Boxing historian Bert Sugar relishes taking the opposite view and backed Shane Mosley to upset the odds by beating fellow American Floyd Mayweather Jr in their non-title welterweight bout yesterday.
Mayweather, the 4-1 favorite, has an unblemished 40-0 record as a professional with 25 knockouts, but Sugar believes the flamboyant 33-year-old will be undone by the bigger and faster Mosley.
“Not only do I think he can win, and obviously I think he will, but I’m a contrarian,” Sugar, 73, told reporters on the eve of the scheduled 12-round bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.
PHOTO: REUTERS
“Mayweather has never met anybody as fast as Mosley. Even at 38 [years old] and 90 percent of what he was, that’s still fast. He’s big and bigger,” Sugar said. “Not just the one pound on the scale, but if you look at the dimensions, particularly in the shoulders and his reach.”
Mosley, a world champion in three weight divisions with a career record of 46-5 with 39 knockouts, tipped the scales at 66.6kg on Friday compared with Mayweather’s 66.2kg.
His reach, at 1.8m, exceeds Mayweather’s by 5cm.
Both fighters are renowned for their lightning hand and foot speed, along with sublime boxing skills, but Sugar believes Mosley has formulated a winning recipe.
“I think he knows how you can beat Mayweather, and it’s not with his right hand,” said Sugar, a cigar-chomping member of the International Boxing Hall of Fame. “That right hand is a looping right hand and it was made for [Antonio] Margarito, but it’s a kind of punch that you won’t hit Mayweather with.”
Mayweather is widely regarded as the best defensive fighter of his era, but Sugar felt his vulnerability to the left jab was highlighted by Oscar De La Hoya when the Americans fought for the WBC super welterweight title in May 2007.
De La Hoya held the upper hand in the early rounds before losing his crown to Mayweather in a split decision.
“Oscar used a left jab for six rounds and was ahead going into the sixth 4-1, but he then stopped and lost a split decision,” Sugar said. “I think he [Mosley] can do that. He’s got a good jab and a better reach.”
One other factor worth considering ahead of the eagerly anticipated contest, in Sugar’s view, was the effect of rust on both fighters.
Mayweather beat Juan Manuel Marquez in his most recent bout in September after a 21-month retirement, while Mosley has not fought since a ninth-round upset of Margarito in January last year.
“I think the rust factor is going to be more telling on Mayweather,” said Sugar, author of numerous sports books and a former publisher and editor of Ring Magazine. “Yes, Mosley is five years older, and I don’t know how to count it in boxing years.”
“But with a great defensive fighter, and there’s no question Mayweather is, any rust factor makes him a nano-second slower in his reflexes so that punches that were once this are now that,” Sugar said. “I do see where it could have even that much of an effect that it could be fatal [for Mayweather].”
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