Cape Breton Post

Wish granted

Mayweather and McGregor will fight in smaller gloves

- BY TIM DAHLBERG

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor got their wish to fight in smaller gloves, but not before being chastised by a Nevada boxing official for using the issue to hype their fight later this month.

Nevada boxing regulators on Wednesday gave the two fighters an exemption to a rule requiring 10-ounce gloves for fights at 154 pounds, approving 8-ounce gloves for the Aug. 26 bout. Representa­tives of both fighters appeared before the Nevada State Athletic Commission to request the waiver.

Commission­ers also approved veteran referee Robert Byrd as the third man in the ring for the fight.

Commission Chairman Anthony Marnell said he was comfortabl­e with the fighters using smaller gloves, but unhappy that they used the issue to sell the fight on social media.

“I do not like the Nevada State Athletic Commission being used as a pawn in a social media battle,” Marnell said.

Under Nevada regulation­s, 10-ounce gloves are required in fights above 147 pounds and the bout is set for 154 pounds. But Mayweather has worn 8-ounce gloves most of his career, and McGregor has worn 4-ounce gloves in his UFC fights.

McGregor said the gloves will only speed up the end of the fight, which he earlier predicted wouldn’t last four rounds.

“I believe now that gloves are eight ounces I don’t believe he makes it out of the second round,” McGregor said. “I do not see him absorbing the blows in the first two rounds.”

Mayweather’s promoter, Leonard Ellerbe, said his fighter is also more comfortabl­e in smaller gloves and would use them to stop McGregor.

“The fight is going to end in a knockout, I’m very confident,” Ellerbe said. “And it will probably be early.”

McGregor will be in a boxing ring for the first time as a pro when he takes on Mayweather, who is coming out of retirement for a fight that will make him tens of millions of dollars. They will fight under boxing rules, which will be enforced by Byrd, a veteran of many championsh­ip fights.

“The referee makes a big difference in this fight, which is the specific reason I chose Robert Byrd,” said Bob Bennett, the commission’s executive director.

Commission­ers also approved Burt Clements and Dave Moretti of the United States and Italy’s Guido Cavalleri as judges for the bout. McGregor’s camp had asked for an internatio­nal judge among the three.

Byrd will be paid $25,000 for the bout, while the judges will make $20,000.

The glove issue took up much of the commission meeting, though in the end all voted in favour of the smaller gloves. There was also discussion about the padding in the gloves, with both sides agreeing to be bound by Nevada boxing inspectors approving the foam padding.

Mayweather has fought 46 of his 49 fights with 8-ounce gloves, including his last six. McGregor has never boxed before, but quickly agreed to Mayweather’s challenge on social media to fight in smaller gloves.

UFC chief Dana White echoed McGregor in saying the smaller gloves will make a difference in the fight.

“It affects the fight big time,” White said. “When we were in our original negotiatio­ns it was something they would not even talk about. I don’t know what changed but I’m glad it did. It makes it so much more fun.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Floyd Mayweather Jr., front left, poses as Conor McGregor watches during a news conference at Barclays Center on July 13 in New York.
AP PHOTO Floyd Mayweather Jr., front left, poses as Conor McGregor watches during a news conference at Barclays Center on July 13 in New York.

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