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Sunday, May 27, 2012

It's Pacquiao in 6

Written by : MANNY PIÑOL

There is a spectacular optimism and overflowing air of confidence in the statements of American Timothy Bradley, Jr. as his June 9 engagement with Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao nears.

In fact, if you were new to the sport and you did not have the opportunity to really look deep into both fighters’ track records and psyche, Bradley’s brags about giving Pacquiao a “return bout” after beating him could be a scary warning.

Bradley is every boxing promoter’s dream: Young and undefeated with 28 wins, 12 KOs and one No Contest (against Nate Campbell when the fight was stopped in the 3rd because of a cut) and most of all, talkative.

Of course, boxing promoter Robert Arum would like all of us to believe that Bradley really has what it takes to upset the PacMan.

But behind the big talk, the immaculate fight record and Bob Arum’s endless drumbeat that Pacquiao should be wary of Bradley, what would an analytical reality check give us?

Indeed, Bradley’s record is impressive and he has defeated some of the big names in the junior welterweight division: Devon Alexander, Kendall Holt and Lamont Peterson, among others, all champions or former champions.

But does he have what it takes to make good his threat to end Pacquiao’s winning streak?

At 5' 6", Bradley does not have the height and reach advantage that both Oscar De La Hoya and Antonio Margarito had when they were pummelled and punished by the small Pacquiao who also stands 5' 6".

Having campaigned mainly in the junior welterweight division, Bradley is not as big and heavy a puncher as Miguel Cotto, Margarito and Dela Hoya, who fought as middleweights.

And most of all, Bradley’s fighting style, especially his defense, has not reached a level of sophistication as Pacquiao’s given the limited quality of opposition he faced in his rise to the top of the junior welterweight division.

In his last fight, against Cuban Joel Casamayor which I personally witnessed, Bradley showed fatal flaws in his defense, especially when he initiates the action which he loves to do.

Against Casamayor, who at the time of their fight in Las Vegas was more dangerous with his scathing statements than his fists, Bradley had a hard time connecting cleanly and left himself open in many instances when he was attacking.

Bradley loves to wade in and throw punches from wide angles and this fighting style is tailor-made for Manny Pacquiao.

I am certain that Pacquiao could take the power of Bradley’s punches but I have big doubts on whether the American challenger could withstand the bombs of the Filipino boxing icon which are dropped by both hands.

Bradley has not fought anybody as powerful or as awkward as Pacquiao. He has not been rained with unorthodox punches coming from the most unlikely angles like the hilarious double-fist whammy that the Filipino tagged Joshua Clottey with in Texas.

Timothy Bradley can talk and talk. He can dream of a stellar boxing career after a victory over Manny Pacquiao.

Boxing is beyond pre-fight talks and dreams publicly declared.

Timothy Bradley, Jr. is not the same league as Manny Pacquiao.

Before the end of the 6th Round, I expect Bradley to be slumbering in dreamland.

Source: The Manila Times.net

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Manny Pacquiao doesn’t want you dead

A gross misquote gets out of hand -- but the iconic boxer still has a long way to go on the sensitivity front

By Mary Elizabeth Williams

Updated below

Let’s get something straight, so to speak, right off the bat. There’s no disputing that Manny Pacquiao is not the most enlightened guy to ever put on gloves and fight for a belt. In a story for Examiner.com this past weekend, blogger Granville Ampong wrote of how the boxing champ takes issue with Barack Obama’s recent groundbreaking declaration of support for same-sex unions. “God’s words first … obey God’s law first before considering the laws of man,” Pacquiao told Ampong, in what the writer described as “an exclusive interview.” Pacquiao was further quoted explaining that “God only expects man and woman to be together and to be legally married, only if they so are in love with each other… It should not be of the same sex so as to adulterate the altar of matrimony, like in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah of Old.”

OK, it’s generally accepted that invoking Sodom and Gomorrah in general — and Sodom and Gomorrah of Old, in particular — is not going to win anybody a seat at the GLAAD awards. Sure enough, Pacquiao’s statements quickly set off a chain of angry and just plain disappointed responses from across the Net, where Pacquiao has been celebrated as a Filipino icon, and beloved for his humanitarian works. On Tuesday evening, the Los Angeles shopping center the Grove, where Pacquiao was to be interviewed for “Extra,” called off the event. “Based on news reports of statements made by Mr. Pacquiao,” read a statement from the center’s spokesman Bill Reich, “we have made it be known that he is not welcome at the Grove and will not be interviewed here now or in the future. The Grove is a gathering place for all Angelenos and not a place for intolerance.”

It’s a relatively free country, which means that the Catholic Pacquiao is welcome to express his views, even views many of us find backward and exclusionary. In return, a business like a shopping mall may choose to decline his patronage. What is not OK is what happened along the way.

You see, within the original Examiner.com piece, Ampong went off on a bit of biblical tangent. “Pacquiao’s directive for Obama calls societies to fear God and not to promote sin, inclusive of same-sex marriage and cohabitation,” he wrote, “notwithstanding what Leviticus 20:13 has been pointing all along: ‘If a man lies with a man as one lies with a woman, both of them have done what is detestable. They must be put to death; their blood will be on their own heads.’”

That’s Ampong. Quoting Leviticus. You could go ahead and infer that this is what Pacquiao was alluding to in his remarks, and you definitely could say that’s some convoluted writing there. But Pacquiao himself clearly didn’t issue the quote. But let’s not let the barest understanding of attribution get in the way of a sensational headline, shall we? Before you could say gross perversion of the facts, Change.org was running a petition asking Nike to drop “homophobic boxer Manny Pacquiao,” declaring, “In an interview published Tuesday, March 15th with the conservative Examiner newspaper, the world-famous boxer and Los Angeles resident quoted Leviticus…” And except for the fact that Pacquiao didn’t quote Leviticus, Examiner.com is not a conservative newspaper, and the interview didn’t run on Tuesday, sure.

The confusion stems largely from a Tuesday L.A. Weekly blog post by Simone Wilson, in which she wrote, “Pacquiao told the National Conservative Examiner over the weekend that gay men should be ‘put to death’ for their sexual crimes.” She then backpedaled a tad by noting “Yes, he was quoting Leviticus 20:13, but he hasn’t backed down from his harsh stance.” She continued further in the piece to invoke “what Pacquiao said” and ponder that “For the sports star to announce that he thinks thousands of gay Angelenos should be ‘put to death’ for loving a same-sex partner should hugely alienate him to the locals,” adding that “Because … uh … ‘put to death’? You just don’t say that kind of thing in 21st century America.” Maybe that’s why he didn’t. And by the way, calling the source “the National Conservative Examiner” greatly glorifies Examiner.com, a site anybody with an Internet connection and rudimentary typing ability can write for, “even if you’re not a professional writer.” It’s a site with all the journalistic credibility of, oh, L.A. Weekly.

But what kind of commitment to facts could we have expected from Simone Wilson? This is the person who, when real journalist Lara Logan was attacked in Egypt last year, hastily banged out a grotesquely offensive fantasy version of events, writing, “In a rush of frenzied excitement, some Egyptian protestors apparently consummated their newfound independence by sexually assaulting the blonde reporter.”

Wilson’s colleague Dennis Romero added more fuel to the mythic Pacquiao interview story Tuesday, in a piece headlined “Manny Pacquiao Says Gay Men Should Be ‘Put to Death.’” USA Today then jumped in, reporting that “Pacquiao also invoked Old Testament, and recited Leviticus 20:13, saying: “If a man lies with a man as one lies with a woman.” And the Village Voice blog, for good measure, reported, “The Bible Via-Manny Pacquiao: Gays Shouldn’t Get Married, They Should Be ‘Put To Death.’” How ridiculous did the whole thing get? On Pacquiao’s own “official” website Tuesday, writer Keith Terceira said, “Manny Pacquiao was recently quoted in the USAToday as invoking the old testament.” [sic]

I get that nobody really pays attention to what anybody posts on Examiner.com, but seriously. If you’re going to quote someone, read the damn source material already. You need to have an eighth-grade reading proficiency level to get a driver’s license, yet apparently you can be functionally illiterate and work for L.A. Weekly and USA Today.

On Wednesday, Granville Ampong wrote a follow-up post on the matter, saying of the Leviticus quote, “Pacquiao never said nor recited, nor invoked and nor did he ever refer to such context.” And Pacquiao likewise issued a statement, saying, “I didn’t say that, that’s a lie… I didn’t know that quote from Leviticus because I haven’t read the Book of Leviticus yet,” and adding, “I’m not against gay people … I have a relative who is also gay. We can’t help it if they were born that way. What I’m critical off are actions that violate the word of God. I only gave out my opinion that same-sex marriage is against the law of God.”

Pacquiao inarguably has a long way to go in the tolerance department. And his remarks were ignorant, to be sure. But you can’t cure ignorant with stupid. And you can’t change minds with lies.

UPDATE: LA Weekly writer Simone Wilson called us Wednesday to clarify our assertion that she initiated the story that Pacquiao himself deployed the Leviticus quote, telling us that “USA Today, the Village Voice, and his own Web site had already reported it” by the time she wrote her piece. Though the misleading content of her story remains the same, her place in the fray was not first. For which we apologize — and offer the sincere hope that the story can’t get any more meta now.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Roach and the “Pac-Man” Return to the Wild Card

(Photo © Chris Farina / Top Rank)
By Steve Kim

It’s been some time since trainer Freddie Roach was actually inside his Wild Card Boxing Club. For weeks or months at a time, he can be away from his renowned gym while traveling to various locales in his role as a color commentator and trainer, most recently conducting the first half of Manny Pacquiao’s training camp in the Philippines. But he touched down in Southern California on Saturday night as he and the “Pac-Man” resume their training to face Tim Bradley on June 9th in Las Vegas.

Monday was the first day he worked with his fighters at the Wild Card since late March.

“It’s been awhile,” admitted Roach, who put Pacquiao through the paces on Monday. “Been in the Philippines with Manny and Amir [Khan] and we had a good training camp over there and it’s good to be home, though.”

The last time we saw Pacquiao, he was on the fortunate end of a controversial decision against arch-nemesis Juan Manuel Marquez back in November. After telling anyone who would listen that they would finally get rid of the Mexican counterpuncher, it’s not clear if Roach and his charge were more disappointed or embarrassed by the outcome.

“A little of both, to be honest with you, because we had a great training camp and then everything fell apart in the last week. Some of these distractions got in the way and nearly split he and his wife up. She wanted to file for divorce and stuff like that because the distractions were just too much,” explained Roach of the turbulent moments leading into that fight. “It was the first bad night we had in 10 years, so it was just bad timing and Marquez had a lot to do with that too because it’s a tough time every time we fight. The thing is, we had a good training camp; we all predicted knockouts and so forth and it was a little embarrassing, yeah.”

The camp might have been too much of a good thing as they may have peaked too soon, according to Roach, who made some adjustments this time around. “We didn’t start sparring till six weeks out. Last time, we started a little bit early because [Pacquiao] wanted to help Jorge Linares get ready for his fight. But the thing is, he had a lot of distractions in his life going on and it finally caught up with him.”

Yeah, Pacquiao was a rolling stone.

“So he got rid of all his distractions,” said Roach, who went through the whole laundry list of vices. “He gave his cockfighting farm away; he gave his nightclub away. He doesn’t gamble anymore; he doesn’t play basketball anymore. He doesn’t play darts anymore. He’s just cut everything bad out of his life and he went to the Bible. He’s going to Bible study now and he goes three times a day.”

Asked if he can see the newfound commitment to the Lord and domestic life translate in the gym, Roach answered affirmatively, “100 percent.” He admits that in the wake of what he witnessed leading into the Marquez fight and how Pacquiao performed that night, he had some concerns about how much his fighter had left in the tank. He says those worries no longer exist after their most recent time in Baguio.

So how does Pacquiao get up for Bradley, a fighter who’s relatively unknown and with whom he has no personal history with?

Roach says the motivation is very simple: “People are telling [Pacquiao] that he’s shot and all that because of his last performance and he wants to show the world that he’s not and that’s our motivation. He knows he needs to shine in this fight and Mike Koncz, everyone in camp, people want to see Manny Pacquiao knock people out and not win decisions. Manny understands that.”

So what does Bradley bring to the table?

“A lot of heart,” said Roach of the young man from near Palm Springs, who established himself as the best junior welterweight in the world and has never tasted defeat as a professional. “I think his dad’s really hard on him; I think he’s been brought up rough. I think his dad pushes him. The kid won’t quit.”

The knock on Pacquiao was that recently, he had not been fighting either A) African-American fighters or B) opponents in their physical primes. The “Desert Storm” is both and perhaps the best athlete Pacquiao has ever faced. “I’m not sure how athletic he is. He’s a workaholic; I know that, like Mayweather is in the gym and like Manny. He says he’s the best conditioned athlete in the world and that he’ll be there standing at the end. My bet is that Manny Pacquiao is the hardest worker in the world and he’ll be standing in the end.”



Source:  matchboxing.com

ROACH SAYS ACTIVITY AND SOUTHPAWS A BAD COMBINATION FOR MAYWEATHER

May 8th, 2012 | by Scott Smith

The Pacquiao camp are gearing up for their upcoming bout on June 9 against Timothy Bradley, and took time out of their schedule to express their thoughts on the Mayweather vs Cotto fight, with Freddie Roach having some very interesting things to say.

Manny Pacquiao remaining very diplomatic on the subject:

· “I saw the Mayweather-Cotto fight. It was a good fight and everyone [fans] was happy.”

Regarding Mayweather’s rumoured plans to retire Pacquiao seemed uninterested and indicated his current position:

“I have no opinion on Mayweather’s plans to retire. That’s his decision. A very personal decision, I’m glad to be back at Freddie’s gym. I have no plans to retire. I still love what I’m doing”
Freddie Roach was a little bit more outspoken on the subject, which is usually the case, with a little jibe at Mayweather:

· We are on a steady pace to get Manny to where he will peak on June 9. We built a good base to build on in our training in the Philippines. Now it’s time for the hard work and the strategy,We had a good session today. Manny went a strong 10 rounds with me today on the mitts. He’ll sleep good tonight. I did not see the Mayweather-Cotto fight but I do know that Floyd’s slippery defense is now better outside the ring than inside the ring. But that is the path he has chosen”

And with that being said Freddie is so confident it seems a little arrogance is creeping into his thoughts regarding the possibility of getting Mayweather in the ring:

“Would Manny beat Floyd? You bet. The way to beat Floyd is to outwork him every minute of every round. Manny is the only fighter capable of executing that game plan. Activity kills Mayweather.You need to stay busy against him and not let him dictate the pace by slowing down the fight. Southpaws are his other weakness. Manny is just a bad combination for Floyd to fight. If it would bring Floyd into the ring, I’d agree to have Manny fight him right handed”

That is a bold statement considering Pacquiao with both hands got outboxed, and given severe problems by a poor man’s version of Mayweather in the older, slower Juan Manuel Marquez.  It is no coincidence that Roach would make these bold remarks after seeing Mayweather get tagged a few times, opening the door for the Pacquiao camp to chase the fight even harder with the belief that Pacquiao has a chance.  Was it a plan all along to wait until Mayweather gets older and is not as elusive, my guess is yes, but a man of Freddie Roach’s experience, should realise that Mayweather fought Cotto’s game and his approach against Pacquiao would be totally different.

I really think Roach should check the stats before he makes such ludicrous comments regarding Mayweather’s defence.  Yes landed 105 punches in the fight, but considering a drained Cotto landed 172 against Pacquiao in shorter time, Marquez landing 138 and Margarito landing 229 and most shocking of all Joshua Clottey landed 108 punches and he was in survival mode from the moment he left the dressing room.  It may be better for Roach to concentrate on improving his fighter’s defence before criticising the best defensive fighter in the sport,

The Pacquiao vs. Bradley welterweight championship collision will take place Saturday, June 9, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, in Las Vegas, Nev., and will be produced and distributed Live by HBO Pay-Per-View®, beginning at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

Promoted by Top Rank, in association with MP Promotions, Tecate, AT&T and MGM Grand, remaining tickets to Pacquiao vs. Bradley are priced at $1,200, $900, $600, $400, and $200. Ticket sales at $1,200, $900, $600 and $400 are limited to 10 per person and ticket sales at $200 are limited to two (2) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster (800) 745-3000 . Tickets also will be available for purchase atwww.mgmgrand.comorwww.ticketmaster.com.

Source: fighthype.com

IT’S OPENING DAY!

PhilBoxing.com
Tue, 08 May 2012

Eight-Division World Champion Congressman
Manny Pacquiao Is Back Training at Wild
Card in Hollywood


HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. (May 7, 2012) – Boxing’s Commander-In Chief, Congressman MANNY “Pacman” PACQUIAO, began his U.S. training camp today at Hall of Fame-elect trainer World-Famous FREDDIE ROACH’s Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif. Pacquiao is in his final five weeks of intense workouts as he prepares for his world title defense against undefeated junior welterweight champion TIMOTHY “Desert Storm” BRADLEY.

Pacquiao began the day with a 6:45 a.m. run from Griffith Part up the Hollywood Hills to the landmark Hollywood sign. He shaved a minute off his personal best time, running the 3.5 mile course in 22 minutes.

Later that afternoon, Pacman worked out for three hours with Roach at Wild Card, going 10 brisk rounds on the mitts followed by two hours of conditioning and hitting the bags.

Manny Pacquiao

· I saw the Mayweather-Cotto fight. It was a good fight and everyone [fans] was happy.

· I have no opinion on Mayweather’s plans to retire. That’s his decision. A very personal decision

· I’m glad to be back at Freddie’s gym. I have no plans to retire. I still love what I’m doing

· Freddie and I had a good camp in the Philippines and we are ready to work very hard in preparation for Timothy Bradley. Bradley is strong, undefeated and young. I have a great deal of respect for his talents and his accomplishments."

Freddie Roach

· We are on a steady pace to get Manny to where he will peak on June 9. We built a good base to build on in our training in the Philippines. Now it’s time for the hard work and the strategy.

· We had a good session today. Manny went a strong 10 rounds with me today on the mitts. He’ll sleep good tonight.

· I did not see the Mayweather-Cotto fight but I do know that Floyd’s slippery defense is now better outside the ring than inside the ring. But that is the path he has chosen.

· Would Manny beat Floyd? You bet. The way to beat Floyd is to outwork him every minute of every round. Manny is the only fighter capable of executing that game plan. Activity kills Mayweather. You need to stay busy against him and not let him dictate the pace by slowing down the fight. Southpaws are his other weakness. Manny is just a bad combination for Floyd to fight. If it would bring Floyd into the ring, I’d agree to have Manny fight him right handed.

Pacquiao (54-3-2, 38 KOs), boxing’s only eight-division world champion and the lone congressional representative from the Sarangani province in the Philippines, will be defending his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight championship crown against undefeated WBO junior welterweight champion Bradley (28-0, 12 KOs), of Palm Springs, Calif.

The Pacquiao vs. Bradley welterweight championship collision will take place Saturday, June 9, at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, in Las Vegas, Nev., and will be produced and distributed Live by HBO Pay-Per-View®, beginning at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.

Promoted by Top Rank, in association with MP Promotions, Tecate, AT&T and MGM Grand, remaining tickets to Pacquiao vs. Bradley are priced at $1,200, $900, $600, $400, and $200. Ticket sales at $1,200, $900, $600 and $400 are limited to 10 per person and ticket sales at $200 are limited to two (2) per person. To charge by phone with a major credit card, call Ticketmaster (800) 745-3000. Tickets also will be available for purchase at www.mgmgrand.com or www.ticketmaster.com.

For Pacquiao-Bradley fight week updates, log on to www.toprank.com and www.hbo.com

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Kiss Mayweather-Pacquiao Goodbye

Written by Lee Wylie  
Monday, 07 May 2012 16:22 





Let's make one thing perfectly clear. Regardless of how some people scored the fight, Floyd Mayweather did a masterful job in dethroning Miguel Cotto on Saturday night, in what I consider one of his best ever nights. Yes, there have been better performances in the past from Mayweather - his ring artistry in the Corrales and Gatti fights remain his signature performances - but this may have been his most complete performance in showing both his offensive and defensive brilliance. However, despite Mayweather chalking up his 43rd career win, against zero losses, you could say May 5th was the night that finally ended any and all hope of this generation's defining fight involving boxing's biggest and boxing's best, between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacqiuao.

Prior to Saturday night, Floyd Mayweather was in pole position so to speak, with regards to the ongoing saga that is Mayweather versus Pacquiao and in particular, how the fight would actually turn out. Boxing has always been full of triangle theories - if fighter A beats fighter B and B beats C, then surely fighter A beats fighter C. Of course, as any boxing enthusiast will tell you, there is a styles dynamic to boxing that doesn't always allow the sport to work in this manner. Nonetheless, before Saturday night, Mayweather would have been a clear favourite over Manny Pacquiao, based on his dominance - and Manny's lack of - in besting Juan Manuel Marquez.

As we all know, Floyd prides himself on how he managed to master Marquez with relative ease, whereas Pacquiao somewhat struggled with the very same Marquez across three fights. Agree or disagree, I believe it's Mayweather's way of establishing dominance over Pacquiao, without actually having to climb into the ring with him. To further my point, I believe that Miguel Cotto was specifically chosen as Mayweather's opponent on Saturday night to further enhance his percieved domination over Pacquiao - if Mayweather fared better against Cotto than Pacquiao did, then he would have even more reason to claim superiority over his Filipino rival. Bragging rights would well and truly belong to Mayweather.

As we all know by now, things did not quite go according to plan. Like I said earlier, I thought Floyd was brilliant on Saturday, especially in taking the fight to Cotto. However, because Mayweather put on one of his most aggressive displays in recent memory, you could say he may have won the Cotto battle on Saturday night, but he may have lost the Pacquiao bragging rights war. More importantly, events on Saturday night could result in never seeing Mayweather and Pacquiao in the ring together in a competitive way.

Mayweather's wish list.

Make no mistake, Mayweather would have loved nothing more than to top Manny Pacquiao's -12th round stoppage - winning effort over Miguel Cotto. This is why we saw a Floyd Mayweather who threw nearly 400 power punches - almost more than the average number of total punches Mayweather usually throws in a 12 round fight - against Cotto. Mayweather also nearly threw in excess of 700 total punches, a huge output for the normally conservative Floyd Mayweather. Undoubtedly, Mayweather was going for the knockout on Saturday night. The fact that he didn't get it may have resulted in irreversible damage to the ego of maybe the most egotistical sportsman currently walking the planet. As good as I thought Mayweather was on Saturday night, apart from a brief moment late in the 12th round, Mayweather never really looked close to stopping Cotto. Manny Pacquiao on the other hand, managed to hurt Cotto on numerous occasions. Against Mayweather, Miguel Cotto fought as if the trophy at the end of the fight would be his life. Against Pacquiao, Cotto appeared to run for his life.

On Saturday, Mayweather hit Cotto with some really spiteful punches, particularly his overhand right and left uppercut combination. Yet Cotto remained undeterred. On the other hand, Pacquiao inflicted damage upon Cotto even with glancing blows. It's not hard to imagine what Floyd Mayweather must be thinking right now is it?

I consider Saul Alvarez to be one of the hardest punchers in boxing - nobody knocks out the ever durable Carlos Baldomir with a single shot without possessing some serious fire power. Saul Alvarez - who must have weighed around 165 pounds on fight night - hit Shane Mosley with some truly terrible shots on Saturday night. Alvarez was throwing bombs, and I mean...bombs. Shane Mosley's response? He walked right through them. Let's go back to Shane Mosley's fight with Manny Pacquiao. Early in that fight, Pacquiao landed a left hand on Mosley that did not appear to be that big of a punch. Mosley went down. His response upon beating the count? Mosley fought the rest of the fight in survival mode, and then claimed Pacquiao was the hardest puncher he ever faced. Mayweather, who was hurt big time himself in round two against Mosley, didn't really come close to stopping Sugar Shane throughout their bout.

Again, if Floyd believed there was something suspicious with regards to Manny Pacquiao's punching power before May 5th, one can only imagine what he maybe thinking now.

Suddenly, it's Manny Pacquiao who now appears to be in the driving seat. A quick glance at their respective results against common opponents suggests this;

Pacquiao TKO 8 De La Hoya      Mayweather  SD De La Hoya
Pacquiao TKO 2 Hatton             Mayweather TKO 10 Hatton
Pacquiao TKO 12 Cotto             Mayweather  UD Cotto
Pacquiao  UD Mosley                 Mayweather  UD Mosley *
Pacquiao  UD/SD/D Marquez      Mayweather  UD Marquez


* Pacquiao was more dominant over Mosley than Mayweather was. Unlike Mayweather, Pacquiao scored a knockdown and was never hurt himself.

We know Floyd Mayweather thrives on his own perceptions - there is no doubting, he believes his own words. When he says he is the greatest of all time based on the notion that he has never lost a fight, whereas fighters like Ray Robinson and Muhammad Ali have, rest assured he believes it. Before Saturday, Mayweather believed he was superior to Pacquiao because of what he was able to do to Marquez in contrast with what Pacquiao was unable to do to Marquez.

It is no secret that before May 5th, one of the biggest stumbling blocks that stood in the way of making the mega-fight a reality was Mayweather's obsessive allegations that Pacquiao's weight jumping exploits were not legit. Now ask yourself, are we really any closer to the fight becoming a reality? During the post fight interview, Mayweather again mentioned Pacquiao's name, claiming that Pacquiao is refusing to take the test. So we are back on the testing protocol are we? Last week it was the purse split, the week before it was the arena, the week before that it was the lawsuit.

The point is, we are probably now further away from the fight becoming a reality than ever before. The fact that Mayweather could not stop Cotto, and Pacquiao could and that Alvarez, a huge junior middleweight could not put Mosley on his keester and Pacquiao could, will further enhance his beliefs that something is awry. On a personal note, I believe Mosley saw every one of Alvarez' shots coming and was able to take the mustard out of a lot of them, whereas Pacquiao caught Mosley on the blindside - it's the punches you don't see that hurt, remember.

Nevertheless, Floyd Mayweather truly believes that something is amiss with regards to Manny's freakish power as he likes to say. In reality, Pacquiao hasn't scored a knockout over anyone weighing 147 pounds or over, yet we have heard Mayweather boast about how unnatural it is for a featherweight to be knocking out junior middleweights.

I've always felt Pacquiao's style, not power, would be very problematic for Mayweather. Yet after Saturday night, I think Mayweather's strength could be more of a deciding factor than I first thought - Mayweather was like a venus flytrap in tying up and man handling Cotto at close quarters. After Saturday night, I now view the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight a lot closer, after originally believing Manny would have the upper hand.

None of this really matters though, Floyd had already, it is quite possible,  made up his mind before May 5th that the fight was never going to happen. The events of May 5th have only but enhanced this notion. The fantasy fight that we all crave, will forever remain just that, a fantasy.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Bloodied Floyd Mayweather Jr. wins

Floyd Mayweather Jr. celebrates after claiming
Miguel Cotto's belt via unanimous decision.
LAS VEGAS -- Floyd Mayweather Jr. finally found himself in a real fight, complete with a bloody nose and an opponent in Miguel Cotto who never was going to quit.

As usual, he found a way to win.

Mayweather used his speed and accuracy Saturday night to take a unanimous decision over a game Cotto in a bruising bout to win a piece of the 154-pound title. But it wasn't easy, as Cotto landed some hard punches and kept attacking all the way to the final bell.

"You're a hell of a champion," Mayweather told Cotto in the ring afterward. "You're the toughest guy I ever fought."

Mayweather dominated late, rocking Cotto in the 12th round to pull out a win and remain unbeaten in 43 fights. Unlike most of his fights, though, Mayweather got his nose bloodied and engaged in some bruising exchanges he usually likes to avoid.

Two judges scored the fight 117-111 and the third had it 118-110. ESPN.com had it 116-112 for Mayweather. The Associated Press had Mayweather winning 116-112.

Fighting just a few weeks before he enters a county jail to serve a three-month sentence for domestic abuse, Mayweather found himself in a tough fight against a game opponent who never stopped moving forward. But he was faster and more accurate than Cotto and seemed to wear him down in the final rounds.

In the last round, Mayweather landed his best punch of the night, a left uppercut that seemed to hurt Cotto. He followed that with several flurries to the head to wrap up a decision that until the later rounds had been in doubt.

The decision was roundly booed by the crowd at the MGM Grand arena, which cheered wildly every time Cotto landed a punch.

"He's a tough competitor," Mayweather said. "He came to fight; he didn't just come to survive. I dug down and fought him back."

Cotto was never down, though he seemed hurt several times during the fight, particularly in the 12th round.

"The judges said I lost the fight; I can't do anything else," Cotto said. "I'm happy with my fight and performance and so is my family. I can't ask for anything else."

Mayweather, who was guaranteed $32 million, was forced to fight every minute of all 12 rounds against the Puerto Rican champion. He did it after weighing in at 151 pounds, the heaviest he has been for a fight.

The weight didn't seem to affect Mayweather, and neither did the heavier 10-ounce gloves at super welterweight. But he took some punishment, including a bloody nose during the middle rounds, before coming back to dish some out in the later rounds.

"When you fight on pay per view, you have to give the fans what they want, and that's excitement," Mayweather said.

Mayweather entered the ring unbeaten in his 16-year pro career, and a 6-1 favorite to stay that way. The fighter who has become the biggest pay-per-view attraction in the sport padded his already thick wallet with the fight, but he was forced to earn every penny of it.

The win gave Mayweather the 154-pound title held by Cotto, and assured him of still being a champion when he reports to jail June 1 for a sentence stemming from a domestic abuse case involving his former girlfriend and their children.

"In life there's obstacles," Mayweather said. "When it comes to June 1, I have to accept it like a man."

Mayweather will be in jail when Manny Pacquiao fights in the same ring on June 9 at the MGM Grand against Timothy Bradley. Though boxing fans have clamored for a Mayweather-Pacquiao fight, it has yet to be made -- and may never be made.

That's partly because of Mayweather's insistence that Pacquiao submit to Olympic-style drug testing, though Pacquiao already has said he will do that.

"I want to fight Pacquiao but he needs to take the tests before we make that fight," Mayweather said.

Cotto came out looking slow and overmatched in the first round, but quickly settled into a routine, attacking Mayweather from behind his left jab. But Mayweather got more aggressive coming out to start the fourth round, and landed a series of rights to the head that stunned Cotto and kept him from moving forward effectively.

Mayweather fought good portions of the fight on the ropes, using them for leverage and counterpunching to Cotto's head when he opened up. He was not only quicker than Cotto, but more accurate, often landing in between Cotto's defenses.

"He's ready to quit," trainer Roger Mayweather told his nephew after the sixth round.

But Cotto was relentless, coming forward and hitting Mayweather with good shots to the head. Toward the end of the eighth round he landed several punches to the head, prompting Mayweather to shake his head as if they didn't hurt, but by then Mayweather was bleeding from the nose and looked like he had taken some punishment.

Punch stats showed Mayweather landing 179 of 687 punches to 105 of 506 to Cotto.

Cotto, who fell to 37-3, was guaranteed his biggest purse ever, $8 million.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Source:  espn.go.com/boxing/

"Ring Kings: Mayweather vs. Cotto" Post-Fight Quotes

PhilBoxing.com
Sun, 06 May 2012

Floyd Mayweather; Eight-Time and Five-Division World Champion

"Tonight we gave the fans what they wanted to see. We matched the best with the best. Cotto was a very tough competitor and he won some rounds. He pushed me to the limits and this is what it's all about.

"Miguel Cotto fought his ass off tonight and I want to congratulate him and his team.

"You've seen me in flashy cars, but I want you to know that I do give back to the community. This is what it's all about. It's not about making a lot of money. It's about giving back.

"I don't want be on TV and not give you guys [the fans and media] what you deserve.

"Cotto is a good puncher. He didn't win more than 30 fights for nothing. I was the first fighter to fight him at a weight that he was comfortable with. I actually came into the fight weighing 147.

"Things happened tonight and we both had to fight. But the main thing is that we got the victory.

"I think tonight was a cool fight. The fans were happy. It's about impressing fans and giving them what they want to see.

"I sensed that sometimes Miguel was breaking down and then he would come back sharp. Miguel Cotto is in shape. The right hook and the uppercut were working for me tonight. I had watched tapes of Shane Mosley [when he fought Cotto] and I saw that the right hook was working. And I also watch Zab Judah use the uppercut against him too. So I knew I was going to use those shots tonight.

"I knew the right hook was going to be my money shot. A lot of times and these days you don't see fighters using the right hook, only the left. But tonight I wanted to use the right hook and that is what I did.

"Tonight I got a few bumps and bruises, but that is part of the sports.

"I could have made it a very easy fight, but I was going for the knockout. Cotto was in tremendous shape. He was tough.

"Our game plan is always to win. Cotto surprised me and his record reflects where he is today.

"It's about winning and that's what I did. I'm not going to fold to pressure. Cotto can keep his head high as we are both winners tonight in our own way."

Canelo Alvarez, WBC Super Welterweight Champion

"I want to thank my great team for all the great work and Mosley for giving me the experience. I learned a lot from tonight's fight. It's is the first time that I got cut and learned a lot from it. I told myself not to worry about it and that is also what I told my team.

"Yes I'm definitely ready to fight on a higher level. I'm ready for the best. I've gained a lot of experience tonight and I am ready to fight bigger fighters.

"I felt I had a great performance. Mosley is an experienced fighter. I know him very well and I followed his career.

"That was the game plan. I had to be calm and take my time and that is exactly what I did.

"I would like to fight one of the two main fighters, Mayweather or Cotto. This is what I deserve the most.

"I wasn't surprised that Shane was able to take my punches.

"The next fight, you will see a better Canelo and a more experience Canelo. I am ready."

Leonard Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions

"Floyd fought a fight that you guys hadn't seen in some time. We knew coming into the fight that preparation was the key. He was pushed and he had to come out and fight hard.

"Cotto never gave up. The fans were going really wild.

"Miguel Cotto is probably one of the classiest guys in the sport of boxing. I would like to give him, his team and Gaby a lot of credit.

"What can I say but another one down."

Oscar De La Hoya, President of Golden Boy Promotions

"Everyone gave a wonderful show tonight. Canelo is a young man who showed a lot of heart and desire, especially when he got cut over the eye, he kept his cool and remained collective. That's a good sign of a champion. Obviously, Canelo fought a good fight and he was too much for Mosley. For a 21 year old, he showed a lot tonight and I believe he is ready for a guys like Cotto or Mayweather.

"Cotto fought a great fight and Mayweather fought a great fight as well.

"It didn't surprise what did Mayweather in the fight. Mayweather is a great fighter and we have to give a lot of credit to Cotto for giving such a fight to Mayweather.

"Mayweather is a strong fighter. He got Cotto with great shots. He's confident in his abilities and he believes in himself. This is a beautiful thing for boxing."

Richard Schaefer, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions

"Canelo is ready and so is the MGM Grand as he will be headlining his first pay-per-view on September 15.

"I've never seen as many people in the arena for the co-main event. A lot of Mexicans came for the fight.

"What I noticed with Floyd is that people are more appreciative of him and realize that he comes to fight. To see him come in tonight with Justin Bieber, Lil Wayne and 50 Cent is really great for the sport of boxing.

"Beside his amazing skills, Floyd brings amazing numbers to the pay-per-view sales.

"Floyd Mayweather is a rock star. He really is."

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Mayweather and Cotto both dwarfing Pacquiao's prospect with Bradley

Granville Ampong

Long Beach Boxing Examiner

Mayweather vs Cotto for the WBA
Super World light middleweight title at
the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas
on May 5, 2012; Photo credit: Dr. Ed
de la Vega
Boxing Perspectives - These are two highly skilled boxers, each with the potential to bring surprise upon each other. No issues of imbalanced electrolytes nor should there be an issue of muscle-wasting. Miguel Cotto, the reigning WBA Super World light middleweight titlist from Puerto Rico who weighed in 154 pounds on the scale Friday, believes he is the stronger man than the son of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Likewise, Floyd Mayweather, Jr., who weighed in 151 pounds on the same scale at such moment and looked perfectly solid, would just be as ready to rock the night in his kingly form and bearing as the most intelligent fighter on earth today and whose record remains unblemished and, in fact, seen as the most effective and cleanest counter-puncher we have in boxing, as of this writing.


HOT: Exclusive behind the scene interview with Bradley

Tonight, the MGM Grand Arena of Las Vegas would not be the same again since the fight between Oscar de la Hoya and Mayweather which produces the biggest pay-per-view numbers in the history of boxing. Mayweather-Cotto fight should be bigger and could potentially dwarf even more the prospect of Pacquiao's attempt to prove his worth with his upcoming fight against the much less favored 5-1, undefeated light welterweight champion Timothy Bradley. Pay-per-View numbers of these two matches will likely give the much-clearer punch as to the purse-split percentages between Pacquiao and Mayweather.

Drained and muscle-wasted, Oscar de la Hoya who once fought Pacquiao, believes Top Rank Promoter Robert Arum  is blocking off a Pacquiao-Mayweather fight.  He believes Arum, a great promoter, finds it too risky, both his ego and Pacquiao's image relative to Top Rank Promotions, to make Pacquiao-Mayweather transpiring.

"Arum's promotion would be hurt badly if Pacquiao loses to Mayweather," says De la Hoya. "I just think Mayweather will expose both Pacquiao and Arum."

"That's why he (Arum) chooses the less threatening opponent for Pacquiao, and without disrespect, that is Timothy Bradley. Bradley does not have the power to knock Pacquiao out nor does he have the skill to match Pacquiao's speed and power."

In other words, De la Hoya implies Bradley has really nothing to bargain to boost Pacquiao's surety to keep his race now at A-level nor does Pacquiao have the chance to improve his bargaining power during negotiation,  only if both fighters truly intends to fight.

Meanwhile, what is intriguing, to some,  is that Bradley, one without any issue of muscle-wasting and imbalanced electrolytes, could just deliver the same element of surprise that Cotto could bring against Mayweather.

Unlike Bradley, Mayweather becomes more receptive as his circle of willis and nerve-endings both could heighten his own perceived stimulation up to surging to a higher level if ever Cotto tries at will to mount heavy pressure. Bad thing is, Mayweather can be so devastating when he is tested to the limit. His instinct would be awaken. In fact, his rapid response system works best when he senses that a near-code-blue episode presses the heat of exchanges if he continues to make mistakes once more, just as what happened to Zab Judah, Ricky Hatton. He can surge quickly to a higher level just as when he almost fell into the hands of Sugar Shane Mosley in the encounter in 2010. And he can be too graceful as well and would  just employ less damaging punches, only if one is just bent to engage in a pure boxing match.

Cotto-Mayweather fight may have just sent warning to Pacquiao. Boxing fans now think that Pacquiao's deserving last fights should be a ramatch with Cotto at 154 pounds and, another,  such most compelling and fresher one, against Mayweather before they both hang up their respective gloves.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

'Pacman' in background as Mayweather eyes Cotto

Published: 5/05/2012 at 01:48 PM
Online news: Sports

For once Floyd Mayweather set the bluster and bombast aside as he looked forward to his battle Saturday with Miguel Cotto for the Puerto Rican's World Boxing Association super welterweight world title.

US boxer Floyd Mayweather (L) and Puerto Rico's
Miguel Cotto eye the scale during Cotto's weigh-in on
May 4, in Las Vegas, Nevada, on the eve of their
Super Welterweight championship fight.

"Miguel is a true warrior, a tough champion, and to go down in the Hall of Fame as one of the best, you have to face the true champions out there," Mayweather said as the two met the press on Wednesday.

The American's gacious words were a stark contrast to the kind of vitriol he has directed at Manny Pacquiao -- the Filipino fight king who has evolved into Mayweather's nemesis even as a mega-fight between the two has repeatedly failed to materialize.

The mention of Pacquiao was enough to set Mayweather off on a diatribe on Tuesday, although he insisted he bore Pacman no ill-will.

"Just speaking my mind," Mayweather said. "When you have two fighters who get to this level there's no losing. That's the ultimate goal is for the top fighters to meet each other. Somebody got to win and somebody got to lose when you get to this level."

Cotto, meanwhile, has been unapologetic in the build-up to the fight even as pundits bemoan the fact that it's not a Mayweather-Pacquiao showdown.

"I didn't care about hearing one more thing about that," Cotto said in a Los Angeles publicity stop prior to the bout.

"If people want to see that (Mayweather-Pacquiao) fight, they have to wait until I beat Mayweather."

This week the 31-year-old Cotto, a three-division champion, promised to end Mayweather's unbeaten run.

"I'm a quiet guy, and I prefer to talk in the ring," said Cotto, who brings a record of 37-2 with 30 knockouts to the bout. "I had a tremendous camp in Orlando. All the work that we put in will bring me the victory Saturday night.

"No matter what, I am going to use what I have to fight Floyd. I'm prepared for his style.

"I am going to be the first guy to beat Mayweather."

Mayweather, needless to say, has other ideas, even though he's stepping up in weight to challenge for Cotto's title.

Mayweather hasn't fought at 154 pounds since beating Oscar De La Hoya in a split decision in 2007.

In his last fight, Mayweather came off a 16-month layoff to knock out Victor Ortiz and take the World Boxing Council welterweight title in September, a triumph that took his record to 42-0 with 26 knockouts.

Cotto easily retained his WBA super welterweight title in December with a technical knockout of Antonio Margarito.

He pounded Margarito, who fought the last few rounds with his right eye shut, the result of a barrage of strategically aimed left hooks from Cotto.

While the bout is projected to be a clash of Mayweather's speed and precision against Cotto's tough physical presence, Mayweather said it might not pan out that way.

"I don't have to be moving and running," he said. "I just have to box. I just have to take my time and whatever happens, happens. Whatever plays out, plays out."

Floyd Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao, and What’s in a Head

By Ivan G. Goldman
May 4th, 2012 boxinginsider.com

Question: does Manny Pacquiao really have a big head? As we know, that’s what Floyd Mayweather claimed this week when he alleged performance-enhancing drug use supposedly created an oversized cranium on his arch-nemesis.


Photo Credit : Chris Farina – Top Rank



















So I checked it out. I didn’t have any versions of Pacquaio’s actual head around, so I studied old photos and YouTube videos of Pacquiao and compared them to recent photographs. My conclusion? Damned if I know. Ask me to detect fake boobs. There I’m much more proficient.














But making using of some things that I do know, let’s put the accusation in context. In previous tirades the Mayweather clan contended that only banned chemicals could have enabled Pacquiao to go all the way from junior flyweight to welterweight territory in the course of his career while maintaining his speed and power, And yes, it’s true that Pacquiao turned pro at 106 pounds when he was 16 and now, by gosh, he still shows blinding speed and paralyzing power 17 years later. But you know what else? Floyd won the national Golden Gloves championships in 1993 at 106 pounds. He was, you guessed it, also16. And Floyd would be the first to tell you he’s retained plenty of speed and power himself.

Please check out my stats yourself if you like. It takes two or three minutes of detective work. You’ll subsequently be able to astound your friends by actually knowing what you’re talking about. What a concept. Most people venturing opinions on this topic, including some of the “analysts” who are paid to know, lack an even passing acquaintance with the facts. They’re too busy opinionating to look them up.

We can assume attorneys for both parties in the slander suit filed by Pacquiao against Mayweather for his original PEDs remarks have also figured out what we know about these supposedly astounding physical changes. When millions are at stake, lawyers tend to look this stuff up too, which might explain why Mayweather’s side has tried to slow the lawsuit down to a crawl. Floyd was even a no-show when scheduled to answer questions under oath for a formal pre-trial disposition. His lawyer Karen Winckler explained that he was phenomenally busy. Doing what? At the time he had no fights coming up, no job, and of course no products to plug because when corporations looks for endorsers they tend to ignore athletes with a history of beating up women and a rap sheet to prove it.

Fighters mature like everyone else, and if they pursue their craft diligently, they can’t help putting on some muscle, which is heavier even than fat. Also, not everybody turns pro at the same age, and fighters from Third World countries tend to make the switch earlier, All this sheds plenty of light on Mayweather’s relative credibility in these matters.

So why did Floyd repeat the slander the very same week he’s going to face Miguel Cotto in a junior middleweight pay-per-view contest? Probably for pretty much the same reason he smacked around his ex-girlfriend again in September 2010. Many of us, particularly Mayweather, say and do things that don’t make much sense.

Floyd’s new rant may bury at last the prospect of an eventual Mayweather-Pacquiao super fight or, as some people speculate, it could serve to hype the attraction and draw in more dollars. My gut feeling now is the fight won’t happen. Mayweather will continue competing against men he believes he can beat. And naturally he will retire. Again. Eventually he may feel he needs more money. And the way he spends it, he may be correct. At that point he will be more agreeable to a Pacquiao match. But Congressman Pacquiao (maybe even president Pacquiao), retired as a prizefighter by then, will tell him to buzz off. Fans will lose out, and history may judge Mayweather harshly over all this even though he might actually believe his unfounded accusations because, for one thing, he feels a need to believe them. But for now it would behoove Mayweather to forget all that and get his mind back on Cotto. If I’m not mistaken, they have some kind of event coming up.

Ivan G. Goldman’s latest novel Isaac: A Modern Fable came out in April 2012 from Permanent Press. Information HERE


Friday, May 4, 2012

Pacquiao Says He's 50-60 Percent Ready

Pacquiao spars in Baguio
By Ronnie Nathanielsz
PhilBoxing.com
Fri, 04 May 2012

BAGUIO CITY—Pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao concluded his two-week Baguio City training camp and pronounced himself 50 to 60 percent ready.

Pacquiao defends his World Boxing Organization welterweight title against undefeated light welterweight world champion Timothy Bradley at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on June 9.

The Filipino champ went a total of six rounds Thursday against Russian sparring partners Ruslan Provodnikov (21-1, 14 KOs) and Rustan Nugayev (22-6-1, 12KOs), ending four days and a total of 20 rounds of sparring.

The Fighter of the Decade looked impressive against Provodnikov in the first round, nailing him with solid combinations and stinging uppercuts before he eased up in the next three rounds.

Asked by the Manila Standard about trainer Freddie Roach’s concern that the fire in him is missing and his increasingly compassionate attitude toward his opponents was showing, Pacquiao responded by saying “The fire will return at the right time.”

Roach said that the real hard work will begin at his Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles on Monday.

He further agreed with Pacquiao’s claim that he was only about 50-60 percent ready, but pointed out that it was only their fourth day of sparring. Roach also noted that Pacquiao “is looking good in spots here and there. We need to get a little more fire.”

The celebrated trainer believes that when Pacquiao resumes sparring in Los Angeles, where he has two more sparring partners waiting for him, things will change.

“The sparring partners are both tough, mean kids. They are not going to touch gloves with him and they are going to force Manny to fight,” said Roach, who set aside concerns about the fire within. “He always performs for me and I’m sure the fire will come and he’ll be okay. But if it’s a little bit more, I’ll be happy. Bradley will force him to fight. If he (Bradley) hurts him, maybe he’ll open up.”

Pacquiao will motor down to Manila in a convoy later today and will resume training at the MP Towers Gym Friday and Saturday before departing for Los Angeles.

Floyd SAYS He Couldn't Care Less About Manny...REALLY?

Written by Ron Borges  
Thursday, 03 May 2012 20:25


LAS VEGAS – How long of a shadow can a man standing 5-feet-6 ½ inches cast? If that man is Manny Pacquiao and you box for a living it is apparently a long, dark and foreboding one.

Even when faced with a formidable challenge and an earnest opponent like Miguel Cotto, Pacquiao is never far from Floyd Mayweather, Jr.’s mind it seems, the latest example of that coming over the past two days when Mayweather has been obsessively talking about a guy he seems to have no intention of fighting.

Tomorrow, Mayweather will challenge the WBA’s junior middleweight champion at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. The fight is expected to do big business, pay-per-view sales already projected at well over one million and perhaps, some claim, possibly challenging the all-time record of 2.4 million buys set by Mayweather and Oscar De La Hoya nearly five years ago.

Unlike others in his powerful position (including Pacquiao), Mayweather has not used his influence in the marketplace to demand Cotto fight at a catch weight below the 154-pound limit, thus having to weaken himself to make the $11 million he’s guaranteed to receive for facing Mayweather. Mayweather could have done that, as Pacquiao has on numerous occasions of late, but he opted instead to fight at the division’s weight limit because, he says, he doesn’t believe catch weights are a fair way to operate. In a sense, it is that view of the marriage between boxing and fair play that keeps coming up whenever Mayweather speaks of Pacquiao, whether the world is listening to what he says or not.

“I’ve never fought a guy at a catchweight,’’ Mayweather said recently. “I don’t fight guys at catchweights. I don’t put plaster in my gloves (alluding to the disgraced Antonio Margarito, who was found in just such a circumstance before facing Shane Mosley several years ago and is suspected by Cotto of having done the same thing to him when he gave him a beating so severe Cotto quit by taking a knee late in the fight). These are things I don’t do because I’m not that type of guy.

“What I do is dedicate myself when it’s time to fight and that’s what I can say I do do. To each his own.’’

Fairness and boxing are two words not often mixed, especially at the sport’s highest level where leverage and power at the box office often allow one fighter to dictate to his opponents not only the site and time of a fight but also the size gloves used, the size of the ring and, too often, the size of his opponent regardless of what the rules of the sport allow.

What brings this all up when talk should be revolving around fighting Cotto, is Mayweather’s Tuesday afternoon rant in Las Vegas when he met with a small group of boxing writers and launched into a 15-minute soliloquy about not Cotto but Pacquiao, or at least his clearly held fear that Pacquiao may have used at some time or other some form of performance enhancing drugs.

At the moment Pacquiao has a pending defamation lawsuit against Mayweather, arguing that he has never tested positive for any form of PEDs and that Mayweather’s sometimes veiled and sometimes not so veiled accusations that he is suspect amount to his being defamed.

Perhaps he has, but it was Pacquiao who long refused to agree to random blood testing for PEDs as a condition of fighting Mayweather, although to be fair of late he has said he would agree to random testing up to the day of the fight. This was a problem because the only test able to discover use of human growth hormone and certain other PEDs is random blood testing. Refusal to agree to such testing, which is not mandated by most state athletic commissions, is not an admittance of anything to be sure but Mayweather argues PEDs have infected most of professional sports, including boxing, and he and others should stand up to assure as best they can that it not continue in a blood sport where the first aim is to render your opponent unconscious.

This is not a sport like baseball, where a juiced player simply hits a ball farther or throws it faster. It’s not even like football, at least in cities outside of New Orleans, where the aim is not to hurt the other opponent but rather to score more points that he does.

Only in boxing is the first aim to hurt your opponent. That being the obvious case, a strict effort to rid boxing of PEDs seems logical and frankly far from controversial. Yet because it has stood in the way of a Mayweather-Pacquiao fight it seems to have been twisted into a discussion of whether or not Mayweather is “afraid’’ to face Pacquiao.

This is ludicrous because, frankly, if he believes Pacquiao is using PEDs he damn well should be afraid of facing him. Second, Mayweather has for the past two years made it a condition of fighting him that both he and his opponent agree to random blood and urine testing right up to the fight. Mosley, an admitted former user himself, Victor Ortiz and now Cotto agreed and did so without incident. Mayweather beat the first two easily and is expected to do the same to Cotto Saturday night.

Yet the issue of Mayweather’s alleged “fear’’ of Pacquiao sent him into a rage on Tuesday when he told a small collection of writers in Las Vegas that, “Health is more important than anything because guess what? When my career is over, if I'm hurt because of something that has happened in a fight, I can't come to you and say, 'I need (money).'

"People say, 'We don't give a f--- if he's taking or not; we just want to see the fight. We don't give a f--- about your health and we don't give a f--- about your family.' I care about my family. I love my family. They're going to be there when no one else is there. When my career is over, you're all going to move on to the next one."

Mayweather is sadly right about that, just as he was about the way he views promoters like Bob Arum and Don King, who agree a Mayweather-Pacquiao fight would be the largest grossing event in boxing history.

“Don King and Bob Arum don't see out the eyes of a fighter because they're not a fighter," Mayweather said Tuesday. "All they care about is some f------ money. I care about a fighter's well being because I am a fighter. I know how it is to have a broken rib the rest of your life. I know how it is to piss blood. You all don't know nothing about this."

Soon after Mayweather questioned Pacquiao’s rapid rise in weight classes from the 106 pounds where he started to 154 pounds and now where he stands as the WBO’s welterweight champion and questioned not that he could do that but how he seemed to become more dominate as he moved up in weight, which is unusual. Since 2008, Pacquiao has won world titles in five different weight classes and stopped four of the nine opponents he’s faced.

Generally fighters who move up in weight may continue to be successful but they usually lose something. They lose most normally punching power and sometimes speed. To retain both is almost unprecedented and seems to have convinced Mayweather that there are reasons beyond Pacquiao’s obvious talent and work ethic for his rise.

To be fair about it that seems to be what Mayweather really fears. Not Pacquiao himself but something outside of Pacquiao that could both elevate his performance and threaten the health of an opponent.

"It took me years to get to here -- years," Mayweather raged Tuesday. "I'm going up in weight but I'm not walking through no damn fighters. (Pacquiao) is 106; now he decides to walk through (Miguel) Cotto? Cotto can't knock down (Shane) Mosley, but can he?

"This is how the world is, you get writers saying, 'Floyd is scared,' " he said. "No, Floyd cares about his family. Floyd is smart. You all know for a fact I'm not scared. You all know that."

Scared is an overused word in sports. Few athletes are “scared’’ of an opponent. The handlers around them might be because they don’t want to see their meal ticket punched to the point where his value in the market place is diminished but elite fighters do not know that type of fear.

What seems to be the case with Mayweather however is that he does fear the power of performance enhancing drugs because, as the name implies, they enhance unfairly an opponent’s ability to perform in the most dangerous sport in the world. That doesn’t mean Pacquiao is or ever has been a user. In fact, he can rightfully argue he’s been tested many times and never been found guilty of anything and has said he’s willing to go along now with Mayweather’s insistence on Olympic-style blood and urine testing.

What Mayweather keeps arguing for however is something different. He’s talking not only about protecting his own health but also about fighters taking a leadership role in a shadowy area of sport that has tainted baseball and the Olympic Games severely and other sports to lesser degrees as well.

“I think since I’m the face of boxing I have totally changed the sport of boxing I’m the reason why they don’t talk about heavyweights anymore,’’ Mayweather said last week. “I’m the one outside the box. I’m doing record turning numbers. So since I’m the face of the sport I should be always trying to change the sport and make the sport a lot better and the best thing is to always put every man on an even playing field.

“Everyone should be on an even playing field. That’s what I truly believe. I think that Manny Pacquiao has done a lot in the sport but he should also be standing behind me and say, ‘We should clean up the sport because I’m a clean athlete.’ I’m letting the world know Floyd Mayweather is a clean athlete and if you’re the best step up and take the test.’’

Tuesday Floyd Mayweather, Jr. ranted and raged about Pacquiao even though no one asked him about Pacquiao. For Mayweather, his nemesis seldom seems far from his thoughts even days before he will face a different man in the ring.

That may speak to fear, as some believe, but more likely it speaks to obsession and a growing weariness that he cannot seem to shake Pacquiao’s shadow nor convince the general public that he doesn’t need him to prove his own worth in boxing.

“I’m not saying nobody is, or nobody is not doing it,’’ Mayweather said Tuesday. “But my health is more important than anything.’’

Perhaps but soon after Mayweather was suggesting Pacquiao’s head size had increased even though he has no such knowledge but does understand that is one side effect of the use of human growth hormone.

In the end, Floyd Mayweather will fight and likely beat up Miguel Cotto Saturday night. He will very likely do it in one-sided fashion. Yet no matter what he does another man will be lurking in the shadows, peering over his shoulder, standing defiantly in every corner of the ring and in every corner of Floyd Mayweather, Jr.’s boxing life.

“I don’t worry about that at all,’’ Mayweather told me last week when asked if he was disappointed that a fight with Pacquiao had not yet been arranged. “If it really was all about Pacquiao then I didn’t have to fight all 42 (previous) opponents. All I had to do was come to the sport of boxing and fight one guy. Then I would have went down as the best.

“So I guess the 42 guys that I’ve faced didn’t count. All I had to do was come into the sport of boxing and train for just one fight. Just train for one 12-round fight, beat that guy, then I was going down in history as the best. Now all of a sudden a guy comes out of nowhere and they say, ‘Well, Floyd, you’re not the best because you haven’t beaten this guy yet.’ Like I said before, Floyd Mayweather has to live for Floyd Mayweather and I’m happy. I could care less what Manny Pacquiao is doing.’’

If that’s the case, why’d he bring him up this week in the first place?

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Manny Pacquiao: Floyd Mayweather Admits He Is Fearful Of Facing PacMan

written by Joseph Herron May 03, 2012 - 08:37AM ET in News


Floyd Mayweather, left, and Manny Pacquiao

Is Floyd Mayweather afraid of Manny Pacquiao? Is any fighter truly afraid of stepping foot in the ring and proving their dominance over another competitor in front of thousands of rabid sports fans? 

Absolutely not...that's ultimately why a pugilist participates in his chosen profession. The adoration of the masses and a boatload of cash can drive a man to do just about anything in this world.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. has been offered both of these commodities when faced with the opportunity of fighting the other "baddest man on the planet", Manny Pacquiao. But alas, neither money nor adulation has been enough to motivate the defensive technician.

"Money" Mayweather recently attempted put to rest any misconception regarding his perceived trepidation when he addressed the media earlier this week in Las Vegas, NV. Unfortunately, his candid commentary raised even more speculation as to why he refuses to make the proposed mega-fight a reality.

"It's basic common sense that Manny Pacquiao has used performance enhancing drugs, and getting in the ring with him would be a danger to my future health," explained Floyd Mayweather Jr. to various members of the media.

"Health is more important than anything. Because guess what? When my career is over, if I'm hurt because of something that has happened in a fight, I can't come to anyone and say I need money.

Pictured: WBO Welterweight Champion Manny Pacquiao
Courtesy of Chris Farina, Top Rank
"I know how it is to have a broken rib the rest of your life. I know how it is to piss blood. You all don't know nothing about this."

"This is how the world is; you get writers saying, 'Floyd Mayweather is scared'. No...Floyd cares about his family. Floyd is smart."

Although his previous words were enough to raise controversy throughout the sports world, Floyd continued to berate the Filipino Congressman.

"The mother f#@%er was 106 pounds when he started his career and he's just walking through Miguel Cotto; and Cotto can't knock down Mosley, but he can? Come on, man!"

"Go back and look at the pictures," exclaimed the pound for pound fighter. "His (Manny Pacquiao) head is small and then all of a sudden his head just grew? Come on...stop this! Go back and look at the pictures and tell me this man's head didn't just get bigger. You're going to tell me that all this sh%t is all natural? C'mon, man...stop this!"

While Floyd's claims regarding Manny Pacquiao's alleged steroid use isn't breaking news, the Las Vegas resident's shocking claim that he is avoiding the big money event because he is fearful of his future health most certainly is.

Pictured: WBC Welterweight Champion Floyd Mayweather Jr


But, is Floyd Mayweather Jr. justified in his position regarding his slanderous allegations towards the Filipino icon?

According to Manny Pacquiao's promoter Bob Arum, Mayweather's comments have absolutely no credence.

In a statement released to the media by the Hall of Fame promoter in September of 2011, he affirmed that his fighter would indeed agree to expanded drug testing and allow the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to administer the process, if performed in a joint effort with the regulatory body in whichever jurisdiction the fight occurs.

Arum's official statement is obviously old news to Camp Mayweather.

With the drug testing obstacle ostensibly overcome through negotiations, Floyd Mayweather Jr. reached out to Manny Pacquiao with a "genuine" attempt to make the highly anticipated mega-fight for a May 5th date earlier this year.

When Manny Pacquiao showed interest in fighting Floyd on the proposed date for an equally divided purse of 50/50, "Money" Mayweather refuted the offer and countered with a flat sum of $40 million.

"50/50 can't happen, but what can happen is that you can make more money fighting me than you've ever made in your entire career," stated Floyd Mayweather Jr on January 20th, 2012.

Now, Mayweather has seemingly run out of viable excuses.

The initial reason for not facing Pacquiao back in 2010 was the alleged cheating through the use of performance enhancing drugs. The motive for delay then shifted to a money disagreement earlier this year.

Mayweather now seems to be resorting back to his previous campaign with allegations of unethical and unsportsmanlike behavior, despite Manny Pacquiao's willingness to proceed with Olympic style drug testing.

If most fight fans and pundits were under the impression that Floyd Mayweather wasn't avoiding an eventual confrontation with Pacquiao purposely, Floyd Mayweather's recent actions and comments have thoroughly debunked that theory.

The biggest question looming in the minds of every interested sports fan is why?

Only one man truly knows, and it's highly unlikely the world will find out anytime soon.


Floyd Mayweather Rants About Manny Pacquiao Ahead Of Miquel Cotto Fight

Floyd Mayweather stretches during a press
conference with Miguel Cotto on May 2, 2012 at the
MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada. Mayweather
takes on Cotto for the WBA Super World Light
Middleweight Championship on Cinco de Mayo,
Saturday, May 5, 2012.
By TIM DAHLBERG 05/ 2/12 06:10 PM ET AP

LAS VEGAS -- Sorry, boxing fans. This is news you don't want to hear.

Enjoy Floyd Mayweather Jr. on Saturday night against Miguel Cotto, if you wish. But understand this: Despite the fervent hope of almost everyone in boxing, Mayweather will not be fighting Manny Pacquiao.

Not later this year. Not ever.

If I wasn't sure of it before, I'm sure of it now. Hard not to be after watching Mayweather as he went into a bizarre rant for the benefit of myself, a few other writers, and his ever present band of sycophants.

This wasn't for HBO's "24/7" cameras, though it was better than anything on the most recent episodes. It had nothing to do with getting people to pony up $69.95 to watch the Cotto fight in their living rooms.

This was pure Mayweather, unvarnished, unplugged, and totally uninhibited.

He won't fight Pacquiao unless he's convinced he doesn't use steroids – something, by the way, that only Mayweather has accused the Filipino of doing. And there will be no convincing Mayweather that he's wrong.

"You all think I'm scared, I'm a coward? Well guess what? I'm a rich, scared coward. I'm a rich coward," Mayweather said. "And if that's the case, why the hell would you want to watch me? I don't want to watch no coward. I don't want to watch nobody who's scared and you all know for a fact I'm not scared. You all know that."

I'll take part of the blame for setting Mayweather off. Sitting next to him Tuesday in a VIP check-in room just off the lobby of the MGM Grand hotel, it seemed like a good time to get his thoughts on his main rival.

My mistake.

Instead of an answer, I got a soliloquy. Instead of a yes or no on Pacquiao, I got a disjointed diatribe on all things Mayweather.

He railed about common sense and hat sizes, doing the right thing and protecting his health. He called Bob Arum a professional liar, and suggested I was in the rival promoter's pocket.

He even questioned my patriotism for some odd reason that only his pals seemed to get.

"So, you're an American, right? I'm an American," he told me. "I was in the Olympics. I represent the red, white and blue. You know what the American writers should say? `Well, why's this guy from another country who comes over here and makes money taking it back to his country?

"Once again, I'm feeding American citizens every day. All I ask is give a little blood, give a little urine. That's a crime?"

Actually, the drug testing shouldn't even be an issue. Arum has already said Pacquiao is willing to take blood and urine tests in the weeks and months leading up to a fight with Mayweather.

But Mayweather seems obsessed with the idea Pacquiao is juicing. He seems to truly believe that Pacquiao has some sort of super human powers other fighters don't.

He's not going to change his mind. And, ultimately, that means no Pacquiao fight.

It is true that Pacquiao has grown noticeably since he first began boxing professionally in 1995 at 106 pounds. He's much more muscular and his body has filled out in the 17 years since then.

However, I reminded Mayweather that he boxed in the 1996 Olympics at 125 pounds, and will be fighting at 154 pounds against Cotto.

"Guess what? It took me years to get to here. Years," he said. "Go back and look at the pictures. First, his head is small. Then, all of a sudden, his head just grew? Come on, man. Stop! Stop this man! Come on, man! This (stuff's) so easy. Ray Charles can see this (stuff). Come on. Come on, now! Come on, man. I told you, it's basic common sense. Look at the pictures and tell me this man's head didn't get bigger? This man probably went from a seven and one-fourth to an eight. In a hat, a fitted hat. And you're going to tell me this (stuff) is all natural? Come on, man. Stop this. I'm going up in weight, but I ain't just walking through no damn fighters."

If that wasn't clear enough, Mayweather shifted into third person mode to press his point.

"Writers are saying, `Floyd is scared,'" he said. "No, Floyd cares about his family. Floyd is smart. At the end of the day, Floyd is smart. My health is important. My health is more important than money. They can take all the money and my health is more important. If they say, `Floyd, you can live a healthy life like you is right now, or you got to walk with a limp, and walk all bent over, but you can have a lot of money for the rest of your life,' I'd say, `Take it all back.'"

Guess we should give the guy a break. He's got a fight that might be tougher than most Saturday night, and he'll barely have time to relax afterward when he's due at the Las Vegas jail to begin serving what's expected to be a two-month sentence for domestic abuse.

Before I set him off he had been in a reflective mood, quietly talking about basically raising himself as a child. He spoke about how the gym was his only refuge, and how he used to put pictures from boxing magazines on his wall and stare at them at night, convinced he would one day be rich and famous, too.

He's both, now. But he's not so sure the fame part is worth it anymore.

"I want to live a normal life. I want to go to the mall by myself, but I know I can't," he said. "I do want to take a walk by myself, but I can't. There's a lot I want to do."

It's hard not to like Mayweather in these moments. Actually, I've always liked the Mayweather I've been around, a guy who is generally thoughtful and upbeat. He contributes some of his considerable fortune to those less fortunate, and he does it mostly without asking for credit. His various arrests show another side, yes, but at the age of 35 he seems to finally be outgrowing the foibles of his youth.

I still like him, even after the rant that ended with a dramatic flourish when he leaned over and offered his hand to me.

"Have a good day," he said.