ALVAREZ, TRIPLE G PROMISE KNOCKOUT
Bitter rivals Gennad Golovkin, Canelo Alvarez vow conclusive end in rematch
Gennady Golovkin and Canelo Alvarez had to follow a circus to town the first time they met a year ago.
The clown show by Floyd Mayweather Jr., and Conor McGregor a few weeks earlier cast a long shadow on a middleweight title bout that turned out to be quite a show itself. Golovkin and Alvarez put on a real fight that had a little bit of everything — except a winner.
The two return Saturday night for a rematch on the Las Vegas Strip that might be even better. The 160-pound titles are at stake once again as the two fighters try
to settle what they couldn’t in last September’s draw.
And this time it’s personal. A failed drug test by Alvarez didn’t just postpone the rematch from the original date in May. It sparked a debate that left Golovkin openly questioning an excuse about contaminated meat in Mexico and whether Alvarez was clean for their first fight.
“I don’t believe all his stories about contaminated meat,” Golovkin said this week. “I think it’s all nonsense. I don’t like to hear his nonsense stories about contaminated meat.”
Luckily for Golovkin, he hasn’t had to listen. He and Alvarez have shared a room only once since the fight was announced — at Wednesday’s final prefight press conference — and Alvarez is so upset about Golovkin’s comments
that he refused to do a traditional faceoff with Triple G for photographers.
When they finally do meet Saturday night it will be with some hard feelings on both sides that didn’t surface in the first fight.
“I’m angry but I’m going to use it in my favor in this fight,” Alvarez said. “I’m bothered by all the stupid things they’ve been saying.”
A fight that had to happen after the disputed draw in the first bout almost didn’t come to be after Alvarez tested positive for clenbuterol just before beginning training for what was supposed to be a May rematch. Alvarez was suspended by the Nevada Athletic Commission for six months, and then Golovkin’s camp demanded a better split of the purse than he got for the first bout. /
Every night before bed, I visualize what I’’m going to do, which is to get a knockout.