Calgary Herald

Rapper 50 Cent gets in the ring

Looking to make a splash in boxing

- TIM DAHLBERG

While Floyd Mayweather Jr. sat in a jail cell, rapper 50 Cent set about signing fighters and putting together the promotiona­l company he and Mayweather had long talked about.

It seemed like a perfect match for two buddies who liked nothing better than to have HBO cameras film them playing with stacks of $100 bills in the 24/7 series. But it fell apart when Mayweather got out of prison and decided that he would rather play with his money than invest it in a boxing company.

The requisite Twitter fight ensued, with all the nastiness that comes with any breakup. But that doesn’t mean 50 Cent isn’t interested in making a real splash in boxing by promoting his former BFF in a fight against, say, Manny Pacquiao.

“I could see myself with the money,” the rapper said in an interview with The Associated Press. “And if you’ve got the money you can make the fight.”

That fight could involve more money than any fight ever, with 50 Cent particular­ly interested in a reported $180 million offer that promoter Bob Arum has from Dubai. But Mayweather has been reluctant to even discuss the possibilit­y of a Pacquiao fight, and 50 Cent thinks he knows why.

One loss, he said, and Mayweather would probably never fight again.

“It’s all confidence when it comes to Floyd and his confidence wouldn’t be there,” 50 Cent said. “He kind of hand picks who he fights instead of taking the tough fights.”

Boxing does make strange bedfellows, though there’s nothing strange about 50 Cent’s foray into the sport. He boxed as an amateur while growing up, and his friendship with Mayweather rekindled a love for the sport.

With Mayweather out, he used his own money to sign several fighters, the most notable being former Cuban Olympic gold medallist Yuriorkis Gamboa. He wants boxing to reclaim the young demographi­c that it has lost to the UFC, and has plans to mix entertainm­ent with any fights that he promotes.

The rapper, whose real name is Curtis Jackson, was approved last month for a promoter’s license in Nevada and is working with Arum’s Top Rank on Saturday’s fight card that is topped by the fourth fight between Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez.

“We’re allies, we’re working together,” Arum said.

But 50 Cent has a learning curve ahead of him, as evidenced by a press conference he was part of Thursday to introduce the undercard that includes Gamboa. When 50 Cent finished a short speech he went to sit down, forgetting to introduce his fighter. “I (messed) up,” he said.

50 Cent reportedly spent more than $1 million getting the rights to promote Gamboa, a big puncher who he believes will become a big star. The rap mogul likely didn’t have to go far for the money, because he made fortunes in music and in a stake he had in Vitaminwat­er when it was bought in a 2007 deal by the Coca-Cola company for a reported $4.1 billion.

 ?? Frederick M. Brown/getty Images ?? 50 Cent is making a foray into boxing, even without the help of former pal, Floyd Mayweather.
Frederick M. Brown/getty Images 50 Cent is making a foray into boxing, even without the help of former pal, Floyd Mayweather.

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