Arturo Gatti vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr.
From Boxrec Boxing Encyclopaedia
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| + | {| {{punchstatstable-r}} | ||
| + | |+ '''Compubox Punch Stats''' | ||
| + | |- {{pstable-bg1}} | ||
| + | ! Total Punches || Mayweather || Gatti | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Landed || 168 || 41 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Thrown || 295 || 245 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Pct. || 57% || 17% | ||
| + | |- {{pstable-bg1}} | ||
| + | ! Power Punches || Mayweather || Gatti | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Landed || 115 || 10 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Thrown || 183 || 56 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Pct. || 63% || 18% | ||
| + | |- {{pstable-bg1}} | ||
| + | ! Jabs || Mayweather || Gatti | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Landed || 53 || 31 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Thrown || 112 || 189 | ||
| + | |- | ||
| + | | Pct. || 47% || 16% | ||
| + | |} | ||
<fight>905514</fight> | <fight>905514</fight> | ||
| + | *'''[[World Boxing Council]] Super Lightweight Title''' (3rd defense of Gatti) | ||
| + | *'''Time:''' 3:00 | ||
| + | *'''Weights:''' Gatti 140 lbs, Mayweather 139 lbs | ||
| + | *'''Promoter:''' [[Main Events]] | ||
| − | + | == Notes == | |
| − | + | [[Image:GatmayFP.jpg|right|225px]] | |
| − | * | + | *This bout had been in the making for over a year and a half. Gatti and Mayweather were both stars in their respective weight classes and after Gatti won the [[WBC]] title in January 2004 Mayweather was the #1 ranked WBC contender. |
| − | + | *Gatti had requested several voluntary defenses from the WBC before finally agreeing to fight Mayweather. | |
| − | * | + | *The fight between the two fighters was billed as a "superfight". |
| − | * | + | *It would be the first time that Mayweather headlined a PPV event. Before the fight there was plenty of trash talk between the two fighters and Floyd had repeatedly referred to Gatti as a "C" fighter. |
| − | * | + | *When it came to fight time, Mayweather's hand speed was simply overwhelming as he landed three and four punch combinations at will. |
| − | + | *Gatti was down in the first round and took a vicious one-sided beating for the next five rounds before his cornerman, [[James (Buddy) McGirt]], decided to stop it after the 6th round. | |
| − | Mayweather's | + | *Before the fight, HBO analyst [[Max Kellerman]] called it the biggest pay-per-view mismatch since [[Lennox Lewis vs. Mike Tyson]]. |
| − | [[ | + | |
| − | + | ||
| − | [ | + | |
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| − | [ | + | |
Latest revision as of 20:24, 10 December 2011
| Total Punches | Mayweather | Gatti |
|---|---|---|
| Landed | 168 | 41 |
| Thrown | 295 | 245 |
| Pct. | 57% | 17% |
| Power Punches | Mayweather | Gatti |
| Landed | 115 | 10 |
| Thrown | 183 | 56 |
| Pct. | 63% | 18% |
| Jabs | Mayweather | Gatti |
| Landed | 53 | 31 |
| Thrown | 112 | 189 |
| Pct. | 47% | 16% |
2005-06-25 : Arturo Gatti 140 lbs lost to Floyd Mayweather Jr 139 lbs by RTD at 3:00 in round 6 of 12
- Location: Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
- Referee: Earl Morton
- Judge: Luis Rivera 52-60
- Judge: John Stewart 53-60
- Judge: Dave Moretti 52-60
- World Boxing Council Super Lightweight Title (3rd defense of Gatti)
- Time: 3:00
- Weights: Gatti 140 lbs, Mayweather 139 lbs
- Promoter: Main Events
[edit] Notes
- This bout had been in the making for over a year and a half. Gatti and Mayweather were both stars in their respective weight classes and after Gatti won the WBC title in January 2004 Mayweather was the #1 ranked WBC contender.
- Gatti had requested several voluntary defenses from the WBC before finally agreeing to fight Mayweather.
- The fight between the two fighters was billed as a "superfight".
- It would be the first time that Mayweather headlined a PPV event. Before the fight there was plenty of trash talk between the two fighters and Floyd had repeatedly referred to Gatti as a "C" fighter.
- When it came to fight time, Mayweather's hand speed was simply overwhelming as he landed three and four punch combinations at will.
- Gatti was down in the first round and took a vicious one-sided beating for the next five rounds before his cornerman, James (Buddy) McGirt, decided to stop it after the 6th round.
- Before the fight, HBO analyst Max Kellerman called it the biggest pay-per-view mismatch since Lennox Lewis vs. Mike Tyson.
