Friday 6 November 2009

COTTO: "I'm Completely Recovered From The Margarito Fight"

By Rick Folstad, The Sweet Science

After so many press conferences, there‘s not much left to say. All the good questions have been asked and answered. And asked again and answered again.

So what else is there? It’s late - just over a week until fight night - and if there’s a good question out there that still needs to be asked, no one has heard it. And it might be too late for second chances.

Besides, it’s not like Miguel Cotto is running for office, trying to sway undecided voters to his side just before the midnight hour. You have to figure by now, all the important questions have been asked and sides picked. Most have been asked a dozen times or more, stuff like, “How are you going to deal with Manny “PacMan” Pacquiao’s speed,?” Or, “What have you been working on in the gym?” Or, “How is your weight situation?”

Good questions, but tired questions.



Cotto is not going to convince anyone to come over to his side, not now, not when it’s this close to the Big Night. He must be tired of repeating himself. But that’s part of the fight game and Cotto will play his role in it, quietly and politely answering even the most foolish questions, the ones that have been asked a dozen times already.

So on a conference call Thursday night, just nine days before his fight, Cotto went through the drill one more time, if not to win voters, maybe to get more pay-per-view viewers.

“I plan on going home to Puerto Rico as the winner,” he said, again. “We wouldn’t have taken this fight (with a 145-pound catch weight) if we didn‘t think I‘d be at my best.”

To the many Manny supporters out there, I can promise you this: Cotto is a very confident fighter. And he seems to easily ignore the wild predictions of Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, who says his fighter will win by an early knockout.. Maybe round one.

A great trainer, Freddie is a heck of a psychologist.

Asked what he thought about Freddie’s prediction, Cotto didn’t miss a step.

“Forget about what Freddie Roach says. He’s not going to be (fighting). All he can do is train Manny the best he can. No matter what Freddie says, I have a very strong mind, but I’m not going to (play mind games) with Freddie.”

Might have been fun.

The facts of the fight are this: Cotto (34-1, 27 KOs) , of Caguas, Puerto Rico, will put his WBO welterweight title on the line when he faces Pacquiao (49-3-2, 27 KOs) of the Philippines at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on Nov. 14 (HBO, pay-per-view).

Cotto is expected to make $10 million and Pacquiao will take home about $20 million before taxes.

But the guaranteed winner in this fight is promoter Bob Arum, who handles both fighters.

“My job as a promoter is to put my fighters into those fights where they can make the most money,” he said on the conference call. “In that regard, I’ve done my job.”

In spades.

It doesn’t seem right to call this just a fight. It deserves something bigger, something better. But then you think back to other great fights - Ali and Frazier, Micky Ward and Arturo Gatti, Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo - and you realize some fights don’t need any help. They don’t need nicknames, or gimmicks, though they are calling this fight, “Firepower,” which doesn’t have the same ring to it as the “Thrilla in Manila,” or the “Rumble in the Jungle.”

While Cotto is defending his WBO belt, Pacquiao is going for his seventh title. Asked what he thought about that, Cotto again didn’t hesitate.

“If he thinks he’s going to win a seventh title, he picked the wrong fighter to do it against.”

As for Pacquiao’s legendary hand speed, Cotto wasn’t giving out any secrets, but he did say “his speed is not going to be the factor everyone thinks it’s going to be.”

Asked if he’s a better fighter since his close win over Joshua Clottey in June, Cotto said he fought nine rounds with a huge gash over his eye against a worthy opponent. How can that not make you a better fighter?

“And I won,” he said. “I learned how to deal with huge problems during a fight.”

He’ll have to deal with another huge problem on the night of the 14th.

Finally, he was asked - again - if he is the same fighter today that he was before he was stopped in a brutal, controversial fight against Antonio Margarito in July 2008. It’s his only loss.

“I’m completely recovered from the Margarito fight,“ he said.

He’d better be.

Source: thesweetscience.com



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Ricky Hatton backs David Haye to win in 'sensational fashion'

Guardian.co.uk

Ricky Hatton has backed David Haye to succeed him as the standard-bearer of British boxing by knocking Nikolai Valuev out "in sensational fashion" tomorrow night.

Haye will attempt to dethrone the 7ft WBA heavyweight champion Valuev in Nuremberg after moving up from cruiserweight a year ago.

Hatton is still undecided over his own fighting future following his brutal defeat by Manny Pacquiao earlier this year.

But in the 29-year-old Haye, the Mancunian two-weight world champion sees a fighter who can go on to become Britain's most popular boxer.

"Absolutely," he said. "The heavyweight division has always been the biggest [draw] in boxing.

"In recent years it's been a little bit quiet as far as excitement goes but David Haye is a massive introduction to the heavyweight division.

"If there's one thing you think of when it comes to David Haye, it is excitement.

"I think this is the first step on the ladder in the heavyweight division for him. I think he's going to look sensational."

Hatton added: "I think the fans are getting behind him. He had the Monte Barrett fight in London [a year ago] but he had to go abroad to win the cruiserweight titles.

"I was very fortunate that I had fight after fight in this country and in my home town, whereas David has been dotted about here and there and it's been more difficult for him to build up a fanbase.



"But I expect his fanbase to go through the roof after this fight, because I think David will prove that Britain's got a heavyweight that can really go all the way.

"He's got a fantastic fight, his second fight up at heavyweight and he's fighting a giant of a man in Valuev, who is over 7ft tall and 20-plus stone. It's an incredible feat.

"He doesn't want to take too many punches and I think the key in this fight will be the speed factor. As big as Valuev is, as tall as he is, the difference in speed is massive and I think if David boxes a very clever fight, a smart fight and keeps his chin down and boxes sensibly, I don't think Valuev will be quick enough to hit him."

Hatton believes a Haye victory can then resurrect his hopes of a clash with the Klitschko brothers, Vitali and Wladimir, who hold the WBC and IBF/WBO belts respectively.

"David packs a lot of power and I think he can do to Valuev what no one else has done and knock him out in sensational fashion," Hatton said.

"When he does that, he can sit down at the negotiating tables with the Klitschko brothers again and he's got a lot more pulling power then."

Source: guardian.co.uk



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Silverstar debut Manny Pacquiao's “Destroyer” collection

MMA Unlimited

Silverstar are keen to circulate their brand using only the most elite athletes across various extreme and combat sports. The lifestyle clothing brand have recently been seen splashed all over the UFC's Octagon on the backs of Anderson Silva, Rich Franklin, Rashad Evans, Lyoto Machida and Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira.

The company have announced a new manny Pacquaio collection as he heads into his huge pugilist clash with Miguel Cotto on the same night as UFC 105, November 14th.



Silver Star Casting Company is proud to introduce the Manny Pacquiao “Destroyer” collection to the brand. Built around Pacquiao's “Destroyer” moniker, the collection will feature a signature Manny “The Destroyer” Pacquiao tee that will be available online November 11, 2009, followed by a full streetwear collection in stores internationally in Spring 2010.

A champion in six weight classes, Pacquiao is also rated the #1 pound-for-pound boxer in the world by Ring Magazine, considered one of the world's most influential people for the year 2009 according to Time Magazine, and listed by Forbes Magazine in its annual Celebrity 100 List for 2009.

“Silver Star wanted to create a collection with one of the most admired and recognized athletes in the world,” says Silver Star owner, Luke Burrett. “Manny Pacquiao's rise to super-stardom is proof positive that hard work and perseverance thrives in the spirit of a champion.”

The addition of superstars to the brand can only help Silverstar's cause and they take the brand more global, allowing more money to filter its way back through to the sponsorship of MMA fighters.

Source: mmaunltd.com



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A glimpse at boxing history: Holmes - Snipes fight (November 6, 1981)

By Marshall N. N., BoxingNewsWorld.blogspot.com

On 6th of November 1981 at Mellon Arena in Pittsburgh, two ring gladiators Larry Holmes and Renaldo Snipes, both then undefeated, fought for the WBC world heavyweight title.

Early in the 7th round, the defending champion Holmes, who stopped Muhammad Ali in 10 rounds prior to the fight and was then looking forward to a $10 million payday against Gerry Cooney (he called the Snipes fight a tune-up), was knocked down by a perfectly timed overhand right that he didn’t see coming. He laboriously got up and miraculously survived the round and went on to stop the challenger in Round 11.

After the fight, however, Snipes complained that the champion received the benefit of a long count. “It only takes 10 seconds to win a title, but it took Larry 14 seconds to keep it. I walked out of that ring with my head high and my pride intact. Maybe it was a blessing in disguise. Not winning the title might have kept me grounded. I’ve always surrounded myself with well-rounded people. Hopefully they wouldn’t have let the victory go to my head. But you never know,” said Snipes.

Watch the fight that took place exactly 28 years ago today.









Sources of this story:
Renaldo Snipes Came this Close (The Sweet Science)
Mellon Arena Final Year
Snipes vs Holmes – Boxer recalls Walcott Bout




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Underdog role no concern for Cotto against Pacquiao

By Mark Lamport-Stokes, REUTERS

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Miguel Cotto has no qualms about being listed as the bookmakers' underdog for his WBO welterweight title defense against Filipino Manny Pacquiao in Las Vegas next week.

The Puerto Rican, who has an enviable career record of 34-1 featuring 27 knockouts, is confident his power and meticulous preparation will trump Pacquiao's speed when the fighters clash on November 14.

"I don't know anything about the betting business," Cotto said on a conference call from his training camp in Las Vegas on Thursday. "I am just here to try to bring my best every day in the gym.

"With all the work I make in my training camp, I am going to the fight to win money.

"I am here for myself, not for any kind of bet.

"I am prepared for anything Manny can bring to this fight. He has a lot of things besides his speed and I am prepared for all he can show me at this time."

Pacquiao, (49-3-2, 37 KOs), is widely viewed as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world but Cotto believes the Filipino southpaw has picked the wrong opponent for his first bout in the welterweight division.

"Manny comes from a lower weight division and if he thinks he is going to have the same power as Miguel Cotto, he is thinking pretty wrong," the Puerto Rican said.

"He has picked the wrong moment and the wrong fighter. If he thinks he is going to win against Miguel Cotto, he is pretty wrong."



RENOWNED SPEED

Cotto, who retained his WBO title with a gruelling split decision win over Ghana's Joshua Clottey in June, was confident he would be able to cope with Pacquiao's renowned speed.

"We know he has speed and style and that is why you prepare yourself to beat him," he said. "You will find out on the 14th how I am going to deal with his speed and it is not going to be the factor that everyone thinks it is."

Pacquiao cemented his status as the sport's premier fighter with a stunning second round knockout of Britain's Ricky Hatton in May to claim the IBO light welterweight crown.

Since then, he and his trainer Freddie Roach have frequently discussed the possibility of a lucrative bout with undefeated American welterweight Floyd Mayweather Jr, leaving many fans to regard the Cotto fight as a formality.

Cotto, however, was unfazed by suggestions he was being underappreciated by the Pacquiao camp.

"What they say and do doesn't concern me," the 29-year-old said.
"I know they know what they have in front of them. I know what I can do to him and he better be focused on what he is up against in Miguel Cotto.

"It's not really important what the boxing world wants to see or wants to do.

"Once I beat Manny Pacquiao on November 14, they continue their plans and do whatever they want but I am not going home without winning this fight."

(Editing by Greg Stutchbury)

© Thomson Reuters 2009

Source: reuters.com



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Video: A Free Boxing Lesson with Oscar De La Hoya

BoxingNewsWorld.blogspot.com



Source: TIME

Matsui's heroics join Asian golden age of US sport

By Jim Slater (AFP)

NEW YORK — Hideki Matsui drew criticism in his homeland for not joining the Japanese team that won the World Baseball Classic eight months ago so he could focus on preparing for the 2009 New York Yankees season.

Matsui is looking pretty smart now.

The 35-year-old designated hitter received the World Series Most Valuable Player award for leading the Yankees to their 27th Major League Baseball title with a 7-3 victory Wednesday over defending champion Philadelphia.

Matsui's achievement is part of an Asian golden age in US sport, coming in the wake of Chinese giant Yao Ming's NBA success, the first major men's golf title for an Asian man by South Korean Yang Yong-Eun at the PGA Championship and Filipino pound-for-pound king Manny Pacquiao's Stateside boxing breakthrough.

"What a great job Matsui did for us," Yankees standout Nick Swisher said. "He has been coming up clutch for us in situations all year long. He deserved that MVP trophy. There's no doubt about it."

Matsui, nicknamed "Godzilla", batted 8-for-13 (.615) with three home runs and eight runs batted in, six of them in Wednesday's triumph that gave New York a 4-2 victory in the best-of-seven final.

"He looked like he wanted it bad, didn't he?" Yankees captain Derek Jeter said. "Matsui is one of my favorite teammates. He comes ready to play every day. He's a professional."



Matsui matched a World Series record for driving in runs in a single game set by Bobby Richardson of the Yankees in 1960, but the Japanese slugger is the only one to do it under the pressure of a possible title-clinching game.

"He has been great for us in the clutch all year," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said.

But the mighty performance might have come in Matsui's sayonara swan song with the Yankees.

His four-year contract worth 52 million dollars expired with the season and Yankee general manager Brian Cashman, who praised Matsui, has made no promise for an offer for 2010.

"He has been a remarkable player," Cashman said. "When he came over from Japan, he ended with a championship. I'm glad he has got one with us too now."

Matsui wants to stay with the Yankees, saying, "I hope it works out in the end. I love New York."

While bad knees have limited Matsui to a designated hitter role rather than an outfielder spot, the Yankees are in somewhat of a tough situation when it comes to Matsui.

How do the Yankees, with baseball's biggest payroll at 201 million dollars, allow the Most Valuable Player from their first World Series triumph since 2000 leave and sign elsewhere?

Imagine how powerful Japan's Classic squad might have been with Matsui onboard. Now imagine how popular he might be with Japanese clubs much less other US major league clubs.

Matsui, who wears uniform number 55 in tribute to legend Sadaharu Oh's one-season Japan League record of 55 homers, smacked 50 homers in 2002 for the Tokyo Yomiuri Giants before making the jump to North America.

"This is what I came over here for," Matsui said through a translator. "Winning the championship means everything to me."

Copyright © 2009 AFP.

Source: Google News



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The Meaning of Manny

By Howard Chua-Eoan and Ishaan Tharoor, TIME




Manny Pacquiao is going through his throwing motion at Yankee Stadium. With easy deliberation, he shows off the form he says he perfected playing elementary school baseball in the dirt-poor southern Philippines before boxing took him over completely. His shoulder slips back, his torso pitches smoothly forward, left hand and arm torquing an imaginary ball into the depths of the air-conditioned players' cafeteria, where he is waiting to take the field for an announcement. The diamond stud in his ear catches the light.

The baseball pose has a balletic grace at odds with the savage power that the best pound-for-pound professional boxer on earth exhibits in the ring. "Best pound-for-pound" is the mantra intoned with every story about Pacquiao. It sounds strange because he has never been bound by the laws of physics. In the past eight years, he has risen through six weight divisions to win just as many world championships. At the stadium, his promoters have arranged for the Filipino to make official his plan to fight Puerto Rico's Miguel Cotto for a seventh title, the welterweight, which has a maximum limit of 147 lb. (67 kg). That is a 40-lb. swing up from the 106 lb. Pacquiao weighed at the start of his career.

He carried increased poundage through his past two jaw-droppingly awesome victories: demolishing Oscar De La Hoya in December 2008 and knocking out Ricky Hatton in two rounds in May. This is how Pacquiao's coach Freddie Roach describes his skill: "He'll throw a combination at you. You'll think he's done, but then he'll keep pounding you. And there's not a dense hardness to his punch. It just jumps on you. It explodes." Roach, who has worked with boxing luminaries such as De La Hoya and Mike Tyson, offers a little poetry when he recalls the time in 2001 when Pacquiao first came into his gym. "I just did one round with mitts with him, and I thought, 'Man, can this motherf______ fight.'"

At Yankee Stadium on this September day, the Puerto Ricans who have come out to cheer Cotto are jeering Pacquiao, but for all that physics matters, the Filipino is the favorite for the Nov. 14 Las Vegas bout. His payday, it is said, will be about $18 million. Back in the Philippines, you can pun on Pacquiao with pakyaw — a verb, pronounced the same way, that means "to monopolize, to corner the market, to take everything at wholesale in order to maximize profit." Pacquiao knows he wants more than he has, more than boxing can give. At the stadium, he retails anecdotes from his life to a couple of Filipinos and repeats what seems to be both an assertion and a lesson learned. "'Di ako bobo," he says in Tagalog. "'Di ako bobo." "I'm not stupid."

A Face for the Selfless

Manny Pacquiao, now 30, is the latest savior of boxing, a fighter with enough charisma, intelligence and backstory to help rescue a sport lost in the labyrinth of pay-per-view. Global brands like Nike want him in their ads. He made the TIME 100 list this year. West Coast baseball teams invite him to throw out the first pitch in order to attract the Filipino-American community. He has even become an object of desire: ESPN the Magazine has his naked torso in its Body Issue, which explores the engineering of several athletic physiques.

In the Philippines, Pacquiao is a demigod. The claim goes that when his fights are broadcast live, the crime rate plummets because everyone in the country is glued to a screen. His private life as well as the ins and outs and ups and downs of his training regimen are tabloid fodder; his much brooded political ambitions are a dilemma many Filipinos feel as existentially as Hamlet's soliloquy: To be or not to be ... a Congressman?

Pacquiao has a myth of origin equal to that of any Greek or Roman hero. Aban-doned by his father and brought up by a tough-as-nails mother, the poor boy who loves to box is rejected by a local squad but then journeys many islands away, to the country's metropolis, Manila, to make it big. Then he leaves the Philippines to make it even bigger, conquering the world again and again to bring back riches to share with his family and friends. Now, in his hometown of General Santos City on the island of Mindanao, he and his family own commercial buildings, a convenience store, cafés and a souvenir shop that sells everything from DVDs of his fights to T-shirts to bobblehead dolls. In Manila, his children attend one of the most exclusive and expensive private schools. He is generous to a fault, spending thousands of dollars a day feeding and entertaining guests. For his last fight, he distributed $800,000 in tickets to friends.

The broad outlines of his history — his legend — have made the boxer a projection of the migrant dreams of the many Filipinos who leave home and country for work. About 10% of the Philippines' GDP is money remitted from overseas Filipinos: nurses, nannies, sailors, singers, doctors, cooks, X-ray technicians, mail-order brides, construction workers, prostitutes, priests, nuns. Some spend decades abroad, away from the ones they love, for the sake of the ones they love. Everyone in the Philippines knows a person who has made the sacrifice or is making it. Pacquiao gives that multitude a champion's face of selflessness: the winner who takes all and gives to all. "To live in the Philippines is to live in a world of uncertainty and hardship," says Nick Giongco, who covers Pacquiao for the daily Manila Bulletin. "Filipinos are dreamers. They like fantasy. And what is more of a fantasy than Manny Pacquiao?"

A movie has been made of his life. But Pacquiao says the full details of that life couldn't possibly fit into just one film. There are things to clear up. For one, he did not leave ramshackle General Santos City, a camp of tin and thatch, to pursue boxing, even though he did love the sport. He left home at 14 because his mother Dionisia, who did odd jobs and factory work and hawked vegetables by roadsides, wasn't really making enough to feed her six children. He had to go off and earn money elsewhere, doing anything to relieve the burden on his mother — even if she wanted him by her side. As it was, he was often absent from school because the family needed him to help sell snacks and trinkets on the potholed lanes where nearly naked children with matted hair still chase rusting bicycle wheels for fun. Pacquiao liked school, correcting and grading his classmates' homework. He "never cheated during a quiz — he wouldn't try to look sideways, this way or that," says one of his schoolteachers from the Saavedra Saway Elementary School. A decent education, however, requires several years and a lot of money. The Pacquiaos had trouble accumulating even a little.

And so young Manny plotted his trip in secret. Dionisia Pacquiao is slender and slight, like her son, and has his easy smile. "Manny has a strong mind and a strong body," she says. "Just like his mother. Except I am stronger." But she was heartbroken when he left for Manila. Dionisia recalls receiving a letter from him "saying how sorry he was [for leaving home] ... I was very, very sad. But after a while, I accepted his destiny."

From Zero to Hero

Pacquiao was not one to pick quarrels. But he did not shy away when friends got into free-for-alls: what he calls, with an almost pop-eyed relish, bukbukan — unrestrained fistfighting. He loved boxing. Dionisia recalls an 8-year-old Manny wrapping towels around his hands to mimic gloves. Rey Golingan, a General Santos City businessman, remembers the young Pacquiao attending the weekly bouts in the main plaza. "Manny was always there at the fights, waiting to be paired with someone," says Golingan. But his consistency wasn't matched by any obvious talent. "Honestly, I didn't see any potential in Manny. He was just another kid who knew if he won a few fights he might get 100 pesos [less than $3]," says Golingan. "He was always very courageous and had natural speed and power. But he wasn't a clever boxer ... He was [always] flailing around."

When he got to Manila, Pacquiao first worked as a laborer. His enthusiasm for boxing, however, had him returning to the ring, fighting in run-for-cover, barely legal matches pulled together in one of Manila's cramped suburbs. He lingers over the names of boxers he knew who died after such fights, then moves on. The death of a friend reportedly spurred Pacquiao to turn professional.

His 1995 pro debut on a boxing show — which he won by decision — made him a local star. After that, energy alone seemed to carry him through six inconsistent years, a period in which he still managed to win two world titles in fights in Southeast Asia. Finally, a Cinderella-like twist got him noticed in the U.S. market. In June 2001, Pacquiao stepped in as a last-minute replacement at a fight in Las Vegas to win the IBF super-bantamweight title by TKO. Soon after, he walked into the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood and met the owner, Freddie Roach, who would transform the way Pacquiao fought.

Roach makes a powerful impression when you meet him, because something is clearly wrong. His movements are a beat or two off-sync; the occasional phrase or sentence is interrupted by an abrupt pause, then a slurring. Roach, who is not yet 50, has Parkinson's disease, most likely the result of his own boxing career. But it has not stopped him from taking Pacquiao's energy and giving it strategy. Their partnership has created one of the most riveting fighters in boxing history. Roach seems prouder of Pacquiao than of almost any of his other famous trainees. He sometimes talks as if the fighter has already reached his peak. Manny, he says, "has nothing more to prove." He predicts a first-round knockout of Cotto but, even as people are already talking about the fight after that (Floyd Mayweather Jr. is the dream matchup), Roach says Pacquiao may have just two more fights in him and then ought to call it quits.

Pacquiao is certainly thinking of the day after boxing. In 2007 he ran for a congressional seat in General Santos City but was beaten by the incumbent, Darlene Antonino-Custodio, who hails from a wealthy family long rooted in the politics of the region. But he is almost sure to run again in the 2010 national elections, though not in the same district. (Pacquiao has his own political organization — the People's Champ Movement — but has been aligning himself with President Gloria Arroyo, who needs his popularity.) Most people say they'd rather he stay a boxer and win more accolades for the nation, that his need to help lift people up can be better served elsewhere. But politics as his second act may be a strategy born of a deeper survival instinct — from knowing the limitations of a boxer's life, particularly after the fighting is done. "'Di ako bobo," he might say.

You see, Manny Pacquiao is not the first famous boxer produced by General Santos City. The previous Filipino world champion, Rolando Navarrete, came from the same streets. Navarrete now lives in embittered obscurity on the city's outskirts, often falling afoul of the law. "Most boxers start with nothing and end up with nothing," says Pedro Acharon, the mayor of General Santos City. "Manny wants to end that story. He knows there's more to explore in life."

Will His Kingdom Come?

Pacquiao crosses himself before digging into dinner amid the Corinthian columns of Capitale, an old bank turned party space, just about where Chinatown starts in Manhattan. It is early June, and he is there to receive his second Fighter of the Year award from The Ring magazine. Even as old palookas cuss up a storm, he prays before his meal. His mother says he was always "very disciplined and God-fearing" — taking after her, of course. Her front garden features a coral-lined altar to the Virgin Mary, and an entire shelf in her living room is filled with icons and bric-a-brac in honor of Christ's mother. Dionisia wanted Manny to be a priest. Prayer reigns in his gym. "After each workout," says Giongco, "he requests a moment of silence where he prays, and then everything goes back to normal."

Being a good Catholic is a plus for a would-be politician in the very pious Philippines. But so is knowing how to handle a constituency. Pacquiao doesn't have one so much as he has a royal court. Roach is famous enough to have his own table at the Capitale extravaganza. Beside Pacquiao sits his wife Jinkee. Filipino tabloids have published her purported ultimatums against Manny's "playboy" ways, but tonight she says only a couple of sentences and even those guardedly. She speaks mostly to the other man seated next to her, Mike Koncz, a Canadian who takes care of the little details that matter to Pacquiao and his wife. The fighter, for example, must have white rice with his meals (a hard habit to break for all Filipinos), so Koncz goes scampering for a plate of it. The slightly fusiony menu lists a side of wild rice with the entrée. That will not do for the Pacquiaos.

If Roach is the most popular foreigner in the Philippines, Koncz, who has become a gatekeeper for the Pacquiaos, is the most loathed. And not just by Filipinos. In mid-October, Alex Ariza, a Colombian boxer who is Pacquiao's fitness coach, fought with the Canadian. Koncz, says Ariza, "is so condescending, so passive-aggressive, and just doesn't care if he's being unreasonable. He crossed a line, and I just bitch-slapped him." Roach shrugs off Koncz's influence. "I'm the only one who can really talk to Manny," he says. Still, he says introducing Koncz to the Pacquiao team was "the worst f______ mistake of my life." For his part, Pacquiao tries to remain above the fray.

The fighter appears anxious as the evening wears on. He reaches into his pocket and pulls out sheets of paper — his acceptance speech, in English. While Pacquiao has no problem understanding English, which is widely used in the Philippines, he is much more comfortable speaking Tagalog, the national language, and Cebuano, the dialect he grew up with. But he is a hit with the New York City audience. All he really has to do is grin, and they are in his hands. A Filipino listening to the speech, however, senses the trouble Pacquiao will face if he decides to run for office in the Philippines. His English is heavily accented, sounding provincial to anyone used to the softly musical English of the entrenched upper classes of Manila. What would they think of someone who pronounces everything as eebreeting? Snobbery is the unvoiced rationale behind some of the opposition to Pacquiao's political ambitions: He's not really one of us.

Even one of his closest advisers isn't sure he's right for politics. Governor Chavit Singson, 68, of the province of Ilocos Sur, in the northern part of the archipelago, hangs out with Pacquiao all the time. He styles himself a kingmaker but is unclear whether Manny can be a king. "He is so humble," Singson says. "He's a simple person." Singson, however, may be a role model for Pacquiao. The governor amassed his fortune as a tobacco-plantation owner and travels in a private plane and in a bulletproof Hummer. He is an epitome of Philippine politics, where power grows out of barrels of patronage. Political reformers worry that that is the style Pacquiao has been learning during his decade of kingdom-building and distributing wealth to family friends and allies. Ramon Casiple, a prominent political analyst and reform advocate, says Filipinos know that model too well to want it from their hero. "They don't want him to run, to dirty himself and open himself to charges of corruption."

Manny's sister Isidra, however, says her brother is too strong-minded to be dissuaded from politics. "Whatever Manny does, we'll support," she says. During the huge floods in Manila in September, he took a motorcade from the mountain resort where he was training to help distribute relief to victims. "He wants to be giving service," his sister says. "He has big potential. He is caring, thoughtful and generous." Dionisia is quieter about her son's career after boxing. "I will support and pray for him," she says. But she worries. "There's a lot of trouble in politics." Can Manny Pacquiao continue to be the most loved man in the Philippines when he quits the ring and enters the cockpit of politics? That is going to be the fight of his life.

Source: TIME

Pacquiao Must Do Huge PPV Numbers To Deal With Mayweather

By Frank Lotierzo, The Sweet Science

As the anticipation for Pacquiao-Cotto begins to escalate, it's hard not to think about the fight that's gotta happen but isn't a given to happen if Pacquiao wins, that being of course Pacquiao-Mayweather. I'm not selling Cotto short and a win by Miguel shouldn't be considered an upset, despite him being a 3-1 underdog. But when considering Pacquiao has the style advantage and is the bigger star, it's hard to envision Cotto being awarded the decision even if he clearly earns it. In order for Cotto to garner a decision verdict over Pacquiao he'll have too practically beat him almost beyond recognition. And the reason for that is because there's so much money riding on a potential Pacquiao-Mayweather fight.

Everybody wants to see Pacquiao and Mayweather fight, even quasi boxing fans care about it and want to see it. But that doesn't mean it will happen. Mayweather hasn't really shown an interest in the fight and acts as though he doesn't care or need for the fight to take place. Floyd knows that he's gotten over by being a fighter with a manufactured undefeated record. In the process he's fooled some sharp boxing observers and fans into believing that he's a greater fighter than he is. And he's counting on as time goes by that being undefeated will enhance his legacy. Which it no doubt will to those who want to live in their perfect world and don't fully understand how to read a fighters record.

If Pacquiao beats Cotto the pressure will be on Mayweather to fight him. However, that won't be enough for the fight to be realized unless Mayweather can somehow hoard most of the money.

Last week while training for his upcoming fight with Miguel Cotto, Pacquiao was asked what he thought his chances were of fighting Mayweather and said, "Fans shouldn't hold their breath. I don't think it's going to happen. I'm sure he doesn't want to fight.

"Boxing for him is like a business," Pacquiao said. "He doesn't care about the people around him watching. He doesn't care if the fight is boring, as long as the fight is finished and he gets (plenty of) money....I want people to be happy. You have a big responsibility as a boxer."



Pacquiao's words are right on the mark. It's hard not to like and root for Pacquiao. Other than some of his fans being over the top and believing he can walk on water, the guy is a real fighter and is definitely one of the greats. It's funny that Pacquiao - who's the smaller fighter and has a better resume and will go down a greater fighter than Mayweather historically, wants the fight more. And I'm not convinced it's all about money on his part. In reality Manny doesn't have to continue to fight bigger fighters, especially if he beats Cotto. The burden of proof as to their greatness rest moreso on Mayweather's shoulders.

I don't believe Mayweather actually fears fighting Pacquiao, and it's my belief that if the fight does actually happen, Mayweather has the perfect style to beat Pacquiao. But Floyd is more about the money and as it's been said here before it'll be hard to get Mayweather to agree to a 50-50 purse split with Pacquiao. And there's no way Bob Arum would let Manny ever agree to fight Floyd for less than a 50-50 purse split.

Arum and Pacquiao face a huge task in dealing with Mayweather at the negioating table if Manny wins on November 14th. Based on Mayweather's one-sided decision over Juan Manuel Marquez seven weeks ago, he's convinced he's the biggest star in boxing. And here's why. Pacquiao-Marquez II did 405,000 pay-per-view buys, Mayweather-Marquez did one million. Pacquiao-Hatton did 850,000 pay-per-view buys and Mayweather-Hatton did 920,000. Granted, the circumstances surrounding those fights were a lot different and Pacquiao, based on his showing in his last fight versus Ricky Hatton is a much bigger star now then he was six months ago. But does anyone with a pulse think that means anything to Mayweather? Of course it doesn't!

The biggest fight this year to date was Mayweather-Marquez. However, it's inescapable that Pacquiao-Cotto is the more legitimate fight. Manny and Miguel are closer in size than Mayweather and Marquez were. And Marquez was 36 whereas Pacquiao is 30 and Cotto is 29. The debate as to which is the more legitimate and anticipated fight doesn't exist; it's Pacquiao-Cotto.

That's why it's imperative that Pacquiao-Cotto do more pay-per-view buys than the one million that Mayweather-Marquez did. As of this writing Mayweather can support his claim as being the active pay-per-view king of boxing because the numbers support him. Obviously the numbers don't tell the whole story and it would be difficult for Arum to argue against Mayweather being at least an equal draw to Pacquiao.

If Manny Pacquiao wants to fight Floyd Mayweather as much as he professes to he better beat Miguel Cotto and hope that the fight does somewhere close to 1.5 million buys. And if that's how it unfolds then Pacquiao will have the leverage over Mayweather along with the boxing public behind him. Sure, Mayweather will counter with the fact that he's undefeated, but that doesn't interest boxing fans like it used to. They've smartened up and view Pacquiao as the more willing fighter who's tested himself against live bodies who in some cases were legitimately a little bigger than him.

If Cotto happens to beat Pacquiao, Mayweather holds all the cards and will say he would've beaten Pacquiao with ease. The only way Mayweather is in a predicament is if Pacquiao looks impressive beating Cotto and Mosley handles Berto. Even at that, Mayweather has the choice as to whether he fights an almost 40 year old welterweight or a fighter who weighed 20 pounds less than he did when they made their pro debut.

Either way it's remarkable how well Mayweather's positioned himself to retire undefeated.

Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@Gmail.com

Source: thesweetscience.com



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Promoter: Mayweather-Pacquiao at Cowboys Stadium 'Total Nonsense'

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse.com

Top Rank promoter Bob Arum called a recent report that he is negotiating a Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight in early March at Cowboys Stadium "total nonsense."

"We haven't talked to Mayweather," said Arum. "We haven't discussed it with Mayweather."

The story, reported by an affiliate of The Dallas Morning News, quoted Top Rank vice president Bruce Trampler as indicating that Pacquiao (49-3-2, 37 knockouts) needed to dethrone WBO champ Miguel Cotto (34-1, 27 KOs) on Nov. 14, after which Top Rank could focus on making the fight with Mayweather (40-0, 25 KOs) in Arlington, Texas.

The story quoted Trampler as saying that Arum had "spoken directly to [Cowboys owner] Jerry Jones," later saying, "Pacquiao is very interested in fighting there. We would definitely try to schedule a fight with Mayweather in March, which is something fans have been waiting to see for some time."



Arum acknowledged discussions concerning Pacquiao in a third match with WBA and WBO 135-pound champion Juan Manuel Marquez (50-5-1, 37 KOs), whom Pacquiao has drawn with once and beaten once over two disputed fights at featherweight (125) and super featherweight (130).

Pacquiao-Marquez would take place at 140 pounds, said Arum.

"This would be my dream if Pacquiao wins. I would think that a fight with Marquez, coupled with Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. against [John] Duddy would be a blockbuster in Cowboys Stadium, particularly given the huge Hispanic population in that area," Arum said.

Chavez (40-0-1, 30 KOs), a junior middleweight (154), meets Troy Rowland (25-2, seven KOs) on Nov. 14, and Duddy (27-1, 17 KOs), is a middleweight (160).

Pacquiao's record, on Boxrec.com, shows March 13 as being an opponent "TBA" in the United States.

"We're talking about Pacquiao against Marquez if Pacquiao wins," said Arum. "If Cotto wins, we're exploring Cotto fighting in June in Yankee Stadium."

Cotto has been a fan favorite at Madison Square Garden, where he packs the stands and is 6-0 with three knockouts, vanquishing the likes of Shane Mosley, Joshua Clottey, Zab Judah and Paulie Malignaggi.

"Yankee Stadium took a full page add out for our Pacquiao-Cotto fight program that reads 'Yankee Stadium, Your Home For Boxing 2010,' and there's a picture of the stadium," said Arum. "The Yankees are so interested in doing boxing at their stadium. That's a good story that nobody has."

Source: FanHouse.com



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Exclusive Interview: Manny Pacquiao (Podcast available)

Brad Cooney, 8CountNews.com

Pound for Pound King Manny Pacquiao returns home to 8CountNews and discusses his big upcoming world title fight against Miguel Cotto. Pacquiao talks about training camp in both the Philippines and Los Angeles. Manny also talks about the recent typhoon that has left so many people suffering, and also touches on his recent appearance on the Jimmy Kimmel show. Check out what else the world's greatest fighter had to say ONLY on 8CountNews.com!

8CN - Manny thanks for joining 8CountNews.

MP - Thanks for inviting me.

8CN - Manny you trained for half of your camp in the PI and the second part in Los Angeles, talk about both places.

MP -Training camp was good. We trained in the Philippines in the high altitude and it was fantastic. We came back to Los Angeles, and everything is ok.

8CN - There was a horrible typhoon over there. Talk about what you have done to help the people that are suffering.

MP - Exactly, there are thousands of people over there that are suffering. I didn't want to be distracted while training over there, and I wanted to be focused on training. But we went to the evacuation center and gave away a lot of food and gave some money to the foundation to help the people.

8CN - Let's talk about the fight against Cotto. You are the challenger for his title, so what do you have to do to win this fight?

MP - It's going to be a good fight. Cotto is a good fighter, he is strong, and he is bigger than me. People believe that it's going to be a good fight. I will do my job and train hard for this fight.

8CN - You did some sparring with Jr Middleweight Shawn Porter. Talk about how that sparring went with him.



MP - Oh yes, Porter is a Jr Middleweight, he is big. He gave me good sparring and helped me a lot for this fight. That's why I am not worried about this training camp, I am ready for this fight.

8CN - Freddie Roach told me that Porter got in a good shot on you, and then in the next round you knocked him down. I am guessing the kid got your attention a little bit.

MP - (Laughs) I was off balance a little bit.

8CN - Recently you were on the Jimmy Kimmel show. Did you have fun doing that?

MP - Oh yes, Jimmy Kimmel was fun. I sang one song, and a lot of the fans came there to see me.

8CN - Back to Cotto, does this fight boil down to speed against power?

MP - Yes, we are focused on speed and power. We are working on different techniques for the last few fight that we had. We have a strategy for this fight, Cotto is a different type of fighter than my last few fights.

8CN - Freddie Roach is predicting a 1st round knockout. I am guessing that you're not going to say that. Do you think a knockout is possible though?

MP - Well I don't want to make a prediction as a fighter. I will do my best to give a good fight, and I want the people to be happy on November 14th. You have to watch the fight.

8CN - Do you have any closing thoughts Manny?

MP - I want to thank all of the people in the Philippines and around the world for you support. This is going to be a great fight on November 14th. Thank you to all of my fans out there.

To listen to the interview, click here

Source: 8CountNews.com



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