FLOYD
MAYWEATHER SR AND JEFF MAYWEATHER
DISCUSS DE LA
HOYA VS. FORBES ON
INTERNATIONAL
CONFERENCE CALL
Monday, April
28, 2008
Kelly Swanson: Thank you everybody for joining us today. Both Mayweather
brothers, Floyd Mayweather, Sr. and Jeff Mayweather, who are
the respective trainers for Oscar De La Hoya and Steve Forbes
are the line with us now. As you all are well aware Oscar De
La Hoya and Steve Forbes are fighting this Saturday night at
the Home Depot Center 27,000 seat Soccer stadium in Carson,
California. It's the first fight ever in the soccer stadium
out there. And the fight will be televised live on HBO's World
Championship Boxing.
Question: Floyd on the call a couple of days ago
with Oscar, I asked him about just the idea of how it went for
you two guys to get back in the gym together after the one
fight hiatus and what it was like, if you were able to just
pick it up as business as usual or did you have to kind of
rehash and discuss what had gone on for the past several
months? Can you just describe what it was like going back to
work with Oscar after all of the, really crazy stuff that had
gone on prior to the fight with your son?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: The whole thing was that we had
unfinished business, the one thing they offered me I wasn't
going for it. That was one thing, but we straightened all of
that out and we never really had any real problem. We didn't
have a real problem, we merely squashed things. They picked
Roach. It wasn't Roach's turn so what difference did it make
to Roach? It didn't make any difference to him. So, Roach took
the job, which I would have done too. It was just that he did
his thing with Roach, and it didn't work and won't ever work,
so he came back with the best.
Question: Jeff, you're the Mayweather that doesn't get a whole lot of
attention these days. Your nephew gets a lot of attention,
obviously, and Roger and Floyd, Sr. get quite a bit of
attention. Can you first of all describe your relationship
with each of your brothers, Roger and Floyd, Sr. and also your
relationship with your nephew?
Jeff Mayweather: Actually I
have a pretty good relationship with Roger and my brother
Floyd.
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Hey let me say he's got a good
relationship with us. He said, "I got a pretty good
relationship." He has got a good relationship with us.
Jeff Mayweather: Yes I have a good
relationship with both of my brothers, but my nephew – It's
one of those situations where at some point in time either him
or myself, will have to make a decision on being the
bigger person and squashing all that happened in the past and
just let it be and let it go. But actually, I have no problem
with him either. And it's just a situation that happened a
long time ago when there was the rival with James Prince at
that point in time. It was me and Floyd, my older brother, and
we both were working with his son and all of the sudden he
just – I was doing all of the things that a manager does,
getting all of the contacts and doing all of the things that
needed to be done, with Top Rank and everything. And
for some reason he got a manager, and I never even knew this
guy. It just came out of nowhere.
And it was kind of like, to me, a slap in the face and I felt
like there was no need for me to be there. I was basically
doing the things that a manager does, even though I wasn't
making the manager's fee. Once he brought in
James Prince there was no need for me to be there. And
I'm one of those people that, once I know that I'm not needed
or not wanted I'm not going to stay around and belittle myself
and try to hang around to try to get a handout or whatever the
case may be. And I already knew my nephew, I know him and know
that that he's never going to be man enough to come out and
say that he didn't want me there, but his actions showed that
he didn't want me there, so I left.
Question: My first question is for Floyd. A
lot of people are saying that Stevie is a preliminary fight
for Oscar in preparation for a potential September fight with
Oscar. My question to you is are there any similarities, and
you've known Stevie a long time, are there any similarities
style wise between Stevie and Floyd Jr.?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Well let me say this to you first, I've
trained Stevie for nine fights, so I know about Stevie. And
I'll be honest with you I'm not going to say that he's a
fighter like Floyd is, but he can give the look. He can roll
his shoulders and come back with his right hand, I worked with
him on that a lot and as a matter of fact, Stevie had worked
with all three brothers. Stevie had worked with Jeff, Roger
and myself. So, he had a taste of us all. But my thing is is
that, of course my brother thinks his fighter is going to win,
I think my fighter is going to win and we'd be evil minded if
we thought any different. But I feel like my man is bigger,
stronger, punches harder, I think he's faster and those are
the edges I would give my fighter.
Question: Okay. And on that note I have a
question for you Jeff. Just like your brother you've known
Stevie a long time, you've worked with Stevie. Over the years
have you seen Stevie, now that you're working with him for
this fight, how has he improved as a fighter?
Jeff Mayweather: Well, I think
that it is one of the things that Stevie has been taught by
all of us, so I mean he will be the closest fighter out there
to emulate Floyd Junior. And so I think that's one of the
reasons why this fight is happening. But I've seen
improvements in Steve even from the short time I've been with
him now. His maturity as a fighter outside the ring, and
inside the ring as well has grown, but the one thing that I
see in Steve is that he has fast hands and is an extremely strong
body puncher. And I guess a lot of guys that aren't really
punchers can punch extremely strong to the body and that's one
of the attributes that I've seen since I came aboard for
this fight in particular. And I can see his right hand is a
lot stronger now. And so I mean we're basically going to fight
a smart fight.
It's like we're climbing a very, very steep
hill and and not just because it's De La Hoya, but because of
the business of the boxing game as well. This has already
happened where De La Hoya had a big fight already in place,
contracts already signed, and actually in my honest opinion he
lost the fight, but the fight still happened. So we're not
just facing Oscar. We're facing the business of boxing as
well, and I wouldn't be honest if I didn't say that. So my
objective going into this fight is, of course, to win, but not
only just win, we also have to look good, look good enough,
that the boxing public, the boxing media, are going to give us
our just dues as well at the end of the day. If we win the
fight, if we don't get it in the ring, hopefully we'll get it
through the writers, through the public, through the media, or
whoever. Not only that, me and Steve will sit down and we've
also talked about the importance of this fight and he still
has to look good enough that the public will want to see him
again. And Steve is actually not 150 pounds. Steve can go down
to 140. There's fights like Ricky Hatton, there's fights like
Malignaggi, there's other opportunities out there as well.
But, looking at the business side of boxing we have a very,
very steep hill to climb and I'm not going to sugarcoat
anything. I know what the situation is. Basically, I hope that
Steve performs to a level that he can and actually wins this
fight in the ring. I hope that the powers and the judges will
make the right decision.
Question: Jeff I wanted to ask you, first of all, have you
ever been in a fight where Floyd or Roger was in the other
corner and if so who was that?
Jeff Mayweather: No. To be
honest I think that this is probably a first in boxing that I
know of. I mean especially when you're talking about a boxing
match on this level. And I think that this is probably a part
of history, me matching wits against my brother.
Question: And I
wonder, which of your two brothers do you think your training
style is closest to, Big Floyd or Roger?
Jeff Mayweather: I think I'm
more close to Big Floyd because we both were pretty much
boxers in our own career and he stresses defense and I stress
defense and Roger was more of a puncher, and that's what Roger
stresses. Roger stresses more aggression and less boxing.
Question: Big Floyd, given the fact that you know Stevie so
well and you trained him for so many fights, do you think that
it gives an you advantage? Or does it give his side an
advantage?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: I think to
some degree that we trained with Stevie and my brother trained
with him and all, and of course I think it gives him some
type of edge. We aren't planning on giving him the edge that
he wants, but I'm pretty sure it will give him some kind of
edge. So I hope it isn't the edge that he's looking for.
Stevie is a good fighter and I trained him. I don't know if
he fought the last fight that I trained him I don't know if he
did or not.
Question: And finally Floyd, if I can ask you this, have
you ever worked with Roger in the other corner where you had a
fighter and Roger was in the other corner?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: No –
amateur, no; professional, no. With neither one of my brothers
I never was across the corner from either one of them. It's
just one of those things that happen. You've got three
brothers in the game and my son's in the game, you know. You
thought something like this could happen? It's just that way
because you've got brothers training a lot of fighters and
you've got fighters at the same weight that it could happen. I
think that it could've happened. It's going to happen, as a
matter of fact. It's going to happen Saturday and in
September, I guess it's going to happen again.
Question: Floyd why is it that Oscar had not so much stamina
when he fought against Little Floyd in his last fight?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Now I'm
going to tell you this right here, I wasn't the trainer.
Freddie Roach was the trainer. And it's not only that because
sometimes, they have this thing called strength training,
strength coaching. I've never heard anything like that in my
life. The strength trainer thing – I think it's bad for boxing
to be honest. I think that because there's so many gimmicks
and gadgets they have. They want you to be jumping over
balloons and taking balls on ropes and banging it up against
the wall and then taking balls up and throw them up against
the walls and they want you to be jumping over little objects
and stuff, you could break your chin or your legs. They have
so much stuff that it's unbelievable. Don't get me wrong it's
just bad they can call all them trainers. One of those guys,
I'm going to tell you about him. They need to get out of the
game and find something else to do because of all of this
stuff they have. Oscar gets tired, one reason, because of the
strength training. They've got you doing too much stuff that
doesn't even go with boxing. And like I said they need to get
out of the game. That's my opinion. As far as Oscar goes,
Oscar's been getting tired for years, before I even trained
with him. Oscar just needs to relax a little bit. As a matter
of fact the last fight that I had with Oscar, he did what he
was supposed to do and he relaxed and did what I told him to
do. He blew Mayorga out. That's what he needed to do, he needs
to just to relax his mind. A lot of this stuff is happening
because you're thinking about it in your head. "I'm going to
get tired if I go so many rounds and I'm going to..." a lot
of times that does happen. I don't know if that's the case
with him or not, but like I said I'm doing my best to keep him
as relaxed as possible, and if I have him relaxed I'm pretty
sure he'll get the job done. I have some other plans about
that but as of right now I think that's the whole problem. I
don't think it's anything except for the fact that is it in
his mind. It's not that he isn't in good condition because
Oscar is a very hard trainer and he works hard. It's his
mind; that's all it could be is his mind. If he lets his mind
relax you're sure going to see something special.
Question: Floyd talk to us a little bit about the De La
Hoya/Mayweather fight were Roach was Oscar's trainer. Had you
trained Oscar in that first fight, what do you think you would
have done differently to help Oscar's chance of winning in
that fight?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Well see,
there's different people, there's different trainers. That
first fight you had Freddie the Joke Coach Roach and you had
him doing his thing and now you've got not only the greatest
trainer of this time, that time, four time, five times, but
now you've got him of all time. Now I'm going to tell you what
I would have had him - well, I'm going to be honest with you
and not to be disrespectful, I'm not going to give out my
knowledge like that. I'm not going to give it out because
people might be listening and when this stuff comes up they're
going to be looking for it. I don't ever want anybody to see
what I'm doing.
Question: Very true.
Jeff had mentioned in the Countdown that it was very important
for him that the whole family had gotten together, especially
for your mom. Now thoughts on that, have you guys had any
talks with Roger?
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Well I'm
going to be honest, me and Jeff we never had a problem with
talking and Jeff never had a problem talking with my brother
Roger, and I really don't have a problem talking with Roger.
When Roger came over to my house it was before I went to
Puerto Rico. It was pretty close to me going at that time, but
Roger and his brother in-law came over to my house and we
laughed and we had a good time. Everybody wants to make it
look like were a violent family that can't function. Nobody
can mingle if your mind isn't right. Even when I train I tell
them if your mind isn't right, you're not going to be right.
I'm just saying that we are not dysfunctional family. Anybody
could have a difference in their family. Dysfunctional
families are people that go in there and kill their mama, kill
their daddy, kill the whole family, and then maybe want to go
over there and cut up the cousins. That's what a
dysfunctional family is. It's sick. Just because somebody has
a difference in a family, that's not dysfunctional. If that's
the case the world is dysfunctional because everybody's got
differences in their family. No two people think alike, and
I'm pretty sure you've got dysfunctional people in your family
too.
Floyd Mayweather, Sr.: Everybody
has that. That doesn't mean your family is dysfunctional
because people don't agree on everything. There are two
people that don't get along, that's not dysfunctional.
Dysfunction is when you go in there and do something stupid,
go in there with the hot grease, throw the hot grease in their
daddy's face, and then break his ribs or something. That's
dysfunctional. But I'll say that it's not the case with the
Mayweather family. The Mayweather family is a warm family and
it ain't bad as it's perceived to be. I'm going to tell you
what this dysfunctional thing is, I'm going to tell you where
the dysfunctional loop is – That's Floyd Mayweather Jr. That's
where the dysfunctional comes in.
Kelly Swanson: Again the fight is this Saturday night at the Home Depot
Center Soccer Stadium, 27,000 seats and also live on HBO's
World Championship Boxing.
"Homecoming"—On
Saturday, May 3, De La Hoya will face former world champion
Steve Forbes, in what will be the first-ever boxing event at
The Home Depot Center's soccer stadium. The bout will also
mark De La Hoya's return home to fight for the first time in
Los Angeles since 2000 as well as his return to HBO's World
Championship Boxing for the first time since 2001.
Homecoming" is
presented by Golden Boy Promotions in association with
Tournament of Contenders, AEG and The Home Depot Center and is
sponsored by Cazadores, Tecate, Rockstar Energy Drink,
Southwest Airlines and Affliction Clothing. The match up will
be televised live by HBO's World Championship Boxing beginning
at 10pm ET / 7pm PT.
Tickets
priced starting at $25.00 may be purchased by calling
Ticketmaster at 213-480-3232 or by visiting
ticketmaster.com. Group tickets,
VIP packages and Hospitality packages are available by calling
1-877-AEG-TICKETS (1-877-234-8425) or by visiting
http://www.aegtickets.com/.
4-29-2008