Hozumi Hasegawa was recently knocked out by the tremendous Mexican fighter Fernando Montiel, and this has caused a backlash from fans and critics to cite the former Bantamweight king as "Hype, "overrated", or at the very least, a "china-chin fraud". Much like it wasn't the end of the road for Marco Antonio Barrera in 1997 after he was derailed by Junior Jones as a Super Bantamweight, nor is it the end of the road or indeed the journey for Hozumi Hasegawa.
Pongsaklek Wonjongkam,...uh...I wish I had better writing skills. But you probably know where I was going with that.
Why are you making a thread trying to exclude the Floydettes? How could you be so cruel! BTW, why Ellerbe? Did you lose a bet?
Seriously, can't you guys just try and add someone productive to this thread. I'm not getting onto that subject, Pejevan.
Pongsaklek Wonjongkam: "I just beat the Michael Jordon of Boxing" Larry Merchant: "Just because you beat Michael Jordon doesn't mean you become Michael Jordon"
Why Ellerbe? Can't be bothered. Sorry Addie. It takes too much effort writing one only to be savaged by idiotic and moronic posters later. However, if you ask me to write on a Floydette psyche, I might give more than that.
After the way you insulted me on MY thread, I cringe at responding to YOUR thread, but I'm a man of the people, so... By: Anthony Randolph - Imagine if it was Super Bowl Sunday. The two teams challenging each other both happened to go 16-0 during the regular season, and both smashed their respective competition in stunning fashion in the playoff games leading up to the Super Bowl. Super Bowls are already the biggest single day sporting event in the U.S., but two 16-0 teams facing each other? Can you imagine? That would mean that somebody is going undefeated for the season. Somebody is finally breaking the "unbreakable" record of the 1972 Dolphins. Ticket sales would be insane. TV ratings would be unprecedented. Advertisers would have to pay almost 7 figures for a 30 second spot. This would be...the biggest single day sporting event in U.S. history. And that, my friends, is how - from a boxing standpoint - I view Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Manny Pacquiao.
Robbery is a bull**** word when not used correctly. Carl Froch wasn't robbed against Mikkel Kessler, Andre Dirrell wasn't robbed against Carl Froch, Martinez (vs Williams) wasn't robbed I could go on, but the point is when there is a close fight, and the judges don't see it your way, that doesn't make it a robbery. Not to mention, there might be a bul**** score (IE: Paul Williams 119-110 over Martinez) but still that doesn't make it a robbery. Edit: I've said this before in a thread I just sort of copy, pasted, and deleted a few things.
Best sign that I spend too much time here? I actually just wondered if that picture of her was on your desktop folder album. It's a thought that actually occurred to me. I spend too much time here. Edit: Can that count as my paragraph?