Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Victor Ortiz

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Victor Ortiz, billed as Star Power, was a professional boxing match contested on September 17, 2011, for the WBC welterweight championship.[1]

Star Power
DateSeptember 17, 2011
VenueMGM Grand Garden Arena, Paradise, Nevada, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBC welterweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Victor Ortiz Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Nickname "Vicious" "Money"
Hometown Oxnard, California, U.S. Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Purse $2,000,000 $25,000,000
Pre-fight record 29–2–2 (22 KO) 41–0 (25 KO)
Age 24 years, 7 months 34 years, 6 months
Height 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) 5 ft 8 in (173 cm)
Weight 147 lb (67 kg) 146+12 lb (66 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBC
Welterweight Champion
The Ring
No. 2 Ranked Welterweight
WBC
No. 1 Ranked Welterweight
The Ring No. 2 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
5-division world champion
Result
Mayweather Jr. wins via 4th-round KO

Background

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Mayweather photographed at the Mayweather–Ortiz press conference on June 28, 2011

Having defeated Andre Berto by unanimous decision in April 2011 to win the WBC welterweight title Victor Ortiz was linked to both a rematch with Berto and a rematch with former conqueror Marcos Maidana.[2]

However on June 7, Floyd Mayweather Jr. announced via Twitter that he was set to challenge Ortiz on September 17, ending a 16 month absence from the ring.[3] This would be Mayweather's first world title bout since his victory over Ricky Hatton in 2007.

The bout was held at the MGM Grand in Paradise, Nevada, Nevada and televised via HBO PPV as part of a split-site doubleheader, the broadcast also featured the Canelo Álvarez vs. Alfonso Gómez light middleweight championship bout taking place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, California.[4]

The fight

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From round one, Mayweather used his speed, skills and accurate right hand to tag Ortiz repeatedly. Mayweather seemed in control through the first three rounds (judges scores: 30–27, 30–27, 29–28 for Mayweather), but in the fourth round, Ortiz found some success, landing a few shots and stinging Mayweather before backing him into the corner. Ortiz hit Mayweather in the face with an apparently intentional headbutt, busting open a cut on the inside and outside of Mayweather's mouth. Referee Joe Cortez immediately called timeout and penalised Ortiz a point for the foul. Ortiz, seemingly acknowledging his wrongdoing, hugged and kissed Mayweather in the corner. Cortez motioned the fighters back together to resume the fight. The fighters touched gloves and Mayweather seemed to half-heartedly return another hug from Ortiz. Then, with Cortez looking away from Mayweather, and as the fighters separated from the hug, Mayweather caught Ortiz with a left hook. Ortiz was stunned by the punch and, still not raising his hands to defend himself, was hit with a flush right to the face. Ortiz dropped straight onto the canvas and was unable to beat Cortez's count.

Aftermath

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"In the ring, you have to protect yourself at all times," Mayweather said. "After it happened, we touched gloves and we were back to fighting and then I threw the left hook and right hand after the break. You just gotta protect yourself at all times." After the interviewer Larry Merchant pressed Mayweather on whether or not what he did was unsportsmanlike, Mayweather told the interviewer he never gives him a fair shake and should be fired.[5]

Fight earnings

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Mayweather was paid a guaranteed $25 million, which could have gone as high as $40 million depending on the pay per view numbers, and Ortiz was paid $2 million.[citation needed]

Mayweather vs. Victor Ortiz generated buys from 1.25 million homes with a value of $78,440,000 in pay-per-view revenue. These numbers make the event the third highest grossing non-heavyweight pay-per-view event of all time.[citation needed]

Main card

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Confirmed bouts:[6]

Preliminary card

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  • Welterweight bout   Carson Jones vs   Said Ouali
    • Jones defeats Ouali via Technical Knockout (Retirement) at 3:00 of the seventh round.
  • Super Middleweight bout   Adonis Stevenson vs.   Dion Savage
    • Stevenson defeats Savage via Technical Knockout at 1:57 of the first round.
  • Super Middleweight bout   Marco Antonio Periban vs.   Dhafir Smith
    • Periban defeats Jones via Unanimous Decision. (80–72, 79–73, 79–73)
  • Lightweight bout   Anthony Crolla vs.   Juan Montiel
    • Crolla defeats Montiel via Split Decision. (78–74, 77–75, 75–77)

International broadcasting

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Country Broadcaster
  Albania SuperSport Albania
  Argentina TyC Sports
  Australia Main Event
  Belgium Be Sport 1
  Cambodia CTN
  Czech Republic Sport 1
  Denmark TV 2 Sport
  France Canal+ Sport
  Hungary Sport 1
  Germany Eurosport
  Iceland Stöð 2 Sport
  Indonesia tvOne
  Italy Sportitalia
  Japan WOWOW
  Malaysia Astro SuperSport
  Mexico Televisa
  New Zealand Sky
  Norway Viasat Sport
  Philippines Solar Sports/TV5/IBC-13[7]
  Poland Polsat Sport
  Portugal Sport TV
  Qatar Al Jazeera Sports
  Romania Sport.ro
  Russia NTV Plus
  Slovakia Sport 1
  Spain Digital+
  Sweden TV10
  South Africa SuperSport
  United Kingdom Primetime
  United States HBO PPV
  Venezuela Meridiano

References

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  1. ^ "Victor Ortiz vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved November 6, 2024.
  2. ^ Rafael, Dan (April 17, 2011). "Victor Ortiz stuns Andre Berto". ESPN. Retrieved May 4, 2011.
  3. ^ "Floyd Mayweather to fight Victor Ortiz". ESPN. June 7, 2011. Archived from the original on January 1, 2022. Retrieved January 1, 2022.
  4. ^ HBO: Boxing: Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. Victor Ortiz. HBO.com. Retrieved on 2011-09-18.
  5. ^ "Mayweather won fair and square". ESPN. September 19, 2011. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  6. ^ "BoxRec - event".
  7. ^ "AKTV on IBC September Schedule" (PDF). TV5. September 19, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 5, 2011. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
Preceded by Victor Ortiz's bouts
17 September 2011
Succeeded by
Preceded by Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s bouts
17 September 2011
Succeeded by