Connect with us

Boxing

“Ryan Garcia destroyed Devin Haney’s image,” says Teofimo Lopez Sr

Published

on

Image: "Ryan Garcia Destroyed Devin Haney's Image," Says Teofimo Lopez Sr

Teofimo Lopez’s father, Teofimo Sr., believes the reason for Devin Haney’s lawsuit is to “take advantage of what happened to him” after losing to Ryan Garcia last April in Brooklyn, Recent York. Lopez Sr. claims Ryan “damaged” Haney’s image with the beating he gave him in that fight and is trying to rebuild it.

After that fight, Ryan tested positive for the PED Ostarine and Haney’s lawsuit focuses on that. Haney is seeking punitive damages in his civil suit. If the lawsuit fails, Haney could be at risk of losing his career. If he moves up to 147 or 154 to compete with guys his size, his chances of success will be slim to none.

Ryan Garcia = Oil well

On the other hand, if Haney wins the lawsuit, he can make a lot of money and it won’t matter if his career ends. He will have enough money to retire and live in luxury as a wealthy aristocrat in Beverly Hills or Atherton, California. Ryan would be like an oil well pumping money into Haney’s bank account. Being one of them would be Haney’s dream life idle prosperous who don’t have to work.

Some fans on social media the media believes that Haney’s real goal is milky Ryan for as much money as he can because this is as good as it can be for him. With his star power, Ryan is like a cow that can be milked for years for money if he loses the lawsuit against Haney. A financial settlement of $100 million would be a huge windfall for Haney and would provide Ryan with the opportunity to work for him.

No other substantial names are willing to fight Haney after he was defeated. It is like a dying star that has exhausted its nuclear fuel and goes out with a supernova explosion.

There is no similar popular fighter in this weight class that Haney would have any chance of fighting. Gervonta Davis won’t fight Haney, and there are no stars in the 140- and 147-pound divisions.

Time will tell if the judge rules in Haney’s favor. It may just be a waste of time and money on his part. The downside to being sued by Haney Ryan (24-1, 20 KO) is the fan reaction.

If this was intended as a move to rebuild his ruined image, it has already backfired on public opinion. Maybe it doesn’t matter to Haney because if he wins the lawsuit, he’ll be so prosperous that his public image won’t be something he’ll have to worry about.

“I think Devin Haney is just playing chess and trying to put the right pieces in the right places to make the most of what happened to him and his image because Ryan Garcia destroyed his image,” Teofimo Lopez Sr. said. Down Fighting Hub TVtalking about why Devin Haney filed a lawsuit against Ryan Garcia after a devastating loss to him last April.

“Furthermore, I don’t know if it’s true, but Ryan Garcia said that you can take some salt and throw it into an Olympic-size swimming pool and that’s what it has in your body. I don’t know how true that is, but if it is. The beating started from the very beginning,” Lopez Sr. said of how Ryan dominated Haney from the first round of their fight in Brooklyn, Recent York.

It doesn’t matter that Ryan tested positive for trace amounts of Ostarine. If the judge rules in Haney’s favor, he could make a lot of money from his trial if he can prove that his future earnings have been reduced.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Boxing

Ryan claims a member of Mayer’s camp was responsible for the paint attack

Published

on

English boxer Sandy Ryan has accused Mikaela Mayer, her opponent in Friday night’s title fight in Fresh York, of orchestrating a pre-fight stunt in which Ryan was hit with an open can of paint as she left her hotel earlier in the evening.

Ryan (7-2-1, 3 KO) lost her WBO welterweight title to Mayer (20-2, 5 KO) by majority decision, with the judges scoring it 95-95, 97-93 and 96-94.

Preparing for the fight at Madison Square Garden was very personal for both, as Ryan worked with Mayer’s former longtime trainer Kay Koroma. Mayer broke up with Koroma when he decided to work with Ryan, which she considered a betrayal.

As Ryan was leaving the hotel on Friday and heading to the event venue, she was struck by an open can of paint belonging to an unidentified man. She said she felt something “punch” her in the stomach and then saw a man wearing a hoodie run to a car and drive away. Ryan was uninjured and continued to the site after changing clothes in his hotel room.

She and her team told ESPN they believed it was a member of Mayer’s camp, which Mayer denies.

In social media post On Saturday, Ryan said she was still “trying to come to terms” with the attack, adding that her team had obtained CCTV footage of the event and was in contact with local authorities.

Despite continuing to fight, Ryan admitted after her loss to Mayer that the incident affected her performance.

“It bothered me at first,” she said. “Going to the scene, I was shocked. And then it kind of took me out of my game plan because I just wanted to fight.

“You saw at the beginning of the fight, I was pretty good with the jab. I boxed her and then started lifting her. But then I obviously pushed too demanding.”

Continue Reading

Boxing

Brilliant Mikaela Mayer-Sandy Ryan fight ruined by pre-fight painting attack on Ryan

Published

on

Author: Sean Crose

“I’ve never had so much pain in my arms after a fight,” Mikaela Mayer said Friday night after winning the WBO welterweight title with a high-octane victory over Sandy Ryan. Indeed, the fight was fierce. Mayer proved to be faster and more mobile early on, but as the fight progressed, she was tagged by defending champion Ryan. “It went similar to what I thought,” Mayer told ESPN’s Mark Kriegel in the ring after the judges awarded him the majority victory. “She has a lot of pedigree, just like me, but I knew I could beat her. I knew I was swift. I knew I was sharper… I felt like I had won the fight. I’m glad I made the right decision this time. ”

Before the fight, it was clear that Mayer and Ryan were not huge fans of each other. However, things took a shadowy turn before the fight when Ryan was attacked on a Up-to-date York street on her way to Madison Square Garden, where the fight was about to end. “Something broke in my stomach,” Ryan told Kriegel before the fight, “I looked down, it was a paint can, I looked up, a guy in a hood running to a car. Then they drove away.”

Ryan, who was fighting for only his second time in the United States and first time in Up-to-date York, was visibly concerned. “Nothing like this has ever happened,” she said. “Mikaela Mayer understands this. It’s definitely someone from her team. Why should it be any different? It has to be. I’m from Great Britain. Who will hit me and run away? Who knew what time I left the hotel to arrive? Who knew that someone was sitting in a hotel and saying that he would come now? They know what time I leave the facility with my team.”

With this in mind, the thirty-three-year-old remained determined. “Throw things at me,” she said, “because that’s what they’re trying to do.” For her part, Mayer condemned and denied any involvement in the incident. “I mean obviously crossing the line,” she told Kriegel before the fight. “It’s messed up, so I feel sorry for her. I’m sorry this happened to her. Of course I had nothing to do with it. I would never do something like that. This is crossing the line 100 percent.”

After the fight, Mayer expressed his desire to have a rematch with Ryan, provided the money and fan interest were adequate. The 34-year-old claimed her dream was to become the undisputed welterweight division. “You won’t see me in an effortless fight,” Mayer said. “I will fight for the biggest and best.”

*

Continue Reading

Boxing

The challenge of signing a contract with the main promoter

Published

on

BEING a professional boxer without a long-term contract with a large promoter is often hard. Unless you’ve won a medal at the Olympics or had a great amateur career, your chances of signing such a contract are slim. So most have no choice but to climb the ladder when performing in miniature venues.

Boxing has been compared to the Wild West and when you realize that most prospects have to sell countless tickets to break even, you start to wonder what drives so many to risk their health, fight after fight, for little or no financial return .

But at the same time, this fight is what makes this sport so fascinating. These are Cinderella stories about boxers competing in random places in Mexico, and years later, like Canelo Alvarez, they headlined the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Or boxers like Josh Padley, who went from working as a part-time electrician, to fighting under the Anthony Joshua-Daniel Dubois undercard at Wembley Stadium, to winning as a ponderous underdog.

One British prospect hoping for a similar trajectory is Alex Murphy, a super lightweight from Salford. Despite his undefeated record of 11-0, he has not fought since stopping Eliecer Quezada at a Black Flash Promotions event last April.

Like many prospects using ticketing deals, Murphy trained in the gloomy for several months until he was offered the chance to return on October 25 for Wasserman Boxing in Bolton.

“It’s just a waiting game,” Murphy said Boxing news on the Internet.

“You just have to hope. You’re not sure what’s going to happen. You’re not sure what fights you’re going to get and what opportunities you’re going to get. This is beyond my control. The only thing I can do is stay in the gym and be ready for the call.

“Fortunately, we received notification about this match and I can have a proper training camp so that I can prepare for it. I had been training for a good two or three months and I just didn’t have any fights planned. Everything was a bit up in the air.

“But I can say that I stayed ready, I stayed in the gym and I finally scheduled the fight. I will be more than ready for it.”

This isn’t the first time Murphy has appeared on Wasserman’s card. He previously fought on the undercard of Lyndon Arthur vs. Brian Nahuel Suarez for the IBO delicate heavyweight title in September 2023 and twice more in the same year.

However, ‘Super’ is determined to put in a sturdy performance the next time he faces Dan Booth.

Murphy continued: “I just want to show how much I’ve improved in the time I’ve had the break. I haven’t left the gym since my last fight.

“I took part in many sparring sessions. This compact break could have been a blessing in disguise because it gave us a lot of time to work on different things and experiment with different things in training.

“I haven’t taken my foot off the gas pedal since my last fight in April. My fitness is at a high level, as always. I’m just keeping myself in the best shape possible and next month I’ll be even better, fitter and stronger. I can’t wait to show it to everyone.”

Murphy is a full-time professional boxer, so the pressure is on him to give his all in every fight. However, job responsibilities go beyond the squared circle. Sparring, strength, conditioning and technical exercises are only part of the puzzle.

“The more tickets I sell, the more money I get and that’s my salary. This is my full-time job, so that’s what I base my salary on.

“Training camps are not economical. It costs a lot of money to get my dietitian. Training, grocery shopping, and treatment all cost a lot of money. Last year the treatment cost me eight thousand.

“It cost me an extra two thousand because I had to go to a neuropsychologist. I was told I had to see the neuropsychologist again next year, so that’s another two grand. It’s not economical, but you just have to stay on top of it all.”

Moreover, with everything available online these days, it has never been more vital for an athlete to be present on social media and document their lifestyle to escalate their following.

“Even when I’m not fighting, I have to be energetic on social media so that people don’t forget about me. It sounds crazy, but it’s also challenging because when you’re not fighting, you don’t have much content to post. So it’s a bit of a battle.

“I feel like I spent as much time as I could on social media. I think the break may have been good for me in terms of ticket sales because during this inactive period, a lot of people were messaging me asking when my next fight was and expressing interest.

“Hopefully it won’t be long before I sign a contract with a promotion company and receive a set salary and ticket commission. It would make my life easier. “As it stands now, the more tickets I sell, the higher my salary.”

At just 23 years aged, Murphy has plenty of time to climb the ranks, gain more experience, develop his boxing skills and achieve manly strength.

And thanks to Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s previous reign. Murphy still holds one of the best-selling tools for any professional boxer, an undefeated record.

Murphy, however, does not intend to shy away from more hard challenges and is already thinking about his first professional title.

“The plan is to fight Dan Booth. I need to be focused for this fight. This is a six round match. Then in December I will be sidelined again, which would mean eight rounds.

“This will set me up well for the start of next year with a chance at the Central Area title. Just go from there. Claim the Central Area title and see what next year brings. This should put me in a good position. I’m keeping my fingers crossed that everything will work out that way.”

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending