"THEY ALWAYS MAKE ME THE VILLAIN": FLOYD MAYWEATHER
Il fait un peu sa pleureuse mais ca fait parti du jeu... l'un des points interessant (a verifier le 8!) c'est le fait qu'il reconnaisse que le combat contre De La Hoya ait manqué de "peps", et annonce un combat tres different contre Hatton!
-Ah bon? T'as arreté la danse Floyd?
As Floyd Mayweather addressed the media yesterday at the MGM Grand
Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas there were more than a few things he
wanted to get off his chest, which is par for the course when it comes
to the “Pretty Boy” and his gift for gab.
One of the more interesting asides had to do with the anticipation
level for this fight, which has far exceeded what most insiders thought
would be the case when the bout was initially announced. Mayweather
insists the bout will live up to the hype, which wasn’t exactly the
case in his last ring appearance.
Back in May when he fought Oscar De La Hoya and found himself on
the cover of Sports Illustrated with the “Golden Boy”, coupled with a
story that proclaimed their showdown the “fight to save boxing”,
Mayweather not only ate up the atmosphere, he spat it back at the
cameras that were following him around for HBO’s 24/7 documentary
series. He used the show to not only hype himself but to turn himself
into a polarizing figure and, in essence, became the villain. It was a
brilliant marketing ploy on Floyd’s part because for all the ‘smack’ he
talks before a fight, when he enters the ring he resembles not a whit
of the thuggish Prima Donna who preens in front of the cameras like a
peacock spreading his feathers. He understands that in order to put
asses in the seats, which will add millions more to an already
overstuffed bank account, he has to play a role and the formerly soft
spoken fighter of six or seven years ago has embraced his alter ego.
“I’m always being put in this position,” he said yesterday when he
was booed during a photo op. “It was the same when I fought Arturo
Gatti and the same when I fought Oscar De La Hoya. You’ve got to have a
villain and they’ll always make me a villain. I’m used to it, it makes
me work harder and it makes me fight harder.”
As for the relative let down of the De La Hoya fight, the one
those who continue to insist that boxing is a dying sport when in fact
it has been thriving, Mayweather acknowledged the lack of sustained
action and promised that his fight with Hatton would be a more charged
event once the opening bell rings.
“They (the fans) don’t have to worry about that this time,” he
said. “Believe me when I tell you this. They don’t have to worry about
that. He’s going to come out ready to kill me. He’ll fight his heart
out, but he’s got a weakness and on fight night I’ll show you what it
is. It won’t go the distance.”
Mayweather then went on to address the trash talking that has been going on between the two.
“Have you known Ricky Hatton to be a trash talker before? No.
He’ll fight hard because he’s mad and upset. If you fight angry, you
make a lot of mistakes, and when you fight a sharp, witty fighter like
me, you can’t make mistakes. He’s been down, he cuts easily, he swells
and he’s fighting the best in the sport. Everyone talks about his
pressure… pressure, pressure, pressure. That’s been the same game plan
against me since 1987.”
As flashbulbs popped and Floyd’s smile widened he made one final
concession. “Hatton is one hell of a fighter. He’s going to bring his
‘A’ game. (But) I’m not worried about no fighter. Watch fight night,
you’ll see.” Source_Eastsideboxing _05.12.07 - Matthew Hurley