
Sharkie’s Machine
By Frank Gonzalez Jr.
June 7, 2008
“Reflecting on Mayweather’s Retirement”
As we’ve heard by now,
Floyd Mayweather Jr. is retiring from boxing again. Most of us
are sure he’ll be back. The question is when? The answer is
simple; when it’s safe to come back. This is not about love or
hate. This is about logically assessing the value of a fighter
who was crowned the best in the business.
When it comes to the sweet
science, Floyd is undeniably talented. He has fast hands, slick
defensive skills and very accurate punching, which translates
into power. But Floyd retiring now, in his prime, is no real
mystery, considering the current reality.
Cotto and Margarito are
going to fight. Williams is getting a gift rematch from Carlos
Quintana, where I expect very favorable officiating in favor of
Williams. In a few months, there will be clear definition at
Welterweight.
If the promoters allow it,
the winners of these fights will fight each other and produce a
single, Undisputed Champion. Instead of being in the mix, Floyd
is fixing to split. Its pretty clear what the real reason is.
He doesn’t want to fight either Cotto or Margarito.
The time has come for
Floyd to put up or shut up, now that its clear that no one
cared about the rematch on Pay-Per-View against De La Hoya.
Their last fight was forgettable and the decision could’ve gone
either way as neither did anything spectacular in all of 12
rounds. Consider what DLH looked like after fighting blown up
Lightweight Steve Forbes and what he looked like after the FMJ
fight? Forbes clearly did more damage, so another sparring
session between DLH vs. Forbes would be a more interesting
fight than DLH vs. FMJ II, especially on PPV, which is killing
boxing’s fan base more than bad decisions!
Floyd said, "It is with a
heavy heart that I write you this message today. I have decided
to permanently retire from boxing. This decision was not an
easy one for me to make as boxing is all I have done since I
was a child. However, these past few years have been extremely
difficult for me to find the desire and joy to continue in the
sport. I have said numerous times and after several of my
fights over the past two years that I might not fight again. At
the same time, I loved competing and winning and also wanted to
continue my career for the fans, knowing they were there for me
and enjoyed watching me fight. However, after many sleepless
nights and intense soul-searching I realized I could no longer
base my decision on anything but my own personal happiness,
which I no longer could find. So I have finally made up my
mind, spoken to my family, particularly my mother, and made my
decision."
Floyd sounds misguided,
disingenuous and full of things you don’t want to step in.
Boxing made him a millionaire and asked little in return. He
was a pet project for HBO, who facilitated his rise to the
mythical ‘Best Pound for Pound’ status without having to fight
any of the best fighters in his weight classes.
Floyd lost the desire and
the joy? Sounds like a very temporary state of mind. Where’s
his mental discipline or his loyalty to his fans that were
always so loyal to him?
I submit that Floyd was
not the best fighter in boxing, just one of the most carefully
managed fighters in the sport. If Floyd were to stay in boxing,
there’d be no more patience for that line about how Cotto or
Margarito are not marketable enough to fight him. He’d have to
fight one of them and its clear that he doesn’t want to fight
either.
The truth is that Floyd’s
fights were rarely exciting, since they were too often
mismatches against guys at the end of their careers or in the
case of DLH, a blatant business arrangement, where neither guy
showed any killer instinct, while raking in the big bucks. In
39 professional fights, only twice Floyd face top level,
undefeated fighters. Diego Corrales way back in 2001 and Ricky
Hatton last December.
Let's look at who his last
ten fights were against:
Victoriano Sosa (35-2) a
decent fighter, it took Floyd 12 rounds to win the decision.
Miguel Cotto beat Sosa by KO in 4 the next year.
Philip N’Dou (31-1) a
decent fighter that Floyd beat by TKO 7. After his next fight,
a loss to Issac Hlatswayo by Split Decision in 2004, Philip
N’Dou was never heard from again.
De Marcus Corley (28-2)
Floyd wins by UD 12. Cotto beat Corley by controversial TKO 5
ten months later. Like most of Floyd’s opponents, Corley was on
his way down when Floyd fought him. Corley has lost his last
four fights in a row.
Henry Bruseles, (21-2)
Floyd beats one of Cotto’s sparring partners by TKO 8. Bruseles
is back to fighting guys with lousy records and hasn’t been
heard from since.
Arturo Gatti (39-6) Floyd
beats Gatti by TKO in 6. Gatti was also past his prime. In the
sixth round, the ref instructed the fighters to break and Floyd
sucker punched Gatti who was looking to the referee. Floyd
should have been disqualified for that unsportsmanlike conduct
but the ref allowed it. Gatti learned real late in his career
that you have to protect yourself at all times! After
Mayweather, Gatti beat a past it Thomas Damgaard by TKO 11 and
then lost by KO to both Carlos Baldomir and Alfonso Gomez, who
saw Gatti retire after that fight.
Sharmba Mitchell (54-6)
Floyd wins by TKO 6. Two fights later, Mitchell loses to Paul
Williams. Imagine six foot tall Williams in against tiny 5’4”
Sharmba Mitchell? Mitchell is probably retired now.
Zab Judah (34-3) who after
showing how past his prime he was in losing to Carlos Baldomir,
the next stop was a big money fight against the money man,
Floyd, who beats Judah by UD 12 in a fight that would have been
ended by technical disqualification after Judah’s father and
Floyd’s uncle jumped into the ring after a low blow and had to
be separated by security. Two fights later, Judah went on to be
TKO’d by Miguel Cotto in 11 and at this time is a shell of the
“good fighter” he once was.
Carlos Baldomir (49-9)
fresh off his win over Gatti and Judah, Floyd took Baldomir to
school for a UD 12 win. Now, Baldomir has lost two out of his
last three, including a loss to Vernon Forrest by UD 12 and a
SD 12 win over a tune up opponent last year.
Oscar de la Hoya (38-4)
Floyd wins a decision that could have gone either way in a
fight so forgettable they wanted to do it again and milk their
big names for another huge PPV that only they were excited
about.
For his last fight, Ricky
Hatton (43-0) Floyd was too fast and technically skillful for
Hatton, who got knocked out by a check hook and banged his head
into the ring post before going down and being TKO’d in the
tenth round. In his comeback fight against Juan Lazcano, Hatton
took a good walloping and was saved from being KO’d when after
landing a pair of big rights cleanly to the face and Hatton was
wobbly, the ref gave Lazcano a warning and gave Hatton an extra
30 seconds recovery time, while his corner tied his shoelaces,
which were suddenly in need of tying while Ricky’s legs were
good and rubbery.
Those are the last ten
opponents of Floyd Mayweather Jr. Not a very impressive resume
for a man touted as the best fighter in boxing. There’s not one
guy on that list that was in his prime when Floyd fought them.
Floyd Mayweather Jr. was
ranked number one in the Welterweight division, even though he
hadn’t beaten any of the best champions in that division.
If he really is retiring
for good, he will be remembered two ways. One side will think
he was the greatest fighter since Sugar Ray Robinson (even if
Floyd only achieved a fraction of what Robinson did) and the
other side will remember him as a guy who only fought guys he
knew he could beat, while calling himself the best.
Floyd played leap frog,
jumping from division to division, wherever the money was best
against the easiest “champion” opponent. He didn’t even have to
work his way up to a championship fight when he moved up, it
was the red carpet treatment all the way.
Anyone with common sense
knows that the only way to be the best is to beat
the best. Floyd simply didn’t fight the best fighters so, how
could he qualify?
Floyd’s departure will be
good for boxing. We can use more warriors and fewer businessmen
in this sport. Let businessmen be promoters, not fighters. Most
fans want to see fighters fight the best fighters of their era,
for pride and the spirit of competition—not just for the money,
which comes with the territory.
Maybe he believed that
Oscar de la Hoya would beat him in their Pay-Per-View rematch
that nobody seemed to give a damn about? Maybe he realized that
he’d have to fight Margarito, (who he ducked after being
offered $8 million dollars to fight him not too long ago) or Miguel
Cotto, who has evolved into a dynamic fighter with great ring
presence and command. If Floyd ever wanted to fight either of
those guys, it would have been on schedule or happened already.
We all know Floyd picks and chooses who he wants to fight. He
got it like that.
The most likely scenario
is that Floyd ‘retires’ for a year or two, then comes back
after the top guys in his division are battle-worn and ripe for
the taking. He’ll fight a couple of big money fights against
the usual suspects, then retire for real.
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Comments can be emailed to Frank Gonzalez Jr.