Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe

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Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« on: November 13, 2010, 03:38:14 AM »
Manny Pacquiao's oversized challenge

By Kevin Iole

RAPEVINE, Texas – Only minutes after the greatest performance of Manny Pacquiao’s career to date, after he drubbed Oscar De La Hoya and stopped him following eight one-sided rounds, trainer Freddie Roach was asked about a potential match with Antonio Margarito.

Roach laughed, shook his head and insisted the fight would never happen.

“Too big,” Roach said. “Far too big.”

But in the nearly two years since that night, Pacquiao has plowed through Ricky Hatton (second-round knockout), Miguel Cotto (12th-round technical knockout) and Joshua Clottey (one-sided unanimous decision), on the way earning wide recognition as the finest boxer in the world.

His promoter, Bob Arum, calls Pacquiao the greatest fighter he’s ever seen, including the legendary former heavyweight champion, Muhammad Ali.

So, earlier this year, when Arum called Roach and proposed Margarito as Pacquiao’s next opponent, Roach never hesitated in accepting. On Saturday at Cowboys Stadium, Pacquiao will meet Margarito for the World Boxing Council super welterweight championship in a bout that will attract perhaps 70,000 fans and which has created a worldwide media frenzy.

And Roach, who once worried that the one-time flyweight champion was too small to compete with a big, physical welterweight like Margarito, is now so confident in Pacquiao that he is predicting an eighth-round knockout.

“Manny’s grown so much as a fighter, even since the Oscar fight,” Roach said. “The guy amazes me sometimes, and I see him all the time.”

Pacquiao is a better than 5-1 favorite in Las Vegas sports books to win his 12th consecutive fight and capture a world championship in his eighth weight class. He will concede 4½ inches in height, 6½ inches in reach and perhaps as many as 15 pounds when the bell rings.

And yet, the newly installed congressman from the Sarangani province in the Philippines is completely unfazed by the challenge in front of him. He’ll concede nothing else.

“With our strategy, we are not worried about the size,” Pacquiao said. “I believe I can fight the bigger guys even though I am small compared to them. We always believe in our talent.”

The simple equation in the fight is Pacquiao’s overwhelming advantage in speed compared to Margarito’s massive size advantage. Margarito is a volume puncher who loves to go to the body and a hard body attack is one of the best ways to combat speed. Hit a guy in the rib cage enough and it’s not long before he slows appreciably.

But Clottey, who along with Cotto fought each man, said Margarito should be wary of Pacquiao’s punching power.

“If Margarito uses his head, and if he respects Pacquiao’s power, he has a chance,” Clottey said. “But if he believes he’s so much bigger and stronger than Manny Pacquiao, he could wind up on the floor.”

Cotto, who was knocked down twice by Pacquiao, concurred with Clottey, noting “Manny is a very strong fighter.”

Margarito is notorious for having a strong chin and relentlessly stalking his opponent, but he is extraordinarily slow and throws wide punches. He’ll be vulnerable to Pacquiao’s lightning fast hands unless he doubles his jab, uses it frequently and shortens his other punches.

Margarito is eager to return to the limelight and, more significantly, start collecting paychecks after a long period of inactivity. Other than a May fight against journeyman Roberto Garcia, who is no relation to his trainer, Robert Garcia, Margarito hasn’t fought since Jan. 24, 2009, when an illegal knuckle pad was discovered in his hand wraps before a loss to Shane Mosley.

Arum said Margarito has been through “torture” and “hell” in the last 21 months, as he’s battled to save his boxing career and fought allegations that he’s a cheater.

His former trainer, Javier Capetillo, took blame for the illegal pad in Margarito’s wraps. In an interview with Ringtv.com, Capetillo said he put the illegal pad into Margarito’s wraps because he worried about his fighter’s condition. Arum said Margarito had to lose 35 pounds in the final month before the fight to make the 147-pound welterweight limit.

“I started panicking the week of the fight,” Capetillo told Ring. “I knew we were in deep [expletive], and we couldn’t tell anyone. It was too late to pull out of the fight. But I want to make it clear that I did not plan what happened. Maybe I was feeling the pressure of the fight and not paying attention to what I was doing when I reached into my bag and grabbed the training gauze, but I didn’t do it on purpose.

“I made a mistake. I wasn’t trying to hide anything. I just screwed up, and I did it in front of Mosley’s trainer and the commissioners. I was just under a lot of pressure because I knew we shouldn’t have taken the fight, I knew Tony was in trouble and I knew that I had put him in that position. I wrapped Tony’s hands four times in front of Mosley’s trainer and the commissioners and two representatives from Golden Boy [Promotions] after they found the gauze. I admitted then that I made a mistake. I confessed to the commission after the fight. I took responsibility for my actions and I think I’ve been punished as if Tony had fought with the gauze.”

Margarito has been under enormous pressure and faced near-constant scrutiny since the fight was signed earlier this year. Pacquiao, by contrast, has been relaxed and loose. On Wednesday, after a late-night workout, he went into a hotel ballroom and practiced his singing with his band.

He’s so worried about Margarito’s size and power that he’s planning to do a concert on Tuesday for some customers of a Lake Tahoe, Nev., casino.

“Manny had a slow start to his [training] camp, but he’s exactly where he needs to be right now,” Roach said. “He’s going to knock this guy out.”

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Re: Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« Reply #1 on: November 14, 2010, 01:52:52 AM »
Manny Pacquiao in thrilling title bout

ARLINGTON, Texas – Manny Pacquiao was once again masterful, beating Antonio Margarito so frightfully that Margarito’s face looked as it had been pounded repeatedly by a club.

Pacquiao won a unanimous one-sided decision in a blowout from the opening seconds of the fight to capture the World Boxing Council super welterweight title before 41,734 in-awe fans at Cowboys Stadium.

[Photos: See Pacquiao take down Margarito]

Pacquiao’s title belt, coming against an opponent who had a 17-pound weight advantage when the bell rang, 165-148, was the eighth in his illustrious career. Pacquiao has won world titles at 112, 122, 126, 130, 135, 140, 147 and now 154 pounds.

Judges Jurgen Langos had it 120-109, Glen Crocker had it 118-110 and Oren Schellenberger had it 119-109 for Pacquiao. Yahoo! Sports scored it 120-107 for Pacquiao, giving Pacquiao a 10-8 edge in the 10th round when he dominated tremendously.

Margarito, fighting for the first time in the U.S. since Jan. 24, 2009, when he was caught with an illegal knuckle pad in his gloves before a loss to Shane Mosley, was never in the fight. Pacquiao’s speed was blinding and was the difference in the fight.

Pacquiao was hurt when Margarito landed a combination to the ribs, but he spun off the ropes and landed a three-punch combination to the head. Margarito’s right eye was swollen grotesquely, beginning in the fourth. By the 10th round, the left eye was a slit, too.

[Video: Pacquiao the politician]

Pacquiao was looking at referee Laurence Cole late in the fight, asking him to stop it. Pacquiao said he eased off in the 12th round. “I did my best,” Pacquiao said. “He’s strong. He’s a very tough fighter. I can’t believe [he took those punches].”

Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, added, “We didn’t lose a round. I wish they had stopped the fight. They probably ruined his career by not stopping the fight.”

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Re: Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« Reply #2 on: November 14, 2010, 01:39:18 PM »
agree...kawawa talaga ang mukha ni Margs...sana they stop na agad..hahah
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Re: Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« Reply #3 on: November 14, 2010, 03:23:35 PM »
he's a Mexican, a fighter all the way through as they claimed ;D

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Re: Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« Reply #4 on: November 14, 2010, 06:05:17 PM »
hehehe...uhuh yea....kahit bugbug na...nagmasakali pa ata...hahaha
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Re: Manny Pacquiao staring down another larger foe
« Reply #5 on: November 15, 2010, 03:47:48 AM »
Manny Pacquiao, contender for best ever

ARLINGTON, Texas – When Top Rank chairman Bob Arum said last November that he considered Manny Pacquiao the best fighter he’d ever seen, it seemed at the time as little more than promoter hyperbole.

A successful salesman like Arum is always pitching and conjuring new ways to sell his next fight. Arum began promoting boxing in 1966 and handled legends like Muhammad Ali, George Foreman, Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran, “Marvelous” Marvin Hagler, Thomas Hearns, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Julio Cesar Chavez.

After watching Pacquiao decimate opponent after opponent over the last two-plus years, perhaps Arum isn’t as batty as we all thought.

Dominating a slow and one-dimensional fighter like Antonio Margarito, such as Pacquiao did Saturday in winning a wide unanimous decision before 41,734 at Cowboys Stadium, doesn’t make one the equal of legends like Ali, Leonard and Hagler, et al.

Pacquiao, though, is far more dominant against his opposition than the likes of Leonard and others ever were versus theirs. Ali had grueling battles against guys like Joe Frazier and Ken Norton. Leonard was in pitched battles with Duran, Hearns and Hagler.

Pacquiao is further ahead of the field now than the great Secretariat was in the 1973 Belmont. He defeated Margarito by scores of 120-108, 119-109 and 118-110 despite being outweighed by 17 pounds when the bell rang. Margarito, who weighed 150 at Friday’s weigh-in, was 165 after rehydrating. Margarito had advantages of 17 pounds, 4½ inches in height and 6½ inches of reach, but looked like he would have needed sticks and clubs, as well as loaded gloves, to even be competitive with the blazingly fast Filipino.

Pacquiao said it was difficult, though it didn’t appear he had many problems.

“I really had a hard fight and this was the hardest fight in my boxing career,” Pacquiao said. “Margarito is really tough and strong. I felt it. He is really big, bigger than me. I wanted to give a good fight and I wanted to make the people happy. It’s why sometimes I fought him toe-to-toe. It’s what the people wanted.”

Pacquiao gave the fans everything they could have wanted and more. He said he knew he had the fight by the third round, but he did take some hard body shots that he conceded hurt him.

Pacquiao cracked Margarito with an uppercut in the fourth round that opened a wound under Margarito’s right eye and nearly closed it. By the 11th round, Pacquiao was looking pleadingly at referee Laurence Cole in hopes that Cole would show mercy on Margarito and end it.

Cole, perhaps, wanted to see Margarito get his just desserts after attempting to enter the ring with an illegal knuckle pad in his hand wraps before a 2009 fight in Los Angeles with Shane Mosley. There was little sense in letting the bout continue Saturday and trainer Robert Garcia’s assertion that Margarito is a “warrior who wouldn’t allow me to stop it” is ridiculous. A trainer’s job is to protect his fighter and know when he’s had enough. Margarito had enough by the eighth round – the rest of the punishment he took was gratuitous.

“I wish they had stopped the fight,” Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach said. “They probably ruined his career by not stopping the fight.”

Next on the agenda is a phone call to Mayweather to see if he has interest in the fight. There are significant obstacles to overcome, but Mayweather is the only man who could be remotely competitive with him.

Mayweather has legal issues – he has a court date on Jan. 24 and faces up to 34 years in prison if convicted on all counts – that have to be overcome in addition to agreeing upon a deal.

Roach, who was one of the most exciting fighters of the 1980s when Leonard, Duran and Hagler were dominating the sport, called Pacquiao the best of his era and suggested he would have been more than competitive in any era. It’s difficult to disagree with him.

“It’s so hard to compare eras,” Roach said. “We could argue all night long. Why not leave it at this: Manny Pacquiao is the best of his era.”

Mosley, who was routed by Mayweather in May and drew with Sergio Mora in September, attended the fight with his new manager, James Prince. Mosley still owns a portion of Golden Boy Promotions, but Prince said he’s a promotional free agent who can sign or fight for any promoter.

Prince said a Pacquiao-Mosley fight would not be difficult to make. And Mosley said he thinks he could do better than some of Pacquiao’s recent opponents.

“I saw some things I think I could take advantage of,” said Mosley, who might be easier to take seriously if he were 29 instead of 39.

At this stage, Pacquiao’s only measuring stick is history. As great as Leonard was, he never dominated multi-time champions the way Pacquiao is doing. Leonard was exceptionally fast, a hard puncher, a smart defensive fighter and as tough as they come, but Arum wasn’t willing to say he was Pacquiao’s equal.

“Ray Leonard is a great friend of mine and he was a great fighter, but he doesn’t compare to Manny Pacquiao, in my opinion,” Arum said. “Ray had great, great skills, great heart, and he was a tremendous fighter, but he didn’t have the same type of extraordinary skills that Pacquiao has.

“Julio Cesar Chavez was a great, great fighter. Sitting in front of me was a guy a lot of people say is the greatest fighter they’ve ever seen, Roberto Duran. These guys are truly great fighters, but they do not compare to Manny Pacquiao, in my opinion.”

Last November, those kinds of words could have been dismissed as promoter hype or the silly rants of a nearly 80-year-old man.

Today? Well, it’s hard to argue. Pacquiao still has to face the ultimate test, the fast, speedy, in-his-prime opponent that Mayweather would be, but it takes two to say yes and Mayweather continues to throw up road blocks.

There may have been better fighters than Manny Pacquiao in the last 50 years, but their numbers were few and their talent level was exceptionally high.

Without question, Manny Pacquiao is an all-time great.

And that’s not just promoter hyperbole.