Showing posts with label Floyd Mayweather Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Floyd Mayweather Jr.. Show all posts

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Floyd Mayweather beats Andre Berto and says ‘it’s over’


Floyd Mayweather earned a unanimous decision over Andre Berto on Saturday to claim his 49th and he says final victim in a glittering unbeaten ring career spanning two decades.

All three judges ruled overwhelmingly in Mayweather’s favor and afterwards the American welterweight world champion confirmed that he was retiring, saying: “My career is over.

“It’s official.”

He equals the perfect 49-0 record of heavyweight legend Rocky Marciano and retains his WBA and WBC titles, embellishing his reputation as the best boxer of his generation.

Mayweather fell to his knees in the ring after the bell, taking in the moment.

“I want to thank all the fans… for 19 years I would not be able to do it without these fans,” he said, after the judges ruled it 118-110, 117-111 and 120-108, all to the champ.

“But you have to know when it’s time to hang it up. I’m knocking at the door; I’m nearly 40 years old now.

“There’s nothing else to prove in the sport of boxing. I’m leaving the sport with all my faculties; I’m still sharp and smart.”

The 38-year-old self-styled “TBE” (“The Best Ever”), who had consistently said that the Berto showdown would be the last time he steps into the ring, had too much guile and nous for the rank outsider.

Berto, who has now lost four of his last seven fights, was set up as the fall guy for the pound-for-pound king’s coronation — and he played the role perfectly, showing plenty of heart but not quite enough quality.

Mayweather has his critics, but he was given a hero’s welcome at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas by a boisterous crowd who had come expecting to see him give Berto, 32, an old-fashioned shellacking.

He did not quite do that, but instead used his sublime defensive skills to avoid the worst that Berto — a former two-time world champion — could throw at him.

Berto kept coming at Mayweather; Mayweather would land a quick-fire combination and then dart out of trouble again — to roars of approval for the man fans have taken to calling simply “Money.”

Turning the screw

Even when he had Mayweather against the ropes Berto found it hard to connect with anything meaningful.

The first real taste of a fight breaking out came at the end of the second round, when the two tangled after the bell, Mayweather giving his foe a dirty look.

The champion — hit by claims on the eve of the fight that he broke anti-doping rules earlier this year, which he denies — came out for round three clearly still riled.

Mayweather was sent scampering across the canvas after one exchange, bringing the crowd of 13,395 to its feet, but the move was more akin to wrestling than boxing.

Berto had his first real taste of success halfway through the fourth of the scheduled 12, forcing Mayweather to cower against the ropes as Berto chased one of the biggest upsets in boxing history.

Berto resorted to roughhouse tactics in the fifth, catching Mayweather with one particularly low shot that drew oohs from the stands.

The crowd were up on their feet again in the sixth as Mayweather turned the screw, bamboozling the underdog with three shots to the body in rapid succession.

Still Berto — dismissed as a dud by some critics who wanted to see Mayweather take on a bigger name — kept coming forward.

But he was mostly finding air, not Mayweather’s face, and Mayweather punished him in the closing seconds of the seventh, and Berto briefly looked in big trouble.

Mayweather was ominously gaining control and he knew it — striking a pose at the end of the eighth, and some in the crowd serenaded him with cries of “TBE! TBE!”

Referee Kenny Bayless had to stop the action in the 10th and  warn the pair to stop mouthing off at one another, and there was another flashpoint when the bell sounded.

Mayweather sealed his night’s work — and that of his career, if he is to be believed — by turning showman in the 11th, ducking brilliantly to avoid  several Berto haymakers and then looking behind himself as if to say mockingly to his opponent: where am I?

Asked what he and Berto were muttering to each other in the ring, Mayweather said: “Just trash talking.”

source: interaksyon.com

Monday, May 4, 2015

Mayweather lives up to 'Money' moniker


LOS ANGELES - As he finished speaking at the post-fight conference of his showdown with Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather Jr. approached some reporters in their seats dangling a check he just claimed after a night's work.

It was a check issued by Bank of America indicating a staggering $100 million (about Php4.46 billion).

"No pictures, though," Mayweather, sliding the check out of an envelope. "Don't want any pictures of it."

On Saturday (Sunday in Manila) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Mayweather reminded everyone why he proudly calls himself "Money".

He just outpointed Pacquiao in boxing's richest fight ever, fashioning out a unanimous decision victory in front of over 16,000 fans. And he was paid handsomely for it.

Since the fight went the full 12 rounds, Mayweather has made around $55,000 per second. He did it by side-stepping his way out each time Pacquiao cornered him on the ropes and countering the gritty Filipino with jabs and short rights.

The $100 million check was just the first of other possible paychecks Mayweather will receive, when income from the live gate receipts, pay-per-view buys and other revenue sources comes in. He walked away from the ring a big winner - unifying the WBC, WBA and WBO welterweight titles - and will even be a bigger winner when he walks into the bank.

His boxing brilliance has made him the world's highest paid athlete for several years now.

"The ultimate goal is to make nine figures in a night. And that's what I did," he said at the dais.

Mayweather has been a staple in Forbes' list of world's highest-paid athletes, ranking first in 2014 with total earnings of $105 million. Pacquiao, for his part, is at 11th with total winnings of $41 million.

Pacquiao, for his part, was handsomely rewarded as well, taking home around $80 million, or roughly P3.5 billion. He is also entitled to a share of other revenues generated by the fight.

But unlike the unbeaten Mayweather, Pacquiao isn't someone who loves to brag about it. - With report from AP

source: philstar.com

Sunday, May 3, 2015

After win over Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather plans one more fight before retiring


After beating Manny Pacquiao to maintain his unbeaten record, Floyd Mayweather reiterated that he plans to fight just one more time.

With one more fight, the 38-year-old Mayweather will fulfill his rich six-fight deal with telecaster Showtime.

And with one more victory he would match the iconic 49-0 ring record of Rocky Marciano.

“My last fight is in September, and then it’s time for me to hang it up,” the 38-year-old Mayweather said.

Mayweather has insisted throughout the build up to the Pacquiao fight that 49-0 would be enough for him — although skeptics think that should he get there he won’t be able to resist trying for a 50th win.

“I’m almost 40 years old now. I’ve been in this sport for 19 years and have been a champion for 18 years. I’m truly blessed.”

source: interaksyon.com

Monday, April 27, 2015

‘FIGHT OF THE CENTURY’ | Big hype, huge money for Pacquiao-Mayweather megabout


The countdown is on to Saturday’s showdown between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather, the $400 million “fight of the century” with a place in boxing’s pantheon of greats on the line.

More than five years in the making, it’s an epic clash of styles and personalities, pitting the craftsmanship and defensive savvy of “Money” Mayweather against explosive southpaw Pacquiao — an iconic figure in his native Philippines.

The welterweight world title unification bout looks set to smash boxing records for worldwide viewership and revenue, with Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum predicting it could generate as much as $400 million.

With a 60-40 purse split in favor of Mayweather, the unbeaten American stands to make an eye-watering $150 million and Pacquiao $100 million.

Fanned by instant Internet publicity and social media, global interest in the contest has skyrocketed.

The precious 500 tickets for seats at the 16,800-capacity MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas that were put on sale directly to the public at face values ranging from $1,500 to $10,000 sold out in minutes.

Promoters are even selling 10,000 tickets to Friday’s weigh-in, at $10 a pop.

The audience on fight night will read like a who’s who of A-list celebrities, casino high-rollers and others with the wherewithal to snaffle tickets that are going at secondary sales outlets such as StubHub for as much as $100,000.

The staggering financial figures and celebrity sideshows have only boosted the fight’s cross-over appeal.

The build-up has focused on such minutiae as Mayweather’s custom-made mouth guard, infused with diamonds and gold, and the $2 million-plus Pacquiao will rake in for advertising on his trunks.

Clash of characters

But once all that is stripped away, it will be up to the two men in the ring to deliver on the hype, in a duel that many feel has passed its sell-by date.

“The only thing the fighters can do is go out there and perform, and do what we do best,” says Mayweather, who brings an impeccable 47-0 record with 26 knockouts to the bout, along with the World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association welterweight world titles.

Mayweather, trained by his father Floyd Sr. and continuing a family boxing legacy that stretches back for decades, is closing in on the iconic 49-0 record of 1950s legend Rocky Marciano, who retired as an undefeated heavyweight champion.

The American has held 11 titles in five weight divisions, his untarnished record and unabashed swagger making him the highest-paid sportsman in the world, according to Forbes.

Underlining his gift for provocative self-promotion, Mayweather last week compared himself favorably to heavyweight icon Muhammad Ali.

“I know there will be a backlash, but I couldn’t care less,” Mayweather said.

But beneath the glitzy surface runs a darker Mayweather story, studded by incidents of domestic violence.

It only makes Mayweather the perfect foil for Pacquiao, beloved in the Philippines as a humble humanitarian who has put his own womanizing ways behind him with a return to his Christian faith.

A lover of music and basketball, Pacquiao is a two-term congressman who many predict will one day be president of the Philippines.

At 38, Mayweather is two years older than World Boxing Organization champion Pacquiao, who is nevertheless considered the more ring-worn of the two, with his record of 57-5 with two drawn and 38 knockouts.

The only fighter to win eight world titles in as many weight divisions, Pacquiao’s stock plummeted with two defeats in 2012, including a crushing one-punch knockout by Mexico’s Juan Manuel Marquez. There were rumors of impending retirement.

He has since won three fights, although in his last bout, in November, he was unable to finish off Chris Algieri despite knocking him down six times.

Pacquiao hasn’t knocked out an opponent since a TKO of Miguel Cotto in 2009 — the same year he crushed Ricky Hatton in two rounds.

Mayweather’s last knockout win was back in 2011 and he too has showed signs of ring-wear, though that has not stopped him going into the fight as the favorite.

Big, but how big?


Even so, the bout tantalizingly brings together two of the most talented fighters of their generation in a clash that recalls such past classics as Joe Frazier’s victory over Ali in 1971, the first fight of their epic trilogy.

“The whole country stopped,” the promoter Arum recalled of the immense interest in that fight at Madison Square Garden.

Whether Pacquiao-Mayweather will surpass Ali-Frazier — or any other “fight of the century” — in lasting significance is immaterial, Arum said.

“This fight is tremendous,” he said. “The interest is tremendous. And we should really wrap ourselves around that fact rather than compare it to fights of another era.

“One thing is clear: it’s the biggest fight of this century.”

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Manny Pacquiao embraces underdog tag: ‘It gives me more motivation’


Floyd Mayweather at 38 could be the perfect target for Manny Pacquiao, the Filipino ring icon’s trainer Freddie Roach said Wednesday.

As Mayweather and Pacquiao turned out for their only joint press conference in the build-up to their May 2 mega-bout, Roach said the unbeaten Mayweather’s vaunted defensive abilities are waning.

“His legs are little bit shot. He’s slowed down quite a bit,” Roach said, adding that he believes Mayweather would have had a better chance of beating Pacquiao five years ago, when attempts to make the fight fell apart.

“He is going to have to exchange more,” Roach added — with a pithy dismissal of the idea that Mayweather has recently become more willing to go toe-to-toe in an effort to please fans.

“That’s bullshit,” Roach said. “He doesn’t care about the fans. He has to exchange more because his legs won’t take him out of the way … if he has to exchange with Manny Pacquiao he is in trouble.”

Mayweather brings a record of 47-0 with 26 knockouts to the bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Although Pacquiao is two years his junior, it was the Filipino whose career appeared to be on the wane after back to back defeats in 2012.

Since then, however, the southpaw has won three fights in a row to take his record to 57-5 with two drawn and 38 knockouts.

He’s the underdog, but said Wednesday that just adds fuel to his competitive fire.

“I like that,” Pacquiao said. “It gives me more motivation, more determination to focus on the fight and prove something.”

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Pacquiao’s friend disputes Floyd-Manny confrontation during NBA meetup: ‘Sobrang bait ni Mayweather’


A close friend of Manny Pacquiao denied reports that the Filipino ring icon was confronted by pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather during their much talked-about meeting in an NBA game.

“‘Yung mga gumagawa dyan ng storya, that’s not true na inaway daw. That’s not true walang ganun,” Bernard Cloma, who was part of Pacquiao’s entourage when he visited Miami to judge Miss Universe this week, said in a radio interview.

Citing anonymous sources, Ben Thompson of fightyhpe.com earlier wrote that Mayweather told Pacquiao to “stop lying” as they met for the very first time at halftime of the game between the Milwaukee Bucks and the Miami Heat last Wednesday.

Mayweather was reportedly referring to Pacquiao’s claims about having already signed contracts about their much-anticipated megafight and just waiting for the American’s signature to finalize the bout.

Cloma was with Pacquiao and his wife Jinkee watching the game and posted on Instagram the encounter of the two boxing rivals.




Cloma also said that after the game Mayweather even went to Pacquiao’s hotel where they had a long conversation.

“Pumunta si Mayweather dito sa hotel ni Manny. Nagkuwentuhan sila nang matagal,” Cloma said, adding that Mayweather was courteous all throughout his meeting with Pacquiao.

“Sobrang bait niya. Hanga ako kay Mayweather, ang bait niya,” Cloma said. “Bakit siya pupunta sa hotel diba after ng kaninang game?”

Pacquiao and Mayweather are expected to announce this week if their megafight projected to set record-setting revenues will push through.

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Floyd Mayweather says he’s ready to fight Manny Pacquiao: ‘Let’s do it’


Floyd Mayweather said on Friday that he’s ready for the long-awaited megafight with Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao.

In an interview on the Showtime network during a fight card his company was promoting, Mayweather said he was willing to make the fight happen, even suggesting a May 2 date for the bout.

“We are ready. Let’s make it happen. May 2. Mayweather versus Manny Pacquiao. Let’s do it,” Mayweather said in the interview.

There has been clamor for the megafight since 2009, but concerns about drug testing and money matters have made the fight seem unlikely to occur.

The undefeated American boxer also said that it was not him that was keeping the much-anticipated fight from happening and pointed at Top Rank promoter Bob Arum instead.

Arum, though, has stated that Mayweather was “smart” and has avoided the fight because Pacquiao poses the biggest threat to his pristine record.

The fight is expected to be the richest fight in boxing history, though Mayweather is expected to demand a much larger purse than Pacquiao in the bout.

Pacquiao has been calling Mayweather out recently, saying he was ready for the fight after his recent win over Chris Algieri and trading barbs with his rival on Instagram and in a Foot Locker commercial.

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, September 19, 2014

Manny Pacquiao’s message to Floyd Mayweather: Stop blabbing and fight me


GENERAL SANTOS – Philippine boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao threw down a fresh challenge to Floyd Mayweather Jr. on Thursday, daring the American world champion to “fight me” instead of setting terms that could torpedo the dream bout.

“He’s all talk. Until now he has not yet agreed to fight me. Instead of blabbing, he should face me atop the ring,” Pacquiao told AFP in an interview.

Ring fans the world over have been baying for a mega-fight between two of the world’s greatest boxers of their generation, but previous talks have always broken down before a deal could be signed.

Pacquiao, 35, has held world titles in eight separate weight divisions.

He is training to defend his World Boxing Organization welterweight title against another undefeated American, Chris Algieri, in Macau in November.

Mayweather, who scored a lopsided victory over Marcos Maidana in a rematch in Las Vegas on Saturday, pushing his record to 47-0, later denied he was trying to safeguard his unblemished record by avoiding Pacquiao.

However, he said a Pacquiao bout would have to be on the American’s terms.

Pacquiao retorted Thursday that great fighters did not duck facing the best and did not let any challenge pass by.

“I’m tired of his alibis. If he really wants to fight me, he knows how to reach me. We can fight anytime, anywhere,” Pacquiao added.

The Filipino, who has won 56, lost five and drawn two fights, also dismissed the manner of Mayweather’s second Maidana win, in which the American retained his World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association welterweight titles.

“To me, Maidana won that fight. Mayweather’s face and lips were swelling compared to Maidana’s unblemished face,” Pacquiao said.

Ahead of his bout in Macau, Pacquiao said he would not underestimate Algieri, 30.

“I’m not taking Algieri lightly. He’s taller than me and moves around the ring with savvy. That’s why I started my training early,” Pacquiao said.

His assistant trainer Buboy Fernandez said they would focus on developing a game plan, as well as honing Pacquiao’s technique and footwork.

“Algieri uses the ring well and he loves to lean on the ropes. We must devise a strategy to counter this,” Fernandez added, warning Pacquiao to beware of the American’s left uppercut.

“He’s fast, but not as fast as Timothy Bradley. So he can be an easy target for our boxer,” Fernandez said.

American Bradley beat Pacquiao in a controversial split decision in 2012, but lost the rematch by unanimous decision last April.

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Dodging Manny Pacquiao? Floyd Mayweather admits picking easier opponents for more money


HOLLYWOOD – Floyd Mayweather says his undefeated record has been partly built on the backs of handpicked opponents who didn’t always provide the toughest fights but did help him become the world’s best paid athlete.

“Sometimes they say, ‘Well, Floyd Mayweather’s opponents was handpicked.’ That’s a good thing,” Mayweather said during a conference call with reporters to hype Saturday’s world title fight against Mexico’s Saul “Canelo” Alvarez. “I commend my team … when I sit back and I think about my career, I say ‘you know what? I had a cool career. I didn’t take any punishment’.

“If they say these guys were handpicked, they was handpicked to make $40 and $50 and $60 million, then you know what? Keep handpicking them. If they’re going to keep paying, keep handpicking them.”

Mayweather, who Forbes magazine lists as the world’s highest paid athlete, has been criticized for dodging a potential mega fight with Filipino superstar Manny Pacquiao.

The two have tried several times over the past few years to get the deal done for what would likely be the most lucrative fight in boxing history. But each time negotiations broke down when they couldn’t come to terms on a variety of issues, including drug testing and share of the revenue and purses.

Pacquiao’s camp blames Mayweather for the holdup, saying even when they agreed to all his demands — including drug testing — the American would come up with new increased demands to scuttle the blockbuster fight.

“Floyd’s statement speaks for itself. Now we know why he won’t give the fans the fight they want most,” Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach told AFP on Tuesday.

The fight with Alvarez is the second in Mayweather’s six-bout, 30-month contract with American cable network Showtime that could pay him more than $200 million. After Mayweather beat Robert Guerrero in May, he said he wanted to fight again in September – marking the first time since 2007 he will be in the ring twice in a calendar year.

Mayweather’s guaranteed purse for the Alvarez fight is reported to be a record $41 million which would surpass the previous record of $32 million he received for fighting Guerrero.

Organizers are also hoping that this fight will eclipse the 2.44 million record pay-per-view sales and sales of more than $130 million racked up by the Mayweather and Oscar de la Hoya fight in 2007. Mayweather will also get a cut of the pay-per-view money on top of his guaranteed purse.

Mayweather, who is undefeated in 44 fights, says he will take nothing for granted when he faces World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association super welterweight champ Alvarez in a 12-round showdown of unbeaten fighters at the MGM Grand Hotel.

“I am not overlooking this guy,” said Mayweather. “In Mexico he is a young rock star and everybody that they put in front of him he was able to go out there and do his job.

“I am pushing myself to the limit right now.”

The last time Mayweather stopped an opponent inside the distance was two years ago and that came when Victor Ortiz lowered both his hands and was looking at the referee for a ruling. Mayweather seized the moment and hit Ortiz with a combination of punches that floored Ortiz.

Since then, Mayweather has won 12-round decisions over Miguel Cotto in May 2012 and Guerrero.

Saturday’s fight will be contested at 152 pounds with Alvarez’s super welterweight titles on the line. Alvarez (42-0-1) is a 154-pound champion and Mayweather usually fights at 147 pounds.

The 23-year-old Alvarez says he believes he has the perfect fight plan to register one of the biggest upsets in boxing history.

“I am going to follow my game plan and I am going to fight my fight,” he said. “I am not going to allow him to fight his fight. I have a game plan.”

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Pacquiao Hopeful vs Floyd

MANILA, Philippines — There is a possibility that Manny Pacquiao will bypass a Nov. 10 ring return in the event a megabuck match with Floyd Mayweather Jr. can be made for early 2013.

“That’s possible,” said Pacquiao lawyer Jeng Gacal.

Mayweather is set to be released from a Las Vegas prison anytime Friday after being convicted for domestic battery and the fact that the unbeaten US boxer has also formed an alliance with rapper-millionaire 50 Cent in the creation of TMT (The Money Team) Promotions is a sign that something’s going on.

Pacquiao has actually declined to say who it is going to be among the leading candidates – Tim Bradley and Juan Manuel Marquez – telling a handful of scribes recently that he hasn’t made up his mind yet.

Promoter Bob Arum is arriving in Manila next week to discuss what’s on the horizon for Pacquiao.

Gacal said that if a Mayweather fight can be made for early next year, Pacquiao might decide not to proceed with a planned return in November to avoid any complications.

Mayweather’s decision to hook up with 50 Cent and form a new promotional outfit is seen as a positive sign towards making a fight with Pacquiao a reality.

One thing that also points to that is the mediation meeting set for Monday in Los Angeles involving the lawyers of Pacquiao and Mayweather. Pacquiao had filed a defamation suit against Mayweather owing to charges made by Mayweather that the Filipino uses performance-enhancing drugs.

But Arum believes the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight won’t happen until April or May 2013 and that it is very likely that Pacquiao will face Bradley, Marquez or even Miguel Cotto.

“I don’t think so,” said Arum when told about the prospects of Pacquiao foregoing a November fight and just wait for next year to resurface.

Arum said he has already talked with the camps of Bradley, Marquez and Cotto and that he expects to have something concrete before he heads back to the US from Manila.

Still, Arum acknowledged that the formation of TMT Promotions and the mediation are “positive” signs that the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight can be made.

source: mb.com.ph

Monday, May 7, 2012

BEAT CRAZY: Twitterverse pummels Justin Bieber, Mayweather’s new ‘boyfriend’

Somebody got beat up very badly.

And no, I’m not talking about Albie Casiño, Mon Tulfo and Miguel Cotto, who were all physically assaulted in separate incidents you’ve probably heard about in the news, particularly in this section.

It’s a different kind of beatdown for, of all people, Justin Bieber. In this case, the teenage pop sensation got hit with plenty of virtual uppercuts in the hands of online detractors on Twitter, who reacted upon seeing him standing alongside rappers 50 Cent, Lil Wayne and the rest of The Money Team posse of boxing great Floyd Mayweather, Jr. who just defeated Cotto for the WBA junior middleweight/superwelterweight belt.

Not that the former YouTube phenomenon, who scored big hits with “Baby” and “Boyfriend,” was popular with numerous internet bloggers and message boards to begin with. As with most overnight successes, Bieber is not without his own share of haters.

Nick Collins, a critic for the UK-based broadsheet, The Daily Telegraph, offers perhaps the most spot-on assessment for the hostile reception: “Bieber’s character also appears to strike a particularly sour note with his Internet critics, with many remarks commenting on his youthful appearance, his teen-pop songs, his image as a heart-throb to young teenage girls and his manner of speech.”

Associating himself with a world-class athlete like Mayweather (and yes, that was him carrying the former’s title belt) is obviously an effort to improve his image and score pogi points beyond the usual Bieber faithful. But apparently, that didn’t turn out to be the case here.

Here are some of the “kinder” tweets from around the world yesterday and today: “Justin Bieber was in Floyd Mayweather’s entourage last night. I really hope his job in the group is the human punching bag.”

“If I was a boxer, I wouldn’t have Justin Bieber in my posse. Maybe that’s why I’m not a boxer.” “Floyd Mayweather just lost a lot of street cred for having Justin Bieber walk out with him.” “Justin Bieber joins Mayweather in the ring after Cotto fight…. boxing plummets to new depths.”

Even 50 Cent, who just two years ago, boldly stated, “I hate Justin Beaver.” Now they’re buddies. Naturally, the rapper is not spared from the barrage of derisions: “Please tell us that “50 Cent and Justin Bieber is trending because they are involved in a massive gang war…”

“50 Cent and Justin Bieber is trending. They shouldn’t be in the same sentence.”

Of course, the superstar hitmaker may really be a nice kid and true to his clean-cut boy-next-door persona just couldn’t say no to the brash, outspoken fighter. His tweet to Mayweather right after the fight sounded gracious and polite: “Hard Work & Dedication. congrats champ. glad i could be a part of it.” To which Mayweather responded, “Keep up the great work and thanks for the support.

Still, the whole thing didn’t necessarily sit well not only with fans of Mayweather and 50 Cent but also with those of our very own Manny Pacquiao, who two years ago was the subject of racist rants from the controversial sports figure Bieber chose to identify himself with—the same boxer the kid now also describes as “misunderstood” in another tweet.

Which also explains why many Filipinos shared similar sentiments. San Juan Representative JV Ejercito tweeted, “Maybe Mayweather and Justin Bieber are both arrogant and full of themselves that is why they get along?”

Sportscaster Jinno Rufino also tweeted this declaration yesterday: Never say never to @FloydMayweather ….. Bieber lost ALL his Pinoy fans.” TV5 anchor Paolo Bediones, on the other hand, simply lamented, “…sad sad day for filipino beliebers.”

Well, whether Justin Bieber really lost a lot of fans both here and elsewhere by casting his lot with Mayweather, even if only for just one night, only time and public reception to his records and concerts will tell.

Meanwhile, the misunderstood Floyd Mayweather, Jr. will be serving his 90-day sentence for domestic abuse very soon. Baby, baby, baby, ooh!

source: interaksyon.com