Mayweather vs. Canelo: Weight Disparity Favors Money May
The 152-pound catchweight for Floyd "Money" Mayweatherโs upcoming megafight against Saul "Canelo"ย Alvarez is a huge advantage for the pound-for-pound king.
Thatโs probably why Mayweatherโs camp pushed for it so hard during pre-fight negotiations. According to Alvarez, Mayweatherโs team negotiated even lower weights before the WBC light middleweight champion decided to agree to a catchweight, per USA Todayโs Bob Velin.
Canelo is expected to fight in the high 160s to mid-170s just one day after dropping all the way down to 152 pounds for Fridayโs weigh-in. As a result of the quick flux in weight, the larger-framed fighter is going to be feeling the physical effects of such a drastic weight shift in the ring.
Just getting down to the 152 pounds is going to be a challenge for him. And there are whispers that heโs struggling with that big cut down.
According to Floyd Mayweather Sr., per David Mayo of MLive.com, sources inside Caneloโs camp indicate the Mexican fighter is having a โdevilish timeโ handling the weight loss properly. As a result, Mayweather Sr. expects Canelo to look sick in the face once Friday rolls around.
Apparently, the sources told him thereโs nothing but water left to lose at this point.
For a fighter who already drops significant weight to fight at 154 pounds, the extra drop may be a deal breaker.
And when going up against a perfectly prepared physical specimen like Money Mayweather, you canโt afford to have anything working against youโphysically or in your head.
However, the mental part isnโt as concerning as the physical aspect. Canelo has fought at 154 and succeeded repeatedly throughout his career. What is alarming, though, is a report about his apparent poor physical conditioning. For a fighter that relies on landing tiring power punches in succession, especially late in fights, that is problematic against a sound defensive technician like Mayweather, to say the least.
As his fights wear on, Mayweather appears to tirelessly transition thanks to a superb work ethic and conditioning regimen that is second to none. For him, even at 36 years old, commitment to fitness and body performance is a way of life not just a career.
And heโs made a killing off of his adherence to his routine.
In the end, Canelo has a chance to score an early upsetโlike any boxer with a powerful punchโbut his odds of winning will drastically decrease the longer the fight persists.




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