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Undefeated Mayweather - Hatton Preview

A Look into This Mega Fight on December 8th 2007

By WriterzBlock, published Oct 02, 2007
Published Content: 123  Total Views: 181,463  Favorited By: 8 CPs
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"I think you've seen more action in these four rounds than you've seen in Mayweather's entire career."

- Ricky Hatton after his 4th round knockout victory over Jose Luis Castillo.

Give him credit, the guy has got guts; Ricky "The Hitman" Hatton is one of the few undefeated fighters remaining active in the sport today. His unblemished record speaks for itself - 43 victories, 30 KOs, 2 division titles and acclaim as the best fighter to emerge from Great Britain. Yet many will question to wonder why Hatton, 29, would even dare step foot on the throne of Floyd Mayweather Jr. A 3-1 betting underdog, Hatton believes he truly has a chance to defeat the sports #1 pound-4-pound fighter.

"There's no question, Mayweather is the best fighter in the world right now," commented Hatton at a New York City press conference. "But I truly do believe that I can beat Floyd. I just hope that with all that talk he's doing that he shows up to fight me on

December 8th." Can you blame him? Recently, Hatton has made his mark on U.S. soil with spectacular appearances on HBO and Showtime in his last few fights. His "kill or be killed" attitude is garnering him worldwide attention. Bottom line is, Hatton is relentless and has a hell of a chance to make this an entertaining fight.

This is nothing new to Floyd Jr. He's scaled the mountaintop for a decade; undefeated in every adventure along the way - flawlessly decapitating his opponents from the ring in 38 victories with 24 knockouts. His recent win over Oscar De La Hoya has shined light over his abilities, celebrity status and box office draw.

"You're a good wrestler but this ain't wrestling," spoke a confident Mayweather at the New York City press conference. "I promise, come December 8th it's going to be a toe-to-toe battle." Floyd made the same claims before his May 5th contest with De La Hoya - which in turn ended up disappointing a lot of the boxing public. Despite harsh criticism from the public, Floyd 30, hasn't smelled defeat since his run in the amateurs more than a decade ago. "I dedicated my life to the sport of boxing. Blood, sweat and tears, that's what it's all about."

Comments
Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
I watched that fight again and I did think Mayweather won the fight. I had it 8-4. Oscar could've won that fight but he abandoned his left jab and it cost him.

Posted on 11/27/2007 at 9:11:00 AM

 
Mayweather didn't beat de la Hoya. He got the decision, and if it had been an AMATEUR bout, he would have won decisively. But it wasn't, and the scoring of that fight was a travesty.

Posted on 11/21/2007 at 8:11:00 AM

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