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View Full Version : Why Danny Garcia was smart to not pursue Floyd Mayweather fight



Fibroso
03-15-2014, 01:12 AM
Why Danny Garcia was smart to not pursue Floyd Mayweather fight http://l.yimg.com/os/388/2012/05/28/01-expert-feat-posts-70x70-png_225912.png (http://sports.yahoo.com/author/kevin-iole/) By Kevin Iole March 12, 2014 9:13 PM Yahoo Sports




http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/sTaMm1SySB6rpmkhI_9xXA--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTQyMTtweG9mZj01MDtweW 9mZj0wO3E9NzU7dz03NDk-/http://media.zenfs.com/en-US/video/video.cbstv.com/64a377d5ea9d06d0ddc6a73293bc1b89 (http://sports.yahoo.com/news/why-danny-garcia-was-smart-to-not-pursue-floyd-mayweather-fight-011305402-boxing.html#)
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Danny Garcia is embracing his heritage as he prepares to fight in Puerto Rico for the first time. (Showtime)



Undefeated fighters who flummox one of the hottest men in the sport generally wind up in a high-profile match worth millions of dollars the next time out.
But not Danny Garcia.
Six months after Garcia outclassed Lucas Matthysse in Las Vegas in September in one of the most significant super lightweight title fights in years, Garcia finds himself away from the spotlight taking on a relatively unknown opponent.
The win did not put his name into the Floyd Mayweather Derby, as it seemed it should have. Rather, Amir Khan, a guy Garcia knocked out in a one-sided manner, was one of two finalists for the spot that ultimately went to Marcos Maidana.
He'll take on Mauricio Herrera on Saturday in Bayamon, Puerto Rico, in a bout televised on Showtime in a match far less anticipated than his last few outings.
As hard as it might be to believe, it's all just fine with Garcia, too.
Garcia was brilliant in defusing the powerful Matthysse on the undercard of Mayweather's one-sided rout of Canelo Alvarez. His victory over Matthysse tagged him as unquestionably the class of the 140-pound division and seemed to set him up for a series of big fights.
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http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/zTUOkBCFHMGHKm0OZYtN8A--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTMxMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_US/Sports/USA_Today/20130914_ajw_aj4_447-5227f05f04809c3cd615654151df31cbDanny Garcia (R) and Lucas Matthysse trade blows during their September bout. (USA Today)

Herrera, though, isn't a particularly big name and his one shining moment came in a loss, when he gave Mike Alvarado a few rough patches during a 2012 bout in Las Vegas.
Garcia, though, is as soft-spoken as his father/trainer,Angel Garcia, is outspoken, outrageous and outlandish. And after discussing the possibilities, Garcia was fine with Herrera and sticking around at 140.

"I'm 27-0 and I've got the titles and I got to this point by listening to my team," Garcia said. "I don't like to get involved too much in the business parts of it. I'm a fighter and I just fight who they tell me to fight. That's worked pretty well for me and I decided that is how I want to keep doing things."
In his last five fights, Garcia has beaten Erik Morales, Khan, Morales again, Zab Judah and Matthysse, all of whom were ex-world champions.
One has to go back to a Feb. 25, 2011 match in San Diego against John Figueroa to find the last time Garcia didn't either fight for a world title or face a person who held a world title fight at one point.
Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer said Garcia had indicated to him after the Matthysse fight that he wanted to stay at 140 for at least one more fight and make another defense of his WBA and WBC belts.
With those marching orders in hand, Schaefer set out to find an opponent and found the pickings slim.
"I don't know another fighter in this sport who has fought bigger names back-to-back-to-back-to-back like Danny Garcia has done," Schaefer said. "But when I went out to look for an opponent for him for this fight and I looked at the available landscape, there weren't a lot of those guys available.
"Danny had told us he had a dream to defend the title in Puerto Rico and this was an opportunity for us to give him that opportunity. And with Herrera being Mexican and the rivalry being what it is between Mexicans and Puerto Ricans, it made a lot of sense."
It made a lot of sense on a lot of levels. The big-money option would have been Mayweather, and had he told Schaefer he wanted it, Garcia might have emerged as the frontrunner and been Mayweather's choice.
But Mayweather is an altogether different story from guys like Morales, Khan and Matthysse. He is a master boxer, he's on another level conditioning-wise and he has the ability to destroy a developing boxer's confidence fairly easily.
So while Garcia would have gotten more money in the short run by fighting Mayweather, he might have wound up worse off in the long run.
If and when he finally fights Mayweather, he'll be as ready as he possibly can be.
"As a fighter, you always want those kind of fights and who doesn't want to see if they can be the one who beats Mayweather?" Garcia said. "It's everyone's dream to get a big fight like that. But no one on my team thought it was a good idea at this point in my career.
.http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/PvSYtx.rjWnY2vfBzO1gQg--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7cT04NTt3PTMxMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_US/Sports/USA_Today/20130427_jla_aa9_1093-bc6b501728797cfa3c4e84cb03431deaDanny Garcia celebrates his win over Zab Judah. (USA Today)

"You don't change what has worked in midstream and listening to my team has worked. So I stayed with it." He should handle Herrera on Saturday to retain his titles and then who knows where he'll wind up.
Golden Boy matchmaker Eric Gomez first spied Garcia during the Olympic trials and came away a believer. Nothing he's seen since has changed his mind.
"We are presenting a main event with the fighter of the moment, one of the best pound-for-pound boxers in the world, Danny Garcia, and this is particularly special for me because I saw him grow," Gomez said.
"His style was unique. He packed a combination of Tito Trinidad, Wilfredo Gomez, Miguel Cotto and Juanma [Lopez's] styles, which is truly impressive."
What's most impressive is that Garcia has grown at the box office and at the gate. Golden Boy has the luxury of time with him, as Garcia won't turn 26 until March 30, and is only now entering his prime.
There will be time down the road for a bout with Mayweather, who has the Maidana match and three other fights left on his contract.
"He's just coming into his own and he can sell tickets as he showed at the Barclays [Center in New York] and he can fight and he's really the total package," Schaefer said. "He's so advanced for his age and his experience, you don't realize that he's still learning. But he's quite the champion already and has a great future in front of him.
"What we want to do is to keep putting him in the right fights at the right time and watch how far he goes with it."

Fibroso
03-15-2014, 10:02 AM
This article should teach the goofs out there a thing or 2 about the boxing game. Not a single person is accusing Garcia of "ducking" because he's not jumping up to welter. He is clearly a smart young man who is wise enough to listen to his team. Of course Floyd isn't afforded the same respect. His election to fight certain people is immediately called cowardice and when he listens to his team, its called cherry picking. How ridiculous would it be for someone to demand that Garcia fight Cotto to prove that he is as good as he claims to be. Sound familiar?
Found this comment in this article, fits well with some of the haters here and there.... hehehehe

Fibroso
03-15-2014, 01:39 PM
PHILADELPHIA -- With a looming junior welterweight title defense against Mauricio Herrera (20-3, 7 KO) just days away, Danny Garcia is thinking about going back home after having concluded another training session in his own gym, DSG Gym.

Garcia (27-0, 16 KO), who was born in Philadelphia of Puerto Rican parents, is not going back to his place in Philly but to Bayamon, Puerto Rico, where he'll fight in front of friends and family for the first time in his career.

Garcia is going to Puerto Rico to continue in the footsteps of the great fighters who have represented the island over the decades, whose pictures are part of a mural right in his own gym where he trains.

You're two weeks away from your fight with Mauricio Herrera. What's your outlook going into this bout?
He's a good fighter. He's a tough fighter. He's going to come to fight, but I'm going to go in there and give him the business.

He does sport an impressive win over ...
The Russian kid [Ruslan Provodnikov], yeah, yeah. I mean that's his biggest win. But other than that he's just a regular fighter to me.

How has your training camp been coming along?
My training camp has been great, man. I've been training hard. I've been putting that work in. I'm ready. I'll already ready. I'm just counting down to fight night.

Danny Garcia-Mauricio Herrera Where: Ruben Rodriguez Coliseum, Bayamon, Puerto Rico
When: Saturday, 9 p.m. ET
TV: Showtime


What's changed, if anything, since your first title fight?
More smarter. More experienced. More confident. Everything just went up. It's just the fights you go through make you more dedicated. When you face adversity and stuff like that, you know what it feels like to be in that ring. That's what pushes you to train harder when you feel like you can't go no more and a guy just keeps coming at you, that's what you think about when you're training -- you push yourself to another level.

How significant is this fight being that it will be taking place in Puerto Rico?
It's very important for me, man. [I'm] going to be making a statement in front of my Puerto Rican fans. We're going in there [to] get the job done on March 15.

When people come inside this gym, one of the first things that people notice, aside from the ring, obviously, is the mural on the wall. We got [Miguel] Cotto up there. We got [Wilfred] Gomez, [Felix 'Tito'] Trinidad. We got Bernard Hopkins up there. Who else we got up there? Oh, Camacho. We got me up there. I'm just showing respect, man.

Are you looking to continue that great boxing lineage of great Puerto Rican fighters who have represented the island over the years?
Yeah, no doubt, man. March 15 is the start of that, and we're looking to go in and make a statement.

There's also a frame hung up alongside that other wall of you and "Macho" Camacho. What do you recall of him?
I've seen his fights. When I was younger, he was at the end of his career. But it goes to show you that picture means a lot to me. It's kind of like history repeats itself. I got the chain, he had the chain on. We're kind of the same Puerto Ricans. That picture is motivational to me.

Was there a fight in which you told yourself, "I've arrived on the scene. Other boxers better look out."
The fight -- I would have to say was the fight after [Nate Campbell in 2011] ... where I knew I was ready, when I beat Kendall Holt. I think that's the fight were I knew I could be a champion, and the very next fight after that I fought for the world title.

http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0427/box_g_judah-garcia_mb_300.jpg (http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2013/0427/box_g_judah-garcia_mb_300.jpg)Elsa/Getty ImagesDanny Garcia, right, has been beating up on very good opposition since winning the junior welterweight title two years ago.


Not many boxers lay claim to having their own gym, their own facility where they work out. What does this place mean to you?
It's very important. It's always been a dream of mine to have my own boxing gym. It's a dream come true, man. What more can I say. I'm happy. I worked hard for it, and I'm going to keep going for more.

You've mentioned working on setting your own legacy, and many kids, without a doubt, will come through this gym maybe as young as you were when you first stepped inside the ring as a 10-year-old. How special is that?
It's very important. There's a lot of talent out there. There's a lot of talent, but a lot of kids get caught up in the streets. They don't have a good foundation at home, and boxing was like my second home. So I think there's a lot of fighters can come here today. Young fighters got the potential to do that. They just got to stay focused and make boxing a home and love it. Anything is possible.

Do you see it as your obligation to go out into these streets and get kids in the gym?
Every day there are kids in here if you come early. You'll see there's a lot of kids here from the streets that come every day and train. It's up to them to stay focused and make their dreams come true.

Let go back to that first day with your dad in the gym. What do you recall?
I remember the first day I walked into a boxing gym, I was actually alone. My brother Erick used to come to the gym with my two cousins because they boxed before me, too. Then, one day I came to the gym. I've always been a fan of boxing, and I wanted to sign up. I had to wait because, financially, my dad wasn't doing good. So as soon as we were good enough to do that, I got in the gym and him and me never stopped.

How's has your relationship with your dad evolved?
My dad is an inspiration to me. He's been through a lot in life. We learned together. We built together. It's just a special relationship.

What's it like on fight nights? Is it still a dad-son relationship or trainer-boxer?
It's both to be honest with you: He's my dad. He's my trainer. So he always going to be there basically.


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You've proven the ability to deliver the knockout punch in two of your past four fights, but the past two have gone the distance.
I need a knockout. [Laughs.] Yeah. I'm not looking for a knockout. Well, I always look for the knockout, but I will love to get a knockout because I haven't got one in a year. If I don't, I am happy with a 12-round decision. I always got the mentality of knocking somebody out.

But if you do get the knockout early, then your fans in Puerto Rico won't get to see that much of you in the ring.
I think they will be happy if it's short and simple. [Laughs.] It's going to be crazy. Everybody loves a knockout. A knockout is what always makes your stock go higher. So, yeah, I would love to go in there and knock him out.

You sit at the top of this division, but what fuels your hunger?
It's just the beginning, man. It's just the beginning. I would love to just keep doing this for the rest of my life. Getting paid and all that. It's the beginning. I'm hungry. I'm going to keep on going.

You've been pretty successful in this weight class. What's the possibility of going up [fighting at 147 pounds] and facing some of the bigger names in the sport.
I would love to do it, but right now we got to worry about March 15. I'm feeling good about March 15. I'm focused, and I can't wait to get the job done.

Do you believe you're being overlooked at all for bigger fights, pay-per-view fights you could headline?
Nah. It's just all about timing. It's all about timing, to be honest with you. Everything is about time. My time is coming.

Fibroso
03-15-2014, 09:34 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlPO1rnVq8Q

rudee
03-16-2014, 03:40 AM
I thought Garcia got beat tonight. Danny didn't look prepared to go a tough 12 rounds.
Herrera was the aggressar and landed more punches.
Tough to win in PR against a PR hero though.
I gave this fight to the Mexican. Good fight though.

Fibroso
03-16-2014, 04:03 AM
I thought Garcia got beat tonight. Danny didn't look prepared to go a tough 12 rounds.
Herrera was the aggressor and landed more punches.
Tough to win in PR against a PR hero though.
I gave this fight to the Mexican. Good fight though.
I have to agree with you, Danny looked unprepared for a fast aggressive boxer.
We know you can't win a championship bout in the neighbor's house by a split decision.
Juanma did win, though.

rudee
03-16-2014, 03:05 PM
Yeah amigo Fib,,, think this mighta been a little vacation for Danny Boy..
Wasn't the Danny that we know..
Glad to see Juanma win..
Boy the heavyweight bout was a fix eh? even the announcers steered
clear of it.

rudee
03-16-2014, 03:16 PM
Oops! I think the heavyweight fight mighta been on another channel...NBC Sports.
I was going back and forth.
Was a first round knockout of a blow to the gloves...

Bonzo
03-16-2014, 03:32 PM
I gotta agree this was afull blown out vacation for Angel and company.
I didn't think he lost cause the other guy did quite alot of holding after landing (never put too many combinations together).
But I did not recognize Danny Boy.
That was still a hell of a shot that broke through those gloves in that heavyweight affair.
Never thought Malik could take a big punch.

Fibroso
03-18-2014, 12:02 PM
He should start with the winner of Pac/ Bradley, since Herreras served as a sparring partner to Bradley so did Lucas. Winning that fight should take him straight to the best in the division. At 147 he will come in stronger and should KO any of them.

Condor
03-18-2014, 05:24 PM
Danny boy needs to get serious as he did get beat... Goes to show you, you cannot take anyone for granted...........

Fibroso
03-19-2014, 11:42 AM
Well said amigo, apparently this fiasco caused Danny Boy his exit from the P4P list 10th place position. He was removed from it and Micky Garcia took his place. So he payed his price for underestimated Herreras.

barbarca
03-19-2014, 01:29 PM
mayweather is the best hands down but there is something about this kid that scares me

Fibroso
03-19-2014, 02:07 PM
mayweather is the best hands down but there is something about this kid that scares me

This kid is a complete boxer, not too much speed in his hands but his timing is great. We can see he grows to the occasions, he still learning.

rudee
03-19-2014, 02:58 PM
I like Danny... has super potential... he threw in a clunker on saturday, but so have
all the great ones... cept Marciano!
I do have to say, Danny's dad has to cool it. This screaming and cursing in Danny's face
has got to go. I am sure this is going to grow old on Danny some day. He is in there giving
and taking shots, you come to the corner to rest and recoup and your dad starts screaming
obsenities and throwing tantrums right in your face. Either cool it or get another trainer.
That is one reason Floyd got rid of his dad as a trainer.. he use to do the exact same thing.
Father or no father. Noone has a right to treat his son or daughter like this.
Especially for the whole world to see. Danny Boy gotta put his foot down.

Condor
03-19-2014, 04:24 PM
I like Danny... has super potential... he threw in a clunker on saturday, but so have
all the great ones... cept Marciano!
I do have to say, Danny's dad has to cool it. This screaming and cursing in Danny's face
has got to go. I am sure this is going to grow old on Danny some day. He is in there giving
and taking shots, you come to the corner to rest and recoup and your dad starts screaming
obsenities and throwing tantrums right in your face. Either cool it or get another trainer.
That is one reason Floyd got rid of his dad as a trainer.. he use to do the exact same thing.
Father or no father. Noone has a right to treat his son or daughter like this.
Especially for the whole world to see. Danny Boy gotta put his foot down.

As usual I agree 100% with your assessment...Compita.......