Thursday 30 September 2010

I’m Bigger, Stronger than Pacquiao -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

MANILA, Philippines — Antonio Margarito doesn’t worry about Manny Pacquiao.

“I am not really concerned about him as long as I train hard,” Margarito told the Bulletin in an interview on Thursday that was facilitated by Top Rank publicity ace Ricardo Jimenez.

Dap 10308 4-Pound Interior Plaster of ParisEmerging from a four-round sparring session in Oxnard, California, Margarito stressed that he “is bigger and stronger” than Pacquiao and that on the night of Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, he will score a stunning knockout win.

“It’s a question of putting a lot of pressure on Pacquiao,” said Margarito when asked about his gameplan. “In this weight, I am stronger than him.”

Pacquiao and Margarito are squaring off at a catchweight of 150 lbs in a 12-round match for the vacant World Boxing Council super-welterweight crown.

Margarito has been deep in training the past three weeks and has sparred a total of eight rounds under the watchful eyes of chief trainer Robert Garcia.

“I feel confident of knocking him out,” said Margarito, who is a 5-1 underdog.

The 5-11 Mexican has a five-inch height advantage over Pacquiao, who will be gunning for an unprecedented eight world title.

Margarito said he has what it takes to derail this bold by Pacquiao, widely regarded as the world’s No. 1 fighter, regardless of weight, and send the entire Philippines in a state of national mourning.

“I have a lot of respect for the Filipino people but I am sorry to tell them that I will be the one who will win this fight,” said Margarito.

Source: mb.com.ph

Amir Khan v Floyd Mayweather ? Do me a favour…boxing needs Manny Pacquiao-Mayweather -- Telegraph

By Gareth A Davies, Telegraph.co.uk

Amir Khan versus Floyd Mayweather this time next September ? Do me a favour. There have been reports this week that Richard Schaefer, and Golden Boy Promotions in the United States are lining up Amir Khan to face Floyd Mayweather Jnr this time next year. Poppycock. Merely tabloid ruminations.

There’s about as much chance as two bald men fighting over a comb of that fight happening. Khan, like most burgeoning fighters, will say he wants the fight, but it won’t happen. Mis-match, from this perspective.

Poppycock, Original Pecan Clusters, 24-Ounce Canisters (Pack of 2)The story was based upon ruminations from Schaefer, and if perception is reality, then this portion remains distorted. Khan is already a world champion, yet he is still a developing boxer. In simple terms, and I have a great deal of time for Khan, he will simply not be ready to fight Mayweather after three more fights.

Mayweather is far too advanced for Khan at this stage. I don’t buy the argument that Khan’s hand speed makes him a credible opponent. Mayweather has far too much in the locker for Khan. Two years time, minimum, for Khan to make the two or even three steps up in class to fight the best counter-fighter out there.

I think Schaefer’s remarks on this have been taken out of context. He was merely ruminating out loud at Khan’s press conference in London last week to publicise the British fighter’s contest with Marcos Maidana in Las Vegas in December.

No. Forget Khan. The compelling fight remains Mayweather against Pacquiao. That is the contest Schaefer - and the sporting world – wants to see. There is bathos in the anticipation of the Pacquiao v Margarito contest on Nov 13.

As Boxing Monthly put on its cover this month: Pacquiao v Margarito is The Champ versus The Cheat. No holding back there. The good guy/bad guy combination is set. Let’s hope Pacquiao can deal with Margarito’s size.

If Pacquiao is successful, expect Christmas negotiations to begin again between Top Rank and Golden Boy to get the two boxing legends together.

Boxing slumbers without that fight. The sport has suffered this year with Mayweather, and to a certain extent Khan, Carl Froch and David Haye not having fought since April/May. Not good enough, really. It should be every three to four months.

This week, on mma journo Ariel Helwani’s MMA Hour, Haye suggested he will not be around longer than another year. Let’s hope that is not the case. He would be a great loss to the sport…just as the sport is on the cusp of getting excited about the things he could achieve in the heavyweight division.

Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

Drug testing no longer issue for Mayweather-Pacquiao super fight -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

Amidst all the Sturm und Drang of the on then off, on then off Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao super fight negotiations, the most contentious issue on the table, under the table and behind the table has been a consistent one.

The Mayweather side has always maintained that it thinks Pacman is a drug cheater and thus it's one persistent, nonflexible demand was always for totally random drug testing.

If you recall, Pacquiao would only OK a prefight drug test up to 14 days before the fight with the mandatory postbout blood being drawn in their respective lockerrooms immediately thereafter.

Coward (Criminal, Vol. 1)The negotiations crashed twice when the hopes of fight fans worldwide were running high and the two sides started spitting at each other again. Even a self-imposed gag order did not get them to the contract stage in the second go-round.

When Pacquiao was in New York a few weeks ago to hype his Nov. 13 bout against Antonio Margarito, he quietly but firmly told me he had aceded to the random testing demand. No ifs, buts and no candy or nuts if you know what I mean.

Pacman made the statement with agent Michael Koncz standing behind him. Koncz did not seek to correct or modify Congressmanny's plain assertion.

On Tuesday, as Oscar de la Hoya visited Gleason's Gym in Brooklyn to plug Golden Boy's new relationship with Barclays Center in that boxing conscious borough, I nearly had a cardiac event when I mentioned what Manny said to GBP CEO Richard Schaefer.

Two or three other scribes were within earshot. I don't know if they were as astounded as I was by Richie Rich's quick response.

I expected a "no comment" or other form of demurral.

I mean, it's not like we were in a deposition or RRS was under oath on cross examination.

But no such disclaimer or correction was forthcoming.

Instead, Schaefer co-signed Pacquiao's statement regarding accepting the at any given time blood testing for drug use.

"If Pacquiao said that, then I'm sure he wouldn't lie about it," Schaefer said without blinking.

It's not Schaefer was intoxicated with truth serum or anything.

But I did not have him across the table, under oath in a deposition or on the witness stand undergoing cross examination.

I inquired about Mayweather and Schaefer took a pass.

"I'm not talking about Mayweather right now," Schaefer snapped.

If boxing fans have any strand of hope for Floyd-Manny to happen in 2011, I say this is it.

Random drug testing is a non-issue now and both sides have said so.

If they can't reset and, Antonio Margarito permitting, then make Floyd-Manny for next May, then I'll be compelled to write a book about their idiocy.

I wonder if can borrow John Kennedy O'Toole's title for his great New Orleans novel.

That's right. "Confederacy of Dunces."

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Let Manny Pacquiao do the talking -- Examiner

By Edward Castro, Examiner.com

Maybe the interviews should ONLY be handled by Manny Pacquiao.

Not his trainer Freddie Roach, who just a day or so ago lit the boxing world up by saying Philipino champion should fight a few more times before accepting a Super Fight against Floyd Mayweather.

And not his conditioning coach Alex Ariza, who on Wednesday decided to discuss the ‘protein’ drinks Pacquiao drinks after every workout.

The Superfight - Marciano vs. AliIn this day and age where sports enhancing drugs have poisoned professional sports, it would have been a wise move for Ariza, who has been with Team Pacquiao since 2008, to avoid all talk of substances consumed by his fighter other than water.

In today’s climate, even the innocent of remarks can cause problems.

“Manny just eats the basic…beef, chicken, fish, rice and a 16 oz. serving of protein shake,” Ariza was quoted by the Manila Bulletin.

The Bulletin provides its own description of the drink as a ‘scoop of powder mixed with water, light yellow granules poured into an aluminum can.’

That was just enough to raise eyebrows as well as the accusations from the Mayweather camp that Pacquiao has used steroids.

Those around Pacquiao should take better notes during a Pacquiao press conference. He has rarely tripped over himself during interviews nor provided ammunition for his opponents.

It was just a few weeks ago when Pacquiao handled himself like a seasoned politician during the press conference announcing his controversial bout with Antonio Margarito. Surrounded by hundreds of journalists, all wanting their own take on the Margarito hand wrapping scandal; Pacquiao was calm, polite and careful with his words.

But here are his trainer and conditioning coach adding fuel to a fire with comments that may, in the end, take away from the bout.

Source: examiner.com

Is Manny Pacquiao unbeatable? -- Examiner

By Edward Castro, Examiner.com

It is safe, even fair, these days to question the superiority of Manny Pacquiao?

After all he is one of the most popular professional athletes on the planet.

And he is perhaps just one fight – a win over Floyd Mayweather – away from boxing immortality.

Or is he?
Unbeatable
Let’s take a look at the quality of his opposition.

In next month’s bout he takes on Antonio Margarito, who was last seen in the ring having his lunch handed to him by Shane Mosley.

Before that Pacquiao faced Miguel Cotto, whose previous bout was a knockout loss to Margarito.

Pacquiao destroyed Ricky Hatton, who, just a year earlier, was schooled by Mayweather.

Pacquiao took on Oscar De La Hoya, who had lost three of his last previous bouts.

And there are his bouts with Mexican superstars Juan Manuel Marquez, Marco Antonio Barrera and Erik Morales. Pacquiao was forced to settle for a 12-round draw against Marquez and faced shot fighters in both Barrera and Morales.

And then there are the knockouts. Yes, Pacquiao has been knocked out twice. TWICE.

Sure, Pacquiao was just a kid when he suffered these defeats. The first was a KO loss to Rustico Torrecampo back in 1996 and the other was in 1999 at the hands of Medgoen Singsurat. Both were knockout losses, both arriving in the third round. And both were caused by body punches.

Floyd Mayweather has never been knocked out.

Just food for thought.

Source: examiner.com

Manny changed my life - Roach -- Philippine Star

By Joaquin Henson, The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines - Boxing trainer Freddie Roach’s biggest paycheck as a fighter was $13,000 which he earned in losing a decision to Hector (Macho) Camacho in 1985. When he worked Oscar de la Hoya’s corner for his 2007 fight against Floyd Mayweather Jr., Roach was paid $750,000. And since Manny Pacquiao’s ascendancy, Roach has raked in at least $1 million a bout with the world’s No. 1 pound-for-pound fighter.

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the Ring“Manny changed my life,” said Roach in an interview a few days before leaving Manila last Sunday to set up Pacquiao’s training camp in Baguio. “I never imagined, nearly 10 years ago when Manny walked into the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles, we would be where we are today.”

Roach, 50, receives an average of 20 calls a day from fighters asking to work with the Boxing Writers Association of America’s four-time Trainer of the Year (2003, 2006, 2008, 2009) and about 50 media interview requests a week. He has a pending offer to appear in a TV series where a cameraman and broadcaster track his movements from morning to night – and the fee is $25,000 a week.

To rationalize his busy schedule, Roach relies on his secretary Marie Spivey and agent Nick Khan. Spivey holds office at the Wild Card Gym.

Roach said he was recently interviewed for a big story in the October issue of Playboy Magazine. The feature is entitled “The Unstoppable Roach” and details his life history from childhood. In the article, Roach said his mother Barbara ran a “tough household” and related an incident where “she broke up one of our fights with an aluminum baseball bat, hitting my brother over the head with it twice.”

Roach’s mother is in the record books as the first American female boxing judge and was assigned to the Marvelous Marvin Hagler-Vito Antuofermo WBC and WBA unified middleweight title bout in Boston in 1981.

Roach said he has invited his mother and a friend to visit the Philippines while he’s in the country.

“My mother’s never been to this part of the world,” said Roach. “I’m waiting for her to confirm. If she comes, she’ll probably stay a few days in Manila to rest up then go to Baguio. What will she do in Baguio? I don’t know, maybe, read a book.”

Roach recently moved his mother out of the Las Vegas home he bought for her. She now lives beside Roach in the duplex which he owns in Los Angeles. Roach also bought a house for his brother Pepper in the Valley. Roach’s mother lived in Las Vegas where another brother Joey managed a successful telemarketing company with over 100 employees. When Joey died of a heart attack in his sleep at the age of 47 last year, Roach decided to relocate his mother.

Roach said he doesn’t see himself getting married even as he is rumored to often go out on dates with very attractive women. “My mother doesn’t think I should get married,” he chuckles. “Besides, 90 percent of marriages in the US end up in divorce.”

Roach, who has worked with at least 25 world champions, said his top five fighters at the moment are Pacquiao, WBA superlightweight champion Amir Khan of England, WBA welterweight titlist Vyacheslav Senchenko of Ukraine, Mexican lightmiddleweight contender Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. and unbeaten Armenian lightmiddleweight Vanes Martirosyan.

“Amir’s the next boxing superstar,” said Roach. “He listens very well, like Manny. He’s a good student. He’s got heart, speed, power and brains. Vanes is being lined up to fight Miguel Cotto. I would never take a fight which I think my fighter couldn’t win. So yes, I think Vanes will beat Cotto. And my best young prospect is lightwelterweight Jose Benavides of Phoenix. He’s 5-11. His record is 8-0, with 8 KOs.”

But of all the fighters he’s worked with, nobody comes close to the man who changed his life. “Manny is special,” said Roach. “His work ethic hasn’t changed all these years. No one works harder in the gym. It’s unbelievable how dedicated he is to the sport. Sometimes, I try to hold him back. I don’t want him burning out. But that’s Manny. It’s good for him to enjoy some down time because he works so hard.”

Roach was a pro boxer from 1978 to 1986, retiring with a record of 40-13, including 15 KOs. Trained by the legendary Eddie Futch, he gained a reputation as a never-say-die warrior who went toe-to-toe against world champions Bobby Chacon, Greg Haugen and Camacho. Roach had no inkling he would later become a hero in the Philippines when he posted his last win ever in the ring over a Filipino – Arnel Arrozal in Lynwood, Washington, in August 1986.

Source: philstar.com

Fans Gobble Up Pacquiao Tickets -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

MANILA, Philippines — With choice seats being sold many times over its price in the Internet, Hall of Fame promoter Bob Arum is expected to make a killing as fight fans begin to gobble up tickets for the November 13 showdown between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito.

“Tickets just went on sale and the response is great and most of the high-priced seats have been sold. Soon, sales will hit the roof,” said the 79-year-old Harvard-educated lawyer.

Manny Pacquiao Undisputed Men's Tee, L, BKThe Cowboys Stadium in Dallas will play host to the fight and while it can be set up to seat 100,000, the $1.2 billion venue will be reconfigured to accommodate 70,000, a figure Arum said will be reached come fight night.

The fight has created so much buzz that some choice seats are now being sold on the Internet 18 times more than its retail value.

A ringside seat facing the main camera that is retailing at $700 is being peddled for $12,500. Aside from the premium ringside seats, tickets are also available for $500, $300, $200, $100 and $50.

Arum’s sense of optimism stems from the fact that Pacquiao drew more than 50,000 when he faced the unpopular Ghanaian slugger Joshua Clottey last March.

“Clottey doesn’t have fans in the Texas area and those were all Manny’s fans,” stressed Arum.

Those who won’t be able to go and watch it live can avail of the pay-per-view telecast for $54.95.

Source: mb.com.ph

Margarito: I'm no quitter like Dela Hoya -- ABS-CBN News

abs-cbnNEWS.com

MANILA, Philippines – Mexican Antonio Margarito has vowed that his upcoming fight against Manny Pacquiao will not end up like the Filipino's battle against Oscar dela Hoya, who threw in the towel after getting a beating from the WBO welterweight champion.

“I will knock Pacquiao out,” the Tijuana Tornado was quoted by Boxing Scene.com. “This is the fight of my life and Manny will be in for a tough night, I won’t quit like Dela Hoya did."

Here Is Tijuana!Pacquiao forced "Golden Boy" Dela Hoya’s corner to throw in the towel after 8 rounds of their “Dream Match” in December 2008.

The Mexican blamed Dela Hoya’s alleged influence over the California State Athletic Commission for its decision to deny him a license. This forced Margarito to apply for a fight license in Texas, which granted his application.

"I don't know what he has against me, I really don't understand. What I do know is that he had a big influence in the California State Athletic Commission with everything he said against me,” said Margarito.

The Tijuana Tornado was Dela Hoya's former sparring partner. The two, however, parted unpleasantly in 2008 when Dela Hoya refused to fight Margarito.

Meanwhile, Margarito plans to apply constant pressure on Pacquiao when they meet on November 13 at the Cowboys Stadium in Texas.

The Mexican is known for his forward fighting style, and is expected to swarm the smaller Pacquiao with punches.

"That's one of the plans that we have, Margarito said in a report by Dog House Boxing.com. "Pressure, throwing punches consistently, countering."

His trainer, Robert Garcia, said Margarito is close to perfect conditioning, and is all set to trade punches with Pacquiao.

"He's ready to fight. He's close to weight already and his conditioning is good and he's running the mountains that mostly everyone does in an hour. He did it in 47 minutes, so he's ready," said Garcia.

Source: abs-cbnnews.com

Wednesday 29 September 2010

Manny Pacquiao Retires: The Effect on Boxing -- Ringside Report

By Geno McGahee, Ringside Report

At the age of 31, Manny Pacquiao has a lot of boxing life left in him, but when he gets beyond the Antonio Margarito fight, what will be left? When you reach a certain level in boxing and you are facing marquee opponents, it’s tough to take a backward step. The public’s demand for Manny to face perceived tough opponents may not allow him to take an “easy one” while he waits for a Floyd Mayweather, JR., showdown.

If there are no worlds left to conquer, what is Pacquiao to do?
There have been recurring comments from Team Pacquiao that retirement is in the near future, and with Floyd Mayweather, JR., apparently not interested in the fight of the decade, what else is there? Even a great fighter like Paul Williams, an incredible challenge for Pacquiao, would not generate the public’s interest. The diehard boxing fans would be sincerely intrigued by the fight, but the casual fan would say “Paul who?” Williams hasn’t had the sort fan following to make the fight worth the risk. Sergio Martinez is the same deal.

When you look at the recent string of opponents for Pacquiao, you see that he has not taken the easiest path. Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto, Oscar De La Hoya, Joshua Clottey, and Juan Manuel Marquez make up his recent opposition, and he has shined. He now faces Margarito, a guy that would be considered tough with loaded gloves, but now seems to be a man walking face first into a tank. Look for Manny to win that one with ease.

So, December rolls around and Pacquiao is still the man in boxing. What happens next?

You have to figure that Mayweather, JR., will once again be on the radar, but with legal problems and a mental breakdown, it’s tough to imagine that fight coming off at all. Maybe we have all been so scorned by the two failures of it to materialize that we cannot believe that it will ever happen. If it doesn’t happen, what happens next?

The retirement of Manny Pacquiao may be eminent.

Then again, Pacquiao has shown that he is driven by money as anything else and if Bob Arum can jingle the change in front of his eyes, we may see the following two opponents on the agenda…

Kelly Pavlik

Considering that Pacquiao is seen as invincible at welterweight, with the only man possibly holding the key to beating him being Floyd Mayweather, JR., how about a move to 160? Former Middleweight Champion Kelly Pavlik was once a big draw but after two defeats, he is now in nowhere land. If he were to take on Pacquiao at 160 or a catch weight of 155-ish, it would be a big seller for all involved. Arum could not lose. If Pacquiao wins, the money train rolls on, but if he loses, Pavlik is reborn and he is back to a big PPV draw. I have a sneaking suspicion that this fight is going to happen if Manny doesn’t leave the sport.

Julio Cesar Chavez JR

How about an easy one that would sell incredibly well? There aren’t many fighters now creating a buzz like Julio Cesar Chavez, JR. He is fighting at middleweight and would remain there to take on Pacquiao. The idea would be to bring in the enormous following of Chavez, JR., along with the Pacquiao fans, creating a huge event. It would be an event, not a great fight, but when you examine the PPV sales of both men, you have to think that Arum has considered this bout. Chavez, JR., has been very protected and perhaps they are looking for the one big cash out. This would be it.

Where does boxing go without Pacquiao?

It’s inevitable that Manny will retire from boxing. He’s a national hero. When he wins, the entire Philippines celebrate the victory. The groupies that write about him constantly will have to find a new subject, unless they change from his boxing life to his personal life, which apparently may be part of their fantasies. Pacquiao’s removal from the sport will be a blow, but boxing has been down and out before and will return again.

Boxing has some stars on the rise that will take the place of Pacquiao. Maybe not one will fill the open slot immediately but with fighters like Yuriokis Gamboa, Juan Manuel Lopez, Amir Khan, Tavoris Cloud, Lucian Bute, David Lemiuex, Nonito Donaire, and Alfredo Angulo make up a small sample of the group of exciting fighters making their way into the public eye.

Recently Golden Boy Promotions has stated that we need network TV for boxing once again and it’s a no brainer. We do. If these future stars get the right exposure, the future of boxing is very bright. Gamboa is on a collision course with fellow undefeated power-puncher, Juan Manuel Lopez, and British superstar Amir Khan is taking on the biggest challenge of his career in Marcos Maidana. Things are looking up in boxing and should Manny retire after his Margarito fight, it will survive.

When Pacquiao retires, there will be a regrouping in boxing. With such a lack of stars currently, most have tunnel vision and focus on Pacquiao, and when he goes, some casual boxing fans will back away from the sport again until the next big thing comes along. Boxing is a sport that gets beaten up all of the time in the press, but it has never been stopped. It will continue to fight even without Pacquiao.

Source: ringsidereport.com

Oscar De La Hoya: In my prime, I'd have schooled Manny Pacquiao -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

BROOKLYN--Physically, Oscar de la Hoya looks the part.

Still trim at age 37, the Golden Boy looks like he could go 12 rounds or 18 holes, your choice.

Mentally, well in his mind he's still the Hall Of Fame fighter who set a PPV TV buy rate record of 2.4 million for his losing bout against Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Oscar De La HoyaOscar was at a sweltering Gleason's Gym on a gloomy, overcast Tuesday afternoon with billionaire Bruce Ratner to trumpet the fact that Oscar' company has an exclusive deal with the Barclays Center (which will house the NBA Nets) to promote boxing. GBP plans to build its New York base, with shows in Brooklyn and at the Prudential Center in Newark.

I sparred (verbally) with Oscar and my first question was direct.

Who wins if Oscar fought Manny Pacquiao and both were in their primes?

"Whew," de la Hoya said. "Different story."

Putting aside that purely mythical matchup, I asked what Oscar's thoughts are about the Pinoy Idol balancing Congressional duties and his superstar boxer status.

Oscar expressed approval of and high hopes for Pacquaio's political career.

"With politics, I give Manny all the credit in the world for being a Congressman. I don't know if he can balance both careers because it's got to be very difficult but hopefully he can do some good things for his people." de la Hoya said.

Wanting to test ODLH's sense of humor, I reminded him that he tried to juggle a singing career and boxing.

"Yeah, and you see how that turned out," Oscar said, smiling the smile that thrilled so many females when he was boxing's matinee idol.

De la Hoya said he thinks troubled Floyd Mayweather Jr. needs to end his boxing hiatus and get back to business pronto.

"I have not spoken to him but I think Floyd needs to get back to doing what he does best, which is boxing."

Oscar was swarmed by apsiring boxers of all ages and races and he was clearly in his element.

One young fighter peppered him with other mythical match questions. If I heard correctly, one of them was who would've won between Sugar Ray Leonard and Aaron Pryor and I think Oscar tipped Leonard to win it.

Oscar said some have misinterpreted his Broadcasting & Cable interview in which he said boxing needs to have a dominant promoter.

It's not all about Golden Boy swallowing up the minnows or wiping out Bob Arum's Top Rank, de la Hoya said.

"It's what is best for boxing, really. I'm not talking about just now, I mean what's going to be best for boxing 10-15 years from now. It's frustrating when (because of interpromotional bickering) we can get the best fighting the best. That's why I mentioned what the UFC does, their model.

"We just need a different setup than what we have now. We need something better for the fans and for the fighters."

To his credit, GBP CEO Richard Schaefer also gave Pacman props for his political achievement.

"Manny has to be congratulated on that, being a Congressman," Schaefer said. "To be such an accomplished fighter and a Congressman, well I think that brings credit to boxing and all of us can be proud of him doing that."

Rich guy Ratner, who said the total cost of the new arena will wind up at $900 million or so, said he tapped Oscar and his company for some obvious reasons.

"I used to go watch the Ali fights on closed circuit at the movie theaters when I was a kid in Cleveland," Ratner said.

"We open up in July 2012 and I felt that I don't see any downside here. Oscar is an icon of the sport and his company has other boxers as owners as well. They operate transparently and I like that.

"We want to bring boxing back to Brooklyn, maybe create more icons like (Mike) Tyson was. We just feel that Golden Boy is the right company for us to go with."

At the event, Schaefer announced what he called "breaking news," saying that Paulie Malignaggi of Brooklyn had signed with GBP and would henceforth campaign at welterweight.

Malignaggi was in attendance along with GBP boxers Danny Jacobs and Danny Garcia.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Julio Cesar Chavez, Manny Pacquiao to Spar, Train Together -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. is expected to arrive next Thursday, Oct. 7, in Baguio City, Philippines, where he will train and spar with Manny Pacquiao, as the two fighters prepare for upcoming fights, according to Pacquiao's adviser, Michael Koncz.

Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.The 24-year-old Chavez (40-0-1, 30 knockouts) will face Alfonso Gomez (22-4-2, 11 KOs) on Dec. 4 at The Pond in Anaheim, Calif., this after having been an early consideration to meet WBA junior middleweight king Miguel Cotto (35-2, 28 KOs) on that date.

The 31-year-old Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs), already the WBO welterweight (147 pounds) champion, will pursue his eighth crown in as many different weight classes opposite former titlist Antonio Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) of Mexico when they clash in an HBO pay-per-view televised bout for the WBC's vacant junior middleweight crown on Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium.

Pacquiao, who already is two weeks into his regimen, and Chavez will prepare under the guidance of four-time Trainer of the Year Freddie Roach, under whom Pacquiao has a 12-fight winning streak that includes eight knockouts.

"Well, we haven't done any of the sparring yet, but one of the sparring partners is going to be named Glen Tapia," said Koncz. "Then another one is going to be Michael Medina, and then, Julio Cesar Chavez is coming next week."

The 24-year-old Medina (24-2-2, 19 KOs), also a junior middleweight, is coming off of July's fifth-round knockout of Gilberto Flores Hernandez that helped him to rebound from a March, split-decision loss to New York's John Duddy (29-2, 18 KOs) on the undercard of Pacquiao's unanimous decision over Joshua Clottey at Cowboys Stadium.

The 20-year-old Tapia has won all seven of his fights, including five of them by knockout as a junior middleweight.

The son of the former world champion by the same name, Chavez Jr. is coming off of June's unanimous decision victory over Duddy. Chavez was initially slated to come to the Philippines in July, when he was in line to face Pawel Wolak (27-1, 17 KOs). But Chavez Jr. decided not to come to the Philippines at that time, and the fight never materialized.

"Well, I've known that all along that Chavez was coming," said Koncz. "I don't listen to the bulls**t on the Internet. I never had a doubt that Chavez was going to show up in camp to train with Manny."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Georges St-Pierre Continues to “Waste His Time and Money” Training with Freddie Roach -- 5th Round

By Tom Ngo, 5thRound.com

Although Georges St-Pierre has won the world over with his flawless fight game and charismatic personality, it appears the UFC welterweight king is the sport’s most stubborn athlete. For some reason, GSP refuses to listen to top contender Josh Koscheck by continuing to train with boxing legend Freddie Roach.

UFC Mixed Martial Arts George St-Pierre 27-by-37 inch Vertical Flag
“Since GSP got knocked out by little Matt Serra, he’s become this guy who’s afraid to go out there and fight,” Koscheck recently said. “He’s hired Freddie Roach as a boxing coach, and to be honest with you Georges, I think you’re wasting your money and wasting your time because you know that you’re not going to come out there and stand up with me.”

Kos brings up a valid point, although I don’t believe “afraid” would ever be the proper term to affiliate with the planet’s baddest 170-pounder. Regardless, prior to his shocking TKO loss to Serra at UFC 69 in April 2007, St-Pierre held a 13-1 record with six of those victories coming via some sort of knockout. That’s an impressive 46 percent clip.

However, since losing his title to the overwhelming underdog, the French-Canadian morphed into the game’s best ground guru, and even though he’s currently enjoying a 7-0 run, emerging more untouchable each time he exits the Octagon against “the biggest challenge” of his career, St-Pierre has only ended two via knockout.

GSP has been adamant over increasing his KO ratio, as he believes it would enhance his aura of invincibility, as well as his legacy. That’s why for the second time since beating Dan Hardy at UFC 111, the 29-year-old hopped a plane to meet up with the boxing genius. The pair were reunited last week in the Philippines where Roach was working with another one of his superstar clients, Manny Pacquiao.

“Freddie has taught me a lot. Before I met him, I thought I knew boxing but he brought me back to school. He’s just so technical,” St-Pierre told Fighters Only. “Since I have trained with him, I’ve been more accurate, been able to hit harder. He has really made a difference with my boxing training.

“And if I just follow what he tells me, I think I can’t be beaten in terms of boxing.”

That’s a fairly scary thought considering GSP can’t seem to be defeated in the sport of MMA. The welterweights will headline UFC 124 on December 11th in the champ’s backyard of Montreal.

Source: 5thround.com

Tuesday 28 September 2010

Acerbic Arum: De La Hoya's system reminds me of the Soviet Union -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

Archrrival Bob Arum looked at Oscar de la Hoya's histrionic statements about total rule of boxing by Golden Boy and laughed Monday night.

"They're coming out from New York...Joe DeGuardia, Lou DiBella, Gary Shaw...they're coming out out to Las Vegas and we're going to have a big bonfire. We're going to all burn out promotional licenses," the head of Vegas-based Top Rank said with tongue planted firmly in cheek.

I suggest they call it "Bonfire of the Vanities, 2."

I asked Arum his thoughts about the Golden Boy's grand design for boxing to become like mixed martial arts, which is predominantly ruled by Dana White and the monolithic UFC.

"Yeah, that's a good system if you like how the government totally ran the old Soviet Union. If you like the Soviet operation and do not like competition between the promoters for fighters, for TV dates and all the rest, then that is perfect," Arum said.

PacMan: Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquiao--the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World"What Oscar wants is good if you don't like the capitalistic system or model of business."


Arum said that maybe de la Hoya, long promoted by Top Rank, may have some mental damage from boxing.

"He's just an idiot," Arum said. "We knew that so we always stood over him and kept him on message. If you let him loose, he just blurts things out."


In one of their verbal spats, Oscar referred to lawyer Arum "as a big Jew from Harvard." Arum did graudate from Harvard Law School.

Arum was more keen on talking up his Antonio Margarito-Manny Pacquiao bout at Cowboys Stadium Nov. 13.

"Manny's left foot is fine. (Agent) Mike Koncz told me Manny knocked (trainer) Freddie Roach down three times in the gym today, he's hitting that hard. Robert Garcia, meanwhile reports to us that Margarito is working very hard also."

Arum theorized that Pacman is pushing himself physically for a special reason.

"Now that he is a Congressman, Manny doesn't want anyone saying he can't do both. That's why he is so focused. That and because he knows this is no walk in the park. Margarito is so freaking big."

Source: examiner.com

Yes, It Is Apples And Oranges...But Boxing Can Learn From Dana White -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Reason number one that I put up coverage of mixed martial arts, 99% from the UFC, is because I am a fan of fights. And I figure you guys are too, so even if it isn't your cup of tea, if the science involved is lost on you, or you have latent issues that pop up when you see two guys grappling, you give me a pass that MMA isn't boxing.

The second reason I cover MMA is because I like to compare and contrast the sport with boxing, particularly from a business-side perspective.

Everlast Mixed Martial Arts Grappling Gloves (Small/Medium)MMA is the fastest growing sport in the world, maybe the fastest-growing sport we've ever seen. The UFC is worth two billion dollars, is reaching its tentacles into China and India and twenty other nations, and when kids ponder signing up to learn a fighting art, boxing comes in a distant second, after MMA. The pipeline of fighters, in other words, is quite likely going to be strong for the next century. If you are a fightwriter, it does make sense to keep up with the Kardashians, rather than concentrating solely on Paris Hilton, whose star is dimming....

When comparing the two sports, it seems like they, and to a large extent I mean UFC boss Dana White when I say "they," do so much right, and sometimes it seems like the major players in the boxing industry do so much wrong.

One of the things he does right is one of White's traits I most enjoy---his candor.

Maybe it's because his is basically the only game in town, because the UFC is the MLB, and everything else is the minors, so White's power is so immense that he can act the way he wants to act, and doesn't have to fear repercussions. If one of the fights on a card stinks, White will say so. Even if the stinker is turned in by one of his top three attractions, as when Anderson Silva preened and postured and made something of a mockery of the sport at UFC 112, against Demian Maia in April. White ripped Silva a new orifice after that display, and threatened to cut the man. He didn't do so, and it seemed like the message got through to the Brazilian 185 pounder, the UFC's middleweight champ.

I spoke to White on Monday morning (see ESPN piece here: sports.espn.go.com/extra/mma/news/story) and he again mentioned the possibility of cutting a well known veteran, the former heavyweight champion Frank Mir, who, save for a last minute knee-from-hell which dropped foe Mirko Cro Cop, looked like he was getting in some work at the gym during the main event of UFC 119 in Indianapolis on saturday night.

Would he consider cutting Mir, I asked him?

"Sure," he said, without a second of hesitation.

Not so in boxing. Imagine Bob Arum, Richard Schaefer or Don King being so disgusted after a poor PPV showing that they publicly threatened to dump the headliner. Now, before you jump in with a comment telling me that I am comparing apples and oranges, let me state that we are somewhat comparing apples and oranges. White and UFC are MMA, while boxing is comprised of a load of free agents, jockeying and shoving each other to gain better position. So if Schaefer told the media after Shane Mosley's last fight that he though SSM had seen better days, and a few days later Schaefer cut him loose, the day after, another promoter would take Shane on, because he's still bankable. White's sole interest is the sport, because UFC is the sport. Because 95% of the top athletes in MMA are working for him, he can toss one overboard if he's not living up to expectations, and his bottom line won't tank.

Now, does anyone really believe that White would cut Silva, one of the five best mixed martial artists on the planet? Not really...But he's just enough of a loose cannon to do it, so I'd bet Silva and his people took the threat seriously enough for it to sink in.

Some of you out there might be saying to yourself, 'That's cold.' These dudes put their lives on the line, and when they have an off night, their boss kicks them to the curb.

I put forth that line of thinking to White, and he blasted me.

If you stunk out the joint at your work, Woods, your boss wouldn't hesitate to toss you to the sharks, White pointed out.

True enough. But mine isn't a life or death position.

Neither is being a fighter in the UFC, White told me.

I was blown away by that stance, I admit. And then I thought about it, how many fatalities have we seen in UFC? Zero.

How many fatalities has the oil services industries suffered this year? OK, so the UFC is a smaller sample. But the athletes are living, for the most part, their dream and being compensated quite well.

"Most of these guys have a better education than I do, Woodsy," White told me. "These aren't dummies. These aren't guys from Mean Street, USA. They've chosen to be athletes. And they're very well paid to do it. (White has drawn heat before for having a top heavy pay scale, but has righted that perception in recent years, for the most part, by pointing out that his lower card guys can hit a lotto ticket if they win Fight of the Night, Knockout of the Night, or Submission of the Night honors. That will net a guy who's making $15,000 a cool $70,000. ) If you get canned, Woods, see how many guys on the Internet stick up for you."

Er, good point sir. I think Deepwater would toss a party, and put up a Woods pinata!

So, will White cut Frank Mir? I highly doubt it. But just the message alone should be enough. I'm guessing the 31-year-old heavyweight, who owns more than solid jiu-jitsu and boxing skills, comes out like a first-timer wanting to impress the badass baldy from Boston in his next Octagon outing.

The way White has built the UFC empire has impressed the hell out of me, I'm not afraid to admit. A while back, irked with another crap pay per view, featuring two faded veterans in a dreary waltz, I messaged White.

"Would you ever come into boxing, and do your thing here?" I asked him.

"No way," he answered. "I've loved the sport, and I respect a lot of the guys, but it's dead."

I didn't agree, and told him so. If Pacquiao and Mayweather were to ever fight, the gross will be immense, bigger than Latvia's GDP. That ain't dead. But that also ain't a certainty. After Pacquiao and Mayweather, who is the third best pound for pounder on the planet? It may well be Paul Williams or Sergio Martinez, who glove up Nov. 20 in Atlantic City. Both those guys could get inserted in a police lineup, and make it through without being outed as a celeb.

Bottom line, I'd like to see boxing's bigs study the White playbook, and steal from his pages a bit more. The big boxing shows still sadly lack in oomph, in zest, in mood, compared to White's shows. The boxing PPVs are still a hit and more often miss affairs, and fans and media are told that they are to be dining on Kobe beef, with stellar undercards, and then are fed sliders, with prospects put in against faded vets who peaked five or ten years before. What about some of those cash bonuses to charge up the boys? It takes money to make money, boxing brigade...

White isn't immune to falling into promoter-speak; he was a canny carny selling the James Toney debacle. But he'll toss political correctness through a plate glass window, and speak up if he thinks a fighter got screwed by the judges, even if the fighter is one of his 'A' gamers. Many don't care for his X-rated delivery, but all have to concede he just about always delivers the money shot for the fans, and he'll spew one-tenth the color-by-numbers hype along the way.

Ok, so the way the sports are set up means boxing will have trouble employing many of White's ways. But while just about everything he does builds his brand, builds up MMA, even if he risks a short term loss (remember when he tossed the potential next big thing Brock Lesnar in against the vaaastyly more experienced Mir in 2008, and Mir knee-barred the ex WWE stud?), too often it is every man for himself in boxing. Too many power players are looking to grow revenue, with the zeal and conscience of a Goldman Sachs trader, and they are letting the brand rust.

The message to the boxing powers that be: handle your business more like White, respect the brand as a whole more, cut down on the BS hype and speak from the heart and gut more, and offer us more pick 'em scraps. This sport ain't dead, and it ain't dying. But it is graying, and we can halt the process by borrowing from the guy who has built an immense empire in no time flat.

SPEEDBAG I wrote about my chat with White for ESPN, but only had limited space, so I wanted to delve into other stuff he touched on here, if you don't mind.

---While White had not much good to say about Frank Mir, he didn't grace his foe Mirko Cro Cop with another hole. Cro Cop took the fight late, after Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira pulled out with an injury, and then the Croatian was himself injured. His eye was poked in a sparring session and it was feared he'd be scratched. But a doc cleared him, and he went on with the bout. "I have a lot of respect for him," White said of the 36-year-old MMAer who once was known for his lethal kicking game. "He showed up to fight, with a poked eye. I'm sure it wasn't feeling great. But will we see him again in the UFC? I need to talk to Cro Cop."

---White told TSS that indeed Mir didn't quite realize how badly his fight came off, but was quickly clued in by ace matchmaker Joe Silva, who he is tight with.

---White was more than a bit miffed at the fan reaction to the show. The main event and the cruddy decision in the Sean Sherk-Evan Dunham bout may have kept people from soaking in the good stuff, like the superior batch of prelims, and the top drawer Sherk-Dunham tussle, he said. "It pissed me off, the overall event was solid. There were great fights on that card."

---White thinks fans who Tweeted him that they thought Sherk won the bout should have their license to Tweet taken away.

--White was impressed, as where we all, except for maybe some members of Team Serra who say him getting lumped up by Chris Lytle right hands from the first round on, that Matt Serra chose to bang against banger Lytle, instead of deadening the pace with methodical jiu jitsu. Of course, he virtually ceded his chances of winning, but wanted to give the fans their money's worth. "I love and respect Matt Serra," White said.

---White said Dunham's stock rose in the loss. "I told everyone, if he wins, everyone will know who he is Monday. I think he gained more fans with the BS loss." Fighting through a cut, check, a sickening slice, on his eye had everyone in Indiana bowing down to Dunham.

Source: thesweetscience.com

Opportunity knockout for Amir Khan as Bolton ace is lined up to replace Manny Pacquiao -- Daily Mail

By JEFF POWELL, DailyMail.co.uk

Amir Khan is on standby to replace Manny Pacquiao in the fight of the century.

In case the fraught road to boxing's first $200million pay-night proves too tortuous for Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jnr to travel together, Khan is being primed to step into his Pacman friend's shoes against America's Money Man.

Amir Khan: A Boy from Bolton: My StoryPacquiao versus Mayweather for the mythical title of best pound-for-pound boxer on the planet is the fight the whole world wants to see but so divisive is the acrimony between them and so troubled Floyd Junior's life that we may never be given that privilege.

As those doubts deepen by the day - with Mayweather facing the possibility of jail time when he answers battery and grand larceny charges in Las Vegas - Plan B was being hatched in London at the weekend.

Khan, Britain's former Olympic silver medallist, was alerted to the hugely enriching prospect awaiting him if he can unify the world light-welterweight championship in his next two fights.

Richard Schaefer, chief executive of Golden Boy promotions, mapped out the path leading to an alternative mega-bout between Mayweather and Khan next September.

'If we can't make Mayweather-Pacquiao in the spring it may be too late,' says Schaefer. 'So this gives us time to build Amir into a pay-per-view super-star in the US.'

That is the colossal incentive for Khan to withstand Argentine challenger Marcos Maidana's concussive punching power in Vegas on December 11.

If he can overcome that clear and present danger, Bolton's WBA champion faces a unification match next spring against the winner between his two rival world title holders Devon Alexander and Timothy Bradley, who are due to meet in January.

Win that - with America watching live on HBO - and the mother-lode awaits him.

Even if Mayweather is convicted of assaulting the mother of his two children and stealing her mobile phone, most legal experts in Nevada expect him to be free to resume boxing in good time to face Khan by late summer or early autumn next year.

That possibility is heightened by the suspicion that Pacquiao will not wait around indefinitely for Mayweather now that he has been elected to the Phillipines Congress, a political role he takes most seriously.
Nor has the current pound-for-pound king been impressed by the racist insults hurled at him by Mayweather following unsubstantiated insinuations that he may have taken performance enhancing substances.

While Mayweather faces up to his court battle on November 9, Pacquiao will be in the ring four days later, boxing the talented but controversial Mexican Antonio Margarito in front of a 50,000-plus crowd in the new and spectacular Dallas Cowboys Stadium.

Unless Mayweather can get his act together quickly that could be the Pacman's last fight, even though his master-trainer Freddie Roach is saying: 'Just in case Floyd sorts himself out, we have a plan in the making to stop him in eight rounds, even though this would be Manny's most complicated fight.'

It is hugely improbable, however, that Pacquiao would delay his retirement beyond next spring so as to fight his friend and spar-mate Khan.

Both are trained by Roach and neither would want to take on that challenge without him in their corner.

Boxing, however, offers Mayweather his best chance of salvation. Although his own pound-for-pound claims will not stand up unless he fights Pacquiao, Schaefer is right to say: 'Floyd needs to get back in the gym and the ring, doing what he does best. While he is training and fighting he has no time for all the nonsense and distractions.'

So Khan declares himself ready to seize the moment, saying: 'I would love to fight Mayweather and believe I can end his unbeaten record. I have to focus on Maidana first, then the winner of Bradley and Alexander. There are risks there but I am fully confident of winning both those fights.'

Negotiations for his pound-for-pound challenge to Mayweather would be comparatively simple, since both are promoted by Golden Boy.

So, as Schaefer dined in his favourite West End restaurant, he held out the mouth-watering prospect of Britain not only gobbling up its share of world titles but of savouring the ring's most hallowed crown of all.

Source: dailymail.co.uk

Did Roach make Pacquiao what he is today? -- Eastside Boxing

By Vitali Shaposhnikov, Eastside Boxing

I have met Freddie Roach a few times so far, and every time he manages to impress me more and more. Of course years back many people on the street would not recognize this man, unless somehow interested in boxing. Sure Freddie was always a decent trainer, but his stock soared after picking up Manny Pacquiao. Roach did work with some amazing fighters previously, such as Mike Tyson, Virgil Hill, Israel Vasquez, Michael Moorer, Wlad Klitschko, James Toney, and Oscar De La Hoya. All of the above mentioned are world known names, which shocked the boxing scene numerous times, but not a single one of them did for Freddie what Manny was able to do, and vice versa..

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the RingSince with Manny, their relationship and success has been unquestioned. Imagining Roach and Pacquiao not working together seems virtually impossible, almost surreal. Together, they seem unstoppable. What seems to be the most interesting aspect in their professional relationship is how they boost each other’s image and opinion in the public eye.

When talking about and discussing Pacquiao’s future opponents, I hear a lot of people “blaming/predicting” a win for Manny because he has the ultimate weapon in boxing: coach Roach. With Freddie, a lot of people feel safe and assured that Manny is going to come in, dominate, and go celebrate his victory in Philippines. Sometimes it feels like people don’t think Pacquiao would be as great without his buddy Roach. Things become even more exciting, when Freddie, with a confident yet relaxed face expression, predicts a knockout for Manny. Not only does Freddie like to predict, but he loves to be very specific, identifying the round of the knockout. This drives Pacman fans wild, and heats up the crowd for the event. This time against Margarito, Freddie took his words a bit further, stating that he will be very disappointed in Manny if the fight doesn’t end with him knocking out Antonio.

Roach seems to be getting a return in his investment into Pacquiao as well. When folks talk about Freddie as a coach, they always mention Manny as his golden trophy (which makes sense). When new fighters emerge and see some success to their boxing, they immediately attempt to get Roach’s attention. Why not? Roach is a great trainer, and could possibly do for them what he did for Pacquiao. Even looking at Amir Khan, Freddie seems to be doing an awesome job. There are a ton of good trainers out there, but they don’t have Pacquiao, do they? Freddie always told me that the only reason he is getting all this attention and popularity is due to the great outcomes with his stable of fighters. But he also says that the only reason for their mutual success is themselves. He said to me that every fighter he has ever had who went far, did so because they are talented and determined. He works on the little things and strategy, but has no doubt that they would go far without him if need be.

This is just something I started noticing when talking to random people about the amazing duo. Most believe that one without the other would not work at all. A big part of the general boxing public sees the birth of Pacquiao when he was turned over to Freddie for “raising.” Personally I don’t want to believe so, as I think that every fighter’s success is due to the earliest part of their training, and the rest is detail polishing. Manny is a tremendous athlete, and is focused as well as determined for every fight no matter what circumstances he comes across. November is coming up, and people are excited to see what Freddie and Manny cooked up for the Tornado this time.

Thanks for reading.

Source: eastsideboxing.com

Monday 27 September 2010

Pacquiao Hits Road in Baguio -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

MANILA, Philippines — Manny Pacquiao hit Baguio City Sunday afternoon and by next morning, the boxing icon was jogging, sprinting and stretching at Burnham Park watched by awed residents who spread the welcome mat for the boxer who is getting ready for the November 13 faceoff with Antonio Margarito.

Pacquiao’s Canadian adviser Mike Koncz described the morning roadwork as “a full (morning) workout.”

“We began running at 6 a.m. and Manny looked terrific,” said Koncz, who finally heaved a sigh of relief after spending the first six days of training camp with Pacquiao and the entire team in Metro Manila.

I Love Baguio City Long Sleeve T-shirt Large WhiteThere was a sizable crowd at Burnham Park where Pacquiao held his jogging and regular sprints and sit-ups, according to GMA 7 news reporter James Velasquez, activities Pacquiao failed to do when he was still in the lowlands.

Pacquiao will stay in the City of Pines in the next four weeks under the guidance of chief trainer Freddie Roach and conditioning coach Alex Ariza and training assistants Buboy and Roger Fernandez and Nonoy Neri.

The 31-year-old Pacquiao had set up training camp in Baguio at around this same time last year during the run-up to the Miguel Cotto fight.

After his final workout at the Elorde Boxing Gym in Quezon City last Saturday, Pacquiao said he is still far from reaching fighting form although

Roach is convinced that the Filipino remains a hungry and determined fighter.

Roach is so sure that Pacquiao is getting the hang of training that he has scheduled his first sparring session Tuesday against Michael Medina.

“We’ll do three rounds with Medina,” said Roach, citing that another sparmate, Glen Tapia, is still recovering from a bum stomach.

If Roach decides to postpone Pacquiao’s first sparring, it will likely take place Thursday.

Roach intends to rack up 150 rounds of quality sparring for Pacquiao.

Source: mb.com.ph

Ariza Bares Secret to Pacman’s Power -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

MANILA, Philippines – The key to Manny Pacquiao’s startling stamina and paralyzing power could be measured in one tiny scoop of powder that conditioning coach Alex Ariza mixes with water each time the Filipino climbs the ring for his daily workouts.

Nobody knows what it is but it apparently makes Pacquiao perform superhuman efforts coupled of course with a training regimen that puts even the finest athletes to shame.

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the RingAriza told a couple of scribes that there’s nothing so special about it, saying it’s just a concoction of supplements as he puts the light-yellow granules into an aluminum can for Pacquiao to drink prior to another round of workout under Freddie Roach.

Ariza said he has to reinforce Pacquiao’s intake of supplements because of the sheer size of Antonio Margarito, the Mexican bomber Pacquiao is facing on Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

“Margarito is big and strong,” said Ariza, implying that Pacquiao has to stand up to his 5-11 rival’s pushing and shoving at close range.

Of course, Ariza also regulates Pacquiao’s diet, which is composed of the basic food groups.

“Manny just eats the basic, beef, chicken, fish, rice and a 16 oz serving of protein shake (that is immediately given to Pacquiao after every workout)” said Ariza, who has been in Pacquiao’s training camp since 2008.

“No game meat,” Ariza said, smiling, recalling the incident in 2008 when Oscar De La Hoya was served deer meat and another exotic fare while preparing to face Pacquiao.

This will be the first time Pacquiao will fight at super-welterweight (154 lbs) although he and Margarito have agreed to fight at a catch weight of 151 lbs.

Meanwhile, Pacquiao’s training camp shifts to high gear this week as the fighter commences the thrice-a-week sparring sessions in Baguio City.

Freddie Roach said Pacquiao will begin sparring with Mexican Michael Medina most probably tomorrow (Tuesday).

Source: mb.com.ph

Real hard stuff starts in Baguio -- Philippine Star

By Abac Cordero, The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines - Coach Freddie Roach can only shake his head when told that Antonio Margarito has been training like hell.

“Even if he works hard, nobody works hard like Manny. Nobody,” said Roach on the eve of Team Pacquiao’s departure for Baguio where, according to the celebrated trainer, the real hard stuff begins.

American Prisoners of War: Walter MiddletonIt’s exactly 49 days or seven weeks before Manny Pacquiao climbs the ring against Margarito, on Nov. 13 at the Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. It’s the time for everyone to put their game faces on.

“It’s time to get serious,” said Roach, who wants sparring to begin tomorrow, behind closed doors at the Cooyeesan Plaza, the same place where they trained briefly for the Miguel Cotto fight last year.

Team Pacquiao arrived at the country’s summer capital around 5 p.m. yesterday.

Weather in Baguio is much colder than in Manila, with forecasts of a high of 26 degrees Celcius to a low of 15 over the next few days. Rainshowers are also in store for Pacquiao and his small party.

Its high altitude and rugged, mountainous terrains will give Pacquiao everything he needs.

Roach said their battle plan against Margarito isn’t done a hundred percent yet but insisted that Pacquiao already knows what to do against the taller but much slower fighter from Mexico.

Roach said Margarito can train as hard, as long as he wants to, and it still won’t make a difference in the fight.

“Okay, he is what he is,” he said of the 5-foot-11 ex-champion. “But this is our time.”

The four-time Trainer of the Year is talking about the fact that Pacquiao had stayed unbeaten for five years now, and that he can remain unbeatable for a long, long time if his work ethic stays the same.

In contrast, he said Margarito may find it easier to quit than put up a fight everybody wants to see.

“When he quit against Shane Mosley, his career was over I think. Here’s my philosophy: once you quit, it’s much easier to quit the second time,” said Roach as he looked back to Margarito’s big TKO loss to Mosley last year.

Again, he said it’s time to get serious, and tomorrow he plans to kick off sparring, and may tap Michael Medina, a fighter even taller than Margarito, to do three rounds with Pacquiao.

“He’s more like the opponent while Glen Tapia (the other sparring partner) is the cocky one. Maybe we can hold him up a bit,” he said, adding that Tapia could use another day or two to rest after going down last Wednesday because of some water he drank somewhere.

Doghouseboxing.com reported yesterday that Margarito, the disgraced ex-welterweight champion, is deep into training in El Monte, California, and will soon move to Oxnard for the tougher grind.

Margarito’s trainer, Robert Garcia, is quite impressed with the way things are going.

“He’s ready to fight. He’s close to weight already and his conditioning is good and he’s running the mountains that mostly everyone does in an hour. He did it in 47 minutes. So he’s ready. When we get to Oxnard, we’re going to be ready to spar and plan for the fight.”

But Roach isn’t giving Margarito a second look, especially after he saw the fight against Mosley.

“And that’s the way he will quit (against Pacquiao) I will bet that he’ll quit. I tell him that to his face. I’ll bet that you’ll quit,” he said couple of days ago.

As usual, Pacquiao would rather talk about himself than his opponent.

“I’m getting better. I think I’m 50 to 60 percent conditioned. But we have enough time. With Margarito, you need to practice hard,” he said.

Source: philstar.com

The right and the wrong about Floyd Mayweather Jr -- 8CountNews

By Brad Cooney, 8CountNews.com

It's been quite a year for Floyd Mayweather Jr. There is no questioning how good of a fighter Floyd Mayweather is. Floyd's accomplishments with boxing gloves on stands on its own merit. There are many things we can point out that's wrong with Floyd Mayweather, and the media including this writer has done plenty of pointing. Floyd makes it pretty easy for the media to bash him, he feeds the media. His decisions in life and being such a public figure makes him fair game.

Floyd has had a few opportunities to get into the ring against Manny Pacquiao and because of himself, and nobody else, that fight has not happened. The steroid allegations that resulted in a lawsuit filed against him for slander was the starting point of a horrible year for him. This was the first roadblock that Floyd threw in the way, and the accusations derailed the talks and ended any chance for the big fight to happen.

Racist America: Roots, Current Realities, and Future Reparations, Second EditionRound two of the negotiations crashed and burned when Floyd scoffed at Bob Arum's deadline for a decision. Even worse, Floyd denied that negotiations ever took place, and this turned out to be untrue. Negotiations did take place and for whatever reason once again Floyd ducked on the fight.

Mayweather then went on the Internet and launched a racial attack that disrespected every Asian man and woman on the planet. His attack on Filipinos and Manny Pacquiao was a disgusting display of disrespectful behavior that did a lot of damage to Floyd's already diminished reputation. Floyd realized that he had made a bad mistake and immediately apologized for what he had said, but not many people took him seriously and the apology for the most part fell on deaf ears. This has been a PR nightmare for Floyd.

The bad news didn't stop there. Just recently Floyd was arrested and charged with two felony counts and a stack of misdemeanor charges that accuse him of beating up his ex girlfriend, and stealing her phone. He is looking at additional charges for threatening his children.

Floyd finally has been quiet as of late, and probably because someone finally told him to shut up.

With all of this said, Floyd actually has done some good things for folks and it wouldn't be fair to blast the guy without pointing out some good things. Floyd does a lot of good things for the homeless folks in Las Vegas. He also does some good work with the youth in Las Vegas, and these two things should be pointed out. He's not all bad, and hopefully one day he will wake up and smell the coffee.

Floyd has done a very good job of destroying his reputation and now he has some damage control to do if he cares about fixing it. The path to fixing things is to get into the ring and fight Manny Pacquiao. If Floyd would just fight Pacquiao, and behave like a gentleman win, lose, or draw, that would be one big step toward repairing his bad reputation.

Source: 8countnews.com

Sunday 26 September 2010

Manny to blame for promotional feud -- ESPN

By Dan Rafael, ESPN.com

I didn't have a lot of fun the other day writing about Golden Boy's federal lawsuit against Top Rank, which alleges racketeering and fraud related to millions of dollars Golden Boy contends that Top Rank owes it from three Manny Pacquiao fights.

Stories like that are a real downer, not to mention it takes time and concentration to slog through a 23-page lawsuit, much of it written in legalese, and to listen to the spin from the lawyers on both sides. I could live without that.

Manny Pacquiao Pound 4 Pound Men's Tee, X, BKBut it's an important story in boxing when two of the most powerful promotional companies in the world are fighting over millions related to fights involving the best fighter on the planet, especially because it further strains their already terrible relationship and further reduces the likelihood of seeing Golden Boy's fighters face Top Rank's. That means don't count on seeing such fights as Miguel Cotto-Shane Mosley II, Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Marquez III, Saul "Canelo" Alvarez-Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. or Victor Ortiz-Brandon Rios, among others.

The companies have been bitter rivals since the day Oscar De La Hoya left Bob Arum's Top Rank -- who had promoted him for his entire career -- to start his own company almost 10 years ago. There were a few truces along the way, but there is so much water under the bridge at this point that I don't think the companies will ever have a truly friendly relationship. Arum can't stand De La Hoya or his CEO, Richard Schaefer, and vice versa. They've trashed each other for years and, even when they did business together, nobody ever looked comfortable during their co-promotions. And let's not even get into the disaster of their twice-failed negotiations for Pacquiao to face Floyd Mayweather Jr., who has worked with Golden Boy for his recent fights.

When Top Rank and Golden Boy reached a settlement of their various lawsuits against each other in the summer of 2007, thanks to a mediator, we had peace for a couple of years and we got some big fights -- Pacquiao's matches with De La Hoya and Ricky Hatton, his rematches with Marquez and Marco Antonio Barrera and other fights as well, such as Cotto-Mosley and Bernard Hopkins-Kelly Pavlik.

When they settled in 2007, the key to the settlement was working out a deal on Pacquiao's contract, which they both believed -- for good reason -- they owned.

In the settlement, Top Rank retained Pacquiao's promotional rights with Golden Boy to share a percentage of Top Rank's profits from his fights. When Pacquiao fought a Golden Boy opponent, it would be the lead promoter, which meant Golden Boy would keep the books. When Pacquiao fought anyone else, Top Rank was in charge of the accounting. The suit filed last week is over the accounting for the fights Pacquiao has had against non-Golden Boy fighters since the settlement, namely David Diaz, Cotto and Joshua Clottey. And you can count on there being more issues after Pacquiao's Nov. 13 fight against Antonio Margarito.

While both companies deserve blame for the complete mess of their relationship, you know who deserves the most blame?

Pacquiao.

Too many people forget, or ignore, that he is responsible for so much of the acrimony.

Remember: Under cover of night in 2006, Pacquiao took a bag stuffed with hundreds of thousands of dollars from De La Hoya, who had picked him up in a limo at Los Angeles International Airport and whisked him away to a clandestine dinner at a steak house to seal the deal.

De La Hoya, of course, didn't win any points for the inappropriate manner in which he conducted business, especially after he got on his high horse and proclaimed when he founded Golden Boy that it would do business differently than other promoters.

But Pacquiao deserves the blame because he is the one who signed with two companies at the same time. When he took De La Hoya's bag of cash, he apparently forgot that he had just recently signed with Top Rank.

Pacquiao's idiotic move ultimately left the companies mostly at each others' throats since, even though he eventually pledged loyalty to Arum.

Pacquiao has never been held accountable enough for his atrocious judgment. Although questioned about this over the years, he has, at least to my knowledge, never really addressed his disturbing decision in a serious manner.

When asked in the past, Pacquiao has blown off the legitimate question -- "Why did you sign with two companies at once?" -- by smiling his way through it and pulling his best Sammy Sosa. You know that move, the one where you suddenly forgot that you actually can speak English when you don't like the question.

In any case, the next time you get upset because Top Rank and Golden Boy won't make a fight you want to see because of their childish, ongoing feud, you have every right to blame them. But don't forget to include Pacquiao in your crosshairs.

Source: espn.go.com

Pacman taken to hospital -- Philippine Star

By Abac Cordero, The Philippine Star

MANILA, Philippines – Manny Pacquiao was taken to the hospital Friday evening after complaining of pain on his left foot shortly after going through a rigorous two-hour workout at the Elorde Gym in Quezon City.

Pacquiao was at the Cardinal Santos Medical Center by 7 p.m. He went through MRI on his ailing foot and took some blood tests for fear it had something to do with uric acid or even arthritis.

Once, he thought he had arthritis when during training for the Marco Antonio Barrera fight in 2007 he felt piercing pain in his hands the day after enjoying a bowl of mongo sprouts in a Japanese restaurant.

The same old fear was back Friday evening when he felt the pain on the soles of his left foot.

The Hospital“Wala naman pala sabi ng doktor (The doctor said it was nothing). May kaunting maga nga kaya sumakit. Baka nahila sa workout (There was some swelling. Maybe it was pulled during the workout),” he said.

Pacquiao’s chief trainer, Freddie Roach, and his strength and conditioning coach, Alex Ariza, looked a little bit concerned when they learned that the pound-for-pound champion was taken to the hospital.

But the moment Pacquiao stepped inside the ring, all those fears disappeared.

He did 12 rounds with the mitts with Roach and worked on the double-end bag and speedball as usual, this time before a bigger number of fans who flashed away with their cameras even if the “no-flash” sign was up.

As he limbered up on the ring, Pacquiao himself sounded some concern when he tried to recall Miguel Cotto’s fight with Yuri Foreman last June when the latter was beaten and limped off the ring with a twisted knee.

“Nakita mo ‘yun? Natalo siya dahil sumakit ang tuhod (Did you see that? He lost because he hurt his knee),” said Pacquiao.

Roach, however, doesn’t think that would happen to Pacquiao when he climbs the ring against Antonio Margarito on Nov. 13, and shoots for an eighth world title in eight different weight classes.

“It’s not an injury we’ve never had before,” said Roach after yesterday’s session, and looked like he had been through a real fight.

“We’ll try to get it out of the way as soon as possible. We know how to deal with it. It’s just a little pull probably. But he moved pretty well today.

“He beat the shit out of me. He got me winded,” said the trainer.

Indeed, Pacquiao moved so well during the session that a couple of times, after throwing a flurry or some perfect combinations, Roach was overheard saying, “Nice shot. That’s what I want Manny. That’s what I want.”

Ariza wanted to make sure he gets to talk to the doctor who checked on Pacquiao at the San Juan hospital, and insisted even if Pacquiao told him there’s no need to do so because he felt perfectly fine.

“I want the number of your doctor. I need to talk to him. I want to know what’s wrong. Why? Because that’s what I’m here for. That’s what you’re paying me for. I need to know what’s wrong so I can fix it,” said Ariza.

Pacquiao cut him short, saying, “Okay, Okay. One word is enough.”

“Not with you, Manny,” Ariza said.

Of course, it was all part of a conversation, and Roach later said Ariza will have his way.

“He will talk to the doctor. He knows how to take care of it, too. That’s his job so that’s what he’ll do,” said Roach.

Again, whatever that is that led Pacquiao to the hospital was nowhere to be found inside the ring.

“His power is there. His speed is coming along and his timing is getting better. Not a hundred percent yet but he’s getting better. I’m happy and I’m thrilled,” said Roach.

Source: philstar.com