WWE aside, Mayweather focused on Marquez

WWE aside, Mayweather focused on Marquez

Published Sep. 16, 2009 8:48 a.m. ET

Haven't we seen this movie before?

In Rocky III, while Rocky Balboa is busy enjoying the spoils that come with being a champion — including fighting a wrestler played by Hulk Hogan for charity — hungry challenger Clubber Lang toils away in relative obscurity knocking out chumps left and right as he waits for his opportunity to dethrone the king.

When the two finally meet for the first time, they are seemingly going in opposite directions, one a rising star, the other a fading one.


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Floyd Mayweather Jr.


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Check out how Floyd Mayweather Jr. fared against WWE superstars in Las Vegas.



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And we all know how that fight turned out.

Now, less than a month before his fight with Juan Manuel Marquez, perhaps his toughest opponent ever, six-time world champion and legitimate claimant to the title of pound-for-pound king Floyd "Money" Mayweather showed up on World Wrestling Entertainment's "Monday Night Raw" to renew his feud with wrestler The Big Show, a behemoth of a man who was on the business end of a folding-chair, brass-knuckle "beatdown" at the hands of Mayweather during WrestleMania 24 last year.

Decked out in a white tank top, white pants and designer shades, Mayweather (39-0, 25 KOs) strolled into the ring with his posse trailing him and listened as Big Show's tag-team partner Chris Jericho told him Marquez (50-4-1, 37 KOs) was going to knock him out, much to the delight of the crowd.

After a little more verbal jousting, Floyd exited the ring and watched as the two wrestlers battled MVP and Mark Henry.

Mayweather eventually lended a hand in the form of brass knuckles, which were used by MVP to deliver the deciding blow that cost Big Show and Jericho the match. (No, the ref wasn't looking ...)

Meanwhile, Marquez was undoubtedly off somewhere in the mountains of Mexico chopping wood or lifting stones or engaging in some other hard-core training regimen before retreating to a 120-degree gym to do his crunches or work the heavy bag while a grainy picture of Mayweather hangs within eyesight.

Do Mayweather's "Rocky-like" antics indicate he's not taking his upcoming fight with Marquez seriously? Will Marquez pull a Clubber Lang and knock out the distracted and ill-prepared Mayweather in spectacular fashion?


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The answers are no and no.

Make no mistake, Mayweather is taking this fight very seriously. After a nearly two-year layoff, the man has no choice. He knows what's on the line here:

His undefeated record.

His claim to the pound-for-pound throne.

His chance to settle the debate once and for all of who the best fighter is, he or Manny Pacquiao. (The two would be expected to meet next year if both win their respective upcoming fights.)

The ridiculously large amount of money he stands to earn from said fight (upwards of $25 million, perhaps?)

Look, despite his many well-documented problems outside the ring, Mayweather has never been less than 100 percent ready come fight night, a statement his undefeated record clearly attests to. And with an absolute bull like Marquez waiting for him, I have no doubt Mayweather will be in top form come Sept. 19.

The wrestling thing? I wouldn't make a big deal about it.

First off, it was in Vegas, his hometown, so it's not like Floyd was crisscrossing the country when he should've been training. All he had to do was head down the Vegas Strip a couple of miles and make a guest appearance, likely after another solid workout in the gym.

Second, there was no physical contact involved, unlike last time Floyd appeared on a wrestling show. No choke holds, no body slams. In fact, after saying his piece in the ring, Floyd sat a good 15 to 20 feet away from it during the match to ensure he wasn't accidentally caught in the crossfire of flying bodies.


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