Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Mayweather v Pacquiao will be one hell of a fight if it goes ahead

By David Anderson, mirror.co.uk

If the fight to stage Mayweather-Pacquiao is anything to go by, then it is going to be one hell of a clash.

Negotiations between the two camps began on Monday and Manny Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, has revealed that Texas and New Orleans are battling it out with Las Vegas to put on the superfight.

Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones wants to have the showdown in his brand, spanking new 80,000-seat stadium in Arlington, Texas, while New Orleans are offering the 70,000-seat Louisiana Superdome.

Vegas is Arum's preferred option and he has challenged the big casinos on The Strip to come up with the cash to make it happen.

"A lot of places want to host it," said Arum. "But for tax purposes, you have to have it in either Nevada or Texas, where there is no state income tax. That's why we probably couldn't have it in New York or New Jersey.

"There's talk that the governor might waive the tax for this fight if it went to New Orleans. But he'd have to do that for it to have any chance of happening there."

Pacquiao's clash with world pound-for-pound king Mayweather will be the richest fight in history and Arum is determined to wring every last dime out of the contest.

The MGM Grand Garden may not be big enough with a capacity of just 16,200, while Vegas' biggest venue is the 20,000-seater Thomas and Mack Center just off The Strip.

This has prompted Arum to consider building a 30,000-seater temporary arena on the site formerly occupied by the Frontier across from the Wynn.

Arum has brought in PR consultant Sig Rogich to look into the project and has talked to Steve Wynn about being part of the promotion.

"We want to do everything we can to bring this fight to Las Vegas," Rogich said. "We want to look at whatever makes good economic and logistic sense.

"The town needs it, and the promoters want it here. I think the casinos realize this is one of those united-we-stand, divided-we-fall moments, and I believe they will work together to bring the fight to Las Vegas."

Arum met Mayweather's promoter Golden Boy chief Richard Schaefer on Monday and although he would not go into detail, he is confident the fight will happen in May.

"There's really not much I can say," he said. "We had one meeting, it was a good meeting, and we'll talk again over the next few days."

Source: mirror.co.uk




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BOXING PROMOTERS ASSOCIATION PRAISES PACQUIAO COTTO SUCCESS

East Side Boxing

It is my pleasure, on behalf of the Boxing Promoter's Association (BPA), to congratulate our sport in once again showing that BOXING is truly desired by fans. The Top Rank-promoted fight between Manny Pacquiao and Miguel Cotto last week exceeded 1.25 million buys and generated over $70 million in domestic pay-per-view revenue. According to the Nevada State Athletic Commission, Pacquiao-Cotto also generated a live gate of 15,930 fans from all over the world, making it the 14th highest grossing sporting event in the state's history, all for which were BOXING events..


This was the second consecutive HBO/PPV telecast that generated over a million buys (Mayweather-Marquez which took place back in September produced over a million buys and generated over $52 million dollars). It will mark the first time since 1999, when Felix Trinidad fought Oscar De La Hoya and Lennox Lewis took on Evander Holyfield, that two bouts in the same year will exceed 1 million pay-per-view buys.


In addition to BOXING'S recent success on HBO/PPV, the Vitali Klitschko vs. Chris Arreola telecast which took place one week after Mayweather vs. Marquez, was the highest rated fight of the year on HBO's World Championship Boxing. Furthermore, Showtime's innovative Super Six tournament has really captured the public's attention as witnessed by the recent success and fan turn out during Stage One of the tournament. Taking a look at such recent events, it is evident that the appeal of BOXING continues to captivate fans and the sport is at one of the highest points it's been in the last decade.


Promoter of the card, Bob Arum of Top Rank, said that the early PPV numbers on Pacquiao Cotto are "over a million and under 1.5 million buys -- and that's without all of the precincts being reported."


"They're not really accurate yet, but all that we can say with absolute certainty is that Pacquiao-Cotto was the biggest, revenue-producing event on pay-per-view for the entire year," said Arum. "And that surpasses all of the UFC. Everything. Any event. It's the biggest event of the year from the standpoint of revenue being generated."


I am proud on behalf of the BPA to congratulate everyone involved in the successful show, particularly our fellow promoter, Top Rank, as well as HBO/PPV and the boxers, Manny Pacquiao and Miguel Cotto. BOXING'S success this past year makes all of us at the BPA very proud. We are excited to move our sport into the future and these recent shows provide yet additional examples of how various parts of the sport working together can create huge successes.


We look forward to future collaborations and successes for the great sport of BOXING.


Sincerely,


Joe DeGuardia
President
Boxing Promoters Association

Source: eastsideboxing.com




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Khan to keep the buzz going

Sky Sports

Amir Khan says he will keep British boxing buzzing by seeing off Dmitriy Salita.

The WBA light-welterweight champion makes the first defence of his title in Newcastle on December 5, live on Sky Box Office.

The fight comes a month to the day after David Haye put British heavyweight boxing back on the map and two weeks after stablemate Manny Pacquiao destroyed Miguel Cotto and Khan says he is in the mood to keep the feel-good factor going.

"Boxing everywhere is on a high at the moment, just at the weekned Manny Pacquiao beat Miguel Cotto in an amazing fight and it just shows that not only in Britain, but all over the world boxing is massive," he told skysports.com.

Khan has made it clear that his ultimate goal is to follow in Ricky Hatton's footsteps and fight in Las Vegas.

But rather than turn his back on British fight fans, he says he will be flying the flag proudly, having helped re-established the sport with his success at the Olympics in 2004.

"First of all I think it's everyone's dream to fight in America, so naturally I'd love to fight there - I think it would be amazing for my career and amazing for British boxing," he said.

"What I've done in Britian is put boxign back on the map.

"It amazes me sometimes, it had all gone quiet at one stage and then after the Olympics it was bang right up there again and i turtned prfoeresioanla nd at the age of 22, I sell out arenas."

The Metro Radio Arena in Newcastle is the WBA champion's next port of call - and it will be the first time he has fought in the city, at any level.

And he is determined to put on a show and hook some new fans in the traditional sporting hotbed that is the North East of England.

"I've never fought there as an amateur or professional," he said. The first time I went there was for the press conference.

"Newcastle will be amazing, the fight going to be a sell-out no doubt and I think the Newcastle fans will love a big show like this.

"The fans will be excited, they will be on the edge of their seats all night. It's going to be exciting from the first bell because one the thing it always is when I fight, is exciting.

"It's never boring, it can end in the first round or it can end in the last - you can't afford to blink!

"It's going to be an exciting night for them and I am sure they will be walking around with a smile on their face."

Source: skysports.com




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Elie Seckbach Video: Charles Huerta, Vicente Escobedo, and Israel Vazquez say Mayweather would beat Pacquiao

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High & Inside: Who needs Don King?

Philadelphia Daily News

COWBOYS CORNERBACK Terence Newman is getting ready to ruummmmble.

You can forget about Ali-Frazier or Hagler-

Leonard. We're talking a bout for the ages here.

While standing at his locker yesterday, Newman explained that his sideline tiff with secondary coach Dave Campo during Sunday's win over Washington was just prefight hype. The real fireworks, he said, will take place on an undercard bout headlined by Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

"We've got a split, 70-30," Newman told the Associated Press yesterday. "I got 70 [percent], he got 30, so it'll be nice. We're on pay-per-view . . . A lot of people are going to watch it."

The bout, of course, will not actually take place. Newman was just joking about the shoving incident he had with Campo during the first quarter. Campo attempted to talk to Newman as he came off the field, but Newman pushed the coach and they had words.

Yesterday, Newman decided to have fun with it.

He said the "bout" would be held in Las Vegas and would be promoted by Don King. Then, he switched to Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.

"I'm kicking Don out," Newman said. "We're going to have Jerry promoting it. We might have to move this whole thing to Cowboys Stadium. That's it! Pacquiao-Mayweather at Cowboys Stadium. Yeah. It'll be Pacquiao-Mayweather and it'll be Campo-Newman. We're going to make it happen. I'm telling you."

When Campo was told of Newman's pugilistic plans he smiled and said, "Everything's good."

Week 11 ties NFL record for nailbiters

The Eagles weren't the only team to pull out a close game last week. Their 24-20 win over the Bears was one of 12 games decided by eight or fewer points, which tied a league record that has been matched seven times.

Yesterday, the NFL said in 11 of last week's 16 games, the score was tied or the team trailing had a chance to tie or take the lead with 2 minutes to play.

- Tom Mahon

Send e-mail to highandinside@phillynews.com

Source: philly.com




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Arum wants megafight in Vegas

By STEVE CARP, Las Vegas Review Journal

Even under a gag order, it's hard for Bob Arum to remain completely silent about a potential megafight between boxing superstars Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

The Top Rank chairman said Tuesday he'd like to see the fight take place in Las Vegas, the hometown of Arum and Mayweather and the site of Pacquiao's greatest ring triumphs.

But there is fierce competition from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, who wants to put the fight in his new $1.3 billion, 80,000-seat stadium in Arlington, Texas. Arum also said New Orleans has shown strong interest in hosting the fight at the 70,000-seat Louisiana Superdome.

"A lot of places want to host," Arum said Tuesday at the Las Vegas Hilton, where he had a news conference to promote the Dec. 19 world middleweight championship fight between Kelly Pavlik and Miguel Espino in Youngstown, Ohio. "But for tax purposes, you have to have it in either Nevada or Texas, where there is no state income tax. That's why we probably couldn't have it in New York or New Jersey.

"There's talk the governor (Bobby Jindal) might waive the tax for this fight if it went to New Orleans. But he'd have to do that for it to have any chance of happening there."

One possible Las Vegas venue is a proposed 30,000-seat temporary stadium on the site formerly occupied by the Frontier across from Wynn Las Vegas. Public relations consultant Sig Rogich is working on the Frontier site on Arum's behalf and has talked to Steve Wynn about partnering on the project.

"We want to do everything we can to bring this fight to Las Vegas," Rogich said. "We want to look at whatever makes good economic and logistic sense."

Rogich is waiting to hear back from Elad Properties, which owns the Frontier site. He also is in the process of soliciting bids on what it would cost to construct the stadium.

"It would be a temporary arena just for this fight," he said. "We're still pricing it out, and it would have to pencil out economically."

Arum dismissed the possibility of using Sam Boyd Stadium, which would seat as many as 45,000 and has luxury suites and club seating. But he said the Thomas & Mack Center, which could seat 20,000-plus for boxing, remains an alternative.

"It's too far away from the Strip," Arum said of Sam Boyd. "The casinos aren't going to support it there. But the Thomas & Mack would be potentially big enough."

The MGM Grand Garden, which seats 16,200 for boxing, might not be big enough for Pacquiao-Mayweather.

Regardless of the venue, Rogich said Las Vegas needs this fight to boost its sagging economy.

"The town needs it, and the promoters want it here," he said. "I think the casinos realize this is one of those united-we-stand, divided-we-fall moments, and I believe they will work together to bring the fight to Las Vegas."

Arum, who promotes Pacquiao, met Monday at the MGM Grand with Richard Schaefer, the chief executive of Golden Boy Promotions who is assisting in representing Mayweather.

Arum said he couldn't talk about specifics of the meeting but was confident both sides could strike a deal for a fight in May.

"There's really not much I can say," Arum said. "We had one meeting, it was a good meeting, and we'll talk again over the next few days."

Contact reporter Steve Carp at scarp@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2913.

Source: lvrj.com




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Richard Schaefer, Bob Arum won't comment on status of Mayweather-Pacquiao negotiations

By David Mayo, The Grand Rapids Press

Richard Schaefer and Bob Arum engaged a day of negotiations this week, related to a potential Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight next year, but don’t expect either one to divulge much about talks that could extend for several weeks.

"The fact is that both Bob Arum and myself had to agree on a total no-comment position, so we really can not talk about the negotiations in any way, shape or form," Schaefer said Tuesday in a message to The Press. "I’m really going to have to refer to that confidentiality clause that we agreed to."

Schaefer, the CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, is representing Mayweather in talks with Arum, who promotes Pacquiao.

The two met Monday at MGM Grand, which is the leading Las Vegas contender to act as casino host for a potential Mayweather-Pacquiao blockbuster next year.

E-mail David Mayo at dmayo@grpress.com and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/David_Mayo

Source: mlive.com





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Video: Manny Pacquiao ~ Dreams Can Come True

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The Rodel Mayol-Edgar Sosa clash of heads

By Epifanio M. Almeda, PhilBoxing.com

Robert Coster’s 22 November 2009 write up on the Rodel Mayol-Edgar Sosa clash of heads during the WBC 108-lb championship fight was not a report of facts but a biased opinion. I don’t even call it a head butt as these words already imply intention.

Coster states, “A vicious head-butt at the beginning of the second round spelled the end for the long reigning champion who crumbled to the floor. The head-butt was ruled as intentional and referee Ramirez deducted a point from the Filipino challenger”.

In his 24 November 2009 “Edgar Sosa Update” in the same website, Coster states, “Sosa was the victim an intentional head butt by challenger Rodel Mayol in their fight Saturday”.

By not checking on the WBC championship rules, Coster tarnished Rodel Mayol’s reputation in showing readers how dirty a fighter Rodel is. Coster’s unfair opinion is due to his failure to identify the cause of the point deduction as well as his ignorant conclusion on the referee’s act of deducting the point. Coster erred in stating that the deduction was due to the head butt which he concluded as intentional because the referee deducted a point on Mayol.

The fact is, as a consequence of the clash of heads, Edgar Sosa sustained a cut on his left check. Since the fight was allowed to continue, Rodel Mayol, being the uncut fighter, was deducted a point.

The Mayol-Sosa fight was for the WBC 108-lb title. When a clash of heads results in a cut to one or both fighters, the WBC has rules to be followed. The rules applicable to a situation which is accidental are:

- “A point will be deducted from the uncut fighter; if both fighters are cut, both will get a point deduction”

- “the uncut boxer will be deducted one point if the fight will continue”

- “If the fight cannot continue, there will not be a point deduction”

If the referee ruled that the cut was a result of an intentional foul, the rule mandates the penalty to be either a deduction of 2 points or outright disqualification of the offending boxer. It is not an option for the referee to deduct one point in an intentional foul, such as a head butt, which results to a cut.

There is no deduction for a clash of heads which does not produce a cut. The referee’s action to deduct a point from Mayol was ministerial after he ruled that the clash of heads was accidental which produced a cut on Sosa and that the fight was allowed to continue. If it was Mayol who was cut and Sosa was uncut, Sosa would have been deducted the point even if he was the one who fell to the canvas after the accidental clash of heads.

Robert Coster owes Rodel Mayol, the WBC 108-lb world champion, an apology.

Source: philboxing.com




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Don't turn Mayweather vs. Pacquiao into U.S. vs. Philippines

By Colin Seymour, Examiner.com

When Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather finally do collide, please tell me that my fellow Americans will not be chanting “USA! USA!” throughout the proceedings.

There are several sports situations in which that kind of patriotism is warranted, such as World Cup soccer and Olympic hockey, where the United States is an underdog.

It was marginally warranted at Saturday’s Andre Ward-Mikkel Kessler fight, as the Super Six tournament on Showtime has been boiling down to disrespect for the three American fighters involved, especially Ward. I’ve been leading the metaphorical flag-waving, but it was a bit off-putting at the fight.

Try to look at it from Kessler’s perspective. He’s from Denmark, a country the size of Maryland. He speaks our language fluently, as well as two others. He earned our respect in the ring before he fought Ward, and he earned it again Saturday while Ward was giving him a whipping he hadn’t been led to expect.

And then he’s up against the might of the most powerful nation on earth, as if Ward alone isn’t humiliating him enough?

Please don’t put Pacquiao through that. He has embraced our country in many ways while connecting us with his country, the Philippines, as never before. It’s possible to love the United States and root for Pacquiao, as I do. There are a few Filipinos who would back Mayweather, too.

It’s not about nationalism. It’s about the two fighters and their styles and their places in boxing history, and both fighters are a very important part of that.

Source: examiner.com





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No contest: Boxing batters mixed martial arts at the gate

By J. Michael Falgoust, USA TODAY

In a November showdown with the UFC in Las Vegas, boxing scored a knockout at the gate after the latest numbers from the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

UFC 106 last weekend featured Tito Ortiz vs. Forrest Griffin before an audience of 10,529 at Mandalay Bay for a $3 million gate. Of that total, however, 3,898 of those tickets were comps, or giveaways (valued at $2.3 million).

By comparison, Manny Pacquiao's 12th-round knockout of Miguel Cotto on Nov. 14 generated an $8.84 million gate with 15,470 tickets sold. No tickets were sold below face value for the bout and just 46 were comps.

Floyd Mayweather's Sept. 18 decision win against Juan Manuel Marquez wasn't quite the same caliber of fight as Pacquiao-Cotto, but it sold almost twice as many tickets at face value than UFC 106 and pulled in a $6.89 million gate.

Both boxing matches were at MGM Grand Garden Arena. Pacquiao's bout scored 1.25 million pay-per-view buys and Mayweather's 1 million, the Nos. 1 and 2 boxing PPV events of the 2009, according to official numbers released by HBO PPV in conjunction with promotional powers Top Rank and Golden Boy.

In a comparison of both sports' biggest shows of the year at the gate, Pacquiao-Cotto still easily outdistances UFC 100 held in July at Mandalay Bay. There were 9,793 paid attendees for $5.1 million gate (second all-time for the organization), with the Brock Lesnar-Frank Mir heavyweight championship rematch headlining a stellar card.

UFC president Dana White has said that event sold 1.5 million on PPV, though the organization is a private company and doesn't release official numbers. There doesn't appear to be any unofficial figures from UFC 106 yet.

UFC 100 drew $312,800 in additional revenue from 6,256 fans who bought closed circuit tickets for the event in Las Vegas and New York.

By comparison, the closed circuit viewing parties for Pacquiao-Cotto in Las Vegas alone brought in $899,100 with more than 24,000 tickets sold.

Source: usatoday.com





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Contenders Are Circling, Even Before Fight Is Set

By GREG BISHOP, The New York Times

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 sites across the country, from stadiums in Los Angeles, Texas, Louisiana and New York.

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

Since Pacquiao finished Cotto with a technical knockout in the 12th round on Nov. 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, Staples Center 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 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 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 for Pacquiao and Mayweather met Monday in Las Vegas, and by the time they had finished lunch, they had decided to not discuss negotiations publicly.

Originally, Top Rank had hoped to stage the fight on March 13. 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, promoters will work on selecting the site.

Hauser cited three reasons that worked heavily against Yankee Stadium — a 14 percent 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 that 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 of Las Vegas to grow boxing’s audience or to hold the fight in a larger stadium. He could also grow revenue by charging $2,000 for ring-side seats, a price last levied for Mayweather-De La Hoya.

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 1.25 million pay-per-view buys, a number 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 nonheavyweight fight.

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

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

The sides are likely to meet somewhere close to 50-50, setting up the fight almost everyone wants: Mayweather, with the reach and the counterpunches and the ability to fight while moving backward, 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: nytimes.com




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Freddie calls Khan KO

By Tim Hobbs, Sky Sports

Freddie Roach is backing Amir Khan to finish his First Defence early.

The legendary trainer has called Manny Pacquiao's last three fights perfectly and is already making predictions as his British charge prepares to take on Dmitriy Salita, live on Sky Box Office.

Khan went the distance when winning the WBA light-welterweight title against Andriy Kotelnik in July, but has stopped 15 of his 21 victims inside the distance.

And Roach, who called Pacquiao's victories over Ricky Hatton and Oscar de la Hoya to the very round and was not far wrong with Miguel Cotto, is confident he will make it a sweet 16 on December 5.

"Obviously he's the No 1 challenger, but I think Amir will get him out of there somewhere along the way," he told skysports.com.

"Salita came to train in my gym in Los Angeles a while back - he and his rabbi popped along. He's a good technical boxer, but nothing spectacular.

"He's a good solid fighter, does the fundamentals OK, but Amir's speed will be too much for him.

"Salita's tough guy and a boxer but I think Amir's a better fighter and a better puncher and we're going to break him down and hopefully get him out of there in the late rounds. It will be a tough fight, but we'll soften him up in the end."

Roach and Khan arrived in England on Saturday morning to finalise preparations for the Newcastle showdown.

They will continue to spar up to as late as the Monday before the fight, but the trainer says is that ferocious preparation that makes the 22-year-old such a firm favourite.

Khan has been sparring with Pacquiao in Los Angeles - where Roach has been offering sparring partners $1,000 dollars if they can floor his fighters - and gives as good as he gets.

"Amir needs a little more maturing but for the first four rounds, it's always about even," said Roach.

"Manny will take over after that because he has a bit more experience. He's been with us just over a year and he always works his ass off. In my gym, this ain't for fun. It ain't easy, all my guys work hard, I don't have time for lazy people.

"I always offer a bet to my sparring partners if they can knock my fighters down - and my money's still in my pocket!

"Amir is faster than when we first got him because he's lost a lot of that muscle mass. He's a lot leaner now and when him and Manny Pacquiao spar, they really go at it because they both have speed and power."

Source: skysports.com





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ESPN Video: Negotiations Begin For Pacquiao-Mayweather

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No steroids for Pacquiao

By Ramon Aranda, Examiner.com

Floyd Mayweather Sr. made a pretty big accusation weeks ago when he alluded to his thoughts that Manny Pacquiao was on steroids. Only days after Pacquiao’s destruction of Miguel Cotto, once again those rumors came swirling back which included similar thoughts from fighters such as Paulie Malignaggi.

How could Manny Pacquiao keep moving up in weight while remaining solid as a rock and retaining his iron chin against much bigger opponents be possible? Well according to trainer Freddie Roach, Pacquiao “doesn’t even know what a steroid is.” Still, without any proof, the rumors continued to rear their ugly heads and Pacman fans were no doubt growing more and more irritated by such claims.

Pacquiao has never tested positive for steroids and after speaking to Nevada State Athletic Commission’s Keith Kizer earlier this morning; this continues to be the case.

The test results have finally come in and they once again prove that Pacquiao is as clean as a whistle as he has tested negative for any illegal drugs. That of course also includes Miguel Cotto who has also tested negative.

Doubters really need to put themselves in check and simply give credit where credit is due. Pacquiao is more or less at his natural weight right now so the fact that he can look so comfortable at junior welterweight and even welterweight, speaks only to his great conditioning and resilience.

Boxing's pound for pound champ is all natural - case closed.

Source: examiner.com




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Manny Pacquiao 'can't fight at all', says Floyd Mayweather Sr

By Paolo Bandini, guardian.co.uk

Floyd Mayweather Sr has issued a scathing assessment of Manny Pacquiao's boxing technique, claiming that the Filipino "can't fight at all". Pacquiao became a seven-weight world champion by defeating Miguel Cotto in Las Vegas this month, but Mayweather Sr said he had been unimpressed by the performance.

"You know what I took away from the Cotto fight? Pacquiao can't fight at all, man," Mayweather Sr said. "That man don't move his head … when Cotto still had his wits and was ducking underneath and moving his head, Pacquiao couldn't touch him.

"Pacquiao couldn't hit me if I was asleep. He is strong and fast, but that man can't fight. He throws the same combination."

Pacquiao's victory over Cotto has prompted calls for a showdown with Floyd Mayweather Jr, and Mayweather Sr says his son would have nothing to fear.

"Lil' Floyd is miles ahead of Pacquiao in the skills department," he said. "If they make that fight, Lil' Floyd got something for him.

"Man, let me tell you something, man. [Pacquiao's trainer] Freddie Roach hasn't taught Pacquiao shit. That man still don't move his damn head and he's till drops his hands after he throws combinations.

"He can try that Superman shit of putting his hands in the air if he wants to; he would be flying all right. Pacquiao can't fight man, I'm telling you."

Source: guardian.co.uk




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