says, 'Fine, a shot of toradol is fine.' So you'd think there'd be no problem getting them on fight night. Ultimately at the 11th hour the Nevada State Athletic Commission says Pacquiao can't get the shot of toradol because of essentially a clerical error, because some box wasn't checked off, a form wasn't filled right. If people are mad at anybody for Pacquiao not being at his best, if that's the belief, be mad at the Nevada State Athletic Commission, in my view."
A couple days before the Berto fight, it's been alleged that Mayweather, the fighter who wanted so badly to clean up boxing, circumvented the system himself.
As was reported in the Washington Post:
According to a report by Thomas Hauser of SB Nation, Mayweather received two intravenous injections, adding up to 750 milliliters of fluid, the day before the May 2 fight, which he won by unanimous decision in Las Vegas. The fluids that the boxer’s camp said were in the injections, mixtures of saline solution and vitamins, would not have been inherently illegal, but the quantity, in that time frame, could have masked another substance and would have been in violation of rules set forth by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Furthermore, representatives of USADA, which is supposed to abide by WADA rules, became aware of the injections when they went to administer a drug test to Mayweather, but the agency failed to report the incident to the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which sanctioned the fight. The NSAC was only made aware of the injections nearly three weeks after the bout, and even then, USADA claimed that it had granted Mayweather a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE), basically a get-out-of-jail-free card, which some experts quoted by Hauser found very odd, at the very least.
Also on May 31st 2015 it was stated in this space:
"So I only have one question that no one has asked, if Floyd Mayweather needed the shot of toradol, do you think the Nevada commission would've refused him due to a technicality as they did Pacquiao? I say no way on God's clay and granite planet...simply because keeping Mayweather undefeated is big business. No way would he have been declined, yet Pacquiao was because it was better for business if Floyd left the ring 48-0. Think about that the next time you contemplate picking Mayweather to lose at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Floyd Mayweather is practically the Vegas boxing commission and he gets what he wants. If he's accepted the proposed terms of the fight, there ain't no way in the world he's losing."
Well it certainly appears that the fighter who delayed the Pacquiao fight for six years because of the fear that Pacquiao was using illegal PEDs, is the biggest phony and hypocrite in boxing history.
The revelation is that Mayweather took an overabundance of the mixtures of saline solution and vitamins could've masked other substances and that would've been in violation of rules set forth by the anti-doping agency. And when this occurred it wasn't reported to the Nevada State Athletic commission. Or as I believe, the NSAC was complicit and didn't want to know because they were tilting the table against Pacquiao and aiding Mayweather.
Now you have every reason in the world not to purchase Mayweather's fight with Andre Berto. You're not going to hurt Andre because his money is guaranteed, but Mayweather will get a big piece of the total buys. So why help him any further when you now know with a high degree of certainty that he's about as believable as New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady. And like Brady, if you live in the real world no one ever gets caught circumventing the rules the first time you attempt it. At least I know anytime in my life I tried to game the system or get over, I never got caught the first time and I doubt you have.
And like Brady probably knowing the footballs used in the AFC championship game versus the Indianapolis Colts were most likely under inflated, I can't say for sure that Floyd's two IV interjections were the reason he won the fight against Pacquiao. All that I do know is that like Brady, Mayweather felt that his pre-bout IV aided him, and a lot of competing in sports at the highest level is more mental than it is physical.
Who knows what Mayweather took or possibly gave himself enough time to cleanse from his system for the upcoming fight with Berto? All that I know is like all Mayweather fights in Vegas, because he seemingly controls the commission, in my opinion, the deck is stacked against Berto. Andre has probably given so much blood for PED testing he could replenish the Red Cross. In the meantime, who knows what Mayweather has been doing, because he sets the rules and controls the NSAC.
Berto can't beat the system and win a legitimate decision and he's not good enough to knock Floyd out. Oh, and it's very doubtful that the fight will be fan friendly, regardless how personal Berto has said that it is. So why bother getting gouged again by the fighter who has stolen and lied to his fans more than any other star fighter/boxer in history?
Let those who get paid to report on the fight do the leg work. I say keep walking, there’s nothing to see that you haven’t seen already when it comes to Mayweather vs. Berto. Wake up fans, and either go out Saturday night or checkout the Oregon (7) at Michigan St. (5) game Saturday night. It’ll be more action packed and less pre-ordained!
Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@Gmail.com
Photo From Esther Lin/SHOWTIME


LOTIERZO: Now You Have All Reasons Needed To Boycott Mayweather-Berto

الخميس، 10 سبتمبر 2015

Hauser Fires At USADA and Floyd, USADA Responds



2:10 (ET) UPDATE: Thomas Hauser has released his own statement, responding to the one put out by USADA late Thursday morning. The author chooses a high degree of specificity in his comeback, you will note:

Statement of Thomas Hauser with Regard to the

September 10, 2015, Comments by Annie Skinner on Behalf of USADA

No amount of self-serving rhetoric from USADA can change the following unrebutted facts:

(1) The IV was administered at Floyd Mayweather’s home after the weigh-in on May 1. USADA learned about the IV on that date.

(2) The 2015 WADA “Prohibited Substances and Methods List” states, “Intravenous infusions and/or injections of more than 50 ml per 6 hour period are prohibited except for those legitimately received in the course of hospital admissions, surgical procedures, or clinical investigations.”

(3) The above-referenced prohibition is in effect at all times that the athlete is subject to testing. It exists because, in addition to being administered for the purpose of adding specific substances to a person’s body, an IV infusion can dilute or mask the presence of another substance that is already in the recipient’s system or might be added to it in the near future.

(4) Mayweather-Pacquiao was contested on May 2.

(5) Mayweather applied for a therapeutic use exemption on May 19 (seventeen days after the fight).

(6) USADA granted the therapeutic use exemption on May 20 (eighteen days after the fight).

(7) USADA did not notify the Nevada State Athletic Commission about the IV until May 21 (nineteen days after the fight).

Meanwhile, on May 2 (fight night), Manny Pacquiao’s request to be injected with Toradol (a legal substance) to ease the pain caused by a torn rotator cuff was denied by the Nevada State Athletic Commission because the request was not made in a timely manner.

It would be helpful if Travis Tygart or his spokesperson answered the following questions directly:

(1) What was the medical justification and supporting data that led to USADA granting the therapeutic use exemption for an otherwise prohibited IV procedure?

(2) On how many occasions has the “A” sample of a professional boxer tested by USADA come back positive for a prohibited substance?

(3) What was the testosterone-to-epitestosterone ratio for each urine test administered to Floyd Mayweather by USADA for each of his fights beginning with Mayweather vs. Shane Mosley up to and including Mayweather vs. Andre Berto?

(4) Does USADA still maintain that it handled the Erik Morales matter correctly?

2 PM (ET) THURSDAY UPDATE: Floyd Mayweather almost 24 hours after Thomas Hausers' scathing scrutinizer looked at USADA's testing record in boxing and their handling of Mayweathers' samples and the protocol involving the sport's marquee name, responded. His statement is brief:

FLOYD MAYWEATHER STATEMENT

"As already confirmed by the USADA Statement, I did not commit any violations of the Nevada or USADA drug testing guidelines. I follow and have always followed the rules of Nevada and USADA, the gold standard of drug testing.

"Let's not forget that I was the one six years ago who insisted on elevating the level of drug testing for all my fights. As a result, there is more drug testing and awareness of its importance in the sport of boxing today than ever before.

"I am very proud to be a clean athlete and will continue to champion the cause."

Thursday AM: Thomas Hauser wrote a lengthy report which scrutinized testing agency USADA and looked long and hard at "TBE" Floyd Mayweather, and his PED testing history, and recent handling of his testing.

The story, which conjured serious questions about the integrity of USADA and Mayweather, who has painted himself as a cleanup agent within the sport, blew up at lunch yesterday and continues to pick up steam, into the mainstream media today, two days before Mayweathers' supposed last-ever bout, against Floyd Mayweather.

Here is the Hauser piece:

http://ift.tt/1JWKMm2

I asked USADA to respond and they did. That follows.

I also asked Mayweather publicist Kelly Swanson to respond, soon after the Hauser story came out, and she didn't reply. (Her office sent out a release on Thursday, at about 1:30 PM ET.)

I messaged the Nevada commission to seek their take and am awaiting a response.

I will also post some responses to questions I had from Hauser, who frequently contributes to this site, shortly.

Here is the USADA response, which arrived before noon ET on Thursday.

USADA Statement on Inaccurate News Reports Regarding the Sport of Pro Boxing

Whether due to a genuine misunderstanding of the facts or an intentional desire to mislead, numerous unfounded and false accusations have been leveled against USADA in recent on-line articles. Since our inception, USADA’s sole mission has been to protect clean sport. As such, it is unfortunate and extremely disappointing to have to address articles riddled with significant inaccuracies and misrepresentations based on unsubstantiated rumors as well as anonymous or self-interested sources that have recklessly called our integrity into question. It is simply absurd to suggest that we would ever compromise our integrity for any sport or athlete.

Although the articles in question contain a multitude of errors, all of which will be addressed at the appropriate time, we believe it is important to immediately correct the record regarding the false suggestion that Mayweather violated the rules by receiving an IV infusion of saline and vitamins.

As was already publicly reported in May of this year by the Nevada State Athletic Commission (NSAC), Mr. Mayweather applied for and was granted a Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) by USADA for an IV infusion of saline and vitamins that was administered prior to his May 2 fight against Manny Pacquiao. Mr. Mayweather’s use of the IV was not prohibited under the NSAC rules at that time and would not be a violation of the NSAC rules today. Nonetheless, because Mr. Mayweather was voluntarily taking part in a USADA program, and therefore subject to the rules of the WADA Code, he took the additional step of applying for a TUE after the IV infusion was administered in order remain in compliance with the USADA program. Although Mr. Mayweather’s application was not approved until after his fight with Mr. Pacquiao and all tests results were reported, Mr. Mayweather did disclose the infusion to USADA in advance of the IV being administered to him. Furthermore, once the TUE was granted, the NSAC and Mr. Pacquiao were immediately notified even though the practice is not prohibited under NSAC rules.

Over the past six years USADA has conducted anti-doping programs for over 45 fights in the sport of professional boxing, and each of those programs has been conducted in accordance with the WADA Code and the International Standards. As a result, every athlete who has participated in one of our programs has voluntarily agreed to abide by the rules of the WADA Code and willingly subjected themselves to substantially more stringent testing protocols than they otherwise would have been subject to.

There are certainly those in the sport of professional boxing who appear committed to preventing an independent and comprehensive anti-doping program from being implemented in the sport, and who wish to advance an agenda that fails to put the interests of clean athletes before their own. Despite that opposition, we will continue to demonstrate to the clean athletes we serve, the sport partners we work with, and all those who share the ideal of fair competition, that we remain committed to our mission of protecting the rights of clean athletes and the integrity of competition.


Hauser Fires At USADA and Floyd, USADA Responds

Hard work, MEDICATION

What was it that an Alexa Ariza said watching the 38 year old Mayweather train for the Pac fight?---something like it was something like he has NEVER seen before in Floyd's ability to endure such long durations of activity that even he himself, a guy who helped train Pac when Pac was a whirlwind of 1200 punches per fight and constant footwork, could NOT believe how good Floyd's endurance was.
Better than anyone he has even seen in his life of being around the most elite athletes on the planet.

No wonder Floyd can fight 30 minute rounds, go 12 hard pro rounds and has the energy left to probably go nother 12.

It is one thing to be a cheater but it is entirely a different one to slander another man for the cheating you are doing.


Hard work, MEDICATION

الأربعاء، 9 سبتمبر 2015

Floyd received banned IV fluids before Pacquiao fight

Tsk Tsk. Pac didn't get to use his medicine for a bad shoulder but Floyd did use his banned fluids. No wonder Floyd won't use WADA. Interesting facts:


Floyd Mayweather received an intravenous vitamin injection before his May fight against Manny Pacquiao, contrary to World Anti-Doping Agency guidelines, SB Nation’s Thomas Hauser reports. Mayweather received an retroactive exemption for the IV after the fight

Employees of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency who arrived to give Mayweather a random drug test after the fight’s weigh-in “found evidence of an IV being administered” to the boxer. Nevada State Athletic Commission executive director Bob Bennett told SB Nation that USADA did not clarify to the NSAC whether Mayweather was receiving an injection when the collection agents came to his home.

According to Mayweather’s medical team, the fighter was given two different vitamin mixes to treat dehydration. While the injections did not include any banned substances, IVs are still banned under WADA guidelines because they can be used to “dilute or mask the presence of another substance,” Hauser explains.

“USADA’s boxing testing program is propaganda; that’s all”
—Victor Conte

Can boxing trust USADA? (no)

http://ift.tt/1JWKMm2


Floyd received banned IV fluids before Pacquiao fight

الاثنين، 7 سبتمبر 2015

Here’s Hoping Floyd is Honest And Retires After He Beats Berto



In roughly a week the supposed top pound-for-pound fighter in professional boxing, Floyd Mayweather Jr. (48-0, 26 KOs) will fight and defeat Andre Berto (30-3, 23 KOs). Beating Berto will be Mayweather’s 49th consecutive victory without a defeat, and he insists he will retire for the second time – he also retired, briefly, in late 2008 – immediately thereafter.

Excuse me for being cynical, but if you believe Berto is Mayweather’s last fight you must also believe in the tooth fairy and the Easter Bunny. That’s how outrageous Floyd’s claim is. You can bet the house that Mayweather was go for No. 50 sooner rather than later, and that his “retirement” announcement is not as genuine as when Lennox Lewis walked away from the ring and never came back after beating Vitali Klitschko.

The amazing thing about Mayweather talking retirement, just to hype interest in the Berto fight, is more fans than not probably are hoping he keeps his word and stays away from the sport that has made him almost incomprehensibly rich and famous. It’s easy to understand that kind of thinking. Floyd’s carnival act has grown old and tiresome. Since he beat a shopworn Oscar De La Hoya in 2007, Floyd’s career has been run like a Fortune 500 company in that every decision is made fo maximize profit while being exposed to the least risk. That has made Floyd’s bouts for the last eight years as preordained as a WrestleMania script, only the matches are less entertaining. This has soured fans on boxing, and has a lot to do with why it is in the malaise that it is in today.

Floyd’s arrogance in fighting only who he wants to fight, when he wants to fight them, really has damaged boxing’s credibility. In no other sport does one combatant get to decide who he wants to plays and demand millions of dollars to do so. Tennis great Roger Federer doesn’t make it to the final of the U.S. Open and instead of facing Rafael Nadal says, “Nope, I’m not playing him. I want to play `Slow Joe’ from Idaho instead.”

True, boxing is run like no other sport or business, but Mayweather has taken it to a level that we’ve never before seen, and it’s time for his bullying tactics to end once and for all. The fight with Berto is such a farce, and everyone knows it, that I can write as if it already has happened and I know who won. That’s terrible. Who would dare to argue otherwise?

Throughout boxing history all the true greats have fought the occasional no-hope opponent. The Sugar Rays, Robinson and Leonard, did it. Muhammad Ali and Roberto Duran did it. But no one can honestly say that much of their success had to do with the picking their spots to the degree that Mayweather has. If you want to nit-pick you might find a worthy opponent here or there that they missed, and maybe even purposely, but never did they use their stature to game the system like Mayweather has. Sadly, in a way you can’t blame Floyd. Why fixs something that’s already just the way you want it to? If a million pay-per-view-purchasing fans like to see the same script and movie with the same actors once or twice a year, I'm not on such a high perch that I can belittle them for it. All I would say is that I don’t consider those who buy most of Mayweather’sfights to be hardcore boxing fans; they’re more Mayweather fans than anything else, just like there are Tiger Woods fans that only follow golf when he plays and football fans who watch Denver Broncos games just so they can see Peyton Manning.

Because of Mayweather’s massive presence, he dominates the sport to the extent he overshadows other potentially great fighters whose careers are now ascending. Boxing has major talent in between flyweight and light heavyweight today, fighters who are ready and willing to take on all comers. Roman Gonzalez, Terence Crawford, Gennady Golovkin, Andre Ward and Sergey Kovalev are warriors, fight whomever is deserving and have never ducked anyone in their respective divisions. Boxing needs more like them, and it needs more action-packed fights like we recently saw between Leo Santa Cruz and Abner Mares. When Floyd is gone these fighters will command more of the spotlight, and to me that looks to be a good thing.

Floyd is an all-time great fighter and a technician. How great is he? Who knows? He’s never really had to put to the ultimate test despite all the Hall of Famers on his record. With the exception of Miguel Cotto, Floyd fought every other big name on his resume when they were in decline, like De La Hoya, or before they fully flowered, like Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. Had he fought and beaten Antonio Margarito or Paul Williams – who had styles that would given him real problems -- when they were pleading to fight him, I’d feel better about assessing his greatness. So I’ll just say that because of his skill set and his unblemished record, largely manufactured or not, he has to be mentioned as an elite fighter. But Floyd Mayweather Jr. certainly is not, as he has so often claimed, “the best ever.”

I hope Floyd retires after he beats Andre Berto. His act has worn thin and he’s hurting boxing’s growth by not giving the fans who pay so much to see him what they deserve. Boxing will be better off when Floyd is acting, or whatever he chooses to do after his ring career is over. And when that happens, I doubt there will be many boxing fans who miss him.

Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@gmail.com


Here’s Hoping Floyd is Honest And Retires After He Beats Berto

السبت، 5 سبتمبر 2015

All ACCESS Episode 2 Recap: Floyd Insists He Will Retire, Berto Says He's Hungrier Than Ever


Time for another All Access, or, at least, access selected for maximum impact in attempting to hype up the severe counter-climactic fight which is to unfold Sept. 12, Mayweather vs. Berto, at the MGM in Vegas. No knock there, anything after #MayPac is a back track...
This was the second installment in this post #MayPac era, which means that everyone who took in the buildup and the tear-down of May 2 sees everything Mayweather and Pacman do, arguably, through a changed set of eyes.
Which means after being told we'd see the Fight of the Century, and instead seeing a runaway Mayweather win--runaway not intended pun-nily--we're most of us not inclined to watch promo shows or listen to pronouncements without first running them a cyncism (realism?) filter.
So when people hear, as we did in this second ep, that Floyd will retire after Sept. 12, they react maybe differently than they would have a year ago. They have bought a car, it was a lemon, and now the salesguy is back at them, asking them to give him another shot.
Fool me once, shame on me. Fool me again, and I'm the fool...
Now, that's not in everyone's head. Many savvy folk didn't listen to a lot of the hype leading to May 2; they know Floyd is risk averse, wouldn't turn into Tyson, would still be an avoid contact first sort of pugilist. They were the wise ones...But it's all the other ones who will need to be convinced to tune in again.
To kick off ep 2, on SHOWTIME, we saw Floyd working out. Berto says he deserves the opp, and then Floyd brags. Yep, hard to re-invent a wheel, for sure..
It's all recap, from ep 1...or maybe we've just already heard all this in the last few weeks, since Berto got the gig, it's hard to recall.
A narrator tells us Floyd has a new toy. It's a car, fastest in the world, one of only two made...sells for $4.8 mill or so.
Some of us yawn, others ahhh, and say he's earned every cent. None talk about him being in a challenging fight Sept. 12...
Floyd is in the gym, throwing weights...He says he'll send Berto back to Haiti if he acts crazy, that Berto looks up to him. He hands out some cash to a kid, then oversees tape over Berto's eyes on a poster in his gym.
He gets his hair cut and talks to the muscle dude who sparred and got stopped right away in ep 1. Muscle guy says he will do it again and people laugh at him..
Next up, we see Floyd at a club. He chews gum, takes in the scene, makes ladies chuckle. It is 3:25 AM, and keeps chugging, till after 5. He showers in his bathing trunks and a gal soaps his back. He calls Berto a "million dollar fighter," dissing him, while in a whirpool. "They wanna know if I'm retiring? Absolutely," he promises.
Berto, though, is not thinking exit. he's thinking upset. Massive proportions it would be. President of Haiti he'd be. Daddy Berto shows up; he was a wrassler, and MMAer, early on. Andre is much about Haiti, where both parents came from. We see him helping during the huge quake. Good, positive stuff, people helping people...
Then, Floyd working out. He says he could train himself, but him Roger and Sr work as a team. Roger is not one hundred percent, though, the fighter says. "His memory has went away a lot, from getting hit with big shots in fights..," says Floyd. Nothing cool about getting hit, says Floyd. He disses the Rope A Dope. The name of the game is hit, and not get hit, he iterates. He wants to leave with a sharp mind, he notes.
Next up, Berto stretches. He says he took stuff for granted, and went off the rails, though, against Jesus Soto Karass; he injured his right shoulder, tore it. So he used the left, to his immense credit. He lost in round 12, by TKO; but new trainer Virgil Hunter said that told him Berto could do some good things. He had shoulder surgery and then had to to evaluate his purpose, question it. He rehabbed for nine months and won his next two. "I went through some s--t, but everything is coming back full circle now," he says.
The Mayweather Boxing Club is seen; local kids get backpacks and pizza. He could throw in a curveball, toss $20,000 in cash in one or two, next year, spice things up..
Go to school, get good grades, they are told. Then back to work...We see Tank Davis bang in sparring...and little ones...like Cashflow Diaz, age 12. Floyd says he will promote hard after fighting ends....
To follow, we see him sparring, usually verboten. He gets grilled, about retiring. People are seeing through those new eyes, they doubt. He insists he will exit. We are told that Berto has lost, but is the tougher for it. He insists he will press the action come Sept. 12. End show...
The last All Access runs next Friday, 5:45 PM ET.
Weigh In Live follows...


All ACCESS Episode 2 Recap: Floyd Insists He Will Retire, Berto Says He's Hungrier Than Ever