Although he isn't as
famous as his fighting sons, Ricky, the world light
welterweight champion or Matthew, a British welterweight
contender, Ray Hatton is definitely a heavyweight in the boxing
business.
While the limelight does occasionally find him, Ray prefers to
apply his talents behind the scenes. This week, he has been
hard at work with co-promotional partners Frank Maloney and
Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions, finalizing
preparations for the biggest boxing show ever to be held in the
UK, taking place this Saturday at the sold out 55,000 seat City
of Manchester Stadium.
"It's all gone very, very well," said Ray of the long labors
performed to turn the massive boxing promotion into a reality.
"55,000 people, it's unbelievable, and we confidently can turn
around and say it is a sellout. There were just a few hundred
tickets that had gone back on sale for a variety of reasons and
the last few of those have been snapped up, so without a doubt,
there will be 55,000 in the stadium on the night."
The promotion is being billed as "The Homecoming" with
Manchester's favorite son Ricky Hatton , 43-1 (31), new making
his first ring appearance in Britain in almost three years.
The rugged body puncher's IBO title defense against highly
seasoned opponent Juan Lazcano, 37-4-1 (21), has clearly been
the driving force behind the enormous ticket sales, but the
inclusion on the show of flashy American Paulie Malignaggi's
IBF light welter championship rematch with Lovemore N'dou and
Matthew Hatton's bid to unseat Commonwealth champion Craig
Watson have only added fuel to the fire.
The Hattons pulled a rare move in modern day boxing by making a
conscious decision to walk away from more lucrative
opportunities in America in order to base this fight card in
their beloved hometown.
"It's been a long time since we fought here and if Ricky wins
this one, the things we have coming up on the horizon will
probably all be based in America, so fighting here at this time
was something we felt we had to do," said Ray. "There's a lot
of excitement here in Manchester and to us, this is a way of
paying back the fans.
"It will be nice for all the people watching on TV here and in
the stadium because the fights start at 5:30 pm in the stadium
and 7:30 on Sky Box Office, rather than much later here when
it's being shown live during prime time in America. So, it is a
Brit friendly time and I think that's a nice part about this,
we've earmarked it as a way of basically saying, 'thank you' to
all the fans."
Standing in the way of this mutual northern affection will be
hardened light welterweight Juan Lazcano, an American who has
no qualms about walking into the belly of the beast, even if it
is inhabited by hostile 55,000 fans.
Lazcano has only lost two contests, a world title fight and a
world title eliminator, over the last ten years while crushing
the hopes of three former world champions on the comeback trail
during that same time span. Ironically, Ricky is trying to
mount his own return following a first career loss, handed out
by Floyd Mayweather last December in Las Vegas,
"With Ricky having his first defeat, against arguably the best
pound for pound fighter on the planet, which is no disgrace, a
lot of people would thought that we'd probably have come back
against a little bit of a lower key opponent," said Ray.
"But, I think this is what makes Ricky a little bit special to
the fans, in that they know that he doesn't like to do anything
the easy way. So he just said that if he's going to do it and
come back home and put it on a big stage, we wanted a fighter
that would ideally give him a really tough fight.
"And obviously, Lazcano, he's fought all the best and he's just
come narrowly short of winning world titles. He has a great
record and he's never been stopped over the last ten years."
Team Hatton expect Lazcano to bring out a classic performance
from their resident superstar and they hope a win here at home
will prime Ricky's engines for another foray across the pond
this Autumn.
"I must admit, as a parent, I would have liked if Ricky had
picked someone a little less tough and robust, but this is not
what it's about," said Ray. "Ricky is the one who decides who
he wants to fight and even though this was a comeback fight
after a defeat, he just didn't want the fans feeling that he
was taking an easy way out.
"Ricky is only 29 and he's still got a lot to give, he's still
very talented. He wants to prove that he's still the man at 140
to beat, not just because The Ring magazine considers him the
best in the division, but he wants to prove to everybody else
that he's the man to beat."
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.
Chief support features IBF light welter champion Paulie
Malignaggi, 24-1 (5), vs. former titlist Lovemore N'dou, 46-9-1
(31), and Commonwealth welterweight champion Craig Watson, 12-2
(4), defending against Matthew Hatton, 33-3-1 (13).
Two other championship fights will be featured with English
light middleweight title bout between the champion Andrew Facey,
19-5-1 (6), going against Manchester's Thomas McDonagh, 31-1-2
(6), and Liverpool's Mark Moran, 9-0-1 (2), squaring off with
Danny Wallace, 12-4-1 (6), for the vacant English super
bantamweight title.
Two-time British light middleweight champion Jamie Moore, 28-3
(19), also sees action on the card, facing Esau Herrera,14-3-1
(6), of Mexico City in an eight rounder.
Doors open at 5:00PM with the first fight at 5:30PM. Sky Box
Office will televise live commencing at 7:30PM.