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Mayweather Returns to Boxing, Fights to Become a Bankable Star

9/19/2009 12:00 AM ET By Nancy Gay

    • Nancy Gay
    • Nancy Gay is a Senior NFL Writer for FanHouse
Floyd Mayweather Jr.LAS VEGAS -- Sin City is the adopted hometown of Floyd Mayweather Jr., but you'd hardly know it on the eve of Fight Night, when the flamboyant six-time world champion in five weight classes returns to the ring after a 21-month hiatus.

Mariachi bands are strolling outside the MGM Grand Garden Arena, trumpeting the presence of Juan Manuel Marquez as the People's Choice in Saturday night's non-title welterweight fight (HBO pay-per-view). The Mexican flag flies from the windows of honking cars idling in the usual weekend traffic jam along Las Vegas Blvd.

Does that mean Marquez (50-4-1, 37 KOs), the likeable reigning lightweight champion and a beloved Mexican sports figure, has an emotional edge in a fight that most everyone believes is a tailor-made setup to welcome Mayweather, 32, back from the distractions of TV stardom, professional wrestling and the money-draining rap music business?

Hardly. This is Las Vegas, and nothing is ever as it seems.

Where are the crowds? For a fight weekend, the streets and The Strip were unusually barren on Friday. Tickets were readily available this week, even the cheapest $150 seats that usually are snapped up first. Both Mayweather Promotions and Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions have been countering by aggressively marketing the fight with weeks of publicity and press stops in Hollywood and Mexico City.


Blame it on the recession, or blame it on the boxing public's reluctance to buy into the bout -- either at the box office, or by forking over $49.99 to HBO for a PPV peek. These will be interesting PPV numbers, no doubt.

This is a matchup at an agreed-upon catch weight of 144 pounds -- comfortable for Mayweather, not so much for the smaller Marquez -- that features a colorful but controversial showman against a 36-year-old legend who has probably seen better days in past wins over Juan Diaz, Joel Casamayor and Marco Antonio Barrera.

Marquez, or "Dinamita" (Dynamite), should enter this battle on the laurels of his two memorable fights against No. 1 pound-for-pound champion Manny Pacquaio, which ended a draw and a hotly contested split decision.

For added drama, Mexican President Felipe Calderon Hinojosa even called Marquez on Friday.

"Juan Manuel, I know about your career. I know what you can do in the ring and I wish you good luck and come back with the victory," the President told one of his country's greatest sports treasures.

With clear fan support in Las Vegas and an entire country behind him, Marquez figures to be at his career pinnacle. Instead, he has emerged in America as a laughable curiosity, after HBO's always masterful "24/7" series featured him guzzling a glass of his own urine as a nutritional supplement to his training.

Friday's weigh-in at the MGM Grand only served to further cloud the legitimacy of this matchup, which isn't nearly on par with the excitement the more bankable Pacquaio currently brings to the sport.

Marquez, who fought Diaz at 134 pounds in February, tipped the scale at 142 pounds. Mayweather came in at 146 -- two pounds over the contractually agreed weight limit.

And there will be consequences.

As per the contract, Mayweather's camp must compensate Marquez for every pound over the limit -- reportedly, $600,000 total.

Considering Mayweather will earn $10 million up front for this fight and Marquez $2 million for what many in boxing believe may be his last bout before retirement, it seems Money is paying dearly for what should be another win.

Most fight experts have picked Mayweather to win by decision.

The MGM Grand sports book continued to keep Mayweather a 4-1 favorite Friday night, and a 4-5 favorite to win by decision.

All the while, boxing continues to wonder why Mayweather refuses to consider the open challenges of Shane Mosley, who takes great pleasure in ripping Money for avoiding him in the ring.

"Me fighting Shane Mosley? Who wants to see that fight," Mayweather asked last Monday in Hollywood before boarding his private jet for Vegas.

Probably the same folks who wanted to see Mayweather take on Antonio Margarito in 2006, for $8 million. Mayweather refused.

Or the same fans who want to see Mayweather in the ring against Miguel Cotto, or the man Cotto will fight in November, Pacquaio. So far, Mayweather has brushed aside any talk of facing either man.

Former Mayweather promoter Bob Arum never believed the former "Pretty Boy" could be a pay-per-view star in his own right. Mayweather angrily disagreed, and today they are bitter enemies. This fight will go a long way in proving one of them was right.

"That's the pressure that he will feel on Saturday night," De La Hoya said of Mayweather. "He has to perform if he wants to be that bankable guy. That's a lot of pressure. There's a lot riding on this fight. I think he wants to knock out Marquez and that should help.

"He has it in him. After the two-year layoff, I have a feeling that we're going to see a Mayweather that we've never seen before."

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