Mexicos Red Headed Step Child vs The Mexican Hero - Canelo v Chavez Jr May 6th HBO PPV

What Happens??


  • Total voters
    120

HeruDat1

Superstar
Joined
Jul 12, 2015
Messages
6,828
Reputation
910
Daps
15,805
You have a different but interesting strategy...you like to cover all bases.. I like to do low risk, high reward scenarios...and yes to the spoiler...hitting fukkery bets leads to fukkery activities that I also have might have a problem with :steviej:

I'm the same breh but I like to win, small or large I'm taking the W.
:myman:

Sometimes you can't put all the eggs in one basket and sometimes putting them all in one strikes gold.
:salute: For fukkery bread
 

GzUp

Sleep, those slices of death; Oh how I loathe them
Supporter
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
30,225
Reputation
6,645
Daps
56,781
Reppin
California
Jr didnt look like thinner or suffering from that die slow...he took it off right
Chavez looked good I thought too, I bet he was extra motivated.

Cherry pick gone wrong?:ohhh:
 

FrankyFourFingers

Raised in Ruins
Joined
Jul 3, 2015
Messages
1,977
Reputation
860
Daps
9,766
Reppin
CA
:hubie: A draw on a GB card, no chance. If it was more neutral and the "star" of boxing wasn't involved :ehh: but Canelo already got 1.5 judges cards pre fight.

I like Canelo in any round between 3-10 and Chavez anywhere between 6-12.

If you wanna play safe for JCC fukkery drop in all rounds shyt...here's a minimum outlook

$1 wins you $50.
$1 per round that's only $12 to cover every round

$12, in any scenario if JCC KOs him any round you win $50.

Btw I put $100,000 Coli cash on Canelo I need some Coli cash

yes I have a gambling problem
:mjgrin:
I was on that bovada struggle. I won big ($180 off $1 :mjgrin:) and it felt easy. It got to the point where i was betting on baseball innings :mjgrin:
Not for this fight breh..both of these nikkas are struggle :hhh:...ill gladly do it for GGG Canelo though:myman: #GGGoodBoys
ae954RP.gif
 

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
119,671
Reputation
11,535
Daps
247,823
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
I was on that bovada struggle. I won big ($180 off $1 :mjgrin:) and it felt easy. It got to the point where i was betting on baseball innings :mjgrin:

thats how it starts...my first big betting win was margarito beating cotto..i got the method of victory AND round right..then i was on it until Wlad vs Haye which i lost a good amount..i calmed that down for a minute...then some thangs changed in my life..one thing led to another and i found myself back in the raw uncut gambling game not only boxing but making bets on horses and occasionally on football too..its a disease brehs :mjgrin:
 

patscorpio

It's a movement
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
119,671
Reputation
11,535
Daps
247,823
Reppin
MA/CT/Nigeria #byrdgang #RingGangRadio
Weights: Canelo Alvarez 164, Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. 164

By Keith Idec

LAS VEGAS – Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. answered any doubts about his ability to make the catch weight Friday afternoon.

Chavez weighed in at 164 pounds, just below the contracted maximum of 164½ for his catch-weight showdown with Mexican rival Canelo Alvarez on Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena. The 31-year-old Chavez, infamous for struggling to make weight, would’ve been fined $1 million per pound if he came in overweight Friday before an energetic crowd that was estimated to be around 10,000 at MGM Grand Garden Arena on Cinco de Mayo.

He looked depleted prior to stepping on the scale, but Chavez’s ability to make weight without a problem brought an anticlimactic conclusion to perhaps the most interesting storyline during the buildup toward their HBO Pay-Per-View main event. The son of Mexico’s most beloved boxer agreed to fight at Alvarez’s preferred catch weight because his guarantee for their 12-round fight is $6 million.

canelo-chavez-weights.jpg


Chavez (50-2-1, 32 KOs, 1 NC) hadn’t been as low as what he weighed Friday since he weighed in at 159 pounds for his 12-round unanimous-decision defeat to Sergio Martinez in their WBC middleweight title fight in September 2012. His five fights since the Martinez match have been contested within the super middleweight and light heavyweight divisions.

Alvarez, meanwhile, seemingly had little difficulty making weight as he weighed in at a career-high 164 pounds. Before Friday, the most the WBO super welterweight champion had weighed for any of his first 50 professional fights was 155 pounds.

The 26-year-old Alvarez (48-1-1, 34 KOs) weighed 155 for four of his fights that were contested at catch weights. He won each of those bouts against Alfredo Angulo (10th-round TKO), Erislandy Lara (12-round split decision), Miguel Cotto (12-round unanimous decision) and Amir Khan (sixth-round knockout).

Against Chavez, however, the 5-feet-9 Alvarez will face a significant size disadvantage.

Angel Heredia, Chavez’s strength and conditioning coach, told BoxingScene.com on Thursday that he expects Chavez to weigh between 182 and 185 pounds once their fight starts Saturday night. Heredia also said he expects Alvarez to weigh 166 or 167 pounds when the bout begins.

Alvarez still was a slightly more than a 6-1 favorite over Chavez on Friday afternoon at MGM Grand’s sports book.

Below are the weights for the first three pay-per-view fights Saturday night (9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT; $69.99 in HD). Each of those six boxers made weight Friday.

Middleweights, 10 rounds: David Lemieux (37-3 33 KOs), Montreal, 163 pounds, vs. Marcos Reyes (35-4, 26 KOs), Chihuahua, Mexico, 163 pounds.

Welterweights, 10 rounds: Lucas Matthysse (37-4, 34 KOs, 1 NC), Chubut, Argentina, 147 pounds, vs. Emmanuel Taylor (20-4, 14 KOs), Cleverly, Maryland, 147 pounds.

Featherweights: 10 rounds: Joseph Diaz Jr. (23-0, 13 KOs), South El Monte, California, 125½ pounds, vs. Manuel Avila (22-0, 8 KOs), Fairfield, California, 125 pounds.
 
Top