Reyaj
Master Don Juan
Very surprised to see no posts on Oscar's big win this weekend. Here is an article I just found. While I think the author is going a little far, it was none the less a great win for the Golden Boy.
Saturday at Las Vegas
Junior middleweight
Oscar De La Hoya TK06 Ricardo Mayorga
Wins a junior middleweight title.
Records: De La Hoya, 38-4, 30 KOs; Mayorga 27-6-1
Rafael's remark: What a night, as De La Hoya looked fantastic beating the crap out of the loudmouthed bully from Nicaragua. Mayorga completely disrespected De La Hoya, his family and his heritage throughout the promotion and threatened to pull out because he was unhappy with his $2 million purse.
When it came time to finally fight, De La Hoya made him eat his words as well as a ton of left hooks and right hands. This was one of the Golden Boy's finest moments as he delivered an explosive and ferocious performance. He was the big favorite, but few figured he would blow away the usually durable Mayorga.
De La Hoya, 33, showed no signs whatsoever of the 20-month layoff that followed his knockout loss to Bernard Hopkins. Instead, he looked fast and unveiled a powerful right hand that had not been a significant part of his arsenal in the past. He dropped Mayorga in the first, knocked him down twice more in the sixth and won virtually every second of the fight.
The 13,076 fans in the arena erupted with such joy after his victory that I will never forget the surge of electricity that shot through the crowd upon referee Jay Nady's stoppage. It was spine-tingling and made the hair on my neck stand up.
Is there any better way for De La Hoya to end his career? He erased the bitter memory of his KO loss to Hopkins in awesome fashion and won his 10th world title belt. Nothing he can do beyond this can ever match that high. If he wants another mega payday, he can pursue a fight/soap opera with Floyd Mayweather Jr. (the son of De La Hoya's trainer, Floyd Sr.) or a rematch with Felix Trinidad. But for what reason?
De La Hoya doesn't need the dough (he's earned more than $200 million) and his place in history is secure; he has his health, a thriving businesses outside the ring, a wife who wants him to quit and a newborn son. This should be the fairy-tale ending to De La Hoya's career. He should listen to the old show-business axiom: Always leave them wanting more.
Saturday at Las Vegas
Junior middleweight
Oscar De La Hoya TK06 Ricardo Mayorga
Wins a junior middleweight title.
Records: De La Hoya, 38-4, 30 KOs; Mayorga 27-6-1
Rafael's remark: What a night, as De La Hoya looked fantastic beating the crap out of the loudmouthed bully from Nicaragua. Mayorga completely disrespected De La Hoya, his family and his heritage throughout the promotion and threatened to pull out because he was unhappy with his $2 million purse.
When it came time to finally fight, De La Hoya made him eat his words as well as a ton of left hooks and right hands. This was one of the Golden Boy's finest moments as he delivered an explosive and ferocious performance. He was the big favorite, but few figured he would blow away the usually durable Mayorga.
De La Hoya, 33, showed no signs whatsoever of the 20-month layoff that followed his knockout loss to Bernard Hopkins. Instead, he looked fast and unveiled a powerful right hand that had not been a significant part of his arsenal in the past. He dropped Mayorga in the first, knocked him down twice more in the sixth and won virtually every second of the fight.
The 13,076 fans in the arena erupted with such joy after his victory that I will never forget the surge of electricity that shot through the crowd upon referee Jay Nady's stoppage. It was spine-tingling and made the hair on my neck stand up.
Is there any better way for De La Hoya to end his career? He erased the bitter memory of his KO loss to Hopkins in awesome fashion and won his 10th world title belt. Nothing he can do beyond this can ever match that high. If he wants another mega payday, he can pursue a fight/soap opera with Floyd Mayweather Jr. (the son of De La Hoya's trainer, Floyd Sr.) or a rematch with Felix Trinidad. But for what reason?
De La Hoya doesn't need the dough (he's earned more than $200 million) and his place in history is secure; he has his health, a thriving businesses outside the ring, a wife who wants him to quit and a newborn son. This should be the fairy-tale ending to De La Hoya's career. He should listen to the old show-business axiom: Always leave them wanting more.