Floyd Mayweather hits Robert Guerrero during their WBC Welterweight Title bout at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas Saturday, May 4, 2013. (Jason Bean/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

For two rounds, it looked as though Gilroy welterweight boxer Robert Guerrero’s prophecy would come true.
In front of 15,880 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Saturday night, Guerrero saw his long odds dream come true of fighting the sport’s biggest draw, Floyd Mayweather, in a pay-per-view main event.
Unfortunately for Guerrero, after two rounds of mild success, hardly anything went his way. Guerrero survived an attempted assault via hundreds of straight right hands but found himself on the losing end of a wide unanimous decision.
For Guerrero it was his first appearance on the sport’s biggest stage against a fighter in Mayweather who has appeared in pay-per-view headliners since 2005 and is the highest grossing athlete regardless of sport.
Guerrero (31-2-1) enjoyed a successful opening round as he forced a rough fight on the inside in the clinch while Mayweather searched for his stride. Guerrero, 30, continued to press the fight in the second round as Mayweather got untracked.
From round three on, Guerrero found himself in the line of fire of Mayweather’s straight right hand at a wildly accurate rate, as punch stat numbers provided by CompuBox showed he landed 60 percent of his power punches. Guerrero’s accuracy dropped as the fight wore on and numbers showed he landed only 19 percent of his total punches.
Mayweather (44-0) began picking Guerrero apart along the middle rounds, opening up a cut after strafing him with more right hands in the eighth round. Mayweather was working with his father Floyd Sr. in the corner for the first time in 13 years as his uncle Roger suffers from an illness.
“I got hit with shots in my last fight with Miguel Cotto that I shouldn’t have got hit with, so I had to bring in the defensive master, my father, back into camp,” Mayweather told the press at the post-fight press conference.
Guerrero was making his third appearance in the 147 pound weight division, and though he suffered a clear loss with all three scores reading 117-111, Guerrero will have plenty of options when he does return to the ring.
“I came up short tonight but I’m still going to praise God tonight,” Guerrero told the press after the fight, further confirming the fighter’s Christian faith, which was a major point of publicity throughout the promotion of the fight.
Another large plot to the fight was the tension between the two father/trainers, as Guerrero is trained by his father Ruben. The elder Guerrero tried upsetting Mayweather earlier in fight week by calling attention to the domestic assault misdemeanor that landed Mayweather in prison last summer. In the end, the two fathers didn’t play a negative factor in the actual fight, though, Ruben Guerrero claimed Mayweather was  “a chicken who ran” after the final bell.
Guerrero lasted the distance, but came closest to tasting the canvas in the eighth round when Mayweather wobbled him after landing 23 of 30 power punches, an unusually high number. Guerrero had moments throughout the latter portion of the fight, but never enough to find himself back in the thick of the contest. Mayweather all but gave away the twelfth round after sweeping rounds three through eleven on most scorecards.
For Guerrero, a newly pressing matter will be the court case regarding his gun possession charges stemming from a misunderstanding in the state of New York at John F. Kennedy airport.

Previous articleLive Updates on Guerrero-Mayweather Fight
Next articleSharks power past Canucks 5-2 for 3-0 series lead

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here