Monday 31 May 2010

Pacquiao prepares to receive US accolades -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

Aside from the Fighter of the Year (2009) award that he will receive this Friday from the Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA) at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York, Manny Pacquiao is also going to be feted by the elite group as the recipient of the Fighter of the Decade honor.

Philippines Flag Embroidered Patch Filipino Pinoy Iron-On National Emblem
This will be the third time that Pacquiao is getting the coveted BWAA trophy and the Filipino star, who got elected to the Philippine congress last month, is excited personally grace the formal affair.

“To be named Fighter of the Year is already a big honor,” said Pacquiao, who leaves for the US tonight with wife Jinkee and kids, adviser Mike Koncz and perennial training camp assistant Roger Fernandez.

“So, when I learned that I will also be honored as (the BWAA’s) Fighter of the Decade, I felt I was walking on air,” added the 31-year-old fighter, who had also won the BWAA award in 2006 and 2008.

The New York trip is actually two-fold for Pacquiao.

The day after the BWAA event, Pacquiao will be an interested spectator when Miguel Cotto faces Yuri Foreman in a super-welterweight (154 lbs) clash at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx.

The winner of the Cotto-Foreman bout will be considered as a prime candidate to challenge Pacquiao in the event a deal with Floyd Mayweather for a Nov. 13 fight is not reached by the parties of the two star fighters.

Pacquiao, Cotto, and Foreman all fight under the promotional banner of Top Rank chief Bob Arum.

Source: mb.com.ph

While We Wait for Manny Pacquiao Vs Floyd Mayweather JR: Thoughts on the “Other” Stories in Boxing -- Ringside Report

By Jeff Stoyanoff, Ringside Report

While the world of boxing waits to see what transpires in the ongoing saga of the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight negotiations other fighters continue to exist. I am just as interested as the next guy in seeing what may prove to be the biggest fight in the history of boxing, but we won’t know anything for a little while so now seems like a good time to take a look at a couple of developing stories.

Khan and Ortiz – Lingering Questions Answered?

MANNY PACQUIAO CUSTOM T-SHIRT NEW DESIGN!Both guys looked very good in their respective fights earlier this month. Granted, both were in optimal situations to look good. Nate Campbell is 38 years old, though we like to remember those outliers that confound our expectations regarding age like the oft cited Bernard Hopkins, that number has to mean something. Campbell has had a long and solid career, but it does appear to be catching up with him. Make no mistake, Ortiz dominated Campbell and showed himself to be the superior fighter right from the opening bell. It wasn’t that he won or even that he dominated, rather it was how overwhelmed and lost Campbell appeared to be in the fight. Perhaps Campbell would have never have been able to beat Ortiz, but the domination exhibited by Ortiz was bolstered by an opponent who no longer could react and adjust to even make the fight a little more compelling. Campbell is a terrific fighter, but no matter how many times one mentions Hopkins or Archie Moore, fighters get old. Ortiz did what he was supposed to do and looked like the fighter that was previously tabbed as potentially the next big thing in boxing, but he wasn’t in much danger on this night. It is going to take a great effort by a supremely talented fighter to best Ortiz at this point and the veteran Campbell seemed to be unable to fight at that altitude anymore.

While the talent level of Ortiz is undeniable it is hard to forget his fight against Marcos Maidana last year. Ortiz’ talent was on display as he dropped Maidana three times in the fight. Unfortunately for Ortiz, the talent and toughness of Maidana were also on display as he weathered the storm and came back to score a pair of knockdowns himself. By the sixth round, Ortiz was cut over both eyes and physically worn down by the relentless punishment of Maidana. After being knocked down, Ortiz indicated that he did not wish to continue in the fight. Truthfully, Ortiz was, in all likelihood, going to be knocked out in the next 30 seconds (there were over two minutes left in the round). His vision was no doubt impaired by the cuts and he was being outworked by a fighter who had decidedly more left in the tank. Ortiz made a rational choice, but boxing is hardly a sport governed by rational thinking. Though certainly logical, the decision to stop by Ortiz was viewed by many as quitting and it has to leave a lingering doubt as to how he will fare against top fighters in the future. Ortiz will encounter adversity again; how will he respond? No matter how he looks during his comeback none of it will matter at all until he is faced with adversity and must choose again between the logic of self-preservation and the blind courage required to make it to the heights that his talent seems to promise. All of which brings us to Amir Khan.

The similarities here abound. Khan looked sensational against Paulie Malignaggi on the same card as Ortiz and Campbell. Khan was expected to win, but Malignaggi had proven to be slick and tough; the kind of guy who could hang around in a fight and produce some questions about his opponent. No such questions could be asked on this night. Khan landed far more clean shots on Malignaggi than had any previous opponent as he dominated him in a way that not even Ricky Hatton or Miguel Cotto could. Khan controlled the action with his jab primarily as he systematically took apart an ever more bewildered Malignaggi. The win was no surprise, but the level of domination was noteworthy.

However, much like the case with Ortiz, one can go overboard with the superlatives. Malignaggi was well passed his prime as well. As was pointed out during the broadcast, Malignaggi relied more on his reflexes and athleticism to out slick his opponents over his fine career rather than utilizing solid technique. The deficiencies in fundamentals were exposed time and again by Khan. Once again as was the case with Ortiz in his fight, perhaps Malignaggi never could have beaten Khan. However, the slippage in his quickness magnified the flaws on defense and the result was an easy night for Khan. Like Campbell, Malignaggi is a terrific fighter, but at 29 years of age he is ancient. He has been through a few wars and he employs a style that relies on quickness and fast reactions and he has never been one to eschew contact in the ring. Fighters sometimes get old overnight and never has that saying been more true than in the case of Paulie Malignaggi on May 15th. In fact, Khan was in even less danger than Ortiz as Malignaggi has also never been blessed with much in the way of one punch power. Once Khan was able to outbox Malignaggi the fight was over. Khan was too good and Paulie was too far passed his prime to fight at anywhere near the brilliant level that Khan brought.

But the similarities between Khan and Victor Ortiz hardly stop there. Khan’s lone loss poses the same kind of fatalistic questions as does Ortiz’ recent loss to Maidana. Khan was caught and knocked out by a sensational left hook from Breidis Prescott in their fight in December of 2008. Just like Ortiz, no matter how good Khan looks it simply will not matter until he is in there again with a dangerous opponent and gets caught flush again. Truth be told, Khan’s loss should not provide a conclusive end to the story about his beard. He was backing into a corner and he got caught with a spectacular shot right on the point of his chin. Perhaps Khan will always struggle when it comes to taking a good shot in the ring as many tremendous fighters have. However, that shot might just have put anyone’s lights out.

Lennox Lewis was often regarded as having a questionable chin during his hall of fame career. The evidence of this lies in the fact that he was knocked out twice in memorable fashion. However, Lewis only went down those two times in a career that spanned 44 fights against the biggest and hardest punching heavyweights of his era. Was he only hit hard twice? Could he have stayed on his feet against the litany of fearsome punchers he faced if he couldn’t take a pretty good shot? Images often trump logic and nowhere is this more true than in discussions of the beard in boxing. Khan getting dropped by a perfect shot doesn’t necessarily mean that any shot that hits him is going to take him out. Everybody has a perfect spot and perhaps Prescott just managed to find Khan’s with a tremendous shot. None of this is to say that Amir Khan is going to be George Chuvalo out there, but mistakes can be particularly costly in boxing and Khan made a big one against Prescott.

Perhaps it was an anomaly and Khan may prove to be tougher than we expect in his subsequent fights; only time will tell. Perhaps Ortiz has rededicated himself to boxing and will display surprising grit and toughness when confronted with adversity once again; only time will tell. These two seem ideally suited to pose these lingering questions to the other. The fight seems like a natural.

Did we miss the “prime” Paul Williams?

It certainly was a bizarre ending in the Kermit Cintron – Paul Williams fight on May 8th. Cintron tripped over Williams legs and fell out of the ring. Though replays showed no conclusive evidence that he fell in some violent way that would have precluded him continuing the fight was stopped. The story goes that Cintron wanted to continue but that the doctors overruled him and stopped the fight as a precaution. That seems plausible to me. However, there have been subsequent suggestions that Cintron actually jumped out of the ring (wow) and that he stayed down long enough to have the fight stopped only to then feign protest after. This seems less plausible.

First, consider the fight itself. Two rounds of fairly careful boxing with not a lot of contact followed by 30 seconds with some good exchanges and then the strange finish. Cintron decided he wanted out after 30 seconds of trading with Paul Williams? So, Williams is some kind of superhuman amalgam of Thomas Hearns and Earnie Shavers? After going 30 seconds Cintron was desperate to get out of the fight? I suppose that makes Sergio Martinez the toughest human being in the history of boxing. Also, Cintron clearly landed during the exchanges and should have won the first two rounds. In fact, Williams clearly buckled after eating a good right hand from Cintron in that third round. It seems safe to say after watching Williams fight for the last few years that that right hand for Cintron would be there again if the fight continued. Perhaps if it was the 9th or 10th round and Cintron was winning one could argue that the strategic move in such a scenario would be to stay down and take the decision win, why chance it? Of course, that once again assumes that boxing and rational thinking are not mutually exclusive when all the evidence suggests that they in fact are. Nonetheless, at least a case could be made in that situation for opting to go to the cards, but that was not the case on May 8th.

So, what would Cintron’s motivation be? Perhaps he wanted to cement his place as an outsider when it comes to any big fights at 154 pounds because that is exactly where he is after this loss. Williams doesn’t need to fight him again and Cintron just lost so why would anyone else? I am just waiting for the second day stories about how Cintron hates money to help explain why he would opt out of a golden opportunity to elevate his status in a deep division filled with potential big money fights. If Cintron wants out as soon as he takes one shot from Paul Williams, why is he even fighting in the first place?

Beyond the Cintron fiasco, I wonder where Paul Williams is in his career. The lack of familiarity with Paul Williams that casual fans have should not be taken as an indication that Williams has somehow only recently burst on the scene. Williams has had 39 fights which is a fairly high total for a fighter in the modern era of boxing. Moreover, Williams fights at a torrid pace and definitely gives and takes a lot of….wait for it….punishment. The power of Paul Williams is cumulative as, more often than not, he wears his opponents down before taking them out. On top of that, he has never excelled on defense. That brutal combination usually leads to a shorter than average career at the top for a fighter.

The lack of world class defense never hurt Williams in the past because his punch output simply overwhelmed his opponent and when he did take a punch he seemed to do so very well. But that has started to change a little, he was hurt a few times against Martinez and he did buckle on a good right from Cintron. And let’s remember that among his many long, tough fights is a contest against Antonio Margarito. Williams went 12 hard rounds against Margarito. The second half of that fight in particular saw Margarito gain in effectiveness landing consistently with solid right hands down the stretch. Not only was that a physical fight, but we must now consider the question that will always accompany a discussion of an Antonio Margarito fight; just what was Paul Williams getting hit with that night?

Paul Williams is a wonderful fighter and hopefully he can squeeze some well deserved money out before he must contemplate retirement. Williams is still largely unknown, but he is hardly untested in the ring having endured more than his share of high contact fights; his prime years may have just slipped by.

Froch Retirement? That was fast…

No sooner than Carl Froch loses his first fight than the talk of retirement starts. However, this time it’s a little different. The ones talking about retirement are not the fans, but Carl Froch himself. This seems like pretty strange talk for a guy who appears for the most part to be full on arrogant in his appraisals of his boxing ability. Suddenly, with one loss there is talk of retirement? Where is the boastful talk of what he has learned and how even the greatest fighters lose and what matters is how one responds to those moments of adversity?

Froch recently lost a somewhat controversial decision to Mikkel Kessler in Denmark in phase two of the Super Six Super Middleweight Classic. I actually scored the Kessler fight for Froch by a single point. Interestingly, I thought Froch handled the post fight interview exceptionally well. He said he felt as though he won the fight, and while you may disagree, it is not as though his statement was outlandish. He then talked about the disparity in the scoring making a very salient point in suggesting that if one of the judges scored that fight nine rounds to three for Kessler then there was simply no way that he (Froch) could have possibly won a decision on that judges card. It is hard to disagree with that view. Judging by the scoring in this event, Froch is not exactly crazy for saying he doesn’t want to fight Arthur Abraham in his adopted home country of Germany. After going on the road to fight Kessler, Froch shouldn’t have to take on Abraham in Germany. Although it is hugely ironic that the most controversial decision in the event went for Froch and yet it is Froch who is complaining most loudly. What’s more fun than human nature? But, the fight location is the least of Froch’s problems at this point.

Froch needs to find a way to gain some confidence as the road doesn’t get any easier in the Super Six. Ordinarily, Froch could come home and take a fight or two against softer competition, get the winning feeling back and then step up again. However, in this format he steps right back into the fire against Arthur Abraham. If the US Open is billed as the toughest tennis in the world and the US Open is the toughest golf in the world then the Super Six is the toughest boxing in the world. The Super Six is built not just on fierce competition, but on a grueling pace that exacts a heavy toll: Physically, mentally, and emotionally.

Today’s top fighters don’t have to deal with the loss in the same way as many of their predecessors The brilliant fighters of today are cash cows that can be worth tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars. They are handled carefully. They are matched up well and moved along at a measured pace. Not because they are soft, but because they are incredibly valuable. The Super Six confounds the status quo by forcing top fighters to face each other one after the other; no options. The event challenges the psyche as much as the body. Winning the Super Six is not going to be purely a question of physical prowess; there will be a significant mental and emotional component as well. Already, every fighter other than Andre Ward has lost (Allan Green hasn’t lost but hasn’t fought either). Unless, Ward dominates this thing from start to finish, the winner of this event might just have to pick himself up off the canvas (figuratively speaking) and gut out a win; not when he feels ready, but now. Today’s brilliant but precocious talents are not always accustomed to winning that way, but they might just have to here.

Right now it is difficult to say where things are in terms of the physical questions in the Super Six as the favorites seem to change after every fight. But, the mental aspects might be starting to take shape. The talk of walking away sends a message that Carl Froch may not be strong enough mentally to pull this thing out. The Super Six brings great boxing matches, but in between it’s a grind and a grinder is going to take it down.

Source: ringsidereport.com

Roach's taking a 'duck and cover' approach to the Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr negotiation -- Examiner

By Rick Rockwell, Examiner.com

In a recent interview, Freddie Roach confessed that he's staying away from the entire negotiation process between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. It's probably the smart thing to do considering the amount of tension, politics, money, trash talking, and public scrutiny that's involved with these negotiations.

TITLE Freddie Roach Boxing DVD Set"I don't know what's going on. I'm staying out of it. I just know Manny will be fighting someone in November. We hope the opponent is Mayweather. If not, we'll fight someone else and we'll be ready." Roach, Boxingscene.com

Now, I don't think Freddie is completely oblivious to what's going on. I'm sure he gets updates and stays informed. I find his 'duck and cover' approach to be entertaining. He'll shy away from the 'negotiations' but he's not afraid to give his opinions on Floyd Mayweather Jr and what Manny Pacquiao will do to Floyd if they fight.

Freddie has repeatedly stated that he thinks Floyd Jr has lost his legs, lost a step, and has become 'flat footed'. Roach also has said on numerous occasions that Manny will knock out Floyd if they fight. Let's also not forget that Roach is so confident in Manny's skills that he once challenged Mayweather to fight Manny and the winner takes all.

In addition to his prophetic messages about Floyd Mayweather Jr, and a potential fight with Manny, Roach pokes his head out long enough to state who he would like to see Manny fight next if the Mayweather fight falls through. Roach wants Manny Pacquiao to KO Juan Manuel Marquez once and for all.

Perhaps, Roach's 'duck and cover' strategy is best for everyone involved with Pacquiao. It's probably the best way to avoid the wrath of Bob Arum who publicly lashed out at members of Manny's team just a few days ago.

Source: examiner.com

Barrera banking on one final title push -- San Antonio Express

By John Whisler, San Antonio Express

Marco Antonio Barrera is no longer baby-faced, and he's hardly the boxing assassin he once was.
But Barrera has a new promoter, and he's on a mission: He wants to become the first Mexican fighter to win titles in four different weight divisions.

“That is why I'm still fighting,” the former six-time world champion said Wednesday. “I want to make history.”

Erik Morales vs Marco Antonio Barrera 2004 11x17 Mini MOVIE POSTERTo do it, he'll have to get past his next opponent, Adailton De Jesus of Brazil. The two are scheduled to meet in a 10-round bout on the “Latin Fury 15” card June 26 at the Alamodome.

Barrera should have little trouble against an unknown foe. But another world title? It might be out of reach at this stage of his career.

A Mexico City native, Barrera turned pro at age 15 and began knocking out opponents at an astonishing rate. Hence the nickname, the “Baby-Faced Assassin.”

But as the years have piled up, so have the rounds and the ring miles against some of the sport's biggest names: Johnny Tapia, Prince Naseem Hamed, Erik Morales (three times), Manny Pacquiao (twice) and Juan Manuel Marquez.

At age 36, he's 65-7 with 43 knockouts but has lost three of his past five fights.

Looking more like a businessman than a prizefighter as he sat at a table at the Alamodome after the news conference promoting the upcoming June 26 card, Barrera dismissed the notion that he's washed up.

“This is not the first time I've been written off,” he said through a Spanish interpreter. “But I've fought the best of the best. And I live a healthy lifestyle. I'm very fit physically and mentally.”

Barrera was written off after losing to Junior Jones back-to-back in 1996 and '97, and after he lost to Pacquiao in 2003 at the Alamodome.

But he came back to win more titles and add to his legacy as one of Mexico's greatest fighters.

Top Rank, an unlikely alliance considering their bitter feuds over the years, is now promoting Barrera. Top Rank represented archrival Morales during all three of his epic battles with Barrera.

But Barrera is hoping the promoter is his ticket back to the top.

“I'm thankful for the opportunity,” Barrera said. “I want to prove to them I can win another world title.”

Goal intact: Barrera's quest to win titles in four weight divisions is still alive, now that fellow countryman Jorge Arce is off the June 26 card.

Arce was hoping to accomplish the feat in his interim WBO bantamweight title bout against Eric Morel on the card but was forced to withdraw after suffering a cut during sparring.

Card changes: While promoters have indicated that Arce-Morel won't be replaced, it apparently did create an opening. San Antonio's Emanuel Ledezma (8-1-1, 2 KOs) officially was added to the undercard this past week.

Now training under “Jesse” James Leija, Ledezma is scheduled to take on Nelson Ramos (4-0, 2 KOs) of Houston in a super middleweight bout.

Majestic night: Bellator Fighting Championships drew mixed reviews for its San Antonio debut.

The bouts were generally entertaining and provided a stark contrast to the grandeur of the Majestic Theatre.

But the crowd of about 1,000 was disappointing. Official capacity at the Majestic is 2,311.

Bellator CEO Bjorn Rebney said it's all about developing a fan base.

“You've got to be willing to come into a city, put down some roots and build the brand,” he said, adding that he hoped to bring Bellator back for another show in the future.

jwhisler@express-news.net

Source: mysanantonio.com

Sunday 30 May 2010

Klitschko takes down Pole -- Sky Sports

Sky Sports

Vitali Klitschko stopped Albert Sosnowski in the tenth round in Germany to retain his WBC world heavyweight title - and David Haye could be next in line for the Ukrainian.

European champion Sosnowski was giving away a huge height and weight advantage to the champion, and in the end it was all too much for the Pole.

Klitschko's victory was the 40th of his career, and his 38th knock-out, and it came in his fourth successful defence of the WBC belt he won back in 2008.

The 38-year-old did not look in the best of condition and was happy to take up the centre of the ring and allow Sosnowski to try and pick him off on the move.

Some big combinations started to get to Sosnowski though, and he was lucky the bell came to his rescue in the ninth round when he was trapped against the ropes.

Cut
A cut opened up above Sosnowski's left eye in the tenth, and with 29 seconds left of the round Klitschko finished the job as he sent his opponent to the deck.

"I was in good form, Sosnowski was younger than me, but people saw that I did well against him," said Klitschko, who wants to fight either WBA champ Haye or Ruslan Chagaev next.

"He did everything to win this fight, but my experience got me through."

Sosnowski was disappointed with the result but believes the experience will help him challenge for a world title in the future.

"I am a bit disappointed, because I thought I had a good chance of winning this fight," said Sosnowski.

"I am okay now, it was a hard punch, but I was also quite tired and I just didn't have the energy to get up.

"I am grateful for this fight and I hope to have another shot at the title in future."

Source: skysports.com

40th win for Klitschko with Sosnowski knock-out -- AFP

AFP

GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany — World WBC heavyweight champion Vitali Klitschko picked up the 40th win and 38th knock-out of his career with a tenth-round victory over challenger Albert Sosnowski here on Saturday.

Klitschko knocked out European heavyweight champion Sosnowski, 21, at the Veltins Arena, home of Bundesliga football side Schalke 04, and this was the fourth defence for the 38-year-old of the WBC title he won in October 2008.

Unser Fitnessbuch"I was in good form, Sosnowski was younger than me, but people saw that I did well against him," said Klitschko.

"He did everything to win this fight, but my experience got me through."

Klitschko said his next opponents are likely to be Britain's WBA heavyweight champion David Haye or former champ Ruslan Chagaev.

"I am a bit disappointed, because I thought I had a good chance of winning this fight," said Sosnowski, who recovered from the punch which sent him slumping to the canvas.

"I am okay now, it was a hard punch, but I was also quite tired and I just didn't have the energy to get up.

"I am grateful for this fight and I hope to have another shot at the title in future."

Keeping his guard low, Klitschko repeatedly pawed the Polish challenger in the opening rounds with Sosnowski, 13 centimetres shorter and 23 pounds lighter than his opponent, looking to land early punches on the champion.

Klitschko was not looking as physically prepared as usual and stayed mainly in the centre of the ring allowing the challenger to connect with the Ukrainian's chin in the fourth round.

The Ukrainian started to make his advantage count with a combination of punches in the fifth round and again in the sixth.

Sosnowski started landing some telling punches and made some progress against the champion in the seventh and eighth rounds as Klitschko seemed to tire.

But the Ukrainian finished the ninth round strongly, caught Sosnowski across the face and then pinned him to the ropes with a flurry of punches, but the bell saved the Polish fighter.

Sosnowski signalled to the crowd, but he looked wobbly at the start of the tenth and a big right opened a cut above his left eye and sent him slumping to the canvas with 29 seconds left of the round.

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

Source: google.com

Saturday 29 May 2010

Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao not automatic; obstacles include blood tests, purse split -- Grand Rapids Press

By David Mayo, The Grand Rapids Press

Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao live at the center of the most-asked question in boxing, about a fight that failed to be arranged once, seems no closer to being arranged now, and remains the subject of more speculation than most events in any sport. The question is simple: Will it happen?

Popular theory holds that Mayweather-Pacquiao is like a monolithic bank -- too big to fail -- except it already failed once, and frankly the only reason to believe it won't fail this time is that the two sides have so much more time to work toward a resolution than last time.

Over the four weeks since Mayweather annihilated Shane Mosley, rampant speculation has it that too much money is at stake for Mayweather-Pacquiao not to happen, that the fight will get made for Nov. 13, and that underground negotiations between the parties already have begun, to the exclusion of media.

Inside the World Bank: Exploding the Myth of the Monolithic BankThat's all fine, except for a few hitches, any or all of which could sink the fight, just as happened in the failed December and January talks.

The most-asked question in boxing is the one I'm asked more than anything these days.

And my answer remains the same. I don't know if Mayweather-Pacquiao will happen, now or ever, and am highly skeptical of it.

In the course of the past few weeks, a few non-newsworthy items have gotten treatment as being newsworthy. Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter, spoke to the media about negotiations to tell them he wouldn't be speaking to the media about negotiations anymore. Leonard Ellerbe and Richard Schaefer, both representing Mayweather, said there wasn't much to talk about right now anyway, because their man planned to take a nice break after his 12-round demolition of Mosley on May 1.

Pacquiao won a congressional election in The Philippines, which is newsworthy enough, but has little to do with making a fight against Mayweather for undisputed pound-for-pound supremacy.

Mayweather is under consideration to replace Lennox Lewis as an HBO analyst.

And Theartha Mayweather Jr., oldest brother of Floyd Mayweather Sr., Roger Mayweather and Jeff Mayweather -- and the only one among those who didn't make his name off boxing -- died here last week, after a lengthy illness.

Then there was the one single tidbit of promising information relative to making the fight: Pacquiao, after waffling out of the fight last winter over his demand that no blood testing occur within 24 days of the fight, yielded to Mayweather, who waffled out of the first negotiations by demanding that the blood-testing cutoff be set at 14 days beforehand.

Only one problem: Mayweather said months ago, well before beating Mosley, that his 14-day cutoff window isn't in play anymore, and that blood testing must be allowed right up until the fight.

He also said that if his fight with Mosley did big business, the original financial agreements -- which weren't a problem at all -- would come off the table, and he would require an edge in the monetary split before agreeing to the fight.

So some recent indignation when Mayweather did exactly what he said he would -- demanded more money than Pacquiao, and asked that the 14-day window be closed -- is a bit disingenuous.

One man's opinion, but the 14-day window probably remains workable. Mayweather-Mosley was conducted under guidelines that allowed for blood testing right up until the fight, yet there was none in those final two weeks, so establishing that cutoff for Mayweather-Pacquiao probably would have no effect. And even if either fighter lived on intravenous performance enhancers in the final two weeks before the fight, the possibility of tangible gains -- and not getting nabbed in post-fight testing -- virtually would be nonexistent.

There are enough other obstacles to create enormous concern, however.

The concept that boxing needs Mayweather-Pacquiao and is in something of a holding pattern until it happens seems accurate enough.

As for the popular theory that it's a foregone conclusion, well, that's just uninformed.

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

Source: mlive.com

Where there's smoke there's fire; and 'Camp Pacquiao' is smoking -- Examiner

By Rick Rockwell, Examiner.com

The latest news coming out of Camp Pacquiao is not all warm and fuzzy as it was just a few weeks ago when Manny Pacquiao won his congressional seat. There is a division brewing over recent comments made by certain members of Pacquiao's management team. Comments that have not only angered promoter Bob Arum but have also angered the pound for pound king.

"I know Manny is just as angry as I am that these guys, who have nothing to do with any of these negotiations, keep shooting their mouths off and inflaming the situation,” Bob Arum, Boxingscene.com

FirepowerArum is referring to the following comments recently made by Eric Pineda and Franklin Gacal.

"We just got word that it seems to be that way. But we will never agree to that." Gacal, Philstar.com

"Yes, we were told that Floyd now wants a bigger share. And if that’s the case, we now feel that he really doesn’t want to fight Manny because Floyd knows we will never agree on that." Pineda, Philstar.com

Pineda and Gacal's statements were in response to Floyd Mayweather Jr's demands of wanting a larger percentage of the fight purse.

"They (statements) are more than irritating, because so much of this is ego and when you say that if he (Mayweather) says this Manny Pacquiao is not going to fight, that’s not the way you negotiate," Arum Boxingscene.com

What I don't understand is why Bob Arum is so frustrated over things. He's the one who originally said that he would keep his mouth shut over things and then a few days later he's telling the world that Floyd Mayweather Jr and Shane Mosley last blood tested 18-19 days out from the fight. These comments caused a frenzy which led me to obtaining a copy of the drug testing summary directly from the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Now, Bob is frustrated over others who are expressing their opinions just like Bob has done so many times before. If Bob wants a gag order on everyone who's a part of team Pacquiao, then he should start with himself first. But, Pineda and Gacal aren't the only ones outside of Arum who have been making comments. Manny Pacquiao has also been pretty vocal over these negotiations too. Which, members of the media like myself, think is a good thing.

There's no possible way that these negotiations are going to remain private. In fact, I think Team Pacquiao should make them as public as possible to show the public that they are willing to compromise and make the fight happen. That would put more pressure on Team Mayweather. Instead, we are getting divisiveness and in-house fighting. I'm surprised to see this coming from them because usually it's a much more well oiled machine.

There's smoke in 'Camp Pacquiao' and they better be careful before things go up in a blaze of divisiveness and blame.

Source: examiner.com

Arum slams Pacquiao associates for public statements -- Examiner

By Charles Indriolo, Examiner.com

Speaking with Boxingscene.com today, Top Rank CEO Bob Arum wasn’t happy with Manny Pacquiao’s associates for speaking to the media regarding negotiations between Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr.

“I know Manny is just as angry as I am that these guys, who have nothing to do with any of these negotiations, keep shooting their mouths off and inflaming the situation,” said Arum.

Keep Your Mouth Shut and Wear Beige“What are Eric Pineda [Pacquiao’s business manager] and Jeng Gacal [Pacquiao’s lawyer], who know nothing about what’s happening, doing? Why are they shooting their mouths off?”

Earlier this week, Pineda and Gacal told The Philippine Star that Floyd Mayweather was demanding for more than a 50-50 split of the profits to fight Pacquiao. A demand both said Pacquiao would refuse. However, Arum is adamant that neither man has any clue to what is going on in the negotiations.

Earlier this month, Arum said a gag order would be placed on this round of negotiations between Team Pacquiao and Team Mayweather. He feels both sides prevented an agreement from happening the first negotiating period because all involved went to the media to vent their frustrations. Arum knows a fight of this magnitude could fall through again if those involved try to negotiate through the media.

“They (statements) are more than irritating, because so much of this is ego and when you say that if he (Mayweather) says this Manny Pacquiao is not going to fight, that’s not the way you negotiate,” said Arum.

Arum and Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer, who’s representing Mayweather in the negotiations, are quietly trying to come to an agreement. Hopefully, one gets made soon.

Source: examiner.com

UFC 114: Rampage, Evans both Pacquiao fans -- ABS-CBN News

By Bev Llorente, ABS-CBN North America News Bureau

LAS VEGAS, Nevada -- Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) 114 battle of the lightweight division fighters is on.

Sin City is all hyped up for this Saturday’s (Sunday in Manila) prime time event, Rampage vs Evans, which will happen at the MGM Grand Arena.

Ultimate Fighting Championship Classics Collection, Vol. 1-4It will be another revenue generating event for the entertainment capital of the world, as UFC fans from all over the world are expected to flock to Sin City, which needs sporting events like this to attract tourists.

UFC’s CEO Dana White said that every time there is a UFC fight, it impacts the economic revenue globally.

He also expressed his wish to hold a UFC fight in the Philippines.

“We have a huge economic impact no matter what part of the world we are in. People come from all over the world to watch the fight,” said White.

Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, who is known for his wrestling and slamming ability in the Octagon, admitted that he is a huge Manny Pacquiao fan.

“I know Pacquiao is a great fighter. He is a cool guy. I like the way he fights, and I just want to say to all my Filipino fans out there: come and watch me this Saturday. Don’t go to the restroom. Don’t even blink, put a tape in your eye. The guy is going to sleep any second,” Jackson said.

Rampage’s opponent “Suga” Rashad Evans said that Pacquiao’s style in boxing is ferocious, and he will do the same Pacquiao moves this Saturday.

“Manny is not afraid to risk it all to win, and that’s a fine line a lot of people afraid to walk that line, where they try to be so clean and they’re afraid to even take a chance, and they never take a chance and they don’t get the dramatic finishes or win,” said Evans.

ABS-CBN’S “Get it Here” Studio 23 will be airing the fight on Sunday morning at 8:00 a.m. live.

Source: abs-cbnnews.com

'Pacquiao's chances vs Floyd depend on first 5 rounds' -- ABS-CBN News

abs-cbnNEWS.com

MANILA, Philippines -- Boxing analyst Al Bernstein thinks 7-division champ Manny Pacquiao’s chances against Floyd Mayweather Jr. will depend on how he handles the first half of his fight against the undefeated American.

Bernstein, who was ESPN’s boxing commentator for many years and is now a fight analyst for Showtime Championship boxing, said Pacquiao would have to survive the first 5 rounds with Mayweather to get a chance of beating the former pound-for-pound king.

“If Pacquiao fights him, Mayweather is likely going to hit him with a big right hand in the first five rounds,” the analyst told Examiner.com.

Silver Star Pacquiao Pistole Men's Tee, XX, WHBoxing fans are anticipating a showdown between the two pound-for-pound kings, whose planned super fight last March 13 was shelved because of disagreements over the type of drug testing they will use before the bout.

“If Manny Pacquiao doesn’t go down or get badly hurt, Manny Pacquiao is either going to beat Floyd Mayweather or he is going to make it such an exciting, hellacious fight that we are going to all be happy,” added Bernstein.

Pacquiao’s handler, Top Rank promotions chief Bob Arum, is working to forge a deal with the Mayweather camp for the mega fight planned on November 13.

The Filipino boxer, who just won a congressional seat in Sarangani province, has already agreed to the American fighter’s demand to have himself blood tested 14 days before the fight.

However, Mayweather’s camp has yet to issue a formal statement regarding Pacquiao’s decision.

Some observers believe the silence in Mayweather’s camp might be an indication that the negotiations are moving, and that the major players in the talks are keeping their meetings under wraps.

Berstein said Mayweather’s insistence on Olympic-style drug testing was just a strategy that got out of hand.

“I think it was just a ploy on the part of Floyd and his people that got out of hand. I think once they took that position, they couldn’t back off from it,” he said.

Source: abs-cbnnews.com

Friday 28 May 2010

Mayweather camp confident of win -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

If the handlers of Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather succeed in dotting the Is and crossing the Ts, the outcome of the fight being proposed for November 13 will end in Mayweather’s favor.

Roger Mayweather, the former world champion and uncle of Floyd, told the website examiner that “Pacquiao is going to get his ass whipped just like Shane Mosley.”

Roger also trains his nephew and is supremely confident that the Filipino won’t stand a chance.

Para Sa'yo Ang Laban Na'to“It’s actually going to be much easier (for Floyd),” said Roger, referring to the lopsided win scored against Mosley last May 1.

Admitting that the pairing is “the only fight that makes sense,” Roger remains unconvinced that the fight is going to take place owing to the touchy issue of random drug testing.

“Anytime a guy doesn’t want to take a drug test, it tells you a lot about a guy. If the fight doesn’t come off it’s because he doesn’t want to take the test. If the fight doesn’t come off it won’t be because Floyd turned the fight down.”

Representatives from the two sides are currently in the thick of negotiations for the super showdown to happen.

Pacquiao has agreed to be tested as long as the latest will be 14 days before the fight and that only a reasonable amount should be taken from him.

Team Mayweather hasn’t responded to Pacquiao’s bold move although there have been reports circulating that a new issue – revenue-sharing – has surfaced and that Mayweather is not amenable to a 50-50 split with Pacquiao.

Source: mb.com.ph

Margaret Goodman Says Boxing Can Afford Random Drug Testing -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

As a former ringside physician and Medical Advisory Board Chairman for the Nevada State Athletic Commission, Las Vegas-based neurologist Dr. Margaret Goodman "was part of advancing medical testing of both MMA fighters and boxers that included MRI scans and testing for anabolic steroids" in the early 2000s.

"The MRI testing, at the time, started in 2001 as a pilot program. There was a time where fighters were being educated," said Goodman, recalling that one of the major hurdles hindering an MRI testing program was cost. "So it was in 2001 that the individuals were notified, and then in 2002, the testing was actually begun more uniformly. [Cost] was one of the main arguments in order to get us to not do it."

But the proponents of safety in the NSAC continued to peck away at the problem until a resolution was reached.

"When we did MRI studies, the MRI studies were $1,500 apiece, and we got the price down to $425. That's still a lot of money to a kid who is earning $100 a round. But the point is that with this drug-testing, I'm sure there's ways to negotiate it so that it wouldn't be nearly as costly," said Goodman.

"When it came to instituting MRI/MRA testing in Nevada, we were able to negotiate reasonable prices. Former Nevada commissioner Dr. Flip Homansky and I sat down with radiologists and radiological facilities and hammered out the details," said Goodman.

"The commission held a hearing on the matter. Initially, everyone told us it would be impossible and ruin boxing in the state, but we got it done, and boxing prospered instead of declined in Nevada. I am sure that this can be done for PED testing," said Goodman.

10 Panel Dip Drug Testing Kit, Test for 10 Different Drugs."When I was chairman of the Association of Boxing Commission's medical committee over five years ago, drug testing -- not PED-- but just routine drug testing for drugs of abuse was discussed," said Goodman. "Today, a few more states are testing, but only a handful test for PED's."

In other words, Goodman believes that it is time for the implementation of a comprehensive random drug-testing procedure involving blood and urine extraction from boxers. She believes that it can be made as affordable as MRI testing was for the sport of boxing when the thought first surfaced nearly 10 years ago.

"I believe that if the athletic commission were to approach the World Anti-Doping Agency, or, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, I'm sure that there is a way that the cost could be reduced, or there could be some kind of arrangement made even with the local laboratories," said Goodman.

"Do this under a research project, get funding. This is not that complicated. You don't want to just work with yourself, you want to work outside of yourself with other experts," said Goodman. "As much expertise as the Nevada Commission's Medical Advisory Board has, they're not experts in drug testing."

Random drug testing has been in the boxing news since late November, when a proposed megafight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao reached a impasse over whether or not both fighters would be randomly tested during training.

Leading up to his May 1 unanimous decision victory over Shane Mosley in Las Vegas, Mayweather and his rival were randomly tested -- a first in boxing -- by the USADA.

But opinions vary on the effectiveness of the procedure and whether or not it belongs in boxing.

"Following the Pacquiao-Mayweather debacle over drug testing, I asked the American Association of Professional Ring Physicians to query commissions as to whether or not they were considering changing their drug-testing polices regarding PED's," said Goodman.

"Essentially none responded positively," said Goodman. "But I know that this can be handled expeditiously with the direct assistance and oversight of WADA and/or USADA. I know these organizations will help, as would Don Catlin, director of the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory."

Goodman, in other words, is a staunch advocate.

"I think that PED testing can be affordable, at least this must be investigated now. But cost is always the bottom-line, and rightly so," said Goodman. "It isn't fair to expect a club fighter to have to spend 50 percent or more of their purse on testing. However, from previous experience, commissions will concern themselves with the following:

1. Man power needed to administer the testing or administrative costs.

2. The overall costs of the testing, and who is going to foot the bill.

3. The repercussions in fight card cancellations.

4. Whether or not the jurisdiction loses cards simply by instituting a rigorous drug testing program.

5. If a fighter tests positive, and the bout is canceled, what are the costs in defending the test results -- possible legal fees -- and will the testing stand up in court.

"No commission wants fighters competing on PED's, but these are all understandable issues that need to be addressed. The main approach is for commissions to acknowledge the problem and sit down with experts like Don Catlin to design a feasible testing protocol. They would need to negotiate the fees, educate the fighters and trainers on the process, and begin implementation," said Goodman.

"I would ask the oversight organization to include input and advice from respected former trainers and fighters and Dr. Homansky, who was the first in the United States to institute drug and steroid testing," said Goodman. "The USADA has opened the door to show boxing this can be done, so it is too late to ignore the situation."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Wednesday 26 May 2010

Arum Looks To Cotto-Foreman, Waits For "Money" Response On Manny Fight -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Bob Arum is gearing up for the June 5 showdown at Yankee Stadium, pitting two Top Rank fighters, Yuri Foreman of Brooklyn and Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico, against each other. On Tuesday, Arum was at the famed and fabled Gleasons Gym in Brooklyn, watching Foreman do a workout for press. He weighed in on the importance of having high profile bouts in mega stadiums, and termed the Cotto-Foreman fight a 50-50 flip of the coin special. But not too much time passed before Arum, who is still basking in the glow of Manny Pacquiao's Congressional win, was asked if Pacquaio-Mayweather would go down on Nov. 13 in Texas, as he desires.

The Sweet ScienceThe ball is firmly in Mayweather's court, the promoter told TSS. He didn't specify on the who, what, when and where of negotiations, but Arum said he communicated to Team Mayweather that Pacman will agree to drug testing 14 days before a fight, as was requested by Team Mayweather in the last, disastrous round of negotiations. And, has Team Mayweather responded?

"Nothing," Arum said. "Haven't heard a word. The ball is completely in Mayweather's court. Every term has been agreed to." Cynics who think Mayweather is looking to erect unpassable hurdles, so this fight won't go down, suspect that Mayweather will try and use his last showing, physically and financially, to put forward new demands to Team Pacquiao. Like, my fight against Mosley did so much better than yours against Clottey, I deserve that much bigger slice of the pie. So far, a re-slicing of the pie hasn't been suggested to Arum, he said. "It's still a 50-50 split," he said.

As of today, Arum said, no meeting is scheduled with Team Mayweather, ie Al Haymon, Richard Schaefer and Leonard Ellerbe, so don't expect a breakthrough soon. Pacquiao will be in New York early next week, with his whole family, giving them a taste of the NYC tourist experience, so hopefully we'll have movement by then. Arum has not, he said, put Plan B aka Antonio Margarito versus Pacquiao, into high gear. The Master of the Plaster Disaster would still need to be re-licensed in the US, so that's one hurdle to that bout, but indications are that he'll be able to get the okay to fight in the States by the end of the year.

Foreman's affable backer, NYC restaurant owner Murray Wilson, was at Gleasons. He said that if his guys gets the better of Cotto, which he expects, a showdown with Margarito would make sense. If that goes well, then a bout with Pacquiao is on his wish list. He almost had that locked down before Clottey got the date, and was about to sign the deal with Arum when Pacquiao advisor Michael Koncz sent word that Foreman was out as an opponent, even though Freddie Roach had given the thumbs up. "Koncz said no, Yuri was too big," Wilson told TSS. "Yuri didn't grow overnight. Freddie agreed to it."

Wilson said that Cotto ex cornerman Miguel Diaz, who was let go by Cotto because he didn't inspect Margarito's hands before they fought, has said, "The only time Cotto is going to touch Foreman is during the glove touch before the bout."

SPEEDBAG Arum is pumped to do more of these big stadium fights. He's eyeing Dodger Stadium, perhaps for a Juan Manuel Lopez/Rafael Marquez bout, for next year.

---Foreman's gorgeous wife, model Leyla Leidecker, was at Gleasons, checking on her guy. She directed a documentary about women fighting in the NY Golden Gloves, and she said it's available on Netflix. Here's the URL to tell you more about it. http://www.goldenglovesmovie.com/

--Arum will get roasted, er, toasted by the Friars Club in NYC next week. Ex footballer Jim brown, and hulking Canadian ex heavyweight George Chuvalo will be there to honor the 78-year-old Brooklyn-born dealmaker.

Source: thesweetscience.com

Tuesday 25 May 2010

Floyd Mayweather Jr.: Man, mouse or just mannequin -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

Man or mouse?

That's what Manny Pacquiao fans and many just plain fight fans are asking about Floyd Mayweather Jr. right now as he hides behind a wall of silence and shows no great desire to tangle with the only fighter who can drop him from the ranks of the undefeated.

I say that Mayweather, who is running silent but hardly deep, is neither.

Mannequin: New Full Body/Full Size Black Male Fiberglass MannequinI say that Mayweather has become a mannequin, a dummy like the ones you see in the department stores.

At this point, can you imagine what great boxing icons of the past would be doing in the face of a threat like Pacquiao?

Muhammad Ali would be pounding the table, trying to come up with insults and warnings about how he would Pacman like a lazy donkey.

Ali would be invading Pacman's training quarters trailed by TV cameras.

His archrival, Smokin' Joe Frazier, would be talking a blue streak about how he will rip Manny apart.

Sugar Ray Leonard would be telling the media he would be glad "to accomodate Pacquiao" anytime, anywhere.

Marvelous Marvin Hagler would be telling us how no judges would be needed for the fight, how he would bring his two fists, one called "K" and the other known as "O," and that would obivate the need for any paper shuffling fight scorers. Hagler would say the only other required person would be a referee able to count to 10.

"I will destruct and I will destroy Pacquiao," Marvy Marv would say repeatedly.

Those guys knew how to throw gasoline onto the bonfire. Those guys knew how to fuel an already burning rivalry, how to stoke a hot match that caught the public imagination.

Maybe Mayweather is being held in isolation for a reason although I can't think of any.

Maybe Mayweather walks the steamy streets of hometown Las Vegas in a burqua, his face hidden by a veil.

By contrast, Pacman even gives out interviews from a hospital bed in Manila, where he was treated and released for a stomach ailment.

A European sportswriter recently inquired about getting at Mayweather for an interview.

"You seem to write positively about Pacquiao all the time," the scribe was told by way of rejection.

In other words, pal, take your million plus daily circulation and buzz off.

But the same writer would have little problem getting access to Pacman.

Pacquiao is headed from Manila to Los Angeles and he will speak to the media.

Then he comes to my fair city, New York, to pick up is 32nd Fighter of the Year Award from the Boxing Writers Association, and of course he will speak to the media.

But Mayweather remains a virtual shut in in Nevada.

What are Mayweather's handlers afraid of?

Maybe they know their charge will say something moronic like his comment about a possible fight against little known Sergio Martinez.

"That's interesting," Mayweather told someone.

No, it's not, it is idiotic.

The public pulse is for Mayweather-Pacquiao and for that mega bout only.

It's clear to me that Mayweather wouldn't be upset if he does fight some chopped liver opponent next.

By contrast, Pacman wants Mayweather like the starving wolf wants the meaty lamb chop.

But we know what Manny thinks, what he wants because he's not locked away in any so called Big Boy Mansion.

Speak Mayweather speak, make your intentions known.

Pacquiao wants to tear you limb from limb. Pacquiao smells the mood of the paying customers.

Your talent is large but your access to any media, unless they are complete and utter bootlickers, is limited.

So we don't know how badly you want Pacquiao next, if indeed that's really what you desire at all.

Floyd Mayweather, man, mouse or merely a mannequin?

Speak louder, L'il Floyd, we can't hear you.

You say you're an icon but you don't act like one.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Released From Hospital, Manny Pacquiao Films Sitcom -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Manny Pacquiao has been knocked out twice during the early part of his boxing career.

But you just can't keep a great man down.

The seven-division champion has won his past 12 fights, a span of more than five years that include eight knockouts.

And on Tuesday in the Philippines, just hours after climbing out of a hospital bed, the crossover star and recently elected congressman was in a studio filming a soon-to-be-released sitcom, "Show Me The Manny."

After three days of treatment for "stomach pain from an ulcer and acid reflux and fatigue," the 31-year-old WBO welterweight (147 pounds) champion was released from the Cardinal Santos Hospital in suburban Manila, his adviser, Michael Koncz, told FanHouse.

Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) was admitted on Sunday, and rested until being discharged, said Koncz. Pacquiao had successfully campaigned for a congressional seat in the Sarangani province following the May 10 elections.

Pacquiao's diagnoses was the result of a routine checkup on Sunday, after which his family convinced him to stay at the hospital, according to Pacquiao's political adviser, Miles Roces.

As much energy as Pacquiao exerts in the ring, let alone that which he exerted during his landslide congressional victory, being hospitalized was among the rare times Pacquiao has been off of his feet in the ring or out.

"Well, that's not exactly accurate," said Koncz. "He does sleep."

Pacquiao received intravenous dextrose drips while hospitalized.

"You know that the guy is always out, but he realized that he needed the rest," said Roces. "So now, he's taking some time off from the exhaustive routine, spending some time with his family, with his kids."

Ty Energizer Bunny (Walgreens Exclusive) Beanie BabyPacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, is working toward a possible mega bout with Floyd Mayweather (41-0, 25 KOs) for as early as November, even as Pacquiao is slated to assume his congressional duties starting on June 30.

Arum has said that he will soon start talking to Mayweather's camp about putting together the world's top two welterweights for a Nov. 13 bout in Las Vegas or Texas.

Arum said he hoped to match Pacquiao against former welterweight champion Antonio Margarito if talks with Mayweather fall through.

Pacquiao, meanwhile, has duties that include endorsements and advertisements for products ranging from food to sports items.

"Manny's fine. His spirits are good and we're actually filming at the studio right now. It's his sitcom, 'Show Me The Manny,' " said Koncz. "Manny's bounced back 100 percent. He's resilient. That's just the way that Manny is. He's like the energizer bunny rabbit. He can just keep going and going."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Sports news seems as if it's on steroids -- Los Angeles Times

By Bill Dwyre, Los Angeles Times

Our sports news cycles have become spurts of normality, squeezed between stories about athletes and drugs.

Sometimes, we can go for a couple of months. But then — wham, bang — there is Floyd Landis, telling all. Or Brian Cushing, saying he didn't think what he was taking was wrong. Or Floyd Mayweather Jr., pointing his finger at Manny Pacquiao.

They used to be called sports pages. Now it's the pharmaceutical section. Rite Aid is missing some great advertising opportunities.

Understanding Pharma: The Professional's Guide to How Pharmaceutical and Biotech Companies Really WorkDon't misunderstand. This is not a rant against the media. Media serve as the messenger of stories that need to be told so that people buying the tickets and the goods hawked on TV during sports broadcasts can have at least some idea of what their entertainment dollar is purchasing. Do you write that $4,000 check for season tickets when Manny Ramirez is going to sit out 50 Dodgers games for enhancing his performance with stuff that isn't Advil?

There is so much of it now. Mea culpas from Alex Rodriguez and Mark McGwire. Shane Mosley, back in the ring with questions about the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative scandal swirling around him. A doctor in Toronto, accused in a federal complaint of having provided NFL players with performance enhancers, the same doctor who has said his patients once included A-Rod and Tiger Woods.

Olympic sprint star Marion Jones is back in the news with her return to athletics and a spot on a WNBA team. We are reminded of Ben Johnson when his infamous coach, Charlie Francis, dies. Horse trainer Jeff Mullins is hit with yet another suspension for putting bad stuff in the horse or the hay.

And somewhere, behind closed doors, they are trying again to make a fight between Mayweather and Pacquiao, while facing the same stumbling block that killed the last one: drug testing.

The subject of drugs in sports always brings to mind two people, Lily Tomlin and Michael Josephson.

Tomlin, the wonderful comedian, once said, "No matter how cynical I get, I can't keep up."

Josephson, a friend and mentor who is heard frequently on KNX with his vignettes on right and wrong, has long seen sports as fertile ground for ethical reform. He should be remembered in our prayers as he attempts to clean out the cesspool with a teaspoon.

Big-time sports these days are no different from Wall Street or your corner banker. Everybody wants an edge. Wall Street and the bankers get theirs in mostly legal, although murky, ways. Sports cross that line more and more now. If it isn't cheating unless you get caught, there must be lots of cheating in sports. For every Cal Ripken Jr., we have a handful of Roger Clemenses.

The specifics of the Landis case bring back to the forefront an element of the performance-enhancing drug world that has been much discussed in the Mayweather-Pacquiao controversy. In our legal system, you are innocent until proven guilty. When Landis pointed his finger at cycling superstar Lance Armstrong, just as Mayweather had at Pacquiao, it suddenly was the other way around.

Whether true or not, Armstrong and Pacquiao are, in the eyes of millions, guilty of enhancing their performances with drugs. Sports give that kind of platform, get that kind of attention.

Armstrong is guilty because he was hugely successful, because he competes in a sport that has been shown to be full of cheaters and because Landis said he is. Pacquiao is guilty because he is hugely successful, because Mayweather and several of his associates said he couldn't have possibly gotten so big and strong so fast without drugs, and because he refused to take a blood test just prior to the fight.

Millions listened to Landis and Mayweather and said the same thing about Armstrong and Pacquiao: Gotcha.

Armstrong can sue for slander or defamation, win millions, and people will still wink knowingly. Pacquiao has already sued, and depositions have begun in that case. He, too, can win millions. He can also fight Mayweather after taking blood tests just prior to the fight, and win the bout. No matter. People will still wink knowingly.

The juice is out of the needle.

Big-time sports are now so corroded by big money, by TV networks chasing big money with big ratings, and by all sorts of other media chasing the TV networks, that there is no turning back. Big money is the ultimate justification for athletes to cut corners chasing it.

If that is a cynical view, blame Lily Tomlin.

The games will go on as always. There will be much to root for, much to be excited about. And we can always hope that the greatness we see is really, truly untarnished.

But we won't be surprised if it isn't.

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Source: articles.latimes.com

UFC: Georges St Pierre recruits trainer Freddie Roach -- Daily Star

By Kevin Francis, DailyStar.co.uk

GEORGES St Pierre is already on top of the world – but now he’s aiming to get even better!

The UFC world welterweight champion has recruited legendary boxing trainer Freddie Roach to help hone his skills even more.

Roach is the man behind WBO world welter­weight champion Manny Pacquiao and the resurgence of Britain’s WBA light-welterweight king Amir Khan.

UFC Undisputed 2010
Roach has had 25 world champions through his famous Wildcard Gym and has previously worked with other MMA stars, including Anderson Silva.

A member of the Roach team revealed: “Freddie is very much at home with MMA fighters and can really help them.

Power

“People like GSP are at the top of their game, but it won’t do any harm to pick up some of the tips Freddie can give them.”

St Pierre is set to defend his title against Josh Koscheck in a rematch from their UFC 74 fight back in August 2007.

St Pierre out-wrestled him on that ­occasion, but ­Koscheck said: “Georges, you better work on your power because I’m ­going to force you to stand up with me and I’m ­going to knock you out.”

GSP and Koscheck will be coaches on the ­upcoming season of ‘The ­Ultimate Fighter’, with their rematch later this year.

RASHAD Evans meets ‘Rampage’ Jackson at UFC 114, which will be shown live on ESPN from 3am this Sunday morning.

Source: dailystar.co.uk

Q&A Andre Berto -- FightNews

By Ricardo Conde, FightNews.com

In his last outing, undefeated WBC welterweight champion Andre Berto (26-0, 20 KOs) defeated former WBO welterweight champion Carlos “El Indio” Quintana (27-3, 21 KOs) of Puerto Rico, via knockout in the eight round last month at the Bank Atlantic Center in Sunrise, Florida. We recently caught up with Andre Berto and asked him a few questions about his fight with Carlos Quintana, who he’d like to face in the near future and a lot more. Here’s what he had to say…

You were scheduled for a WBC/WBA welterweight unification bout in January against “Sugar” Shane Mosley (46-6, 39 KOs) but had to withdraw two weeks before the fight because of the tragic earthquake in Haiti and the loss of some family. Can you talk a little bit about that? What was going through your mind when you first learned about it, what was your reaction upon hearing about the earthquake, and about having to withdraw from the fight?

It was a very tough situation for me, I was basically preparing for the biggest fight of my life and then to have such tragedies happen and losing my family like I did, it was hard. I went through different emotional stages during that time. I was trying to stay focused for the fight and at the same time I was worried about my family that I lost and that’s all I could think about. Everyday it just kept getting harder and harder so we made a decision to cancel the fight so I can make a trip over there and try to do everything I could for my family.

Subsequently, Mosley ended up fighting Floyd Mayweather Jr. (41-0, 25 KOs), give us your thoughts on the fight, was it what you expected?

Yes, and no, I mean Mosley definitely showed his age. He just couldn’t get off; he just couldn’t let his hands go. Floyd, he looked sharp, it was the best I’ve ever seen him, he stayed composed and very relaxed and he came out with the win, it was a good win for Floyd.

Any idea who you’ll be fighting next, when and where?

I’m not sure yet. I just got off the phone with my manager and it looks like I’ll be back in the fall, sometime in August or September maybe. They haven’t mentioned any names but I’m still in rehab for my bicep that I injured during my last fight so I’ll have to be 100% before we can make a decision on when I’ll be coming back.

Let’s talk a little bit about your last fight. In your last outing you were able to stop former WBO welterweight champion Carlos Quintana in the 8th round, what’s your opinion of him as a fighter?

Carlos Quintana is a tough fighter. He’s a tough southpaw and he’s showed that in the fight with Miguel Cotto, he showed that when he beat Paul Williams, and he’s definitely a tough veteran. He impressed me a lot but I came out victorious.

Before your fight with Carlos Quintana, you hadn’t fought for almost a year; do think having been out of the ring for so long had any affect on you during the fight?

Yes, definitely I felt some ring rust in there, with everything that was going on I couldn’t fight for a year but I still had to go in there and do what I do best and that’s winning. So I definitely paid a price there, I was battling two things in the fight, ring rust and it didn’t make things easier when I injured my bicep in the second round so it was just another obstacle I had to overcome.

You had injured your bicep during the fight, how’s the arm now?

It’s feeling better, a lot better. I’ve been in rehab so it’s getting better. The doctor said I couldn’t be in the gym for a few weeks so with rehab everything is coming along pretty well.

What kind of statement were you looking to make in your fight with Carlos Quintana, were you looking for the knockout?

Yea, definitely, with so much attention on the 147 pound division and going the distance in my last three fights, we worked on different things in the gym and I definitely wanted to make a statement in this fight with Carlos Quintana. I went into the fight with a lot more emotion and I really wanted to give the fans a great performance.

Who do you feel has been your toughest opponent to date and why?

I think my fights with David Estrada and Luis Collazo have been my toughest fights. With David Estrada, I felt like that was my first real test as a young fighter coming up, I would punch the guy and he would come back and punch me harder and I had to dig deep in that fight to come out with the win and I did. With Luis Collazo, I didn’t come in the best shape and he definitely pushed me to the limit in that fight but again we did what we do best and that’s winning.

What is your opinion on the current welterweight division?

It’s the best division in boxing right now. At the top of the division you have Floyd Mayweather Jr., Manny Pacquiao and these are guys I looked up to coming up and now to be up there with them in the same division, its great. It’s just so full of great competition.

Name one or two fighters you’d like to face in the near future?

Well, anyone at the top of the division. I’d love to fight Floyd, Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto; a fight with any one of them would be great. Basically anyone in the top five of the division would be great.

Do you plan on moving up in weight any time soon?

Not right now, the weight has been coming pretty easy. No plans on moving up any time soon, I haven’t had any problems making weight, so no.

You are signed with Lou DiBella’s, DiBella Entertainment; tell us a little bit about him and how it has helped your career?

Louie has been great, he’s always believed in me and had faith in me from the beginning. He’s done a lot for my career and I know we made the right choice in teaming up.


What are some of your goals for the rest of 2010?

Well, I hope 2010 will be an interesting year for us. One goal of course is to stay healthy and hopefully I can give the fans the best fights.

Is there anything you would like to tell your fans?

Definitely, I really and truly appreciate everybody that’s shown me support here in the States and all over the world; I thank everyone for all the tremendous support. I look forward to putting on some great fights for the fans and make this the best year.

Source: fightnews.com

Dana White Says Mayweather, Pacquiao Would Lose in MMA -- MMA Fighting

By Michael David Smith, MMAFighting.com

UFC President Dana White gave an interview Monday morning in which he talked about all the usual things (promoting the soon-to-be released UFC video game and this weekend's UFC pay-per-view), but he also had an interesting exchange with radio host Dan Patrick about the world's two best boxers, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao.

UFC: Ultimate 100 Greatest FightsWhite said Mayweather and Pacquiao would lose if they gave mixed martial arts a try. I think he's half right.

Patrick asked White, "If I put Pacquiao and Mayweather in the Octagon, could you tell -- from their boxing skills -- how they would be in the Octagon?"

White answered, "I'm a huge Pacquiao fan. Pacquiao is a more aggressive fighter and his fights are more fun to watch, but either one of those guys would get beaten in mixed martial arts."

Obviously, White isn't going to say that Mayweather or Pacquiao could just waltz into MMA and beat the best fighters, but it is worth noting that it's far from unprecedented for an accomplished athlete in one combat sport toget into MMA and find success quickly. Brock Lesnar, after all, was an NCAA champion wrestler who won the UFC heavyweight title in just his fourth professional MMA fight.

It's also a little strange that White is saying Mayweather or Pacquiao would lose in MMA while he's preparing to promote a fight featuring boxer James Toney making his MMA debut against Randy Couture. If the two best boxers in the world can't win in MMA, why even bother watching a washed-up boxer like Toney?

Ultimately, I think White is underestimating how Mayweather or Pacquiao would do in MMA -- and in fact, I think Pacquiao would have an excellent chance of winning a championship in MMA if he ever wanted to try it.

Mayweather is a great athlete with incredible cardiovascular conditioning, great defensive skills and head movement, and tremendous hand speed, and he'd be a threat to a lot of the best 145-pound fighters in MMA. I couldn't see him winning the championship, though: If Mayweather were to fight the best MMA fighter in his weight class, WEC featherweight champion Jose Aldo, he'd get his leg kicked into oblivion.

But Pacquiao is a different fighter altogether. For starters, it's important to remember that Pacquiao is boxing above his natural weight class because after he dominated all the guys his own size he didn't have anyone else to fight. If Pacquiao were ever going to try MMA, he'd do it at 135 pounds. And the top 135-pounder in MMA, WEC bantamweight champion Dominick Cruz, would have his hands full in a fight with Pacquiao.

Cruz would try to use his superior reach to land some kicks against Pacquiao and then try to take him down, but Pacquiao is such a fast and powerful puncher that I would give him a real chance of knocking Cruz out in an MMA fight.

This is never going to happen, of course. Mayweather and Pacquiao can make more money for one fight than any MMA fighter has ever made in his entire career, so neither one of them is ever going to give MMA a try. But I hope a day comes when a truly elite boxer tries MMA at the top of his career. If it ever happens, I think that boxer will do better than Dana White -- and most MMA fans -- would like to think.

Source: mmafighting.com