
LAS VEGAS — Ricky Hatton didn’t need to watch “Dancing With the Stars” to know Floyd Mayweather Jr. was spending too much time on the jive and not enough on the jab.
Mayweather might be boxing’s unbeaten pound-for-pound king, but he still doesn’t realize the trouble he’s facing Saturday night at the MGM Grand, according to the British champion who will attempt to dethrone him.
Hatton (43-0, 31 KOs) eagerly traveled to Mayweather’s adopted hometown to get a fight for the WBC welterweight title. He relishes being an underdog to Mayweather (38-0, 24 KOs), the flamboyant, self-proclaimed face of boxing — and he loves hearing Mayweather’s months of dismissive comments about Hatton’s skills.
After all, Hatton knows almost every great champion has overlooked the first opponent who defeated him; especially when distracted by excessive pride and the seduction of celebrity. Sugar Ray Leonard, Lennox Lewis, even Muhammad Ali — they all slipped when they forgot how they rose to the top and began admiring the view from up high.
“I don’t think he’s seeing the whole picture,” Hatton said Thursday. “I think that’s what will beat him. The pressure he has dealt with his whole career is not my type of pressure.”
Many experts give the hard-charging Hatton little chance against Mayweather and his matchless athleticism. Mayweather certainly didn’t seem distracted during his stop at the casino Thursday, calmly proclaiming his superiority and insisting his brittle hands won’t hurt his punching power.
“I’m never going to overlook a guy or come into the ring in the wrong shape,” Mayweather said. “He’s the one who shouldn’t sleep at night.”
Though showmanship and over-the-top villainy long have been part of Mayweather’s plan for selling pay-per-view buys, it’s still easy to wonder whether his mind has been on Hatton.
For instance, Mayweather spent nearly as much time Thursday discussing his prefight production number as the actual bout. He promises to wear “a wild outfit” into the ring while walking with fellow television dance show contestants Mark Cuban, Helio Castroneves and Wayne Newton.
“It’s been an amazing year for me, to become an A-lister,” Mayweather said. “I did ‘Dancing with the Stars’ and so many different shows, and just having the fans supporting me and all the writers and all the websites keeping my name out in the public eye.”
The Las Vegas crowd will be solidly behind Hatton, judging by the thousands of British fans combing the casino in the colorful football shirts of Manchester or Liverpool or Millwall, often accented by shorts and black socks.



