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OSCAR -vs- FLOYD; WILL THIS BE THE END OF THE GOLDEN ROAD ?
By Jim Amato
February 22, 2007 - I really can not remember ever rooting for Oscar De La Hoya
to win a fight. He was the Olympic " Golden Boy " who was turning professional
and was going to become the next Sugar Ray Leonard. The hype, the ever present
smug smile were just too much for me to take. Things just seemed to come too
easily for Oscar. Yes he rang up his winning streak and even captured the WBO
junior lightweight title in 1994. Four months later he stopped Jorge Paez to win
the WBO lightweight title. He beat the stuffing out of Lorain, Ohio's Carl "
Stuff " Griffith but by 1995 Oscar had yet to meet a serious challenge.
Finally the quality of Oscar's opposition improved. He beat John John Molina,
Genaro Hernandez, Rafael Ruelas and Jesse James Leija. In 1996 he halted Mexican
legend Julio Cesar Chavez in a bloody affair to win the WBC junior welterweight
title. Ten months later he met soon to be Hall Of Famer Pernell Whitaker for the
WBC welterweight title. Although the scores were 115-111 and 116-110 ( twice )
for Oscar, a lot of people thought Whitaker had done enough to keep his title.
The Golden Express kept moving along. There were wins over Hector Camacho,
Chavez in a rematch, Ike Quartey and Oba Carr. Then in 1999 came his showdown
with Puerto Rican hero Felix " Tito " Trinidad. I wanted Tito to win this fight
so badly. Trinidad was a tremendous puncher and I wanted him to wipe that golden
smile from Oscar's face. On this night though Oscar fought the fight of his life
and he boxed Felix silly for eight rounds. Finally Trinidad started to come on.
Oscar even danced the last few rounds away feeling he had a comfortable lead but
in the end Tito got the verdict but I still feel Oscar got robbed.
In 2000 I thought Oscar suffered his first legitimate loss when he was
outpointed by former lightweight titleholder " Sugar " Shane Mosley. In 2001
Oscar captured a title in his fifth weight class out scoring Javier Castillejo
for the WBC light middleweight title. Then came his 2002 super fight with arch
enemy Fernando Vargas. Talk about bad blood. This was a grudge match for the
ages. I was wrong in the opening statement of this article. There was a time I
rooted for Oscar and that was the night he battled Vargas. Fernando was brash
and showed Oscar no respect. De La Hoya gave Vargas a sound thrashing that
evening. Two fights later Oscar again lost to his nemesis Shane Mosley. This one
was much closer then their first bout and I actually felt Oscar did enough to
earn the decision. So up to this point, in my eyes Oscar had suffered only one
un-disputable loss.
Sometimes you reach for something that is just a little to high and you over
extend yourself and fall. That is just what happened when Oscar attempted to
take Bernard Hopkin's middleweight belt. Bernard halted Oscar in the ninth
round. Nearly two years later Oscar challenged Ricardo Mayorga for the WBC light
middleweight crown and gives Mayorga a well deserved drubbing. Now a year later
Oscar will put that title on the line as he faces undefeated Floyd Mayweather
Jr.
Why am I rooting for Oscar now ? Well by looking back at his career I've been
able to put things into perspective. Oscar was not some well promoted and spoon
fed pretty boy. He fought the best of his era and ducked no one. The names on
his record read like a who 's who of the best boxers from 135 to 160 pounds.
Ruelas, Molina, Genaro Hernandez, Leija, Chavez, Whitaker, Camacho, Quartey, Oba
Carr, Trinidad, Mosley, Vargas and Hopkins. Now that is impressive. Respect ? In
my book he's earned it and then some.
Will Oscar's strength, punching power and better overall opposition be enough to
over come the challenge of Mayweather ? Oscar looked great in stopping Mayorga
but there are many who feel that Mayorga has always been a bit over rated and he
was the perfect " name " foe for Oscar's return. De La Hoya is now thirty four
years old. Since September of 2003 Oscar has had only four fights and has lost
two of them. It may very well have been three as he barely got by Germany's
Felix Sturm. By bringing in Freddie Roach to train him for this fight I believe
Oscar made a very wise decision. Freddie's one of the best trainers in the
business today. Still with Roach in his corner or even the ghost of Ray Arcel
giving him advice it is obvious that the deck is stacked against Oscar.
Mayweather is one of the most naturally gifted boxers I've seen since Sugar Ray
Leonard and Roy Jones Jr. He has terrific hand speed and he has a great defense
BUT...Does he have the power to get De La Hoya's attention or the chin to
withstand Oscar's booming left hook ?
All questions will be answered on May 5th. I say Floyd fights smartly especially
in the early going and establishes his speed. He's in, he's out. No foolish
exchanges. By the middle rounds Floyd is so dominant that he might go for the
knockout. I doubt if he'll get it because Oscar has a good chin. In the end I
see Floyd winning a conclusive decision. Still I'll be rooting for Oscar.