Oscar De La Hoya vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Date | May 5, 2007 | |
Title(s) on the line | WBC Light Middleweight Championship | |
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Oscar De La Hoya vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. | ||
Golden Boy | Pretty Boy | |
Tale of the tape | ||
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East Los Angeles, CA, USA | From | Grand Rapids, MI, USA |
38-4 (30 KO) | Pre-fight record | 37-0 (24 KO) |
WBC Light Middleweight Champion | Recognition | The Ring‘s #1 pound for pound fighter in the world |
De La Hoya vs. Mayweather: The World Awaits was a super welterweight superfight which took place on May 5, 2007, at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada between six-division world champion Oscar De La Hoya (38-4, 30 KO) and undefeated four-division champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. (37-0, 24 KO). At the time, the bout was the most lucrative boxing match ever, with over $130 million in generated revenue.
Mayweather Jr. won by split decision over De La Hoya in 12 rounds, capturing the World Boxing Council (WBC) light middleweight title.
Details
The fight took place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada under the promotion of Golden Boy Promotions. It was contested at 154 pounds, with De La Hoya defending his WBC light middleweight championship.
Tickets sold out three hours after they went on sale on Saturday, January 27, 2007. With the sellout, the bout generated over $19 million in live gate, beating the previous record of $16,860,300 set by the June 28, 1997, heavyweight championship rematch between Evander Holyfield and Mike Tyson at the Thomas & Mack Center.[1]
The fight was televised on HBO Pay-Per-View, with the cost to watch the fight at $55 in the U.S.[2]
Mayweather won by a split decision in 12 close-fought rounds, capturing the World Boxing Council (WBC) title. Judges Jerry Roth (115-113) and Chuck Giampa (116-112) scored the fight for Mayweather while judge Tom Kaczmarek had De La Hoya winning, 115-113.
Hype
As part of the buildup for the fight, HBO produced an unprecedented four-part prelude. The series, titled De La Hoya-Mayweather 24/7, aired installments on the final three Sundays of April, with the fourth installment airing on Thursday, May 3, two days before the fight. The series focused on each fighter's training and preparation for the bout.
A subplot to the fight concerned whether De La Hoya would be trained by Floyd Mayweather Sr., the estranged father of Mayweather Jr. Mayweather Sr. had served as De La Hoya's trainer since 2001. Mayweather Sr. announced his willingness to train De La Hoya after initially declining to oppose his son, but demanded a $2 million fee in light of the enormous revenue to be generated by the fight. De La Hoya declined to meet Mayweather Sr.'s demands, making a counteroffer of $500,000 guaranteed plus an additional $500,000 contingent on De La Hoya winning the fight.[3] Ultimately, the sides were unable to come to an agreement and De La Hoya hired the highly respected Freddie Roach to be his cornerman instead. [1]
Although Mayweather Sr. reunited with his son at the start of Floyd Jr.'s training camp, he had no official role, as Floyd Jr. opted to retain his uncle, Roger Mayweather, as his trainer instead. Mayweather Sr. left the camp by the end of April, upset over not being chosen as trainer and by comments made by his son and brother during the taping of the 24/7 show.
Undercard
- Rocky Juarez defeats Jose Andres Hernandez via unanimous decision for the WBA Fedaltin featherweight title.
- Rey Bautista defeats Sergio Manuel Medina via unanimous decision in a WBO superbantamweight title eliminator.
- Ernest Johnson had a draw with Wes Ferguson in the sixth round.
- AJ Banal defeats Juan Alberto Rosas via unanimous decision.
- Christian Solano KOs John O'Donnell in the second round.
- Billy Dib defeats Jose Alberto Gonzalez by unanimous decision.
- John Murray KOs Lorenzo Bethea in the seventh round.
- Carlos Duarte KOs Calvin Rooks in the second round.
- Jonathan Arabaca defeats Pheng Her via split decision.
Fight earnings
The De La Hoya-Mayweather fight set the record for most PPV buys for a boxing match with 2.4 million households, beating the previous record of 1.99 million for Evander Holyfield-Mike Tyson II. Around $136 million in revenue was generated by the PPV. Until, it was surpassed in 2015 by Mayweather vs. Pacquiao, which generated more than 400 million dollar from 4.4 million households in PPV buys. Becoming the most lucrative fight in history and one of the most lucrative sport events of all time. Factoring in the percentages, Oscar De La Hoya ended up earning $52 million, the highest purse ever for a fighter. The previous record was $35 million, held by Tyson and Holyfield. Floyd Mayweather earned $25 million for the fight.[4][5]
September 20 rematch
De la Hoya and Mayweather were scheduled for a rematch on September 20, 2008. However, unlike the first fight, the fight would have been contracted for 147 lbs. or the welterweight limit. The first fight was contracted at light middleweight or 154 lbs and de la Hoya's WBC junior middleweight title was on the line. However, Mayweather would have come in as champion and defended his WBC/The Ring welterweight titles. As a tune-up fight, De la Hoya fought Stephen Forbes (33-6) on May 3, with Floyd Mayweather, Sr. as his trainer. De La Hoya (39-5, 30 KOs) dominated and won a unanimous decision over Forbes, 119-109, 119-109 and 120-108.
The rematch never took place due to Mayweather's retirement in 2008[6] and De La Hoya's retirement in 2009, although Mayweather would return to boxing in 2009.
References
- 1 2 ESPN - Roach named to train De La Hoya - Boxing
- ↑ Will the De La Hoya-Mayweather Fight Save Boxing? - TIME
- ↑ Mayweather Sr. wants raise to train De La Hoya vs. 'my son' - USATODAY.com
- ↑ ESPN - De La Hoya 'ecstatic' that fight was richest ever - Boxing
- ↑ Hbo: Boxing: Event: Hbo Pay Per View: Oscar De La Hoya Vs. Floyd Mayweather: Cinco De Mayweather
- ↑ BBC SPORT | Boxing | Mayweather announces retirement
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