Monday, 30 November 2009

Roach: Khan is in top shape

Sky Sports



Trainer Freddie Roach insists Amir Khan is in prime condition ahead of his first defence of his WBA light-welterweight title against Dmitriy Salita.

Khan's career has taken a dramatic turn since July last year, when some thought it was over after he was knocked out in the first round by Breidis Prescott.

However under Roach, Khan has returned to the ring a stronger fighter, with his defeat of Andriy Kotelnik on July 18 earning him the WBA light- welterweight title.

Shape

Roach told Sky Sports News: "He's in better shape, he is getting use to the weight and is much stronger than 140 pounds, that was the problem at 135 (pounds) - it killed him to make the weight.

"He is much more comfortable at 145, he is punching better and is 100 per cent right now."

Roach is confident that Khan can reach the successful heights of another of his charges - the multi-weight world champion Manny Pacquiao.

Source: skysports.com




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Pacman could fight Foreman - Roach

UKPA

Manny Pacquiao may fight Yuri Foreman before taking on Floyd Mayweather Jr, trainer Freddie Roach has revealed.

A super-fight appears to be on the cards next year between Pacquiao, the world's best pound-for-pound boxer, and Mayweather, the undefeated American who recently returned to the ring from retirement. Negotiations to make the fight are under way, but Roach is weighing up the option of first pitting Pacquiao against Foreman who currently holds the WBA light-middleweight belt.

"We want to fight in March and we don't really want to wait," Roach told Press Association Sport. "Mayweather doesn't want to fight in March, so we might fight for the 154 pound title in March and move up for that eighth world title."

He added: "I'm thinking about that still and it's something that I'm kicking around in my head right now.

"Yuri Foreman might be the opponent. It is a possibility, and then Mayweather in September. If they guarantee me that, we'll do that, but I need more of a commitment from Mayweather because he's not negotiating too well.

"It has to happen, and with the money they are going to make out of it, I feel it will happen. Mayweather can't make that money with anybody else."

Roach is fully confident Pacquiao's aggression will triumph over Mayweather's defensive skills in what is set to be the biggest bout of the decade.

"Offence wins fights. He (Mayweather) has a great defence, you don't score points with defence," Roach said. "I have a good game-plan for Mayweather. I have studied him hard and I know him pretty well.

"He's very difficult and he gives us problems but I think we can get to him. We can match his speed and our footwork is a little better than his so I think we can excel in those spots. Obviously it's a tough fight but I think we can get to him and break him down."

Copyright © 2009 The Press Association. All rights reserved.

Source: Google News




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Pacman as 2009 SI Sportsman of the Year?

By Eddie Alinea, Philboxing

Golfer Tiger Woods, basketball superstar Michael Jordan and pound-for-pound best boxer Manny Pacquiao have been honored together many times before.

All three, for instance, have been included in the list of the richest athletes in the world, not to mention the list of the most influential persons in the entire universe.

They also have been in the cover of the TIME Magazine.

The Filipino boxing hero, the only man to win seven world boxing championships in seven separate weight divisions, however, unlike Woods and Jordan, has yet to be named Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year.

Woods made it as SI Sportsman of the year twice – in 1996 when he swept the US National and NCAA championships and in 2000 when he won three major championships, while Jordan in 1991 when he took the NBA MVP, NBA Finals MVP and handing the Chicago Bulls to their first of a series six NBA championships.

According to two of the most respected boxing writers – Michael Marley of Boxing Examiner.com and Norm Fauenheim of 15Rounds.com – Pacquiao, a cinch for the “Fighter of the Year” accolade, should be considered.

Marley went to the extent of recommending to SI editor Terry McDonnel that such an honor be bestowed on the Filipino ring warrior, emphasizing a suggestion of Frauenheim made in an earlier column.

How fitting is Manny for this year’s honor, Marley wrote, is his athletic accomplishments that can match up those of Tiger, Kobe Bryant, Albert Pujols, LeBron James and all the usual candidates from the more mainstream sports.

Wouldn't this big jug look lovely in the Pacman Mansion? Michael Marley says hell, yeah!
Marley went further saying that “what makes Pacquiao different and so worthy of this honor are the factors that SI’s sister publication, Time Magazine, recognized by putting Manny on the cover of its Asian edition recently on the strength of his being the biggest sporting idol 97 million Filipinos have ever had, His good and charitable works including his recent aid for typhoon victims, his coming from a humble bed and never forgets it, and his modesty and his attribution of all his success to a Supreme Being is no act

“No boxer and few athletes have captured the world’s imagination the way Muhammad Ali did in his epic career,” Marley continued. “Muhammad Ali stood for important matters way beyond the thimble world of boxing.”
“Manny Pacquiao is a Muhammad Ali circa 2009 and his influence and popularity continues to grow.Sports Illustrated should slap Pacman on the cover and declare him the 2009 Sportsman of the Year. He clearly deserves it,” the Boxing Examiner writer asserted.

Frauenheim, for his part said,”Critical acclaim for Manny Pacquiao after his stoppage a couple of weeks ago of stubborn Miguel Cotto included a moment in the post-fight news conference that defined the Filipino’s ongoing emergence and pointed toward recognition that he has yet to achieve.”

He quoted Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum called him “boxing’s Tiger Woods’’ and Yahoo columnist Kevin Lole offered an amendment, saying that Tiger Woods is “golf’s Manny Pacquiao.’’

He event suggested that not only Sports Illustrated must name Pacquiao its Sportsman of the year, but, likewise, the Associated Press.

“It’s not often that any athlete can single-handedly captivate a nation. But Pacquiao has. (Roger) Federer, James, Bryant and (New Orleans quarterback Drew) Brees are all terrific athletes and ambassadors for their respective sports. But Pacquiao has become a reason to cheer, almost an island of hope, for Filipinos hit by typhoons in October and political violence during the last week, “ he said.

“I’ve heard a Pacquiao story that might be apocryphal, but it is worth repeating. Warring rebel and government troops call a cease fire when Pacquiao fights so they can watch and/or listen. After it’s over, they go back to war. If that’s even close to true, the Nobel people got the wrong guy when they picked President Barack Obama for their peace prize. It should have gone to Pacquiao,” he wrote.

Source: philboxing.com




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Hopkins shows boxing still matters, despite tragedies

By Bernard Fernandez, Philadelphia Daily News

Mark Twain once observed that reports of his death had been greatly exaggerated.

The same might be said of boxing in 2009, which is enjoying a notable rebirth after years of decline or, at the very least, stagnancy.

Ageless wonder Bernard "The Executioner" Hopkins' first ring appearance in his hometown of Philadelphia in 6 1/2 years might not represent the high point of the sport's recent upswing, but his light-heavyweight bout in the Liacouras Center against Mexican tough guy Enrique Ornelas on Wednesday could be the first of a series of falling dominoes that would send the longtime former middleweight champion into retirement in a blaze of glory.

Hopkins (49-5-1, 32 KOs), who turns 45 on Jan. 15, has an ambitious three-bout exit strategy that calls for him to not only dispose of Ornelas (29-5-0, 19 KOs), but of fellow forty-something legend Roy Jones Jr. (54-5-0, 40 KOs) on March 13, and then to win the heavyweight championship sometime before the end of 2010.

The 6-1, 175-pound Hopkins, who ruled the middleweight division for 10 years and a division-record 20 defenses, almost certainly wouldn't try going all the way up to the land of WBC heavyweight champion Vitali Klitschko (38-2-0, 37 KOs) and WBO/IBF titlist Wladimir Klitschko (53-3, 47 KOs), the Ukrainian giants who go 6-7 1/2, 250 and 6-6 1/2, 240, respectively.

But newly crowned WBA heavyweight champ David "The Hayemaker" Haye (23-1-0, 21 KOs), of England, is a block of wood that might be more reasonably whittled down. Haye, who won his title on a majority decision over 7-foot, 316-pound Russian Nicolay Valuev on Nov. 7 in Nuremberg, Germany, is 6-3 and weighed 217 pounds for that fight.

A proposed matchup of Hopkins and Haye is feasible, and perhaps even likely, as both are promoted by Golden Boy Promotions.

"I will win [against Ornelas] and I will beat Roy Jones Jr., then I will become heavyweight champion in 2010," said Hopkins, who ranks with Archie Moore and George Foreman as the finest over-40 fighters ever.

The problem for Hopkins in his most recent Philly fight - an eighth-round stoppage of Morrade Hakkar on March 29, 2003, at the Wachovia Spectrum - was that the tickets were overpriced ($500 ringside) for this market and Hakkar was an undeserving No. 1 contender who fought scared. That should not be the case Wednesday, with tickets for the Versus-televised matchup more affordably priced (from $20 to $200) and Ornelas vowing to do all he can to become the first man ever to defeat B-Hop inside the distance.

"He's a tough, proud Mexican, and I say that with respect," Hopkins said of Ornelas. "Everybody knows what a true Mexican fighter brings to the table. They fight with pride, they fight with guts. It's in their DNA."

But ticket sales for Hopkins-Ornelas could be adversely affected by what happened to Mexican-born, Chicago-based super bantamweight Francisco Rodriguez, who suffered a brain bleed in his Nov. 20 bout with North Philadelphia's Teon Kennedy at the Blue Horizon. Rodriguez fought valiantly, but he was stopped in 10 rounds in his bid to win the vacant USBA 122-pound championship. He collapsed shortly after the bout and, with no discernible brain activity, was unplugged from the machine that kept him breathing on Nov. 22.

There are always repercussions about the ever-present dangers of boxing whenever there is a ring-related death, and the passing of Rodriguez - father of a 5-month-old daughter - is no different. He became the first fighter in 31 years to die as the result of injuries incurred in a bout in Philadelphia, and his death occurred only 10 days and a few blocks away from where Hopkins-Ornelas will take place.

Boxing's status as a mainstream sport took major hits in 1962, when Emile Griffith bludgeoned Benny "Kid" Paret past the point of no return, and in 1982, when Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini put Duk-Koo Kim down and out for a permanent count.

Rodriguez' death is not nearly so high-profile as those of Paret and Kim, but it does strike much closer to home in this city, and it raises familiar questions as to whether boxing still has a place in a civilized society.

It also comes amid a flurry of positive news for the beleaguered fight game, which has withstood past tragedies. In what can only be described as a very good year, the Floyd Mayweather Jr.-Juan Manuel Marquez bout posted big pay-per-view numbers, Manny Pacquiao-Miguel Cotto did even better and, recession or not, HBO officials are prepared to break the bank for Pacquiao-Mayweather in 2010.

"The money we are talking about is astronomical," said HBO Sports president Ross Greenburg. "This fight has to happen. This should be our Super Bowl. It will break records."

Just this past Saturday night, in Quebec City, Lucian Bute knocked out Librado Andrade before a raucous, sellout crowd of 16,473. Boxing also is hugely popular in Eastern Europe, and Andre Ward, the only American gold medalist at the 2004 Athens Olympics, gave U.S. fans a reason to cheer on Nov. 21 when he upset Denmark's Mikkel Kessler in the Showtime-orchestrated "Super Six" super middleweight tournament. Ward, who claimed Kessler's WBA belt, is the first American to win in the opening round of the ambitious round-robin event.

Source: philly.com




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Manny Pacquiao vs Floyd Mayweather: Odds are 80 million to 1 that the fight happens

By Glenn Wilson, Examiner.com

News hit the media this weekend that negotiations for the Manny Pacquiao vs Floyd Mayweather fight have gone very well. Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum and Floyd Mayweather representative, Golden Boy's Richard Schaefer sat down together to try to iron out details for a Pacman-Money blockbuster.

Along with the purse for each fighter, the promoters have to find a venue for this megafight to take place. Word is that Dallas, Las Vegas and New York are the front runners.

New York would like the fight at the new Yankee Stadium. Experts believe the tax situation for that venue will keep New York from hosting the fight. Las Vegas would like to keep their name synonymous with big fights, but Dallas has the new Cowboys stadium and currently seems the best bet to get the event.

The real surprise is the lack of a surprise. That is that negotiations are going so well. The promoters think that the fight could have an $80 million purse attached to it. It would be hard to imagine either fighter turning down $40 million dollars.

The negotiations probably went this smoothly, Richard, "we're all going to be rich". Arum probably responded,"you mean we're going to be richer, see you on the press tour".

There is no way that this fight will not get done when you are talking about that kind of payday. It would seem that the only thing left up in the air would be the date. With Manny coming off of his big win against Miguel Cotto and Mayweather having beat Juan Manuel Marquez in September, it would appear a May date would be likely.

I have talked to people that don't follow boxing that have said that this is a fight they will buy. So will all the casual fans make this fight see $90 million or even, $100 million? The possibility would seem to be there for that to happen.

$80 million dollars. Man, I am in the wrong bussiness.

Source: examiner.com




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Gusi son fires back: Manny Pacquiao jerked us around

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

EDITOR'S NOTE: I took my shots at Ambassador Gusi for what I still see as emotionally charged, over the top remarks about Pinoy Idol Manny Pacquiao being a no show for the Gusi Peace Prize ceremonies. So, in the interests of being firm but fair, I am running this response from Mikko Gusi, the Ambassador's son, in toto.--MICHAEL MARLEY)

In Response to Ambassador Barry S. Gusi’s speech about forfeiting the Gusi Peace Prize to Manny Pacquiao last November 25, 2009, in Meralco Theater, during the Gusi Peace Prize Annual Ceremonies.

1. The Camp of Manny Pacquiao, including Pacquiao himself (in an actual encounter with Amb. Gusi in Penalosa Gym Mandaluyong) promised, several times that Mr. Pacquiao will be attending the ceremonies. Communication to Pacquiao’s camp was by all means well followed up.

1.a “I am truly humbled by this incredible honor and I would like to thank the Gusi family and the foundation,” said Pacquiao. There have been press releases on the internet from 411mania.net, www.saddoboxing.com, pacman.craveonline.com, boxinginsider.com and other websites quoting Pacquiao’s affirmation in accepting the award.

1.b Aside from the Awards Night itself, Wednesday evening, There was a Monday Malacanan Luncheon and Presscon Dinner, and a Tuesday Peninsula Welcome Dinner. He didn’t show up despite his camp faxed a list of guests to attend the welcome dinner in Peninsula and despite the well followed up communication with Pacquiao’s camp for the main awards night.

1.c Pacquiao’s Adviser, Michael Koncz volunteered to accept the award in behalf of Pacquiao. According to the bylaws of Gusi Peace Prize, Physical Presence is a MUST. The Award shall be forfeited if the laureate fails to attend the ceremony. No one is exempt from this rule.

2. To answer the speculations that Ambassador Gusi was making a strong statement against Pacquiao in an attempt to elevate the status of Gusi Peace Prize Foundation.

2.a Ambassador Gusi has his own identity. He is a former Honorary Ambassador to the Federated States of Micronesia. He is a world traveler. He has been chaiman of the Gusi Peace Prize Foundation for the past 2 decades, long before Pacquiao ever entered the picture. Even at a very young age, He belonged to a family of influence already, his father being a WWII Guerilla and a city mayor, and his mother being a Sotejo (one of the Filipino families in affluence).

2.b It wasn’t an attempt to to elevate the status of the foundation. The roster of awardees in various fields for the past years have clearly been great achievers of the world. The foundation itself is prestigious even considering Pacquiao being taken out of the roster. The Gusi friends and supporters adhere and follow the genuine cause led by Amb. Gusi.

2.c Audiences in the Meralco theater weren’t there to mainly see Pacquiao. The Filipino Audiences present were there to witness and support especially the three Philippine laureates: Lea Salonga, Amb. Preciosa Soliven and Fr. Joe Faller, as well as the 15 foreign laureates. About a third of the audience were foreigners.

3. To answer the manner by which his statement was unprofessional and unethical

3.a Ambassador Gusi may have overreacted to Pacquiao’s absence. He was hurt, upset and saddened by Pacquiao’s not showing up. He admits that only a few people know about the hard work that the Gusi Family exerts for the foundation. He is not revoking his statement. Being a sincere person, he was courageous to show his humanity. Those who know him understand completely.

3.b Ambassador Gusi admits he got mad. The present foreign laureates from other countries took time from their busy schedules to be present in the awards night. Respect begets respect.

Direct Quote (Amb. Gusi’s statements may have been mistaken for another meaning, especially among those who haven’t met him yet, except in his youtube video speech)

* “We have to boycott” Amb. Gusi reffered that Pacquiao boycotted the event, and was not engaging the crowd to boycott Pacquiao.

* “No award for the rest of his life” Pacquiao is forfeited of the Gusi Peace Prize permanently (according to foundation bylaws)

The Gusi Peace Prize Foundation’s Identity apart from Manny Pacquiao

The Gusi Peace Prize represents one of the highest honors for distinguished individuals from the four corners of the globe. In recognizing the most brilliant examples of those working toward the attainment of peace and respect for human life and dignity, the Gusi Peace Prize brings out the best of human achievements, ideals and values.

It is a charitable foundation who's main objective is to give proper recognition through the conferment of awards of excellence and distinction to individuals or groups worldwide who have distinguished themselves as brilliant exemplars of society or who contributed toward the attainment of peace and respect for human life and dignity.

2009 Gusi Peace Prize include:

Bob Filner (USA)

Madam Timi Bakatselos (GREECE)

Her Royal Hhighness Princess Fuziah Raja Uda (MALAYSIA)

Dr. Alice Chui (HONG KONG)

Professor Emil-Silvio Ciobata (ROMANIA)

Hon. Massimo Romagnoli (ITALY)

Charalambos Lambrou (CYPRUS)

Dr. Ho Son Fat (MACAU)

Manny Pacquiao (PHILIPPINES) - revoked

Natividad Mercedes Meza (PARAGUAY)

Alexey Steele (RUSSIA)

Dr. Liu Chi Chun (TAIWAN)

Ambassador Preciosa S. Soliven (PHILIPPINES)

Silvia Scherer (SWITZERLAND)

Dr. Rudiger Losch (GERMANY)

The Most Rev. Fr. Joseph A. Faller (PHILIPPINES)

Ali Nasuh Mahruki (TURKEY)

Madam Surapee Rojanavongse (THAILAND)

Lea Salonga (PHILIPPINES)

Christine M. Warnke, Ph.D. (USA)

Written with Love,

Mikko Gusi, Amb. Gusi’s son.

I hope you can help, seeing beyond the video since you never knew my father personally. As his son, and as yours, please delete your article.

My email and facebook is mikkogusi@yahoo.com

Source: examiner.com




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“Joan Guzman vs. Ali Funeka Star in, 'Enough Already with Bogus Decisions!”

By Frank Gonzalez Jr., Bragging Rights Corner

It was another black eye for boxing Saturday night in Quebec City, Canada, where South African Lightweight Ali Funeka (30-2-3, 25 KO’s) faced Joan Guzman (29-0-1, 17 KO’s) of the Dominican Republic for the vacant IBF Lightweight title.

This fight started with Guzman winning the first two rounds using a slick, aggressive approach that involved some impressive feints, great in and out movement and punches that were landing. That lasted until near the end of the second round, when a Funeka jab opened a small cut over Guzman’s right eye. From round three on, it was all Ali Funeka, who found his range and used his height to keep Guzman at the end of his jab. Guzman was a bloody mess by the fourth round, as the Funeka jab had busted up his nose and pecked away at the small cut that grew larger and bled more as the rounds progressed.

Guzman spent rounds three through 12 trying to find a way to hit Ali Funeka but had very little success. Funeka jabbed like a maestro and dominated the action all the way to the finish. If ever a boxing match looked easy to score, this was it. Yet two of the Official Judges saw the fight as a Draw. Funeka had outclassed a bloody faced Guzman for 10 out of 12 rounds.

Guzman had to be a bit rusty, since he hadn’t fought in almost a year and hadn’t done much in the last couple of seasons. Actually, I don’t understand how Guzman even qualified for a shot at a title.

From round three on, Guzman missed often, got tagged plenty and grew more frustrated as the fight wore on. Guzman changed his tactics a bit and gave a good effort but the good big man with the hammering jab was too much for the shorter Guzman. Ali Funeka showed good footwork and timing, often countering Guzman’s misses with clean shots. A few times, I thought Guzman was going to get dropped but he held on—literally and finally opted to fight in close, where he might negate some of Funeka’s long armed offense. But that didn’t work too well either, as Funeka was simply the better boxer Saturday night.

Funeka was able to neutralize Guzman’s aggressive offense and control the tempo of the fight from rounds three until the final bell. When it was over, the two Canadian Judges scored it the same; 114-114. The American Judge had it closer to reality at 116-112 for Funeka. The result was a Majority Draw.

Whoever was paying the Canadian Judges didn’t want Ali Funeka to be their new “Champ.” You have to wonder why the IBF even sanctioned this fight. A blind person could see that Funeka won this fight by a landslide. A “bad decision” was how HBO’s Harold Lederman generously described it.

If the IBF didn’t want Funeka to pay them dues for owning their strap, why did they let even him fight for it? Joan Guzman is a crafty boxer who’s shown some quality in the past but hasn’t really had his head in the game lately for whatever reasons. I don’t see how he even qualified to fight for a title based on what little he’s done lately. Guzman beat a fading Jorge Barrios back in 2006, won a decision over Humberto Soto in 2007 and won another 12 rounder over a little known opponent named Ameth Diaz in 2008. He was supposed to fight Nate Campbell last year but came in overweight. The fight was cancelled from Guzman’s end and even after Campbell said he’d accept the fight with Guzman being overweight, Guzman wasn’t interested. After taking that career path, Joan Guzman gets a shot at the IBF Lightweight title?

At least Funeka has fought two name brand fighters in his last two outings and has built a good momentum in the process.

It’s unlikely the Canadian Judges will ever be held to account for their incompetence, corruption or both. This bogus officiating saw Ali Funeka robbed of a title he really won. It makes Guzman look bad too since that Draw on his record is really a loss. The result of this fight is false and gives the impression that someone was protecting Guzman’s undefeated status Saturday night in Canada. Intelligent fans are insulted for being treated like fools who’ll accept whatever nonsense they throw at us and the sport suffers more criticism for allowing corrupt officiating to go unchecked. I don’t understand how the boxing commissions can claim any legitimacy when they allow Official Judges to get away with ‘stealing’ from fighters right in front of the whole world.

And its not just Canadian Judges or American or German Judges. It’s the same business all over the world. There are a lot of good things about boxing but there is a lot wrong with the crooked way it is administered. There’s nothing encouraging about following a sport that you can’t trust for honest competition and officiating. If anyone is hurting boxing, it’s all these crooked Official Judges. Send letters or emails to the IBF and let them know that we do not approve of the crooked decision that saw Funeka robbed of his victory. We all know boxing is more business than sport but good businesses do well because they build a good client base. Bad businesses ultimately fail because no one wants to buy what they’re selling. Pro Boxing only exists because of us—the fans who keep them in business. They know that. Enough is enough already! The head of the IBF should overturn this hideous result immediately. It’s garbage like this—that’s killing the legitimacy of boxing.

Source: braggingrightscorner.com




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Funeka robbed BOLO for Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel

By Brad Cooney, 8CountNews

Ringside judges Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel both should be banned from boxing, and should never be allowed within 5 miles of a scoring table ever again. Both men scored the Ali Funeka vs Joan Guzman fight 114/114, scores that are so ridiculous that words can't describe it. Funeka busted up Guzman for 10 of the 12 rounds, and appeared by anyone with two functioning eyes to be cruising to a lopsided unanimous decision and world title victory. Judge Joseph Pasquale scored the bout 116/112 for Funeka, the only one that remotely came close to scoring the fight correctly.

Time and time again the sport of boxing has to endure complete incompetence by either corrupt judges, or judges that are too stupid to be allowed to sit ringside. These fighters train their hearts out, fighting is how they pay their bills. It's a crying shame that it takes two idiots like Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel to squash the dreams of a warrior from South Africa named Ali Funeka. What in the world were these two guys looking at? Both judges should be required to sit down in front of a 57 inch television screen with a boxing commission behind them, and have to watch this fight all over again, and then made to explain to each commisioner how they arrived at 114/114 scores.

Both of these judges need to be immediately stripped of their judging privileges, and banned from the sport. This has gone on too many times now. There are too many great fighters that are being robbed by people who never even laced up a glove that are either corrupt, or just plain stupid. We do not know which category these two clowns are in yet, but it's either they are corrupt, or they are not intelligent enough to correctly score a boxing match.

Promoter Gary Shaw was screaming in the ring, and rightfully so I might add. HBO's Max Kellerman who usually does a stand up job with the microphone, in my opinion should have given Shaw a few seconds to speak his peace on national television. The judges should have been publicly called out, and Shaw probably was going to do it, or would have come close to doing it.

HBO needs to do what's right here and immediately grant Funeka a nationally televised rematch against Guzman. Shaw did the right thing by praising Guzman's heart, and didn't vent his frustrations at the fighter. Guzman knows that he was given a gift. Guzman did fight hard, it was just that he was beaten fair and square by a better fighter. The look on Funeka's face was hard to watch. A look of utter shock, and confusion came across the fighters face as the scores were read. Once again, judges, (if you want to call them that) stink up the sport, and give it yet one more black eye. Way to go Mr Davis, way to go Mr Roussel, good looking out for boxing. Thanks for doing more damage to the sports credibility. Thanks for running more fans away from boxing. I am sure UFC owner Dana White will gladly welcome the fans people like two drive away from our sport.

Source: 8countnews.com




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Gary Shaw: "Funeka got screwed and he didn't even get kissed"

East Side Boxing

QUÉBEC CITY (November 29, 2009) -- ALI FUNEKA. He came. He saw. He conquered. And then he got hosed . . . by two International Boxing Federation (IBF) judges, Saturday night at the Pepsi Coliseum in Québec City, Québec, Canada. Top-rated lightweight contender Funeka, who battered undefeated two-division world champion Joan Guzman from pillar to post during their 12-round rumble for the vacant IBF lightweight title, received a Royal Canadian Mounting, coming away with a Majority Draw. Joseph Pasquale scored it 116-112 for Funeka while judges Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel scored it 114-114. Harold Lederman, HBO's unofficial judge, also had Funeka winning by a comfortable margin.

"Let me put it to you this way, Ali got screwed and he didn't even get kissed," said an irate GARY SHAW, Funeka's co-promoter, who watched the fight from ringside. "Ali got robbed. As one reporter told me, '...this decision was so bad it made the Diaz-Malignaggi decision look legitimate.' This may be the worst decision since Lewis-Holyfield I and it needs to be addressed with a formal investigation by the IBF and Interpol. I implore the Promoters Association to issue a formal statement in support of such an investigation. At the very least, the IBF should make Funeka its interim lightweight champion so that no matter who he fights next, it's world title fight. We must stop robbing fighters, sending them home with nothing but shattered dreams instead of the rewards they earned in the ring.."

That is the consensus of spectators, viewers, media and the HBO Boxing After Dark broadcast team which broadcast the fight live. A decision that was "...curious and absurd," said HBO Boxing After Dark blow-by-blow announcer Bob Papa at the end of the telecast.

HBO WILL REPLAY THE FIGHT THIS WEEK! SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30 and TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1:
HBO: Nov. 29 (8:45 a.m. ET/PT) & Nov. 30 (11:40 p.m. ET/PT)
HBO2: Nov. 29 (6:15 p.m. ET /PT) & Dec. 1 (11:55 p.m. ET/PT)

Source: eastsideboxing.com




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Sunday, 29 November 2009

Video: "They didn't ask your promoter, they asked you." - Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Boxing News World



Credit to Antivocalbattles2




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Funeka denied in convincing victory over Dominican Joan Guzman

Dominican Today

Quebec.– South Africa's Ali Funeka was denied what seemed a convincing victory over Dominican Joan Guzman when their vacant IBF lightweight world title fight was scored a majority draw in Quebec City, Canada.

Funeka, 31, looked to have comprehensively out-boxed former two-time world champion Guzman, 33, over 12 rounds at the Pepsi Coliseum only to get the verdict from one of the three judges.

American Joe Pasquale gave the fight 116-112 to the South African but to even Guzman's apparent surprise, Canadian judges Benoit Roussel and Alan Davis both scored it a 114-114 draw and referee Jean-Guy Brousseau raised both fighters' hands as the contest was declared a majority draw.

The third draw of his professional career, Funeka moved to 30-2-3 (25 KOs) as a result while Guzman stayed undefeated at 29-0-1 (17 KOs).

Guzman, a former WBO champion at super bantamweight and super featherweight who vacated both titles, had been fighting for only the second time since relinquishing the latter title in 2007. Yet the New York-based 33-year-old got off to the more aggressive start against the rangy, 6ft 1ins Funeka.

Source: dominicantoday.com




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AMIR KHAN: I'M READY FOR MARQUEZ

By Nick Parkinson, Daily Star

AMIR KHAN wants to upset Ricky Hatton’s comeback plans by getting in first to face Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez next year.

Khan makes the fi rst defence of his WBA light-welterweight title against New Yorker Dmitriy Salita in Newcastle on Saturday.

It is believed to be the fi rst world title fight between a muslim and an orthodox jew.

But next year, the Bolton boxer intends to launch his career in the States, where he already prepares for his bouts in Los Angeles with the world’s leading trainer Freddie Roach.

And Khan, 22, sees former world featherweight, super-featherweight and light-weight world champion Marquez as the ideal opponent for an American debut.

Marquez, 36, has been linked to a fight against Hatton next summer and the Manchester hero’s team has already spoken to the Mexican’s representatives about a possible clash.

Hatton, 31, has not boxed since being flattened by Khan’s gym-mate Manny Pacquiao.

But Khan has emerged as a threat to Hatton’s comeback plans by declaring his intention to fight Marquez after his Salita scrap.

He said: “I just want to get this fi ght over with, have a holiday, then see where we go from there.

“Marcos Maidana will be the next mandatory challenger if I beat Salita.

“My boxing’s getting better and better and my training’s getting tougher. My mission is to fight people like Marquez. It would be tough for Ricky to come straight back to fight Marquez.

“My dream is to fi ght in the States. I’m 23 next year and that’s the right time to go.

“I don’t want to go there too late. I think Joe Calzaghe and Ricky Hatton left it a bit late but I want to go early and take it smoothly.

“My promoter Frank Warren has picked the right fi ghts for me so far.”

Khan has worked with Warren since winning a silver medal at the 2004 Olympics aged 17.

And Warren agrees Khan is ready for his American dream – and that Khan-Marquez would be a better fight than Hatton-Marquez.

He said: “Without a doubt Amir against Marquez is a better fi ght than Hatton against Marquez.

“This is a mandatory defence against Salita. It is a fi ght that has been forced upon us. But this is a fi ght Amir needs, to take him where he wants to be.

“If he does win this he will go on to some bigger and better things. He can go on to achieve what Manny Pacquiao has done and also become one of the most successful-ever British fighters.

“I agree with Amir – every good fi ghter wants to go to America to fi ght in Las Vegas and Madison Square Garden.

“But if Amir does have a fi ght or two next year in the States, it’s important he goes out there with a reputation that will generate a big gate and income.”

Roach, who successfully predicted Pacquiao would KO Hatton and Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto earlier this month, expects Khan to stop Salita.

He said: “I have a lot of confi dence in my fighters because I know where they’re at.

“Amir will knock this guy out somewhere along the way. We’re working hard.

“Amir’s getting better and better and becoming a more complete fighter.”

Source: dailystar.co.uk




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Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr. superfight belongs in Cowboys Stadium

By Matthew Aguilar, El Paso Times

With a pair of pay-per-view fights drawing more than a million buys in 2009, boxing is enjoying a spike in popularity that it hasn't seen since Mike Tyson ruled the heavyweight division 20 years ago.

The sport's resurgence can be traced directly to the star attractions of those two successful PPV events -- Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. And it won't be long now before "Pac-Man" and "Money" square off in a proposed May 1, 2010, showdown that is all but guaranteed to smash previous PPV records and perhaps usher in a new era in boxing.

This is an unprecedented time in boxing. It is on the precipice of becoming important again. And the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight will dictate whether it gets there.

So why not make it as big as it can be?

A statement

While Las Vegas will always be boxing's capital, Pacquiao-Mayweather requires a grand stage if it hopes to catapult the sweet science back into the mainstream. And the new billion-dollar Dallas Cowboys Stadium is that grand stage.

Cowboys Stadium reportedly is a candidate to host Pacquiao-Mayweather, along with a proposed temporary 30,000 seat stadium on the Vegas Strip, the new Yankee Stadium, CitiField -- the new New York Mets stadium -- and the Superdome in New Orleans.

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum of Top Rank already has said that Yankee Stadium and Mets Stadium are out for tax reasons. The Superdome is dated. And the temporary stadium proposal in Vegas fails to accommodate one major, undeniable possibility: rain.

The venue that makes the most sense is Cowboys Stadium.

It seats more than 100,000. It has the largest big-screen television on earth, making every seat in the house a good one. It has a retractable roof -- making the weather a non-factor. And it sits in Texas -- a state that is wildly passionate about its boxing.

Whether it's Oscar De La Hoya drawing 47,000 people to the Sun Bowl in El Paso or Julio Cesar Chavez and Pernell Whitaker drawing 65,000 to the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas supports major boxing events.

Arum is well aware of the Lone Star State's passionate, knowledgeable, predominantly Hispanic boxing fans. He saw it first hand with De La Hoya's appearance in the Sun Bowl. And with the Texas pay-per-view receipts that he counts.

Imagine the state's support of a monster event like Pacquiao-Mayweather.

If the point is to make this showdown the pugilistic equivalent of the World Series, NBA Finals and Super Bowl -- then it needs to be in Cowboys Stadium.

Only option

With the help of Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, the money making potential and hype for this fight would be unprecedented. The entities that have ignored boxing for years -- the television networks, the national magazines and newspapers, the corporate sponsors -- would be forced to pay attention and recognize boxing as a renewed force.

And while Pacquiao-Mayweather always could end up at the MGM Grand or Mandalay Bay, it simply would be another big fight weekend in Vegas. In Dallas, it would be something never before seen.

Now that's making a statement.

Meanwhile, Vegas wouldn't be threatened. It will always be "Fight Town." It even would benefit if Pacquiao-Mayweather achieved the expected success in Cowboys Stadium, as it would energize the entire sport.

They say everything is bigger in Texas. Wouldn't it make sense, then, to put perhaps the biggest, richest fight of all time in Texas?

If the sport really wanted to capitalize on the momentum, and re-establish itself as a force, this is its chance. If it really wanted to make a statement, then Cowboys Stadium is the only option.

Matthew Aguilar may be reached at maguilarnew@yahoo.com

Source: elpasotimes.com




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Koki Kameda outboxes Daisuke Naito to claim WBC flyweight title

Bad Left Hook

Koki Kameda put the final stamp on a busy, eventful and exciting weekend of boxing by defeating rival Daisuke Naito in Saitama, Japan, taking Naito's WBC flyweight title, staying undefeated, and almost surely silencing some of his critics.

Kameda (22-0, 14 KO) won by unanimous decision. Scores were 116-112, 117-111 and 117-111. Bad Left Hook scored it 116-112 for the young challenger, who used speed, accurate punching, and boxing class to topple Naito.

For Naito (35-3-3, 22 KO), this was no big time fall from grace. In fact, Naito looked no older today than he has in his other recent fights. At 35, he's slowing down. That's natural. But he's still a world-class fighter at 112 pounds, and proved that.

This was less a show that Naito was too old than it was a passing of the torch in a lot of ways. Kameda is the real deal. His counter punching was outstanding, he stayed controlled the entire fight, and unlike the ferocious killer Kameda we've seen before, he recognized that Naito wasn't one of those slugs he'd sparked in the past. Despite any out of the ring trash talk, Kameda clearly respected Naito as a fighter.

It's a terrific win for Kameda, as it fully legitimizes him on the world stage. For my money, there really isn't a better flyweight out there. I think with his youth, speed, power, and the fact that he's going to get better, he's a step ahead of the rest of the division right now. It's nothing against fighters like Pongsaklek Wonjongkam, Denkaosan Kaovichit or Omar Narvaez, it's just that those guys are in their mid-30s. Kameda's an explosive fighter who coasted through 12 rounds of a fight that wasn't easy. His conditioning was superb.

By the end of the bout, Naito was tired, his nose appeared broken, and he had clearly been in a fight. Kameda barely looked any different than when he hit the ring to the sweet, sweet sounds of Survivor's "Burning Heart."

This wraps up what was an abnormally ridiculous weekend for us at BLH. We covered six cards in three days, plus watched the main event of a seventh (Molina-Honorio on Shobox). It was fun.

Some personal highlights for me from this weekend's massive slate of shows:

•Anthony Small's ludicrously bad fight with Thomas McDonagh on Friday was highlighted, in my view, by one of the many moments that neither man was throwing a punch, much less landing one. It came when Small, doing one of his "look at me entertain!" dance numbers, tripped on the ring apron, and during his fall, mule kicked the ring bell. Falling down is embarrassing enough. Falling down and kicking the bell, which makes a noise everyone hears, is truly hilarious.

•Lennox Lewis referring to Ali Funeka's tough luck on his second trip to America. The fight was in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.

•Barry McGuigan's overbearing fascination with Yassine El Maachi (11-4, 5 KO). To hear McGuigan tell it, we're looking at Prince Naseem mixed with Roy Jones Jr.

•This quote from Lucian Bute, after he knocked out Librado Andrade: "Librado Andrade is a great person. He’s a great fighter and he will stay my friend for life."

•The atmosphere at Saitama Super Arena. There are all kinds of "great atmosphere" for a big fight, but the energy from a Japanese fight or puroresu crowd is so much different than in other parts of the world.

Source: badlefthook.com




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Video: Bute vs Andrade II

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Video: Funeka vs Guzman

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Credit to hitcher809




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Bute KOs Andrade to keep IBF super middleweight belt

AFP

QUEBEC CITY — Unbeaten Lucian Bute knocked out Librado Andrade in the fourth round here to retain his International Boxing Federation super middleweight world title.

The Romanian-born Bute, who has become a hero in his adopted Canada, dropped the Mexican challenger for the first time in the fourth with a short left to the chin - sending a crowd of 16,000 into a frenzy.

Bute then connected with a left to the midriff that sent Andrade down for the count at 2:57 of the fourth.

Bute improved to 25-0 with 20 knockouts, while Andrade fell to 28-3 with 21 wins inside the distance. Bute said the knockout was just what he had in mind.

"That's what I trained for," said Bute, who wanted to erase the memory of his first fight with Andrade in October of last year. Then, Bute dominated Andrade in Montreal until the final 90 seconds, before the challenger unleashed a desperate comeback that many thought Bute was lucky to escape.

"I haven't felt that good in two years," a joyful Bute said. "Tonight you saw the real Lucian Bute."

Andrade was trying to become the first world champion from Mexico in the super middleweight division.

Bute, meanwhile, demonstrated his strength despite being the only major champion in the division snubbed for the "Super Six" promotion featuring top US and European fighters.

"Tonight was my night," he said. "Everything went as planned."

On the undercard, South Africa's Ali Funeka punished former two-division world champion Joan Guzman but emerged with only a controversial majority draw in a fight for the vacant IBF lightweight title.

One ringside judge scored it 116-112 for Funeka, while the remaining two saw it 114-114 to leave the title still vacant.

Dominican Guzman remained unbeaten with a record of 29-0-1 with 17 wins inside the distance. Funeka moved to 30-2-2 with 25 knockouts.

It was a second North American disappointment for Funeka, who took on American Nate Campbell for the IBF and World Boxing Association lightweight belts in February.

Campbell failed to make weight and was forced to give up the belts. He then beat Funeka to deny the South African's bid to claim the vacant titles.

"I travelled a long way from South Africa to prove I'm the best in the lightweight division," a frustrated Funeka said. "What can I do? I don't even know what I can say."

Copyright © 2009 AFP. All rights reserved.

Source: Google News




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Funeka robbed in world title bout

Times LIVE

East London boxer Ali Funeka smashed unbeaten Joan Guzman for the better part of 12 rounds in Canada on Saturday night, but was handed a controversial draw instead.

He was fighting for the vacant IBF lightweight crown.

Judge Joseph Pasquale scored it 116-112 in the South African’s favour, but Alan Davis and Benoit Roussel had it 114-114. No fewer than three boxing writers at ringside called the draw controversial, saying Funeka should have been given the decision over US-based Guzman, who hails from Dominican Republic.

Funeka, who lost on points to Nate Campbell in a previous bid at the same title early this year, would have been annointed South Africa’s fourth reigning IBF king, alongside Isaac Hlatshwayo (welterweight), Simphiwe Nonqayi (junior-bantamweight) and Moruti Mthalane (flyweight).

Funeka’s record now reads 30 wins (25 by KO), two losses and three draws. For Guzman, who has previously won world titles at junior-featherweight and junior-lightweight, it was the first time he had not won a professional bout. His record now stands at 29-0-1 (17 KOs).

Source: blogs.timeslive.co.za




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Naito-Kameda encounter

By Joe Koizumi, FightNews

The day has come. WBC flyweight champ Daisuke Naito (36-2-3, 22 KOs), Japan, will risk his prestigious belt against unbeaten compatriot Koki Kameda (21-0, 14 KOs) today (Sunday) in Saitama (the adjacent prefecture to Tokyo), Japan. Some 20,000 people are expected to be in attendance at the Saitama Super Arena.

The weigh-in ceremony took place yesterday at the Koreakuen Hall, where both Naito and Kameda tipped the beam at the 112-pound class limit.

This is a sort of Battle of Ages, since Naito is a 35-year-old warrior making his sixth defense, while Kameda, ex-WBA 108-pound ruler, is a still upcoming youngster, twelve years his junior at 23. The modest and soft-spoken champ is loved by everybody, while the arrogant young man’s flamboyance is hated by a great many fight fans and the general public as well. Kameda’s lack of humbleness and politeness (which are so important in this country) caused peoples’ hatred against him.

A majority of Japanese people hope Naito to win, but the fight itself seems so competitive that it may be very hard to pick up the winner before their long-anticipated encounter. The old champ lately showed his apparent wear-and-tear and decline, scoring a come-from-behind tenth-round stoppage of Tomonobu Shimizu and a hairline victory over unknown and neglected Chinese Xiong Zhao Zhong. Naito was disappointingly floored by Xiong’s roundhouse right hook when losing his equilibrium in a very tough defense this May.

The young and fresh southpaw Kameda also has a problem. He has fought just eight times in three years since he renounced the WBA light flyweight belt after keeping it against Venezuelan Juan Landaeta in December 2006. It was a grudge fight, as Kameda badly hit the deck and very barely earned a controversial decision to acquire the vacant WBA throne five months earlier. So plenty of television watchers saw Kameda lose that they made tremendously many protesting calls to TBS TV and the Japan Boxing Commission (JBC). But Kameda, in their rematch, utilized his previously unseen footwork to clearly outscore the puzzed lefty Landaeta.

Naito is well-known by his unorthodox way of fighting, ducking low, sidestepping awkwardly and throwing punches from unpredictable angles. Naito, however, has recently forfeited his potential trickiness to be simply an old soldier. We cannot see how strong Kameda is, as he hasn’t fought any competitive opponents. Busily moving between Japan and Mexico, Kameda reportedly keeps training and improving, but his improvement hasn’t been proven as he easily defeated only over matched opponents such as Irfan Ogah, Salvador Montes, Humberto Pool, et al.

It will be telecast nationwide in Japan tonight, as the public pay attentions to this sensational contest presented by Miyata Promotions.

Source: fightnews.com



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DON'T LET RICKY HATTON FIGHT AGAIN

By Steve Lillis, News of the World

AMIR KHAN wants to ambush Ricky Hatton's comeback fight by getting his fists on Juan Manuel Marquez before his pal.

WBA light-welterweight champion Khan knows that defeating the Mexican superstar will help make him the next face of boxing, but it could cause a rift with 'The Hitman'.

Khan, 22, makes the first defence of his world crown against New Yorker Dmitry Salita at Newcastle's Metro FM Arena on Saturday, and will then turn his attention to the three-weight world champion.

Hatton is in talks to box Marquez next summer, but Khan's promoter Frank Warren dismisses that fight.

He told Sport of the World: "Hatton can get fit, lose weight but cannot avoid shots any more.

"He should be prevented from boxing anyone, let alone Marquez."

Concerns

Khan's gym-mate Manny Pacquiao brutally knocked out Hatton in May, and there are understandable concerns about him boxing again.

Khan told Hatton to set his sights lower than Marquez, adding: "I thought Ricky might come back and have one easy fight just to get rid of the flashbacks. Fighting Marquez straightaway will be tough.

"It is my mission to fight men like Marquez and that would be my dream fight in America.

"I think he is made for my style and if I beat Marquez, it would make my name a lot bigger and people will start knowing who Amir Khan is in the States."

Khan's desire to fight in America has led to speculation that he might quit Warren's stable, despite the promoter resurrecting his career after his sole loss to Breidis Prescott 15 months ago and making him a millionaire.

American promoters Golden Boy were smooching up to Khan recently in Las Vegas and Bob Arum was gushing in his praise.

Khan has also followed the lead of Hatton and formed his own promotional company, and plans to invest in upcoming boxers.

He says: "I will see how this fight goes and then we will see where we are.

"I think Joe Calzaghe and Ricky Hatton left it a bit late going to America but I want to go early, take it smoothly and pick the right fights."

Khan moved his training base to Freddie Roach's Wild Card gym in Hollywood after his 54-second loss to Colombian KO king Prescott.

Training in Tinseltown has been far from glamorous, but the sparring partners have been A-listers like Pacquiao and outrageously talented 17-year-old sensation Jose Benavidez.

Most nights Khan has gone to bed in agony having been involved in some of the hardest training imaginable under Roach and hard-line conditioner Alex Ariza.

Limit

Khan, who is considering living in Los Angeles permanently, said: "I go back to the apartment tired and suffering from muscle fatigue because I push myself to the limit.

KHAN: Wants to crack the States"I am one of those fighters who treat sparring sessions like a fight and give my all. I'm not one who takes it easy and just gets through the rounds.

"It doesn't matter if I am sparring ten or 12 rounds, I will push myself so much that when I finish sparring I can't punch any more and I'm totally finished."

Roach admits: "We spar really hard and we fight. The only rule in my gym is if you hurt somebody, you don't finish them."

Salita, 27, is unbeaten in 31 fights - the only blemish a draw with Ramon Montana when the Jewish slugger was floored twice in the first round.

And although he is Khan's mandatory contender, Ukraine-born Salita hasn't beaten a world-class fighter and a quick-fire Khan win is possible.

Roach says: "Salita doesn't do anything special, but is good all round. I think our speed and power will be too much."

* Khan v Salita is live and in high definition on Sky Box Office on Saturday 5 December. To order the fight call: 08442 410 888. For tickets visit: http://www.metroradioarena.com/

Source: newsoftheworld.co.uk




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The Manny Pacquiao Wars Part III: The Perez Menace

By Steve Lewis, BoxingNews24.com

This final part of this trilogy will be a “compare & contrast,” involving the predictions of a group previously mentioned in the 1st and 2nd installments of this trilogy: those who like to stir the pot up just to get a reaction from the Pacquiao fan base.

To reiterate, there are Monday Morning Quarterbacks who “player hate,” and player haters who “Monday morning quarterback,” but there are those who do both for the sake of getting a reaction, and consequently, to garner attention for themselves. There are lots of them out there, especially on the internet. So for purposes of brevity, I will be referring to these types, generically speaking, as the “Perez Menace,” in honor of a particular Pacman Nation favorite, known for his adept writing and Nostradamus-like prognosticating skills.

So Nostradmus-like indeed, that everyone should be running to their local bookie or going down to the sports book at the casinos based on what he and his similar thinking compatriots say. Let us take some past examples:

Prior to Pacquiao vs. Oscar De La Hoya:

“You know what’s going to happen, you just know it; Pacquiao is going to be too small, too over his head in trying to deal with the much bigger De La Hoya and is going to get taken apart by the surgeon-like shots from De La Hoya.”

“I go to say that I don’t see Pacquiao having much, if any, chance at beating De La Hoya. The added weight that Pacquiao has put on his small frame, some 12 pounds, has had the effect of making him slower, less mobile than he was at the lighter weight classes. At the same time, he remains what he was before – namely a small, 5′6″ fighter, trying to mix it up with a much bigger 5′11″ De La Hoya.”

“As a Mexican, I always wanted to see Pacquiao get his backside handed to him, but not like this. This fight is a joke and I personally feel ashamed to see De La Hoya, 35, resorting to taking a fight with a fighter so much smaller than him like Pacquiao. I could excuse De La Hoya for taking a fighter one level above or below his junior middleweight class, but for him to take a fighter three divisions below him at lightweight is just wrong.”

After the De la Hoya fight:

Oscar quits on his stool – Pacquiao wins TKO8!

Prior to Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton:

“If people think that Manny Pacquiao (48-3-2, 36 KOs) is going to be the next “Golden Boy,” then I say they’re going to be sadly disappointed when Pacquiao is knocked out by Ricky Hatton (45-1, 32 KOs) on May 2nd, at the MGM Grand, in Las Vegas, Nevada.”

“Pacquiao won’t have that same luck tomorrow night and will be facing a fighter in Hatton that is fighting at his normal weight and who will be much bigger, stronger and aggressive than any fighter that Pacquiao has ever faced before in his career.”

“This is why I agree with De La Hoya’s prediction. Hatton will be knocking Pacquiao out tomorrow night and he’s going to shock the world in the process. Right now, not too many people are picking Hatton to win against Pacquiao, but boy are they going to be wrong.”

“Hatton isn’t just going to win, I see him destroying Pacquiao with power shots and making him look like a fighter that doesn’t belong at light welterweight. In fact, Pacquiao doesn’t belong at this weight, but after tomorrow night it will be academic.”

“I got to call like I like I see, he’s going to beat Pacquiao black and blue come May 2nd.”

After the Hatton fight:

Pacquiao knocks Hatton out cold in the 2nd Round!

Prior to Pacquiao vs. Miguel Cotto:

“I see Manny Pacquiao getting the living daylights beaten out of him on November 14th by WBA welterweight champion Miguel Cotto in their fight at the MGM Grand, in Las Vegas. What we have here is a good old fashioned case of overreach on the part of Pacquiao…Okay, so Pacquiao is facing Cotto instead of a shot fighter….Well, Cotto is a little diminished from his beating at the hands of the tough Mexican Antonio Margarito last year, but he’s still fighting at around 80% of what he was in the past. That should be enough for Cotto to easily get by Pacquiao. What we have here is a case of fools gold, with Pacquiao looking better than he actually is because of his wins over Hatton and De La Hoya.”

“He’s fast but he’s no power at welterweight. Pacquiao is only strong at the smaller weights. De La Hoya said himself that Pacquiao doesn’t punch hard. I have to believe an old champion like De La Hoya. He’s a great warrior and he’s telling it like it is. Pacquiao is fast, De La Hoya says, but he doesn’t hit hard.”

“Cotto is going to take Pacquiao to the wood shed and give him a terrible beating.”

“Pacquiao is going to be physical wreck by the time Cotto’s gets through with him. You ever seen someone that was in a bad car wreck? You know, with the bloody face, sideways nose, lips all busted up and teeth littering the car. This is how I see Pacquiao ending up by the time that Cotto gets through with him next month. Oh, it will be sad to see Pacquiao beaten so badly, but it will be good for boxing. I think it will make smaller fighters like Pacquiao think twice before moving up in weight.”

After the Cotto fight:

Cotto floored twice – Pacquiao wins TKO12!

So now, this obviously knowledgable and insightful “Jimmy the Greek” of the new era has this to say about the possible megafight between Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather:

“Manny will be slaughtered by Floyd.”

Among other things.

So those from Pacman Nation, time to turn in your wagers. Just look at Mr. Nostradumus here and follow his recent trends (i.e., pick the opposite!). And if he happens to be right this time, that gives him a 25% accuracy rate in the last 4 fights. Man, the handicappers and head honchos in Vegas must be beating down his door to have him work for them!

So for those who get aggravated in Pacman Nation, as you can see, the track record speaks for itself. No need to get the proverbial panties up in a bunch. So in closing, some wise tidbits previously shared by Pacman Nation’s favorite prognosticator:

“I really hope that Pacquiao takes his loss like a man and doesn’t come up with the excuses after the fact but I just don’t see it happening that way.”

“There’s one thing that fighters need to accept is responsibility for their losses. The worse thing they can do is start coming up with the excuses after the fact.”

Hmmm…maybe somebody needs to heed their own advice and follow through accordingly.

Source: boxingnews24.com




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Saturday, 28 November 2009

Money men trade blows to hook the match-up of the millennium

The Sydney Morning Herald

Promoters see Manny Pacquiao v Floyd Mayweather as the fight that will change the sport forever, writes GREG BISHOP.

The calls started two days after Manny Pacquiao bloodied and battered Miguel Cotto to capture his record seventh title in seven weight divisions.

They came from representatives of venues across the United States, from stadiums in Los Angeles, Texas, Louisiana and New York.

All were inquiring about hosting the match the boxing world most wants to watch – the undefeated Floyd Mayweather jnr in one corner and Pacquiao in the other.

Since Pacquiao finished off Cotto with a technical knockout in the 12th round on November 14, Pacquiao's promoters at Top Rank Boxing have heard from officials of the Yankees, the Mets, the Giants and the Jets, along with representatives for Cowboys Stadium in Texas, the Staples Centre in Los Angeles and the Superdome in New Orleans.

James Carville, once an adviser to president Bill Clinton, called on behalf of Louisiana. And a group of businessmen in Las Vegas, eager to retain the top fights, has proposed building a temporary arena on the Strip that would hold 30,000 fans.

Such is the interest for a fight that remains far from guaranteed. Top Rank cannot negotiate with sites until it has completed a deal between the fighters. But that has not stopped the stadiums from lining up.

"This fight is as much sought after as any fight probably since the first between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier," said Thomas Hauser, an author and the lead boxing writer for website SecondsOut.com.

"Lewis-Tyson, which was the last fight of this magnitude on the Richter scale, was a hot potato, but nobody wanted to deal with Tyson. This is different.

"If it happens, it will be one of those events that transcends boxing."

Representatives of Pacquiao and Mayweather met last Monday in Las Vegas and, by the time they had finished lunch, they had decided not to discuss negotiations publicly. Originally, Top Rank had hoped to stage the fight on March 13, 2010. But Freddie Roach, the trainer for Pacquiao, wanted to hold a longer training camp, for 10 weeks instead of eight weeks. Now, the target date is May 1.

For Pacquiao, Top Rank is only working on a fight with Mayweather, no others.

"Nobody would tolerate anything other than this fight," Bob Arum, the chairman of Top Rank, said over breakfast last week in New York. "Any other fight would do a terrible disservice to boxing. Everybody is talking about boxing right now. And everybody is talking about this fight."

Nobody knows exactly how long negotiations between the fighters will last. But because of bad blood between Mayweather and Arum and because of the amount of money involved, the negotiations could stretch for two months, as those between Pacquiao and Oscar De La Hoya did.

Once they make the fight a reality, promoters will work on selecting the site.

Hauser cited three reasons that worked heavily against New York's Yankee Stadium: a 14per cent loss of the purse in taxes, the possibility of rain and the lack of a local fan base for the fighters.

Last week, Arum seemed most intrigued by Cowboys Stadium (seating for 111,000, no state income tax), the Superdome (he spoke highly of Carville), and the temporary arena in Las Vegas, where he lives.

Arum said the potential site for the Vegas arena, where the Frontier Casino was once situated, was already properly wired for a fight.

"Business is business, but Vegas would have to have the leg up with us, because we're Vegas people," Arum said.

"On the other hand, it's our job to grow the revenue with these fighters. And we will do that."

Arum could accomplish that by hosting the fight outside Las Vegas or in a larger stadium to help increase boxing's audience.

He could boost revenue by charging $US2000 ($2200) for ringside seats, a price last levied for the Mayweather-De La Hoya match.

Arum also wants to add new sponsors. He has said a major soft drink company and a major fast-food chain sent representatives to Pacquiao's fight against Cotto.

That fight produced at least 1.25million pay-per-view buys, a figure that is rising as more results come back, according to Top Rank. Mayweather's fight against De La Hoya registered 2.4 million buys, the most of any non-heavyweight fight.

Pacquiao and Mayweather could top that number and split more than $100million. But first they need to agree on how to divide the money.

The promoters declined to comment on Tuesday, but later Arum said Top Rank favoured a 60-40 split in favour of Pacquiao. Mayweather has previously said he wanted the divide in his favour, at 65-35.

The sides are likely to meet somewhere near 50-50, setting up the fight almost everyone wants: Mayweather, with the reach, the counterpunches and the ability to fight while moving backwards, against Pacquiao, who keeps moving up in weight and knocking out the toughest fighters around.

"Everyone wants to get this done," Arum said last week.

Source: smh.com.au




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