De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
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Ruthless-RKO
- Welterweight
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De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
Oscar De La Hoya wouldn’t have finally signed off on Canelo Alvarez-Gennady Golovkin if he wasn’t convinced Alvarez is a full-fledged middleweight.
De La Hoya is no longer worried about size as it pertains to his franchise fighter challenging the Kazakh knockout artist for middleweight supremacy. Speed has supplanted size toward the top of De La Hoya’s list of concerns as their 160-pound showdown nears.
Alvarez’s promoter expressed to ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith on his radio show Tuesday that he is concerned about Alvarez packing on too many pounds between their weigh-in September 15 and the start of their fight the following night. If Alvarez adds too much weight after weighing in at or below the 160-pound limit, De La Hoya thinks it could affect his speed, one of the Mexican superstar’s advantages over Golovkin.
“I’m worried about the speed a bit,” De La Hoya told Smith. “That’s his big advantage, is his speed, against Golovkin. So, you know, I wouldn’t wanna see him to go up too many pounds right after the weigh-in on Friday before the fight. So we’ll see how they do it. He has a new strength and conditioning coach, so we’ll see how they adjust. But I think Canelo’s speed is a big factor.”
Roughly 29 hours will pass between when Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 KOs) and Golovkin (37-0, 33 KOs) weigh in at MGM Grand Garden Arena and when the first bell rings at nearby T-Mobile Arena for their HBO Pay-Per-View main event.
Golovkin and Daniel Jacobs had even more time between their weigh-in March 17 and the beginning of their fight March 18 at Madison Square Garden. The 6-feet Jacobs (32-2, 29 KOs) gained at least 15 pounds in those approximately 38 hours and enjoyed a noticeable size advantage over the 5-feet-10½ Golovkin in their 12-round fight.
Jacobs also skipped the IBF’s second-day weigh-in the morning of March 18. The IBF’s rules prohibit boxers fighting for its titles from adding more than 10 pounds over a division’s limit the morning after official weigh-ins.
Alvarez, who’s about an inch shorter than Golovkin, has said he will fight for Golovkin’s IBF 160-pound championship and thus participate in the second-day weigh-in.
De La Hoya is no longer worried about size as it pertains to his franchise fighter challenging the Kazakh knockout artist for middleweight supremacy. Speed has supplanted size toward the top of De La Hoya’s list of concerns as their 160-pound showdown nears.
Alvarez’s promoter expressed to ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith on his radio show Tuesday that he is concerned about Alvarez packing on too many pounds between their weigh-in September 15 and the start of their fight the following night. If Alvarez adds too much weight after weighing in at or below the 160-pound limit, De La Hoya thinks it could affect his speed, one of the Mexican superstar’s advantages over Golovkin.
“I’m worried about the speed a bit,” De La Hoya told Smith. “That’s his big advantage, is his speed, against Golovkin. So, you know, I wouldn’t wanna see him to go up too many pounds right after the weigh-in on Friday before the fight. So we’ll see how they do it. He has a new strength and conditioning coach, so we’ll see how they adjust. But I think Canelo’s speed is a big factor.”
Roughly 29 hours will pass between when Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 KOs) and Golovkin (37-0, 33 KOs) weigh in at MGM Grand Garden Arena and when the first bell rings at nearby T-Mobile Arena for their HBO Pay-Per-View main event.
Golovkin and Daniel Jacobs had even more time between their weigh-in March 17 and the beginning of their fight March 18 at Madison Square Garden. The 6-feet Jacobs (32-2, 29 KOs) gained at least 15 pounds in those approximately 38 hours and enjoyed a noticeable size advantage over the 5-feet-10½ Golovkin in their 12-round fight.
Jacobs also skipped the IBF’s second-day weigh-in the morning of March 18. The IBF’s rules prohibit boxers fighting for its titles from adding more than 10 pounds over a division’s limit the morning after official weigh-ins.
Alvarez, who’s about an inch shorter than Golovkin, has said he will fight for Golovkin’s IBF 160-pound championship and thus participate in the second-day weigh-in.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
He's never been faster than Golovkin. He's never had the advantage in speed to begin with at least not in any significant way. He's not gonna have it now either.
Golovkin is better with footwork and creating angles to set up his punches. Even if Canelo's hands are slightly faster, GGG's superior technique and footwork will shut it down.
Golovkin is better with footwork and creating angles to set up his punches. Even if Canelo's hands are slightly faster, GGG's superior technique and footwork will shut it down.
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SaadOffTheDeck
- Heavyweight

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Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
I think canelo is significantly faster, agreed on gggs technique largely negating it.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
Canelo definitely has faster hands, though he's slow and plodding on his feet.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
I think canelos boxing ability gets overcooked on this forum. I'm looking forward to ggg putting it on this guy
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
GGG's boxing ability gets overlooked in an enormous way. People for some reason still act as if he's just a raw slugger with power sometimes. Which is absolutely ridiculous.Ossyrules wrote:I think canelos boxing ability gets overcooked on this forum. I'm looking forward to ggg putting it on this guy
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boxing_rocks
- Welterweight
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Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
Speed is overrated. Timing is more important.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
The IBF weight limit for day of the fight was waived correct? I thought that the IBF came out recently and announced that. Maybe a weight in is still required the day of the fight by the IBF but there's no weight limits to say under perhaps?
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apollo creed
- Super Welterweight
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Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
ODLH should concern about the rematch.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
Canelo's boxing ability compared to GGG's is slightly above average. Floyd and Lara made him look absolutely foolish at times, and Trout outboxed him for at least 1/2 the fight. His careful matchmaking by GBP makes him look better than he is. Look back at his last 5 opponents. All that said, if GGG doesn't KO him, he will have to win 10 rounds to beat him.
Re: De La Hoya Concerned About Canelo's Speed Against Golovkin
Canelo is an oddball of a boxer. Fast hands/slow feet, good upper body movement/poorly covers distance, okay power/flails a lot. He's like an inside fighter made to fight at range.