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Speed Beats Power In Vegas
Mayweather Tops De La Hoya in 12

By Tim Dahlberg
Associated Press
Sunday, May 6, 2007

LAS VEGAS, May 5 -- Floyd Mayweather wanted to give Oscar De La Hoya a beating. He had to settle for just getting a win.

Mayweather won one of boxing's richest fights ever Saturday night by using his superb defensive skills and superior speed to take a 12-round split decision and win the WBC 154-pound title in his first fight at that weight.

The fight was billed as one that would save boxing, and while it didn't do that, it was an entertaining battle between two proud champions who both fought hard from the opening bell through the final round.

The fight ended with the sellout crowd on its feet roaring and two fighters trading punches wildly at the bell. They then stopped and embraced.

Mayweather was favored on one scorecard, 116-112, and 115-113 on a second. De La Hoya was ahead, 115-113, on the third scorecard.

"It was easy work for me," Mayweather said. "He was rough and tough but he couldn't beat the best."

In the end, Mayweather was simply faster and more slippery in a bout where neither fighter managed to hurt the other and neither went down.

Still, De La Hoya did enough to impress at least one judge, and thought he did enough to win the fight.

"I landed the harder, crisper punches," De La Hoya said. "I felt when I landed my punches I could see I was hurting him. If I hadn't pressed the fight, there would be no fight."

Mayweather's estranged father also thought De La Hoya did enough to win.

"I thought Oscar won the fight on points, threw more punches and was more aggressive," said Floyd Mayweather Sr., who used to train De La Hoya. "My son had good defense and caught a lot of his punches, but I still thought Oscar pressed enough to win the fight."

Ringside punching stats heavily favored Mayweather, crediting him with landing 207 of 481 punches to 122 of 587 for De La Hoya. Mayweather also landed more power punches than De La Hoya, outscoring him, 138-82.

Mayweather said before the fight that De La Hoya would fade as the fight went on, and it seemed as though he did. Two judges gave Mayweather four of the last five rounds, making the difference in what turned out to be a closely scored fight.

The sellout crowd of 16,200 at the MGM Grand Garden arena cheered everything De La Hoya did, and booed when the decision was announced. It was the third loss in the last five fights for De La Hoya, who also served as the bout's promoter.

Mayweather had predicted he would dominate De La Hoya and give him a beating, but De La Hoya took his best punches and came back with enough of his own to keep it close. De La Hoya appeared staggered by a right hand with 20 seconds left, but finished with a flurry as the crowd erupted in delight.

Mayweather remained unbeaten in 38 fights and won a title in his fifth weight class, moving up from welterweight to challenge De La Hoya in a fight that earned De La Hoya at least $25 million and Mayweather at least $10 million. The $19 million live gate was a record for the sport, and there were predictions the pay-per-view sales would make the fight boxing's richest ever.

Mayweather climbed into the ring wearing a sombrero, mocking De La Hoya's Mexican-American heritage on Cinco de Mayo. Once the first bell sounded, De La Hoya began his strategy of trying to box Mayweather into a corner or along the ropes.

The crowd cheered wildly every time De La Hoya got Mayweather on the ropes and flailed away. But the punches mostly missed, and Mayweather hopped away, often giving De La Hoya a parting shot to the head in the process.

Mayweather was a 2-1 favorite when the fight was made, but money poured in on De La Hoya and he was a 3-2 underdog by fight time.

De La Hoya was the aggressor throughout the fight, and he managed to get through Mayweather's defenses in the early rounds as Mayweather moved away and counterpunched without great effect. Every time Mayweather went near the ropes, De La Hoya tried to trap him there and land a flurry of punches to the body and head.

De La Hoya wanted to get Mayweather into a brawl, but he was having no part of it, content to pick his spots and land counterpunches. In the fifth round, the fight shifted into a different gear as Mayweather stood his ground and landed some hard combinations to the head.

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