Updated: June 15, 2007, 3:52 PM ET

De La Hoya has no interest in rematch

Despite his loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr., at age 34, Oscar De La Hoya will fight on. His camp does not know who he will take on next but, he has no plans to offer Mayweather a rematch.

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Rafael By Dan Rafael
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No Mayweather-De La Hoya rematch
Oscar De La Hoya
Ethan Miller/Getty ImagesAt age 34, Oscar De La Hoya, left, will fight on, but has no plans to schedule a rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr.
The world waited for the May 5 Oscar De La Hoya-Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight, and when it was over, Mayweather had cemented his place as the pound-for-pound king with a tight, but well-deserved, split decision victory. But De La Hoya performed much better than many expected, making it highly competitive despite coming off a one-year layoff and fighting for only the second time since losing to Bernard Hopkins in September 2004.

In the immediate aftermath there was much discussion of a rematch, and why not? The fight was competitive and set all kinds of records, including best-selling pay-per-view (2.15 million), biggest live gate ($19 million-plus) and highest grossing fight (more than $150 million).

Since the fight, it has been the winner, Mayweather, waffling between retirement and his desire for a rematch. De La Hoya, however, has been mum about his plans.

But, now, he has spoken, telling his close friend, Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer, that although he plans to fight on at age 34, he has no plans to offer Mayweather a rematch.

"Oscar told me he's not hanging them up, but we have not talked about who, when or where. But it won't be a rematch with Floyd Mayweather," Schaefer told ESPN.com. "Oscar's thoughts about a Mayweather rematch are 'Been there, done that.' Most people felt like it was a close fight and that Oscar came to fight. [Many] fans believe Oscar won the fight."

Schaefer said after things settled down after the fight and the pay-per-view figures and the other revenue had been counted up, he asked De La Hoya about his interest in a rematch.

"I said, 'What do you think' because I had been reading everywhere that Floyd Mayweather was calling Oscar out for a rematch," Schaefer said. "Oscar told me he respects Mayweather, but he is not going to do a rematch."

Who, then, will he fight?

"He hasn't discussed who. He doesn't want to discuss any opponents right now," Schaefer said. "But when I said, 'What about the Mayweather rematch,' he said, 'No.' Oscar is not going to fight Mayweather again.

"Oscar thinks Mayweather is a great fighter and it was a great promotion. It's not like he doesn't deserve a rematch or anything like that. It's more like been there done that, move on. What the 'move on' part means I don't know. It's not the time to discuss it. When he wants to he will come and talk to me. There is not an urgency. We all know that Oscar is not going to fight again in 2007."

More likely, De La Hoya will return in May 2008. He has fought on Cinco de Mayo weekend a number of times in his career and he likes fighting on the Mexican national holiday.

It is possible De La Hoya's public refusal of a rematch with Mayweather is a way to nudge Mayweather toward a fight with Shane Mosley, De La Hoya's pal and business partner in Golden Boy Promotions. Mayweather-Mosley looms as the biggest fight in boxing besides a Mayweather-De La Hoya rematch.

Mayweather has been reluctant to focus on a fight with Mosley, probably because he has designs on facing De La Hoya again. The Mayweather camp was unmoved by De La Hoya's dismissal of a rematch.

"We don't have a reaction. If Oscar wants to come back and do a rematch then cool," Leonard Ellerbe, Mayweather's best friend and adviser, told ESPN.com. "Whatever it is he wants to do with his career, we respect it. He can do what he wants to do and Floyd will do what he wants to do, but the reason he doesn't want a rematch is because he can't beat Floyd. Fact is, he got his a-- whipped by a smaller guy. He'll never be able to whip Floyd, so, of course, he doesn't want to do it again. We respect it. We ain't mad at him. It's OK."

Marquez to face Barrios
Junior lightweight champ Juan Manuel Marquez was willing to give a rematch to Marco Antonio Barrera under the terms of the contract for their March 17 showdown, when Marquez won the title via decision in an all-action fight. Barrera, however, is unhappy with Golden Boy and rejected the rematch in favor of a taking a smaller fight in the fall, perhaps in Mexico. That left Marquez (47-3-1, 35 KOs) in need of a dance partner for his Sept. 15 HBO PPV date at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

A rematch against Manny Pacquiao also was not possible, so Marquez went with Plan C: exciting former titlist Jorge Barrios (47-3-1, 34 KOs) of Argentina. The fight is a questionable pay-per-view headliner, but Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer promised the card would feature four evenly matched bouts "all with fireworks, which is what we are calling the show, 'Fireworks,'" he said.

One of the fights already set for the card is a 10-round middleweight match between former junior middleweight titlist Kassim Ouma (25-3-1, 15 KOs) and Sergio Mora (19-0, 4 KOs), winner of "The Contender" first season.

Ouma is coming off a lopsided loss to middleweight champ Jermain Taylor in December. Mora, who pulled out of a May 19 opportunity to fight Taylor because he didn't want to fight in Memphis, was supposed to fight Raymond Joval on ESPN2 on Aug. 10 but withdrew for the higher-profile Ouma fight.

"Sergio thinks it's a great fight for him and that he will have a chance to shine," 'Contender' promoter Jeff Wald told ESPN.com. "He has a lot of respect for Ouma, but he's not taking him lightly."

One of the other fights being discussed for the show would match Steve Forbes, runner up on the second season of "The Contender" against onetime phenom Francisco "Panchito" Bojado in a junior welterweight fight. However, that fight is on the rocks because Forbes is unhappy with the money being offered.

A third fight mentioned as a possibility for the card would match junior welterweight Demetrius Hopkins, Bernard Hopkins' nephew, with Juan Lazcano.

Spinks returning to 154
Cory Spinks is headed back to 154 pounds, where he holds a title, after an unsuccessful jump to 160 pounds on May 19, when he lost a close decision to middleweight champion Jermain Taylor.

"He's gonna go back to 154, for sure," manager/trainer Kevin Cunningham told ESPN.com. "Ain't nothing else to stay up there for. He ain't a 160-pounder. We just went up because we couldn't get a fight with anyone else and Jermain gave us the opportunity."

Cunningham said that even though Spinks gets a bad rap for his defensive style, he's willing to fight anybody.

"The media wants to talk about the negative things about Cory, but one thing people don't talk about is this: He will fight anyone at any time at any weight," Cunningham said. "We'd like to get Mayweather, De La Hoya or Felix Trinidad. We'd be willing to fight Kassim Ouma. We'd stay at 160 if Trinidad would come out of retirement and fight us. We'd take Ike Quartey. We'd take the [July 28] winner of Vernon Forrest-Carlos Baldomir.

"And we'd be willing to bring Zab [Judah] back to St. Louis for a trilogy. Even though Zab lost (to Miguel Cotto last week), the guy showed more guts than I have seen a lot of fighters show in a long time. He had his moments and he took a lot of punishment. If he didn't have the heart of champion he could have quit, and he didn't."

Spinks defended the undisputed welterweight title against Judah via decision in 2004, but lost the title on a ninth-round knockout in 2005 in St. Louis, Spinks' hometown.

QUICK HITS
Zab Judah
Judah

• The Sept. 7 season finale of "Friday Night Fights" (ESPN2) will be a big show. It will be 2½ hours instead of two and headlined by Zab Judah, who is wasting no time returning from his memorable 11th-round TKO loss to Miguel Cotto on June 9 in the possible fight of the year. The tripleheader from the DeSoto Civic Center in Southaven, Miss., a few minutes outside of Memphis, Tenn., also will include a pair of rising prospects, brothers Anthony and Lamont Peterson, who have been ESPN2 mainstays during their rise up the ladder. Opponents aren't set.

Bernard Hopkins
Hopkins

• With regular trainer Nazim Richardson recovering from a stroke, light heavyweight champion Bernard Hopkins opened the boxing part of his training camp June 10 in Los Angeles under the watchful eye of new trainer Freddie Roach. Hopkins, of course, is preparing for his July 21 HBO PPV fight against Winky Wright. "It's a complete change of scenery for me and the new surroundings are a great motivation at this stage of my career," said Hopkins, 42, who is training in Los Angeles for the first time in his career after preparing for fights in such places as Miami, Philadelphia, Big Bear, Calif., and New Orleans. Hopkins said that even though Richardson is unable to go through the rigors of training camp, Richardson would be in the corner on fight night at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas to work with Roach.

Winky Wright
Wright

• Golden Boy has rounded out the televised undercard for the July 21 Hopkins-Wright HBO PPV show. The two other televised bouts: former junior featherweight titlist Oscar Larios (59-5-1, 37 KOs) facing 21-year-old prospect Jorge Linares (23-0, 14 KOs) for an interim featherweight belt in a fight rescheduled after a May 26 card was canceled and all-action interim lightweight titlist Michael Katsidis (22-0, 20 KOs) of Australia making his U.S. TV debut against 21-year-old Filipino southpaw Czar Amonsot (18-2-1, 10 KOs).

Vitali Klitschko
Klitschko

• Vitali Klitschko's comeback fight is set for Sept. 22 in Munich, Germany. The former heavyweight titlist hasn't fought since December 2004 and retired in November 2005 because of a knee injury. He will face Jameel McCline, who is also coming off a knee injury suffered in his January loss to then-titleholder Nikolai Valuev. If Klitschko wins, he will be next for the winner of the Sept. 29 fight between beltholder Oleg Maskaev and Samuel Peter. Klitschko adviser Shelly Finkel told ESPN.com that he is exploring options to make the fight available on American TV, although it won't be on HBO or Showtime. Live pay-per-view in the afternoon seems most likely.

Peter Manfredo
Manfredo

• A deal was struck this week between the camps of super middleweight contender Allan Green and "Contender" star Peter Manfredo to meet in a 10-rounder Oct. 16 on an ESPN "Contender" special. Both boxers, however, will have to win fights ahead of their meeting. Manfredo headlines the next edition of ESPN2's "Wednesday Night Fights" (10 p.m. ET) against David Banks and might take one more bout later this summer. Green, coming off a March 3 loss to Edison Miranda and a stint on the shelf because of a colon condition, will get back to action this summer against Samuel Miller, probably on ESPN2.

• Although former heavyweight champ Hasim Rahman outpointed Taurus Sykes on Thursday night in Rochester, N.Y., in his first fight since losing a title via punishing 12th-round knockout to Oleg Maskaev 10 months ago, he didn't look good. Rahman weighed a career-high 261 pounds and was lethargic in his first bout working with trainer Marshall Kauffman of Reading, Pa. At least Rahman admitted it was not his best night. "I want to fight right away, in 30 or 40 days," he said. "I am not ready to go into a world title fight right now. I need at least one more tune-up and I need it right away. I felt strong in the ring but I need to drop some more weight." Rahman has been mentioned as a possible fall opponent for titleholder Wladimir Klitschko.

Luis Collazo
Collazo

• Former welterweight titleholder Luis Collazo (27-3, 13 KOs), sidelined since having left hand surgery following his decision loss to Shane Mosley in February, hopes to resume full training by the end of July and return to the ring in the fall, adviser/trainer Nirmal Lorick told ESPN.com. "The doctor told Luis everything looks good and, hopefully, by the end of October or November, he should be back in the ring," Lorick said. "He's got one more appointment with the doctor. He's been working with his right hand on the [heavy] bag. He'll start running in a week." Former junior welterweight titlist Sharmba Mitchell has said he wants to fight Collazo and Lorick said he'd love for promoter Don King to make the match. "He's calling Luis out and that would be good for us coming back," Lorick said. "We ain't ducking nobody. We'd take that fight, but we'd really love a [Miguel] Cotto fight. We just want to get Luis back to work and stay in the picture." Mosley easily out pointed Collazo, but it might have been closer had Collazo not injured his hand. In 2005, Collazo lost his belt in on a close decision to Ricky Hatton.

Wayne Braithwaite
Braithwaite

• It'll be "Big Mac" vs. "Big Truck." Enzo "Big Mac" Maccarinelli (26-1, 20 KOs) owns a cruiserweight title, but has been fairly well protected throughout his career by promoter Frank Warren. But now, at age 26 and heading into his third defense, the Welsh star will face the best opponent of his career, former titleholder "Big Truck" Wayne Braithwaite (22-2, 18 KOs). They'll meet July 21 in Cardiff on a card that also includes Souleymane M'Baye defending his junior welterweight strap against Gavin Rees and Alex Arthur meeting Koba Gogoladze for a vacant interim junior lightweight belt. Maccarinelli is anxious to test himself against Braithwaite. "The man left standing will be the one who hits first and hits hardest, and that will be me," Maccarinelli said. "I'm looking forward to feeling his power and seeing if he is able to take mine."

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QUOTABLE
"I like action, so there is going to be some action. I plan on stomping Margarito. I know that he is in his hometown, so I cannot leave [a decision] to anybody."

-- Welterweight contender Paul Williams, who challenges titlist Antonio Margarito on July 14 (HBO) in one of the most anticipated matches of the summer.