De La Hoya lauds PacMan for Cotto win Saturday, 21 November 2009 00:00 By Jun Medina Special Correspondent WASHINGTON, D.C.: Pay-per-viewrecord holder Oscar De La Hoya paid tribute to Manny PacMan Pacquiao and predicted the Filipino boxing icon could set a new pay-per-view record in a mega-fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. At the height of his popularity, De La Hoya generated much of the 2.45-million all-time pay-per-view record set during his May 2007 junior middleweight title fight with Mayweather. De La Hoya lost that fight via a controversial split decision. Now, the former 10-time world champion is predicting Pacquiao-Mayweather could hit 3 million pay-per-view buys or even more to break that record. At $55 each, 3 million pay-per-view buys translate into $165 million. At that level the fighters, assuming the agree to a 50-50 sharing, could gross at about $50 million each in what would be the richest fight in boxing history. De La Hoya, whose company Golden Boy Promotions represents Mayweather, thinks a Pacquiao-Mayweather match would be the biggest fight in boxing, which he described as already on a great roll. Huge blockbuster De La Hoya, a former Olympic champion and boxings former top draw, explained why Pacquiao-Mayweather would be a huge blockbuster. In one corner, you have Mayweather, who many still believe is the best pure boxer on the planet today. And in the other corner, you have Pacquiao, a fighter who is explosive and always puts on a good fight, said De La Hoya, who was stopped in the eighth round by Pacquiao in December 2008 and retired after that. According to De La Hoya, Pacquiao and Mayweather are both crossover stars now, and they appeal strongly not only to boxing fans but also non-boxing fans. So this isnt a case of one fighter carrying the show; you have two fighters who will carry the promotion and make it a blockbuster, De La Hoya explained. When I fought Mayweather, he was extremely talented but not quite the crossover star he is now. De La Hoya conceded that negotiations to firm up Pacquiao-Mayweather wont be easy, but it can be done. The ball is in Mayweathers court; he calls his own shots. But thats the fight I believe Mayweather wants, Pacquiao wants and the fans want. Its a fight that should be done, wrote De La Hoya on Thursday in his weekly Ring online blog. Incredible Pacquiao De La Hoya described Pacquiao as incredible in his dominant win over Miguel Cotto on Saturday. I thought Manny was very patient. He wanted to be sure to execute his game plan, which is the result of a lot of dedication and hard work during training. As the fight went on, Cotto just realized that he couldnt hurt Pacquiao or beat him to the punch, De La Hoya said. It was one of those [incredible] performances. Pacquiao put on a great show. He also expressed his admiration with the way Pacquiao kept on moving up in weight and beating the best fighters in the different weight divisions. To move up all those weight classes and beat the guys hes beating is really something. I tip my hat to him. Not too many fighters can move up in weight and do what hes doing, said De La Hoya who remains active in the sport, this time as a full-time promoter. He estimates that Pacquiao-Cotto chalked up more than a million pay-per-view sales, reflecting the people renewed interest in boxing as well as Pacquiaos star power.
"De La Hoya lost that fight via a controversial split decision." That's interesting, I don't recall there being much controversy in it. PBF did lose a few of the later rounds as I recall, but I don't remember much controversy? hmmm...
I thought that Oscar's comments about Pacquiao not hurting him were bull****. Pacquiao DID hurt him. The only reason he didn't go down is because he was being too defensive, and not taking any shots he didn't see coming. Aside from that, had they not stopped it when they did, De La Hoya would have surely been KO'd outright. Oscar probably said Pacquiao didn't hurt him to save face, so he wouldn't look as bad. Oscar picked Cotto, and was very dismissive about Pacquiao leading up to their fight. It's good to see him eat his words.