Jose Benavidez Sr. has officially landed in Las Vegas and fully plans on attending the third installment between Canelo Alvarez and Gennadiy Golovkin this upcoming weekend.

With 24 rounds and two highly controversial decisions, neither man feels completely satisfied with the way things have ultimately played out. In what appears to be the final meeting between them, fans and media members have flooded Sin City in an effort to observe these Hall of Fame fighters lock horns once more.

Benavidez Sr., on the other hand, admits that he’ll do much more than take in the sights from a fan's perspective. His son, David Benavidez, has begged and pleaded with Alvarez to take him on. Yet, despite his public callouts, Alvarez has continually looked in the other direction.

At this point, Benavidez Sr. has come to grips with the possibility that a matchup between his son and Alvarez simply won't take place in the immediate future. With that reality setting in, Benavidez Sr. has taken off his trainer cap and thrown on his Golovkin attire. Should the current unified middleweight champion usurp Alvarez and reign supreme over the super middleweight division, Benavidez Sr. believes that the Kazakhstan star would be more than willing to give his son an opportunity.

“I’m going to root for GGG so he can win,” said Benavidez Sr. to Fight Hub TV. “Maybe he can give us a fight. GGG, he would fight anybody, he don’t give a f---. I’m going to be cheering for him so we can get that fight with GGG.”

Recently, Golovkin celebrated his 40th trip around the sun by staining his gloves in the blood of Ryota Murata. In doing so, Golovkin began his second reign as a unified middleweight champion. Still, even with the former Olympic silver medalist grabbing a stranglehold on the division, oddsmakers are of the belief that Alvarez will violently put an end to their perpetual rivalry.

In addition to Golovkin battling against both Alvarez and father time, for the first time in his storied career, Golovkin will forgo his middleweight throne and compete as a full-fledged super middleweight. Considering that the well-respected 160-pound champion has the chips stacked against him, no matter how badly Benavidez Sr. wants him to pull off the upset, he has a hard time seeing it happen.

“It’s gonna be tough. I think he (Alvarez) should win. Whoever comes better prepared that night and is more focused with no problems, I think they have a better chance at winning.”