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Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs. John Gotti III: Time, how to watch, what to ...

Floyd Mayweather Jr vs John Gotti III Time how to watch what to
Floyd Mayweather Jr. and John Gotti III are scheduled for an eight-round exhibition in Mexico City. Follow along for updates, highlights and action:
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Are personalities like Jake Paul making fighting better? Michael Bisping weighs in

UFC Hall of Famer Michael Bisping weighs in on personalities who are trying to enter the combat fighting space like Jake Paul, and the pros and cons that come with it.

In Mexico City this week, Floyd Mayweather Jr. sat next to John Gotti III, the grandson of the New York crime boss, in a room full of boxing officials, dignitaries and inquiring minds.

“Why did you decide to come out from retirement?’’ a reporter asked.

Mayweather, 47, grinned.

“This is retirement for me,’’ he said.

This Floyd Mayweather Jr. Exhibition Tour – now on stop No. 8, a rematch vs. Gotti, is scheduled for eight rounds Saturday night. The billionaire boxer still is throwing punches and cashing sizable checks.

Though Mayweather ended his professional boxing career in 2017 with a 10th-round TKO of Conor McGregor, his gloves never had time to collect dust. Mayweather has fought in seven exhibitions, including one against Logan Paul, and proven to be as savvy a businessman as a boxer.

Case in point: John Gotti Jr. said it was Mayweather who reached out to them years ago after Mayweather learned the grandson of the late mobster was competing in MMA. Mayweather, who’s as skilled at selling a fight as winning one, offered Gotti III a chance to fight him in the boxing ring, according to Gotti Jr. Why?

In what sounded like an appeal to PPV customers, he said, “If youse know anything about the Gotti family, you know we’re fighting son bitches,’’ John Gotti Jr. said earlier this week. “We fight the government. We fight anybody that wants to fight us.’’

On rolls the Floyd Mayweather Jr. Exhibition Tour.

Round 1: Arlenn Sanchez steps into the ring less than a week after taking the fight. She stays busy with body shots, but Cecilia Rodriguez capitalizes on her reach advantage. Rodriguez 10, Sanchez 9. 

Round 2: Sanchez unloading punches, but not with much force and she already looks fatigued. Rodriguez lands enough clean shots to win the round. Rodriguez 20, Sanchez 18.

Round 3: Sanchez might as well put pillows on the end of her boxing gloves. Rodriguez showing no fear of her punches and she’s landing a barrage of clean shots, including several uppercuts. Rodriguez 30, Sanchez 27.

Round 4: Sanchez out with more authority. Spirited exchanges commence. Sanchez leaning in and finding more power. Rodriguez answers with a solid left, but Sanchez dictated most of the action. Rodriguez 39, Sanchez 37. 

Round 5: Sanchez the aggressor and again leaning in. Rodriguez connecting with the left but struggling to slow Sanchez. Rodriguez 48, Sanchez 47.

Round 6: Rodriguez using her length again. Sanchez warned for landing punches behind Rodriguez’s head. Sanchez slowing again, and Rodriguez lands a flurry. Rodriguez 58, Sanchez 56.  

Round 7: Rodriguez unloading fierce punches. Sanchez still coming forward. Definitely paying for it. Lands punches, but eats more. Rodriguez 68, Sanchez 65.

Round 8: Sanchez looks lively and remains the aggressor. Takes two uppercuts from Rodriguez and yet still moving forward and throwing punches. But Rodriguez firing the harder and more precise punches. Rodriguez 78, Sanchez 74.

Sanchez took the fight on short notice. She won admiration, but not the fight.

Though Sanchez showed spirit and determination, Rodriguez landed more shots and with precision in the eight-round, light flyweight bout.

The judges scored it 78-74, 80-72 and 79-74 in Rodriguez’s favor.

Rodriguez, 24, earned a unanimous decision and improved to 14-1-1. Sanchez, 26, fell to 5-7-4.

Round 1: Cesar Vaca wearing pink gloves and Luis Rodriguez wearing bright yellow ones. More yellow lands, slightly. Rodriguez 10, Vaca 9.

Round 2: Vaca opens up and absorbs a big left from Rodriguez as a result. Vaca stays aggressive and lands two uppercuts. Lands another combo and evades any punishing blows. Rodriguez 19, Vaca 19.

Round 3: Vaca showing good footwork and quickness, and it’s spared him from Rodriguez’s powerful left. Vaca throwing punches and staying on the move. Vaca 29, Rodriguez 28.

Round 4: Vaca comes out staying on the move, bouncing left and right, and firing punches. Rodriguez patiently looking for an opening. Too patiently, perhaps. Vaca tags Rodriguez, but crowd lets loose with a few boos as Vaca backpedals. Vaca 39, Rodriguez 37.

Round 5: Referee quickly stops the action to mop up Vaseline from Vaca’s forehead. But that’s not what’s making Vaca look so slippery. Still bouncing on his toes and landing the right. Rodriguez looks baffled. Vaca 49, Rodriguez 46.

Round 6: Rodriguez targeting the body, with minimal success. Vaca sticks with his game plan. He's moving side to side and firing quick punches. Rodriguez lands several rights to the body. Vaca 58, Rodriguez 56.

Round 7: Rodriguez waving Vaca forward. He wants action. Vaca stays on the move. Rodriguez waves his arms in frustration. Vaca now going to be a stationary target. Rodriguez lands a combination late. Vaca 68, Rodriguez 65.

Round 8: Rodriguez appears to be trying to draw in Vaca and counterpunch. But the strategy not paying off, as Vaca exploits his quickness and footwork. Rodriguez running out of time – and ideas. Vaca 78, Rodriguez 74.  

Round 9: Rodriguez again expresses frustration with Vaca’s seemingly constant movement. But it’s more than a way to evade punches. Vaca’s landing punches, too. Vaca 88, Rodriguez 83. 

Round 10: Vaca could take the round off. Instead, he’s still landing punches. Rodriguez simply can’t catch him. Vaca would be making Floyd Mayweather proud with this combination of wise defense and opportunistic punching. Vaca 98, Rodriguez 92. 

Rodriguez entered the bout as an emerging knockout artist. He got beat by a boxing artist.

With great footwork, defense and hand speed, Vaca evaded Rodriguez’s powerful left and landed a steady diet of crisp punches during the 10-round super middleweight bout.

The judges scored it 95-95, 97-94 and 98-92 in favor of Vaca, who improved to 17-1-1. Rodriguez fell to 15-1.

Round 1: Alberto Artiga took the fight on 24 hours’ notice, according to DAZN, and he looks like he’s been in training for, well, several hours. Aaron Silva, on the other hand, clearly has spent more time in the gym than at the buffet. He hands a powerful right. Silva 10, Artiga 9.

Round 2: Silva stalking and lands a big shot. It's a hard left that almost drops Artiga. The ropes may have saved Artiga, but those ropes might not be so generous moving forward. Silva 20, Artiga 18. 

Round 3: Silva comes out quick and punishes Artiga with a barrage of punches, prompting the referee to stop the fight. As predicted, the ropes do not save Artiga again as Silva wins by TKO.

Artiga came out wearing trunks that on the front read: “Pollo.’’

He was no chicken, taking the fight on 24 hours’ notice, and he had no chance.

Silva bloodied Artiga in the third round of their super middleweight fight and after a barrage of punches the referee stopped the fight.

Silva, 27, improved to 15-1. Artiga, 33, fell to 6-14.

Round 1: Moton out assertively behind his jab. Staggers Vazquez and then drops him! It’s over.

Moton needed less than a minute to flatten Vazquez and demonstrate why at 18 he’s one of the top prospects in boxing.

He unleashed a brutal three-punch combination that dropped Vazquez to the canvas, and the referee halted the fight with only 55 seconds having elapsed in the lightweight bout.

Mentored by Floyd Mayweather Jr., Moton has fought five times in less than a year and delivered his fourth knockout.

The one thing worth noting: Vazquez (5-3-1) was coming back from an eight-year layoff. It would be no surprise if Moton’s KO combo keeps him away from the ring even longer.

The Floyd Mayweather-John Gotti fight will not be officially scored because it's an exhibition. The same is true for the co-main between Ortiz and Coria. USA TODAY Sports' boxing analyst Josh Peter will score the fights.

Round 1: Both boxers wearing lime green boxing gloves. Exhibition gloves? It’s an exhibition pace. Both landed left hands, but Ortiz’s moved the flesh farther. Ortiz 10, Coria 9. 

Round 2: Coria clearly showing more speed. But no evidence that he plans to exploit it beyond controlling this round. Ortiz 19, Coria 19.

Round 3: Whistles from the crowd. The fans want more. They’ve got restrictor plates on these punches. We're seeing limited speed and limited power. Coria 29, Ortiz 28. 

Round 4: They meet in the middle and let their fists fly, without fury. Crowd is chanting. They do not sound happy. Coria again showing superior quickness. The round ends and Ortiz grins as he taps gloves (yes, lime) with Coria. Coria 39, Ortiz 37.

Round 5: Would like to see how much power Ortiz has left in those gloves. Doubtful we’re going to see it, but he does land a couple of solid punches. Coria 48, Ortiz 47. 

Round 6: Ortiz’s smile at the end of the round is bigger than any of his punches during the round. Coria at least looks half serious. Coria 58, Ortiz 56. 

Round 7: Coria catches Ortiz with a solid right. Ortiz counters. Coria shows more flashes of speed. The crowd does not sound satisfied. Coria 68, Ortiz 65.

Round 8: Ortiz eats a left, and Coria feeds him a few more punches. Definite snap on those punches, but the action slows again. The round ends and Ortiz gives Coria a kiss on the cheek. Coria 78, Ortiz 74.

Victor Ortiz and Damian Coria might have set a boxing record for most punches pulled during a fight in Mexico City.

Too many to count.

When the eight-round exhibition ended – without injury or insult – the plump, 37-year-old Ortiz kissed Coria on the check.

Fans booed.

Hector Franco, FanSided MMA: With added motivation of personal animosity, look for the Hall-of-Famer to be more gung-ho with his punches and stop Gotti before the eight-round distance. Prediction: Mayweather by stoppage. 

Alex Ballentine, Bleacher Report: Mayweather will take a cautious approach in the early rounds, allow Gotti to entertain the crowd with some offense, but Mayweather will be able to turn up the heat whenever he wants. Prediction: Fight goes the distance. 

Josh Peter, USA TODAY Sports: Mayweather will go on the attack earlier than usual to ensure he ends the fight rather than allowing the referee to step in prematurely again. Prediction: Mayweather by TKO, 6th round. 

This week, a reporter asked Mayweather about a supposed rumor Mayweather would fight Julio Cesar Chavez in an exhibition.

“The father or the son or both in one night?’’ Mayweather cracked.

The reporter said he was referring to Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., 62. Not Chavez’s 38-year-old son.

Replied Mayweather, “Well, do you want me to use one hand? I can use no hands.’’

The main card starts at 7:30 p.m. ET on Saturday. The Floyd Mayweather vs. John Gotti III fight is expected to begin at about midnight ET.

Where is Floyd Mayweather vs. John Gotti III fight?

Mexico City

What time is Floyd Mayweather vs. John Gotti III fight?

The Floyd Mayweather vs. John Gotti III fight is expected to begin at about midnight ET.

How to watch Floyd Mayweather vs. John Gotti III fight

DAZN. PPV is $49.99 (plus subscription).

Follow Josh Peter on social media @joshlpeter11

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