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OSCAR DE LA HOYA INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE CALL -- TRANSCRIPT
Thursday, April 27, 2006
MARYLYN ACEVES, PUBLICIST, GOLDEN BOY PROMOTIONS: Hello everyone, and welcome to today's conference call with eight-time world champion Oscar De la Hoya. He will be joining us in just a few minutes, but first I want to let everyone know that Danger Zone, featuring the Golden Boy, Oscar De la Hoya versus Ricardo “El Matador” Mayorga will take place on Saturday, May 6, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The event is being promoted by Golden Boy promotions and Don King Productions, and will be broadcast domestically live on HBO Pay-Per-View. Available to more than 56 million pay-per-view homes beginning at 9:00 p.m. Eastern Time and 6:00 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, with a suggested retail price of $49.95. Telecasts will be available in high definition television for the viewers who are HDTV capable. Tickets to see the event live and in person are priced from $1,250 to $150 and are available at the MGM Grand Garden Arena Box Office, can be charge by phone by calling Ticket master or online at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com. In early March, Oscar returned to Puerto Rico after he finished the cross country media promotional tour and set up his training camp at the Wilfredo Gomez Gym located in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. He's now making his final preparations before he travels to Las Vegas on May 1. Oscar is joined on this call by his good friend and Golden Boy Promotions CEO, Richard Schaefer.
RICHARD SCHAEFER, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, GOLDEN BOY PROMOTIONS: Good morning, to all of you. I see with this promotion a lot of parallels to when Oscar fought Tito Trinidad. For example, in today's conference call, I was just told that we have over 60 participants. The media credential requests for the fight are in line with what we had with De la Hoya versus Trinidad. On the venue, ticket sales have been very strong. We actually have to add additional seats into the venue. So everything is really going extremely well as it relates to the promotion. It will be a huge night. We have little more than a week to go, so we are all fired up and excited and it is a pleasure now to introduce to you, Oscar De la Hoya. Oscar, if you want to make some comments on how training went and so on, and then we're going to open it up for questions and answers.
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Thank you, Richard. Training camp went really well. I am on my final stages, I sparred close to 130 rounds. I feel really strong, really fast. I'm extremely excited and anxious to get up into the ring, especially at 154, because I know I will be able to perform the way I normally do, and I'm just ready to fight.
RICHARD SCHAEFFER: OK, can we open it up for questions?
OPERATOR: Thank you. At this time, I would like to remind everyone if you would like to ask a question, please press star one now. Our first question is coming Lem Fatterfield of the Baltimore Sun News.
LEM SATTERFIELD: Hey, you know you've accomplished just so much in this sport, and I know you've been asked this a lot. Why come back when you've done so well outside of the sport, you know, with your promotion? You know you really did not get beat up against Bernard Hopkins and you've done so much. Why at this point come back and fight this guy, and is it a visceral thing, is it just a competitive thing?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well that's the exact same reason, the one you mentioned. You know, I didn't get beat up by Bernard Hopkins even though I was at 160, which is not my weight class. I didn't have no business there. I just feel as a competitive athlete that coming back down to 154; I can close the book on many chapters that I've written and lay it to rest. You know, I can end this story once and for all as a world champion and finish this sport on top.
LEM SATTERFIELD: And particularly against this kind of opponent who just has absolutely no respect for you, I guess kind of as a human being, as a fighter, you know that kind of thing. Why would you put yourself through this? And I guess it may be the same answer, but could you elaborate on that?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well it's motivation. At this point of my career, it's not that I'm deteriorating in skills, it's not that I'm lacking in that area, but it's the motivation that gets me going now, and Ricardo Myorga has sparked that in me. He lit that fire in my belly and I'm full steam ahead going with my training with working as hard as I can, and I'm in tremendous shape right now, and I will show it come May 6. It will be a tough fight because this guy can take a punch and he hits hard, but this is what I need to get up for events like this one.
LEM SATTERFIELD: Last question, the ire that you have right now for this guy, does it compare to-can you bring up any other opponent that you've felt this for, perhaps Vargas? You know, going into a fight and you see it kind of translating the same way, you know in this fight, the Vargas fight, how brutal it was and how you came back.
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: I think and then some. I feel as if I want to teach this guy a lesson really bad. I'm so anxious to get inside that ring to teach him a lesson. My demeanor will be the same. My conditioning is, I think, better. My experience is much, much better. You know, people are going to think that I'm going to dance around and box this guy, but it's not going to be that way. I mean we've prepared for a really tough, tough fight to stay in front of him, but obviously in a smart way, move our head a lot. But it's going to be one long night for him.
OPERATOR: Thank you. Our next question is coming from Ramiro Gonzales of LA Opinion Newspaper.
RAMIRO GONZALEZ, LA OPINION NEWSPAPER: Oscar, Buenos dias, com estamos (SPEAKING IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE)
MARYLYN ACEVES: Excuse me, Oscar before you answer that, why don't you repeat your answer that you just gave in Spanish so that the English media can hear that as well, and then go on to answer.
(SPEAKING IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE)
RICHARD SCHAEFFER: Oscar, can you please repeat ...
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: I will. You know, people will think that I'll be boxing this guy and dancing and boxing. You know, a lot of people are going to be very surprised that I will stay right in front of him. Obviously as a smart boxer, I'll know how to move my head and use my defense, but you know, guys like this who hit hard and who are wild, are guys that you have to know how to maneuver, and the more you box them, obviously the more pressure they'll put on you. So, you have to know how to stand your ground and keep your distance and just be careful, so this fighter here is going to make me so aware and keep me on my toes, and make me fight as hard as I can. He's going to bring out the best in me, which I'm really looking forward to.
OK, next question
OPERATOR: Thank you. Our next question's coming from Chuck Johnson of USA Today.
CHUCK JOHNSON, USA TODAY: How are you doing today, Oscar?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: All right Chuck, really good, thank you.
CHUCK JOHNSON: All right. You mentioned about closing the book, does that mean that you're looking at this fight as the last for Oscar De la Hoya, or have you decided that that's going to be the last fight or not?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well, I mean my plan is to win this fight in May and have my retirement for September. My official retirement fight's for September 16, which is a date that I've always fought on. You know, we're very focused on this fight here with Myorga because obviously in boxing, one punch and its over which is always in the back of my mind, but my plan is to do my final fight in September if everything goes well.
CHUCK JOHNSON: OK, I'm not asking you to look past Myorga, but you mentioned September 16, the opponent, do you see that as a mega-fight?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Oh, absolutely. My September fight has to be a mega-fight and you know, I've thrown out names like Winky Wright and Mayweather, Junior and now I hear Trinidad is wanting to come back. So, the possibilities are there to, yes to fight the Trinidads and the Wrights and the Floyd Juniors. You know it's a matter of analyzing who is the best opponent out there for me to face. Those three top guys that I mentioned are world-class champions in their own right, and so my September fight if I get past this one will be a mega-fight.
CHUCK JOHNSON: You mentioned, I know I had asked you about it previously, Oscar, and you had mentioned that you wouldn't be inclined to necessarily want that fight. It sounds like your attitude has changed a little bit.
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well I mean, I've mentioned it many times over and over that I have so much respect for Floyd, Senior, that I would never fight Floyd, Junior, and obviously still out of respect winning this fight here, May 6, if everything goes well, I would have to sit down with Floyd, Senior and talk to him about it. I'm making no decision whatsoever in my mind on fighting Floyd, Junior in September. Out of respect I would have to sit down with Senior and talk to him.
CHUCK JOHNSON: Well what did you (INAUDIBLE)
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Hello? It cut off.
OPERATOR: Thank you. Our next question is coming from Angel Rodriguez of univision.com.
ANGEL RODRIGUEZ, UNIVISION.COM: (SPEAKING IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE)
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: He's been talking a lot of really in a negative way attacking my persona, attacking my family, attacking my heritage. You know, he's don his job already. I mean he's made me train already as hard as I can. He's motivated me already to be the best fighter I can be. So there's no way I can fall in whatever kind of trap he's trying to set for me. I already have my plan of attack; I already have my game plan set. You know, I already know what I'm going to do inside that ring, so whatever little games he's trying to play, he can't play them with me.
MARYLYN ACEVES: Next question?
OPERATOR: Thank you. Our next question's coming from Bud Schulberg of the Sunday Herald.
BUD SCHULBERG, SUNDAY HERALD: Oscar win or lose, you're on your way to the Hall of Fame, I just wondered if the fight should be close or controversial, could that possibly just be a rematch on the September fight?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well I mean a close fight or a controversial fight obviously that would be the last thing that I would want for my career and for boxing. You know, that's both of the reasons why I trained as hard as I can, to not make this fight as close as possible, to make sure we beat this guy decisively. But if it's a fight that is a fight where it's close and a fight that people want to see again because it was such a good one, then obviously it would be an option for September.
MARYLYN ACEVES: Next question?
OPERATOR: Thank you. Our next question is coming from Eddie Goldman of Seconds Out Radio.
EDDIE GOLDMAN, SECONDS OUT RADIO: Oscar, how are you doing today?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Good, thank you.
EDDIE GOLDMAN: The question I first want to ask is, you've been out of the ring for over a year and half. How is the layoff going to effect you, is it going to have a positive effect in the sense that you aren't hitting, getting hit, or is it going to make you a little rusty, and how are you going to account for that, too?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well we prepared for everything. I started training four months in advance in order to get the rust out to make sure that the timing and the power is there, the speed is there. Actually just about three weeks ago is when I finally felt it click in me, that my speed was there, my power, my timing. So it's no concern whatsoever that I'll feel rusty inside the ring come May 6. And I actually feel rested, my body feels rested and with energy. So I took every necessary precaution to make sure I go out there a hundred percent come May 5.
EDDIE GOLDMAN: Can you tell us what you've seen in his fight with Trinidad, when Trinidad knocked him out that you can learn? Obviously you are a very different fighter from Trinidad, but anything from that you can apply or tip off about your strategy?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well, I mean I would, if I was Trinidad, I would have gone more to the body. You know, hit the body. He does have a good chin. You know when he stuck out his chin against Trinidad, he took it, and Trinidad had one of the hardest left hooks in the game. So, you know you have to attack the body, and when you attack the body it's just like a tree. Chopping down the tree it comes down by itself.
EDDIE GOLDMAN: Last thing, there's been a lot of trash talk on his side, and a lot of very nasty things said. How much is that going to effect the fight, because as you recall he said a lot of nasty things before his fight with Corey Spinks and he lost that one, and that was-I mean obviously you are also a different fighter from Spinks, but that didn't seem to effect what happened in the ring that much.
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well the way it's affecting the fight is that, you know, for the better. It's going to make it such an exciting fight. My blood is boiling inside, I mean, I'm human, and a few things that he said, yes they got under my skin. And I do want to teach this guy a lesson and hit him as hard as I can, but at the same time I have to keep my cool, be collective, you know and stick to my game plan. So, it will be, you'll see some heated exchanges that's for sure, come May 6.
EDDIE GOLDMAN: Do you want to make a prediction for the fight?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Just to win.
EDDIE GOLDMAN: OK, good luck.
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Thank you.
OPERATOR: Thank you, our next question's coming from T.J. Simers of the L.A. Times.
T.J. SIMERS, L.A. TIMES: Oscar, how are you doing?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: T.J. Simers.
T.J. SIMERS: Some of us think you might be finished, OK?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: I was thinking the same thing too.
T.J. SIMERS: So what for your own self, do you think you have to prove something even to yourself, that you've still got it?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Oh, absolutely, absolutely. I mean, you know it's the athlete in me. Especially free myself about Hopkins at 160, fighting him, fighting a bigger guy, you know getting stuck with a body shot against a bigger guy. You know, being in the fight against a bigger guy and all those things I just keep reminding myself and I say to myself, "Hey, you are not finished. You felt straight, you felt fast, you felt strong. You were just in against bigger guys at 160. So it makes me feel really comfortable fighting at 154 now because even in the gym when I'm training, I feel different. I'm a whole different athlete inside that ring so...
T.J. SIMERS: So a lot of this is riding on the different weight. That's the number one thing that gives you confidence?
OSCAR DE LA HOYA: Well the weight is going to be a big factor. When I weigh in come May 5, the night before, I'll be at 151, 152 tops, and that's my natural weight cap there. That's where I belong, so it makes me feel confident that I'm going to be fighting at 154.
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