On one hand, it seems that a few of our guys here at Saddo were on the "know" as to have offered a refreshing take on the Max "K" incident at the post fight interview of Saturday night's fight between Floyd Mayweather Jr, and Juan Manuel Marquez. They were objective and on some level uncannily accurate.
On the other, a few Saddos too, had it a way bit too impassioned, and may very well have shared obtuse if not an outright opposite view of what actually had transpired.
I am no Max K fan, the guy indeed is not very likable, but for the sake of impartiality, let us not close the thread without examining this one write-up... and allow ourselves a little more "read up" and "knowledge-up", so as not to allow biased opinions to find their way less than positively "impressing" or swaying our minds with ease.
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In a phoner, Kellerman offered his take.
When Mosley came over, and then Hopkins started talking, was when "I felt it started to get out of control," he told TSS.
HBO was ready for such an eventuality, as Kellerman and producers were aware that with Floyd's fightweek barbs and refusal to step on HBO's unofficial scale, the fighter was not feeling a great deal of fondness for Team HBO. "There was a sensitivity to it getting out of control in the ring," he allowed.
Kellerman, in talking to me, was surprisingly self-critical of his handling of the interview. "Floyd's perception is 'This guy won't let me talk' and on replay I can see what he means," he said. "It's not like he wasn't justified."
But, Max said, once Mayweather took the mike from him, he felt he had no choice but to push the auto-eject button. "What am I supposed to do? The announcer has to at least have the mike."
In a different time, under a different circumstance, he said, perhaps he'd try and pull the mike back. But not then, with a rumble threatening to explode. "But Floyd was agitated, and watching the tape (the day after) I see his point,"Kellerman said.
In a phoner, Kellerman offered his take.
When Mosley came over, and then Hopkins started talking, was when "I felt it started to get out of control," he told TSS.
HBO was ready for such an eventuality, as Kellerman and producers were aware that with Floyd's fightweek barbs and refusal to step on HBO's unofficial scale, the fighter was not feeling a great deal of fondness for Team HBO. "There was a sensitivity to it getting out of control in the ring," he allowed.
Kellerman, in talking to me, was surprisingly self-critical of his handling of the interview. "Floyd's perception is 'This guy won't let me talk' and on replay I can see what he means," he said. "It's not like he wasn't justified."
But, Max said, once Mayweather took the mike from him, he felt he had no choice but to push the auto-eject button. "What am I supposed to do? The announcer has to at least have the mike."
In a different time, under a different circumstance, he said, perhaps he'd try and pull the mike back. But not then, with a rumble threatening to explode. "But Floyd was agitated, and watching the tape (the day after) I see his point,"Kellerman said.
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Rest of the story from Sweet Science, link is provided below:
MORE MAX: Kellerman Explains Postfight Skirmish With Floyd
Last edited by KananKrus; 09-24-2009 at 02:39 PM.
I have to say, reading this raises my respect for Kellerman quite a bit.
His error wasn't in ending the interview too soon, that was unavoidable. It was in the way he handled it from the start up until the point where GBP butted in -- with his long-winded questions and showing visible frustration and annoyance instead of patience.
For him to have the self-awareness to identify where he went wrong and then go ahead and admit it means he understands where he needs to improve and presumably wants to do so -- a rare enough quality in any walk of life.
He's a smart enough guy, so I'm sure he'll get better.
Merchant would have made that a 1,000,000 hit youtube interview by the morning... That is all.
Hidden Content
"There's nothing special about him." -Sergiy Dzinziruk
THANKS, MAX.
Max wanted to do an interview, that's his job. The boxer told him to stop talking. Max didn't go in the ring and told the fighters to stop fighting.
Fraud didn't want to do the interview, he wanted to promote his endorsements. Wrong place and wrong time, no one wants to hear about Nike, Gatorade, or any crap he's trying to promote.
So Max did the right thing. Take control of the interview or don't have one.
WAY TO GO, MAX. GOOD JOB!!
i often wonder what would of happened to kellerman had he of jumped in to give one of his "frank interviews" to a pent up mike tyson
No doubts the resulting incident would currently have upwards of 50million youtube hits![]()
one dangerous horrible bloke
I specifically remember Floyd and Merchants last interview. I am pretty sure Larry doesn't want to talk face to face with that prick. Mayweather saying, "Larry you never give me credit... <blah blah> This is my time! I just fought my heart out. You are always saying how I never do my job well... When are you going to show me the respect I deserve! You aren't in here fighting!" Typical Floyd being a whiny pansy.
He wouldn't have to demand respect if he gave it.
"Floyd needs to inject Xylocaine into his balls to gain the courage to fight Pacquiao."
- and I quote from some random guy on the internet
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