It has been 17 years in the making, but the feeling and the fire still burns deep…at least in the heart of The Executioner, Bernard Hopkins. When Hopkins met Roy Jones Jr back in 1993, and 15 pounds lighter, for the middleweight title, this was the match that would catapult the winners career into the prominent position that is seeked by all fighters. This was true to form, Roy Jones Jr, went on to dominate over the next 10 plus years, being named the Ring Magazine fighter of the decade of the ’90’s. Meanwhile, Bernard took a roundabout way to gain the recognition that he’s always wanted. Bernard went on to win a record 20 straight battles at middleweight and with his win over then champion Kelly Pavlik, seems to have found the fountain of youth while making top 5 on most pound for pound lists today. It is still very evident that Bernard wants this win to put another bow around what is a sure fire hall of fame career. “Roy has been avoiding me for 17 years now, he is afraid that I now know his game and I know what he can do. he never wanted to give me a rematch because he knew he would lose.” Hopkins went on to say, “This will not be a close match. I expect the best Jones Jr. to face me, but with his diminished skills and speed, I will end his career. This fight will end in a knockout.” Either Jones is a great bluffer or he genuienly believes he will win this fight just like he did the first time around. “He has been jealous of me and my career over the past 17 years and it shows. His anger is what will get him beat in the ring…besides me being the faster, stronger, and more skilled fighter,” Jones stated.
This is a true prize fight in the sense that the winner, (which has to win by either KO or TKO) will win 60 percent of the purse leaving the loser with 40. On April 3rd, in Las Vegas, NV, the rematch that has been nearly 20 years in the making has come to fluition. With the natural disdain and mutual dislike these two have for each other, there is no way this fight can be a snoozer. Is Hopkins too old? Have Jones’ skills left him? The world ill find out in a few months and one will emerge as perhaps the greatest fighter of the past two decades.
QUOTES FROM LOS ANGELES DEBATE FROM
THE RIVALS: HOPKINS VS. JONES II
Bernard Hopkins
“This is 2010. That was 1993. That’s 17 years I’ve been waiting for this fight. It’s personal to me and it’s important to me that I get this man in the ring and that I send him on his way to the Hall of Fame. I want to make sure that the last person he remembers is ‘The Executioner.'”
“You listen to Roy Jones and he says something I agree with. You hate to say it, but we are rivals, and you hate to say it, but it took us 17 years to get here. A lot of other things have happened in our lives in the time it took to get here, but now that it’s here, his worst nightmare has come to pass. Me.”
“This means a lot to me. This means that Roy Jones Jr. is going to have to fight me off him. When you have that mindset, you are going to have to take risks too. Roy Jones Jr. is going to have to fight to not get knocked out or fight to knock me out. That has been the motivation for 17 years.”
“I’d be a fool to think that Roy Jones Jr. is going to train to fight Bernard Hopkins, me, by laying on the beach getting a suntan. I know that that Roy Jones Jr. has something to prove to the world and I know that Roy Jones Jr. is going to come to salvage his career and change the opinion people have of him right now. I never underestimate my opponents, it’s not in my character.”
“This is going to be devastating because that’s the way I want him to remember Bernard Hopkins for the rest of his life. Any time he looks at boxing, he’s going to see that I took him to the point that he doesn’t even like boxing anymore. He won’t even let his kids go to fight anymore. The entire Jones family will leave boxing for good after April 3.”
Roy Jones Jr.
“The fight is a rivalry because as the man just said, we are two legendary future Hall of Famers. We’ve always had a debate about whose career has been the most impressive and April 3 will be the deciding factor.”
“The fight is important because, I hate to say it, but first he is my rival, and I must defeat my rival. Secondly, this is the perfect opportunity and perfect timing. The fans wanted it, and since they?? couldn’t give them the other fight they wanted??, we’re going to give them something else.”
“What I have planned is simple. I will fight to get you off me, or I will fight to knock you out, whichever one comes first. Whichever comes first, that’s what I’ll be doing. I’ll knock you out to get you off me, or go after you and knock you out. It doesn’t matter.”
“The day ‘The Executioner’ will leave the boxing ring is going to be April 3rd.”
“The man’s so jealous of me that he doesn’t even want to see my kids watch the fight. He doesn’t want to see any resemblance of me near a boxing ring because it reminds him of that 17-year nightmare he’s had to face.”
“This is probably going to be win and go home for me, because after I win, they’re going to say I’m beating up old men and I shouldn’t fight anymore.”
Oscar de la Hoya, President of Golden Boy Promotions
“These are two legends that we all must respect. It’s not one of the best relationships, but now after 17 years we’ve been able to make the fight. The fact that this rivalry is still there shows how much they wanted this fight.”
“Bernard Hopkins and Roy Jones Jr. are two of the most recognized names in the sport. You’ve got the Tyson’s and Holyfield’s, and then you have the Hopkins’ and Jones’.”
“This fight is so big, that these guys made the front page of the Wall Street Journal. In all my years of fighting, I’ve never even been on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, that shows you how big this fight is.”
John Wirt, CEO of Square Ring Promotions
“There’s so much passion and emotion in this fight. These guys really just plain don’t like each other and you know that’s what a fight is all about. A lot of it’s sport but a lot of it’s just that these two guys don’t like each other.”
Naazim Richardson, Hopkins’ Trainer
“Bernard Hopkins is one of the most well prepared athletes I’ve seen in my entire life, but I know that Roy Jones Jr. is going to show up and be the best Roy Jones you’ve seen in a while.”
Alton Merkerson, Jones’ Trainer
“Both of these gentlemen are very well rounded athletes and this is going to be a very interesting fight. Don’t have any doubt in your mind about whether these men are going to be ready. They are both going to be ready and train hard. On April 3rd it’s going to be a fight.”
# # #
The Rivals: Hopkins vs. Jones II is set for Saturday, April 3 at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nev. The event will be broadcast live on pay-per-view beginning at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.
Tickets priced at $750, $500, $300, $200 and $100 are on sale now at all Las Vegas Ticketmaster locations (select Smith’s Food and Drug Centers and Ritmo Latino). Ticket sales are limited to eight (8) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster at (800) 745-3000. Tickets also will be available for purchase at www.mandalaybay.com or www.ticketmaster.com.
The Hopkins vs. Jones II pay-per-view telecast begins at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT and has a suggested retail price of $49.95. The telecast will be available in HD-TV for those viewers who can receive HD. The main event will begin live immediately following the college basketball semi-finals. For Hopkins vs. Jones II fight week updates, log on to www.goldenboypromotions.com.
An exciting undercard will be announced shortly. For more information regarding the April 3 event, please visit www.goldenboypromotions.com.