pacquiao/algieri for nov 22
http://www.boxingscene.com/pacquiao-algieri-agreement-reached-november-22--79970
http://www.boxingscene.com/pacquiao-algieri-agreement-reached-november-22--79970
GOAT underdog
Since that fight with Khan, Chino made me a believer![]()
We dont fukk with cotton round these parts![]()
Porter the next GOAT and hes gonna expose thurman![]()

So was porter on the roids?
yo this fight is really happeneingpacquiao/algieri for nov 22
http://www.boxingscene.com/pacquiao-algieri-agreement-reached-november-22--79970












by David P. Greisman
Floyd Mayweather had been speaking to the assembled public in Washington, D.C., about how long he’d been at the top of the sport when he pointed to Robert Garcia, the trainer of Marcos Maidana — Mayweather faces Maidana in a rematch on Sept. 13.
“I was champion when he was champion,” Mayweather said. “And then he long gone away from the sport, I’m champion. And once I retire you Sept. 13, I’ll still be champion.”
Garcia felt he had to respond while sitting on the dais.
“Hey Floyd,” the trainer said.
“Oh now you want to talk,” Mayweather responded. “You had your chance to talk.”
The war of words began, with Mayweather landing some heavy blows.
Garcia: “We were champions at the same time. Sixteen years ago, I was world champion. But if you want to take a little walk, me and you can take a little walk. I’ll show you.”
Mayweather: “I’m the type of fighter, I can kick a fighter ass and the trainer ass the same night.”
Garcia: “Me and you can take a little walk.”
Mayweather: “If y’all want me to kick both of their ass the same night, I can do that. Y’all want me to kick both of their ass the same night?”
The crowd cheered.
Mayweather: “They only pay me to kick one ass.”
Garcia: “We don’t need no pay-per-view. Take a little walk.”
Mayweather: “If I’m not mistaken, he had his chance to talk. He got up here and didn’t say nothing. You want to get the mike again? He had his chance. He had his chance. Since he couldn’t get the job done against Diego Corrales, I did.”
Mayweather then pantomimed a body shot.
Mayweather: “Y’all got YouTube? YouTube Diego Corrales and Robert Garcia. His trainer, and you can see what’s going to happen Sept. 13. You know, birds of a feather flock together.”

by David P. Greisman
Floyd Mayweather is 37 years old, has been a professional prizefighter since he was 19 years old, and had trained and competed as an amateur long before that. He’s earning more money through boxing than any other athlete in his sport, but it’s still fair to wonder how he maintains the will and energy and the love for fighting after all these years and as he grows older.
“Some days are better than others, as far as I’m more like ‘OK, this is what I love to do,’ and some days it’s more like, ‘This is not what I want to do,’ ” he told a handful of media members on July 14.
“Of course I’m very comfortable. I don’t have to fight anymore. Different days you have different feelings. It’s no different from you guys. Some days you feel like you may write a story and are like, ‘This story wasn’t really that good,’ and other people may comment and tell you, ‘You know what, that story was immaculate,’ but you may not feel that was your best work.
“Some days I go to the gym, I may spar, I may box, and I feel like, ‘You know, it wasn’t my best day. I can do better.’ But some days I can be hard on myself. I’m my own biggest critic.”
He was asked whether he still hopes to fight through his contract with Showtime. The Sept. 13 rematch with Marcos Maidana will be the fourth pay-per-view in a six-fight deal.
“The only thing I want to do is just take one fight at a time as each fight presents itself,” he said.
Boxing’s been his life. What would he do were he to hang up his gloves?
“I’m really not sure. I’m really not sure,” he said. “As my children get older, I know they got a lot of things that they want to do, goals they want to accomplish out there in the real world, and hopefully I can be, not a good father, but a great father. A great father stand behind them and help them get to where they’re trying to get to in life.”

By Rick Reeno
WBO bantamweight champion Tomoki Kameda (30-0, 19KOs) has confirmed to BoxingScene.com that he signed an agreement with powerful adviser Al Haymon.
Kameda made his American debut last Saturday night at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. As part of the Saul Alvarez-Erislandy Lara undercard, Kameda scored a spectacular one-punch knockout of Thai challenger Pungluang Sor Singyu.
Tomoki is the youngest of the three fighting Kameda brothers. The three brothers made boxing history last September, when all three of them simultaneously held world titles. Unlike his two older brothers, who are very popular in Japan, Tomoki built his career up in Mexico. He speaks fluently in Spanish and uses the nickname "El Mexicanito."
"Team Haymon saw me at the fight. We had a chance to talk for a while. They were very interested in me. Haymon is the best in boxing. I had the opportunity and I'm very happy [with the deal]. My job is only to train and to win and Mr. Haymon's job is to get me the biggest fights possible and that what I expect he'll do," Kameda told BoxingScene.com.
Haymon's stable continues to grow at rapid rate. He currently works with a who's who of fighters, including Floyd Mayweather Jr., Adrien Broner, Amir Khan, Robert Guerrero, Shawn Porter, Deontay Wilder, Abner Mares, Keith Thurman, Sakio Bika, Leo Santa Cruz, Omar Figueroa, Erislandy Lara, Austin Trout, Devon Alexander, Errol Spence, Gerald Washington, and at least 30 others.

you will choc..you will...you made your bed..you gotta lie in it brehI ain't buying PAC Algieri
fukk that
Can't do it

)...im def not going to be buying this shyt
..this is stream status all the way