THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

De La Hoya's goal is to land rematch

OSCAR DE LA HOYA Breezes in tuneup OSCAR DE LA HOYA Breezes in tuneup
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Tim Dahlberg
Associated Press / May 5, 2008

CARSON, Calif. - The crowd had gone home mostly satisfied, and Oscar De La Hoya had a few minutes to shower and change from boxing trunks into something a bit less revealing. His job not yet finished for the night, he stood in the same ring where he beat Steve Forbes and wasted no time promoting his next act.

This one already has been seen before, but that didn't stop De La Hoya, who is proving as adept at promoting fights as he is in fighting them.

"I tell you one thing, I can't wait until September," De La Hoya said.

For those not briefed on De La Hoya's retirement tour plans, September means Floyd Mayweather Jr. and the rematch of the most lucrative fight in boxing history. That's assuming negotiations with Mayweather go according to plan, and with all the millions on the table there are few in boxing who doubt the sides will come to an agreement.

All that remains is selling the fight to fans, who might have felt they didn't get their money's worth in the first fight last May.

De La Hoya will certainly do his job, just as he did to draw some 27,000 to the Home Depot Center to see what was little more than a homecoming tuneup against Forbes.

If he needs any help, former middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins is more than willing to weigh in on the side of his business partner in Golden Boy Promotions.

"It's an easy fight to promote," Hopkins said. "You just tell the people when the fight will be and where it will be. They'll show up. Believe me, they'll show up."

They showed up Saturday night in a soccer stadium for the first of three fights De La Hoya has planned to finish off his career, and had quite a bit to cheer about as he won a lopsided 12-round decision to keep those retirement plans on track. De La Hoya never knocked down Forbes or hurt him badly, but he won every round on one ringside scorecard and 11 of the 12 rounds on the other two.

More important to De La Hoya, he didn't fade in the late rounds against Forbes like he has in many of his fights.

De La Hoya stands to benefit the most from selling boxing fans on a second fight with Mayweather, considering he earned some $45 million from the first bout he lost by split decision. And while many boxing experts believe there is little De La Hoya can do better to change the outcome against the cagey Mayweather, that won't stop the relentless promotion for the fight.

De La Hoya will not only have his performance against Forbes to help sell his cause, but will have Mayweather's father in his corner training him to fight his son.

"This is the beginning of our preparation to fight my son," Floyd Mayweather Sr. said. "Floyd is obviously a better fighter than Stevie, but they're both tough and, honestly, Floyd doesn't throw as many punches."

De La Hoya, who has built a business empire that now includes a minority interest in Major League Soccer's Houston Dynamo, was only 7-5 in fights since 1999 after winning his first 31 fights as a pro. He hasn't won a fight against a notable opponent since stopping Fernando Vargas six years ago.

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