BOXING De La Hoya risks title against Mayorga
They will trade punches for the WBC light middleweight title tonight.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ricardo Mayorga smokes cigarettes in the ring after particularly satisfying victories. "El Matador" wears a bullfighting outfit before his fights, and he revels in insulting his opponents' families, challenging their ethnicities and questioning their sexual orientations.
In short, the former Nicaraguan gang member is one of the nuttiest men in a profoundly irrational profession. And he has little in common with Oscar De La Hoya, the cultured epitome of businesslike fisticuffs -- except a desire for a career-revitalizing win when they meet in Las Vegas tonight.
De La Hoya seems eager to be back in the ring after a 20-month absence since his ninth-round knockout loss to Bernard Hopkins in September 2004. The Golden Boy has nothing left to accomplish in a long, frequently spectacular career, but he seems determined to fight at least two more times before devoting himself fully to his myriad interests outside the ring.
Reason for fighting
So why would De La Hoya risk his health and reputation against Mayorga, of all people? Perhaps it's exactly because Mayorga is just the type of fighter who would insult De La Hoya's wife and Latino heritage, filling any motivational gaps for a fighter who's already done everything.
"He's done his job already," De La Hoya said. "He's made me train already as hard as I can. He's motivated me already to be the best fighter I can be, so there's no way I can fall in whatever kind of trap he's trying to set for me."
De La Hoya (37-4, 29 KOs) has maintained his sterling career and a largely unblemished face by avoiding any of the flat-out brawls that take their toll on any fighter -- the type of brawls that Mayorga revels in starting. De La Hoya insists he'll stand toe-to-toe with Mayorga (28-5-1, 23 KOs) at the MGM Grand, trading power punches for the WBC light middleweight title.
While De La Hoya is expected to make $8 million for his business empire, Mayorga threatened not to fight this week unless his purse was increased to $8 million as well. Promoter Don King and manager Tony Gonzalez announced Mayorga's decision to fight after all on Thursday, though neither knew why Mayorga changed his mind.
All part of the game
That's all part of the game with El Matador, who's clearly motivated to pound De La Hoya: He's down to three or four daily cigarettes from his three-pack-a-day habit when he's not training, and he even stopped drinking before the fight.
"I believe honestly that despite everything I told him and despite all the insults that we traded, I still don't think he's man enough to stand in front of me," Mayorga said through a translator.
Mayorga's wild behavior has been fairly constant before his biggest fights, and it seems to be part of a plan to get his opponents off their games mentally. That plan -- and Mayorga's tremendous courage in the ring -- seemed to work in his landmark wins over Vernon Forrest in 2003, but had little effect on Felix Trinidad, who knocked out Mayorga in 2004.
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