On Thursday,
one of the most respected Mexican boxer, the retired 6 division world champion Oscar
Dela Hoya, went on social media and elucidates to the boxing fans on why they
shouldn’t support Mayweather-McGregor contest.
Dela Hoya,
who currently heads the Golden Boy Promotion, said that the key reason why they
(Mayweather and UFC camps) are pushing the event to transpire is money. Clearly,
the Mayweather-McGregor show is all about business and fans would just got
robbed and will hurt the sport.
What’s the
probability of someone with a sparkling professional boxing record of 0-0
disposing an icon with 49 and 0? The probability of McGregor hurting
Mayweather? Don’t try to calculate because there’s no solution to the given
problem.
Below is Dela
Hoya’s plea to the boxing fans copied from his Facebook page.
To my fellow boxing
fans: I write in the hopes that together we can protect the sport of boxing.
With each passing day, it looks more and more likely that the circus known as
Floyd Mayweather Vs. Conor McGregor will be coming to town in the near future. As
undercard fights start to take form, athletic commissions give their blessings
in exchange for millions of dollars and the fighters start counting even more
cash, one group will eventually be left to make sure this farce doesn’t occur.
We, the fans, who are the lifeblood of our sport. Boxing is starting to dig out
of the hole that Floyd and Manny Pacquiao shoveled by waiting seven years to
put on a fight that ended up being as dull as it was anti-climactic. 2017 has
started off as a banner year for boxing. Joshua vs. Klitschko; Thurman vs.
Garcia; Golovkin vs. Jacobs; Canelo vs. Chavez. All four of these fights – and
many more – have brought the fight game back and reinvigorated interest from
the ever-elusive casual fan. But if you thought Mayweather/Pacquiao was a black
eye for our sport – a matchup between two of the best pound-for-pound fighters
that simply didn’t deliver – just wait until the best boxer of a generation
dismantles someone who has never boxed competitively at any level – amateur or
professional. Our sport might not ever recover. I fully understand the initial
attraction from any fan of combat sports. McGregor is almost certainly the best
pound-for-pound MMA fighter. Floyd is Floyd – the most dominant boxer of his
time. But success in one sport does not guarantee success in another. Far from
it. And let’s be clear, these are two different sports – from the size of the
gloves fighters wear, to the size and shape of the ring, to the fact the one
sport allows combatants to use their legs to strike. Think about it, beyond Bo
Jackson and Deion Sanders, what other athlete has successfully competed in two
sports in the modern age? And Jackson and Sanders both played both baseball and
football throughout their high school and college careers before going
professional. Furthermore, it’s not like McGregor would be fighting a good
fighter, let alone a mediocre one. He would be fighting the best. To use a bit
of an extreme analogy, I happen to be a pretty good golfer. Could I potentially
hold my own on one of the second-tier tours? Maybe. But would I be able to
compete with Rory McIlroy, Jordan Speith or Sergio Garcia? Of course not. Nor
would I think to try. Now, I know critics will say that I’m only writing this
letter because my company is promoting what will be the culmination of an
outstanding boxing year when Canelo Alvarez takes on Gennady “GGG” Golovkin in
September, and I don’t want anything to distract attention away from that
fight. But my interest is in the health of boxing as a whole. It always has
been. And if Floyd were to come out of retirement to take on someone like Keith
“One–time” Thurman, Errol Spence or some other top welterweight, not only would
I applaud the fight, I’d be the first one on line for a ticket. That kind of
fight is what the fans – and I am a fan first – deserve. Which brings me back
to the circus. Floyd’s and Conor’s motivation is clear. It’s money. In fact,
they don’t even pretend it’s not. But it’s also a lack of consequences for when
the fight ends up being the disaster that is predicted. After this fight,
neither of them will need us anymore. Floyd will go back to retirement –
presumably for good this time with another nine-figure paycheck – and Conor
will go back to the UFC. It’s a win-win for them. It’s a lose-lose for us.
We’ll be $100 lighter and we will have squandered another opportunity to bring
boxing back to its rightful place as the sport of kings. At this point, only we
can shut the circus down by making it clear that we won’t pay to see a joke of
a fight and telling our casual-fan friends that they shouldn’t either.
Sincerely, Oscar
https://youtu.be/LWDTLFtGFHU
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