"I'm like W.T.F. capitalized right now. What the f*** was that? Me as a fighter and a warrior, if I think I got no chance I'm gonna go out there swinging. That's always been me. I just don't understand how the corner can quit and not give him hope. If you believe in your capabilities, why f***ing quit," Donaire explained to BoxingScene.com.
"I saw that every time that they'd break, that every single time he would look to his corner. I told [Jessie] Vargas, when [Walters] walked over to his corner [at the end of the seventh], I told him 'he's done.' I didn't know he was gonna quit, but I knew he was done mentally. They didn't have the right game plan. They got frustrated. They weren't pushing each other to win [in the corner]."
"You see the biggest deference was, he seemed very nervous. When he fought against me he let his punches go. This time he held on to his punches. There was no power on those punches. Even when he threw the right hand, he would throw it halfway and then pull it back. To me it just doesn't make sense, regardless if you're losing the fight you just don't quit. He went in against a guy who was just five steps ahead of him and he said 'f*** this sh*t." - See more at:
Donaire on Nicholas Walters' Quitting: What The F*** Was That? - Boxing News