Daily Dispatch

I’m the real deal, says Golovkin

Mayweather-Conor fight just a circus, says Kazak fighter

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GENNADY Golovkin (“Triple G”) has dismissed the idea that Floyd Mayweather Jr’s comeback against Conor McGregor will overshadow his September 16 clash with Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.

WBC-IBF-WBA middleweig­ht champion Golovkin defends his world title belts at the T-Mobile Arena three weeks after Mayweather faces McGregor at the same Las Vegas venue.

Five-weight world champion Mayweather, now 40, will not have fought for nearly two years by the time he faces 27year-old Irishman McGregor, a mixed martial arts fighter, on August 26.

But McGregor, a two-weight UFC champion, has never fought as a profession­al boxer and faces the sport’s best practition­er for decades. Golovkin (37-0, 33 KOs), 35, insists his fight with Alvarez (49-1-1, 34 KOs) is bigger and of more significan­ce than Mayweather-McGregor, which he sees as a “circus show”.

“This (Mayweather-McGregor) is not for fighters, but business,” Golovkin said earlier this week.

“I think people understand what is a true fight, a boxing fight, like mine with Caneno or a big show, maybe sometimes for people a funny show, like a circus show.

“Everybody knows – Conor is not a boxer, just show. If you want to watch a show please watch them, if you want to watch a true fight, a true boxing fight and you respect boxing, watch my fight with Canelo. “This is business. Conor with Floyd is not a boxing fight because Conor is not a boxer. Money fight OK, show fight OK.”

Regardless of some dismissing it as a mismatch, Mayweather-McGregor is expected to do record business for a boxing fight and may eclipse Golovkin-Alvarez in revenue and television viewers.

But Golovkin-Alvarez is a fight for the ages, one of the most eagerly awaited boxing match-ups in recent memory.

It pits two crowd-pleasing icons against each other to decide the world’s best middleweig­ht. Golovkin, a knockout machine from Kazakhstan but now based in California, has made 18 consecutiv­e world middleweig­ht title defences and was taken to points for the first time since 2008 by American Daniel Jacobs in March. Alvarez, 26, has won world titles in two weight divisions with one blemish – by majority points decision to Mayweather in 2013. Only one world title – the WBO – will not be on the line when the pair collide, but the winner on Monday was offered the chance to fight for it later this year.

Alvarez, who cruised to a wide points win over fellow Mexican Julio Cesar Chavez Jr in May, admitted he did not know who WBO world middleweig­ht champion Billy Joe Saunders (24-0, 12 KOs) was when the Briton addressed him at a press conference in London on Monday.

Saunders, who asked Alvarez why he had not fought Golovkin sooner, holds the only world middleweig­ht title not in Golovkin’s hands and wants to face the winner of the September 16 showdown. “I didn’t even recognise him [Golovkin],” Alvarez said earlier this week. “I’ve never really watched him or studied him. With one hand tied behind my back and with my eyes closed I will still beat him.

“He talks too much, but he’s not a promoter,” Triple G said at a press conference in London.

“I told my promoter Tom Leoffler I wanted this [Saunders] fight for June 10 and he said he wasn’t ready. He has said no two times and he has wasted my time. I said I’m ready for this fight in Kazakhstan but he said no and I turned my focus to Canelo.” — AFP

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? UP FOR THE BATTLE: Oscar de la Hoya holds upthe hands of Canelo Alvarez, left, and Gennady Golovkin at a press conference to launch the fighters’ September 16 bout in London
Picture: GETTY IMAGES UP FOR THE BATTLE: Oscar de la Hoya holds upthe hands of Canelo Alvarez, left, and Gennady Golovkin at a press conference to launch the fighters’ September 16 bout in London

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