IKSRTFO wrote:Enlightened-One wrote:caldo2025 wrote:I think that this will be the fight in which Floyd finally gets bagged with a needle in his ars and PEDS pumping through his body. One last money grab will end up being one too many. 40 year old men are not in this kind of shape. It's impossible. Watch when Floyd's shirt is off. He looks more ripped up than when he was fighting at freaking 130. Joke.
I don’t know whether Floyd is a “clean” athlete or not, but since he was one of the very first high-profile boxers that insisted that his opponents and himself were drug tested for their bouts (he was even initially lambasted for having the sheer audacity to demand this contractual stipulation for his fights, then I highly-doubt it.
In regards, to Floyd Mayweather Jr. being “ripped”, Money May has always kept himself in good shape and I also suspect that he knew about the Conor McGregor bout several months prior to it being officially announced.
I believe that he would have already been seriously training for his upcoming bout against the UFC star before it was “officially” announced, because the announcement of the fight was probably intentionally delayed and strategically timed in a manner with Showtime’s sole intention to damage the commercial success of HBO's Kovalev-Ward, Cotto-Kamegai and GGG-Canelo contests.
There's definitely something shady about him. Especially considering he was allowed to take an "IV" for hydration when he never drains himself to make weight. Demanding drug testing doesn't mean much considering Lance Armstrong and Marion Jones never was caught by any test.
Thomas Hauser’s article that was originally responsible for the alleged “intravenous vitamin injections” Money May scandal was published during the fight-week of the Mayweather-Berto bout... a strategially-timed ploy employed by HBO to undermine the commercial success of a Showtime PPV event.
It is important to note that Thomas Hauser went from being a renowned critic of HBO’s when he was an independent journalist to becoming employed as one of their journalists/consultants.
Now that he's employed by HBO, he now refrains from publishing any articles that damage his employers' reputation. Indeed, he now has a track-record of releasing editorials that are strategically-published to damage the reputations of the high-profile people that are affiliated to Showtime.
Many of his claims about the “intravenous vitamin injections” Money May scandal have been subsequently proven to be unsubstantiated, with most of the allegations mainly based on anonymous sources.
Hauser made similar claims about Al Haymon that were also subsequently debunked during the Golden Boy-Haymon “Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act” trail.
It’s your prerogative to believe your own opinion to be true, despite all the facts and the evidence suggesting a polar opposite version of the truth, so I’ll let you continue making your bogus, fictional and comedic claims.