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De La Hoya off to great start on farewell tour, beats Forbes

CARSON, Calif. -- Oscar De La Hoya showed he still could beat a contender. Next up is cashing in again like a champion.

In what was little more than a tuneup for a much bigger fight, De La Hoya kicked off his retirement tour Saturday night before an appreciative crowd by pitching a near shutout over a game but overmatched Steve Forbes.

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  • De La Hoya got a chance to shake off ring rust and put on a show in front of his hometown fans, who came out in big numbers to cheer him on against a fighter whose previous biggest claim to fame was losing in the final of the "Contender" reality series. He didn't disappoint, battering the smaller Forbes around on his way to an easy 12-round decision in his first fight in a year.

    The win set up a September rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr., who beat De La Hoya by split decision last May in what was the richest fight ever. And, even though De La Hoya was a 17-1 favorite Saturday, his dominating performance against Forbes likely will do what De La Hoya wanted by helping sell the second fight with Mayweather.

    "This is the same style I'm going to use for Mayweather," De La Hoya said. "This is the same plan for Mayweather."

    De La Hoya won all 12 rounds on one judge's scorecard and 11 of 12 on the other two. He bloodied Forbes' face but failed to knock out an opponent who never had been stopped in 38 previous fights, as he had vowed to do before the bout.

    The Associated Press had De La Hoya winning every round and scored it 120-108.

    Forbes seemed happier that he had made it through 12 rounds than De La Hoya seemed about winning the fight.

    "It was an excellent fight and an honor to fight Oscar," Forbes said. "I felt strong, and it was great to be in there like that and have the opportunity to get in there and not go down. I hope by fighting him I proved I am a top-level fighter."

    De La Hoya had little to fear from the light-hitting Forbes, a former 130-pound champion fighting at 150 pounds, and it showed. De La Hoya attacked from the opening bell, and the fight soon settled into a predictable pattern, with De La Hoya stalking Forbes and punishing him with combinations to the body and head.

    But the crowd greeted De La Hoya with scattered boos at the end of the fight after he failed to put Forbes down or stop him.

    "I'm happy I fought Forbes," De La Hoya said. "Now I feel sharp after a year's layoff."

    De La Hoya, who says he will retire at the end of the year after two more fights, needed an impressive performance to help set up a second fight with Mayweather. De La Hoya hand-picked Forbes, a decent fighter with little power, to be an opponent who would showcase his skills while at the same time not pose too much of a threat to his plans.

    Forbes cooperated by doing his best, but he rarely got inside De La Hoya's reach or mounted any sustained attack. As he kept losing rounds, his corner became as desperate as the fighter, imploring him to land one big punch.

    "Try and make him walk into something," trainer Jeff Mayweather told Forbes after the fourth round

    The fight hardly seemed suited for an outdoor arena and a prime-time audience on HBO, considering one fighter had lost two of his last three fights and the other had dropped three of his last five. But De La Hoya remains a box office attraction despite a middling 7-5 record over the last eight years and, with his retirement looming, this was the only chance for many in his hometown to see him live.

    An announced crowd of 27,000, lured by ticket prices as low as $25, came to the Home Depot Center to do just that, even though fans in the upper reaches of the soccer stadium barely could see the two fighters. The 35-year-old De La Hoya wanted to kick off what he says will be his final year in boxing before fans from his hometown.

    "It was so great to be able to fight here in Los Angeles in front of all these people, particularly my fans of East L.A.," he said. "It just felt really nice to be home."

    De La Hoya promotes as well as he fights, and the fight was part of a carefully laid-out plan to finish his floundering career with a flourish. He plans to fight Mayweather in September and, if he can beat him, could fight for the last time in December against perhaps Miguel Cotto.



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    luis wrote on May 12, 2008 11:58 AM: cool


    paul wrote on May 04, 2008 12:27 PM: Put Mayweather,De La Hoya and Forbes all together and you still won`t get a fighter. I agree with bt, Diego Sanchez in the first round, all three!!!


    Joe C wrote on May 04, 2008 11:18 AM: Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me. The first fight, Mayweather played with De La Hoya and the majority of boxing fans wanted their money back. No way would I pay for another fight with De La Hoya.

    The Forbes fight was a joke, hardly made me interested in seeing De La Hoya again.
    Unless it comes on HBO for free the next week and De La Hoya is embarrassed the way he should be, knocked out in the first round.

    Plus the disgraceful pandering to mexico with the Mexican national anthem and putting the Mexican flag on one side our great U.S. flag is insulting. Mexico has done nothing for him, he’s an U.S. citizen and we don’t need to constantly witness his devotion to another corrupted country, seemed rather bigoted.


    MKovac wrote on May 04, 2008 07:43 AM: Who is Diego Sanchez?


    bt wrote on May 04, 2008 06:15 AM: blah blah blah let him get in the ring with Diego Sanchez. Boxing is way past its time.