
-Photo Credit: McCormickMMG-
With the excitement in
North West England reaching a fever pitch for Ricky Hatton's
much anticipated return to his beloved city of Manchester,
there are many questions still to be answered surrounding this
massive fight card which will be played out in the open air
City of Manchester Stadium before a record breaking 56,000
spectators.
The debate rages on between camps of those who maintain that
Hatton will resume as the wrecking ball that destroyed Jose
Louis Castillo with a devastating body shot versus those
concerned that "The Hitman" has already left his best on the
canvas of the Thomas and Mack Centre in Las Vegas when put
there by Floyd Mayweather last December.
One point that is beyond contention is the confidence of
IBO/Ring light welterweight champion Hatton, 43-1 (31), which
has reached sky-high proportions as he relishes performing
once again in front of his legion of faithful followers who
will pack the massive football ground in numbers that Britain
has never before witnessed.
"Lazcano comes to fight and I won't have to go chasing him,
that's for sure," said Hatton. "This one is really important
for me to get back to what I do best and work off me boxing
abilities and not just go rushing in. I think that people will
see the best Ricky Hatton that there's ever been."
Hatton's opponent Juan Lazcano, 37-4-1 (27), has been
conducting himself with quiet confidence since arriving in
Manchester and the highly seasoned 34 year old hasn't come
here to play the sacrificial lamb.
"My birthday fell on Easter this year and I truly see his as a
Resurrection type thing for me," said the Mexican born
American. "I know what I've got to do and I'm going to
surprise a lot of people in that stadium. If Ricky Hatton
didn't already have a loss on his record, I'd be putting the
first one on there."
The mouth-watering
undercard is led by a bad-blood rematch between the flashy IBF
light welterweight champion Paulie Malignaggi, 24-1 (5), and
the man he swept past to win that title, no-nonsense grafter
Lovemore N'dou.
Despite his wide points victory over N'dou in their first
bout, Malignaggi sees this return contest as a dangerous
endeavor that must not take for granted, particularly if he is
to get his long called for showdown with Hatton this fall in
New York's famed Madison Square Garden.
"Lovemore is going to be a dangerous and I can't afford to
look past him," said the brash New Yorker. "Look what happened
to Junior Witter recently; he was focused on a fight with
Hatton and got schooled by Timothy Bradley. I'm a great
fighter but I have to put on a great fight against N'dou."
The transplanted South African N'dou, 46-9-1 (31), has come a
long way from his adopted Australia but feels that this
rematch will give him a chance to right what he feels are
injustices that led to his defeat in the first bout with
Malignaggi.
"When we fought in America, the referee wouldn't let me work
on the inside and that cost me the fight against Malignaggi,"
recalled the hard-nosed N'dou. "Here in England I think I will
get better treatment and have the chance to do my thing, so I
will win this fight."
An all-Manchester scrap
that has been brewing for some time has now reached a boiling
point as Commonwealth welterweight champion Craig Watson, 12-2
(4), puts his belt at risk against the more experienced
Matthew Hatton, 33-3-1 (13).
"I just love to fight and I've been really looking forward to
this one against Matthew, especially on this bill," said
rugged southpaw Watson. "I'll show my win against Ali
Nuumbembe for the Commonwealth was just the start and I
guarantee I'll win this fight."
Having had a short amateur career led to a long professional
development for Matthew Hatton and the eight year veteran
could not have picked a better time to start sharing the
spotlight with superstar big brother Ricky.
"This is my time now and I won't be denied," stated Matthew.
"I've worked hard and have kept improving to reach this point.
This is the perfect opportunity for me to show what I can do
and there's no way I won't have the Commonwealth title on
Saturday night."
Saturday, May 24, 2008 will feature the biggest selling fight
in the history of British boxing, IBO/Ring light welterweight
champion Ricky Hatton vs. Juan Lazcano, in front of 55,000
fans at City of Manchester Stadium in Manchester, England on a
shared production between Frank Maloney Promotions, Punch
Promotions and Golden Boy Promotions.
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5-23-2008