Tuesday, 9 February 2010

Edwin Valero: The New Manny Pacquiao -- Ringside Report

By Geno McGahee, Ringside Report

At 31, with fifty-two fights, the career of Manny Pacquiao may be at its tail end. The explosive southpaw will be leaving some big shoes to fill, but there is a lightweight that brings many of the same things to the ring. Edwin Valero, 27-0, 27 KO’s, holds the WBC Lightweight Championship, and has not found any use for the judges yet in his career. Last Saturday, he stepped up to the biggest challenge of his career, facing the young and hungry contender, Antonio DeMarco, in a defense of his title. DeMarco came into the fight with only one defeat on his record and had a recent spree of good wins. He was hungry and tough and if Valero was a fraud, he would have exposed it. Valero proved that he was not a fraud.

Out of the 27 knockout wins, 19 of them were inside of the very first round. The majority of his reputation was built on his exposure on youtube, the only way that the boxing fans in the states could see him. His lack of exposure in the United States is due to his ineligibility to fight within its borders. He cannot get medically cleared because of a motorcycle accident he had which led to surgery and the removal of a blood clot. There is the concern that a punch could hurt him more so than any other boxer that hasn’t had this sort of issue, but money is not only talking at this point, it’s screaming.

Showtime was on hand and broadcasted the Valero-DeMarco showdown, which took place in Mexico, and the undefeated champion was all that people that were clamoring about him have claimed, and more. He is a big puncher, stunning DeMarco on several occasions, but he also presents good defense, dodging and swaying away from punches, the ability to put punches together, and a big heart. In the second round, he was elbowed, opening a giant gash on his forehead. He forged on and continued to fight, when he could have probably had it stopped and held onto his title without much more fuss, but he understood the importance of the occasion and battered DeMarco into submission.

Where does Valero go from here? The lightweight division has plenty to work with. There’s Juan Manuel Marquez, the man that came closest to beating Manny Pacquiao in recent times and on two occasions. It would be a high profile fight and a big test for Valero. How would he do against the technically sound and very tough Marquez?

Ali Funeka, the very tall and very strong fighter that was robbed in his two defeats would be a great challenge for Valero too. How would he overcome the incredible height? It’s another fight that would get Valero into an HBO or Showtime showcase.

The powerful Michael Katsidis would be a wild encounter, Marco Antonio Barrera is still hanging around, and Joan Guzman are all possible challenges that would put Valero back into the public’s eye. With the names in and around the lightweight division, Valero has a big chance to become a big attraction and PPV star, following the same path that Filipino superstar, Manny Pacquiao. When you compare Valero and Pacquiao, you can’t help but see the similarities. They are both fearless southpaws that come forward seeking the knockout from the opening bell on. In fact, Valero was once considered as an opponent for Manny, but it was too much risk, not enough reward, and getting Valero cleared in the states where most big fights take place would have proven difficult to say the least.

I don’t think that the ban will last forever with Valero, especially when the demand grows. Valero has stated that he can pass a medical test and he will have a chance to prove it in the near future. He is one of the, if not the, most exciting fighters in the game today, and I look forward to his continued development and future showdowns with some of the bigger names out there in the lightweight division.

Antonio Margarito: Will he Return to the Ring?

The “Hands of Plaster” Antonio Margarito, 37-6, 27 KO’s, the former WBA Welterweight Champion, is about to be given the news. Will he be allowed to return to the ring after his hand wraps were exposed prior to his encounter with Shane Mosley in January of 2009? Team Mosley noticed something fishy about the wrapping of Margarito’s hands and when they were sent to the lab to be analyzed, it came back that he was using plaster of Paris to make his fists basically bricks packed into the boxing gloves.

Bob Arum, the Promoter of Margarito, came out strong when his fighter was first banned, stating that he was only banned because he was Mexican and had he been white, he would have not been prevented from fighting. And people say Don King is scum.

The fact is that Margarito cheated and it’s fair to say that he has done this for some time, including his Miguel Cotto and Kermit Cintron wins. Against Mosley, when the playing field was even, he was very ineffective and it’s fair to say that he would have lost many more of his bouts had he not loaded his gloves.

Should Margarito be re-instated? No. They need to ban this menace for life. If they ban Luis Resto for life, why should Margarito be any different? What he did was the basic equivalent. He knew he could have killed his opponent, but had the money signs in his eyes and found that more important than the health of his opposition. We don’t need a person with that attitude and that lack of morals involved in boxing.

Unfortunately, my guess is that he will be back in the ring. Money talks and boxing is a dirty sport where guys like Margarito flourish and he has some big guns behind him to make the return easier. Hopefully, the networks will ignore his return and the boxers that face off with him take every precaution to ensure that he doesn’t load his gloves again.

Source: ringsidereport.com

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Manny Pacquiao-Edwin Valero - Please Make This Fight Happen! -- Eastside Boxing

By James Slater, Eastside Boxing

Immediately after he'd stopped a brave Antonio DeMarco in the 10th-round on Saturday night, improving his perfect record to 27-0(27), WBC lightweight king Edwin Valero again called out fellow southpaw and reigning pound-for-pound star Manny Pacquiao. Saying a fight between he and the Filipino legend is a fight "the whole world wants to see," the lethal-punching Venezuelan made it clear he'd be willing to move up in weight to make the super-fight happen..

Indeed, the word is, "El Inca" will make the move up to 140-pounds in his very next fight (tantalising whispers suggest Valero could possibly fight WBO light-welterweight champion Timothy Bradley in the summer!). Believing he can carry his power - punching power that has seen him win every single one of his pro bouts inside the distance - up with him to 140 and maybe even beyond, Valero is hungry for a mega-match with "Pac-Man." He is not the only one!

As big a fight as Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather would have been (and maybe still will be), a fight between Pacquiao and Valero is something else altogether. Not as big a mainstream fight, a showdown between the two southpaws who carry dynamite in their gloves would be a hardcore fight fans' dream. But what are the chances of it happening, and of Valero being capable of wreaking havoc as a 140-pounder?

First of all, Pacquiao must get past the tough and durable Joshua Clottey in March. No easy fight for Manny, the March 13th clash could even conceivably ruin any talk of a fight with Valero. Secondly, Valero must win his debut at 140-pounds (if this debut IS against the man known as "Desert Storm," there is no guarantee he will do so). But assuming both men do win their next fight, could we see Valero get his wish later this year or early next?

Pacquiao, if he cannot get the winner of Shane Mosley-Floyd Mayweather to agree to fight him this year, would have no name more appealing to the fans than Valero. Though he's a huge enough name to be able to fight just about anybody and have his fans tuning in, Mayweather and Mosley aside, a fight with Valero makes the most sense and has more intrigue to it than any other for Pac-Man. Who wouldn't want to see this fight?

And Valero, at a listed 5'6," is tall enough to be able to move up to 140-pounds. Only a fraction shorter in height than Pacquiao, Valero actually has a slightly longer reach than Manny. And if Valero were able to carry his frightening power up with him, well, his chances of beating even as great a fighter as Pacquiao would have to be looked at as at least pretty good.

The sight the fight would be held at could possibly prove somewhat problematic. It's well known how Valero is unable to fight anywhere in America other than Texas, and a fight the magnitude of Valero-Pacquiao would be best suited to Las Vegas or New York. But the again, Pacquiao-Clottey is taking place in Dallas, Texas, so why not Pacquiao-Valero? Or how about the fight happening in The Philippines? The bout would not make as much money if it happened there, but Manny has fought at home before. Imagine what an occasion it would be for Manny's adoring countrymen to see their hero fight such a big fight in Manila!

Wherever it were staged, and at whichever weight (Manny may not wish to drop back down to 140), this fight would have no trouble at all getting the fans to tune in. Two fast, powerful and talented fighters going at it head-on; what's not to like? Would Pacquiao be able to cope with Valeros' wicked punches and relentless aggression? Would the less-polished Valero be able to deal with Pacquiao's punching power along with his finer overall skills? Could the clash of southpaws possibly go the distance?

These questions and far more besides will hopefully be answered in the coming months. Let's hope the promoters involved recognise how big a deal the making of this fight is to boxing fans!

Source: eastsideboxing.com

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Manny Pacquiao to be Profiled on '60 Minutes' -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Seven-division titlist, Manny Pacquiao, of the Philippines, will be featured in an upcoming segment of 60 minutes, Top Rank publicist, Lee Samuels, told FanHouse on Sunday.

Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 knockouts), who already has graced the cover of the Asian edition of Time Magazine, earned his current WBO welterweight (147 pounds) title with November's 12th-round knockout of Miguel Cotto, and will defend it on March 13 at The Dallas Cowboys' Stadium in Arlington, Tex., against Joshua Clottey (35-3, 20 KOs).

"Their crews will be with him throughout the days leading up to the fight, and they will be at the fight and have full access during the fight and after the fight," said Samuels. "They're hopes were that they are planning to release the segment sometime before his next fight, so they're talking about it airing in September."

Pacquiao was recently named Fighter Of The Year for the third time, Fighter Of The Decade for the first time, and his trainer, Freddie Roach, Trainer Of The Year for an unprecedented fourth time -- all both by the Boxing Writers Association of America.

Top Rank CEO, Bob Arum, told Michael Marley of The Boxing Examiner on Sunday that CBS is expected to begin shooting on Valentines Day at Roach's Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif.

"It just shows that interest in Manny has transcended sports, gone beyond that," Arum told Marley, who first reported the news. "Good Morning America on the ABC network is also going to do something on Manny. It is really phenomenal how the interest is widening on Pacman."

Beyond boxing, there is certainly plenty to talk about concerning Pacquiao, who is perhaps the most prominent cross-over boxing star since Muhammad Ali, and even shares his nickname, "The Greatest," while also being dubbed, "Pac-Man."

Pacquiao already has been featured in ESPN Magazine's 'Body Issue,'has displayed his modest singing and comedic skills as a guest on Jimmy Kimmel Live, been featured in main stream newspapers such as The Los Angeles Times and The New York Times, and been selected among Time Magazine's Top 25 People Who Mattered in 2009 --listed alphabetically directly behind the United States' first African American president, Barack Obama.

A hero to his native Filipinos, Pacquiao delivered food to his countrymen in devastated Manila only a few days prior to landing in America over the final weeks of training for Cotto -- this after the area had been ravaged by two typhoons.

Born into poverty as Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao in Kibawe, Bukidnon, Pacquiao is considered a man of strong, Christian faith. Pacquiao's first name in The Bible means "God is with us."

There is plenty about Pacquiao that is coincidental if not symbolic, such as the facts that his birthday is eight days prior to Christmas, and he arrived in America from the Philippines on Jan. 17 in order to attend press tours for his bout with Clottey -- a date that happened to be Ali's 68th birthday as well as the day prior to the annual observation of Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday.

Pacquiao, who shot a super hero movie, WaPak Man, that was released on Christmas, will run for congress in the Philippines. The championn will begin campaining on March 26, with the elections slated for May 10.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

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SHOULD ANTONIO MARGARITO BE ALLOWED TO FIGHT AGAIN? EXPERTS SHARE THEIR THOUGHTS

Boxing News World

The short one-year suspension by the California State Athletic Commission of Antonio Margarito is about to expire this week and we would probably see the Mexican banger back in action against mediocre Carson Jones at Cowboys Stadium on March 13 as co-event of the much anticipated Manny Pacquiao–Joshua Clottey showdown.

Boxing fans are divided whether or not the Tijuana native should be allowed to get back to the boxing ring after being caught red-handed with an illegal plaster-like substance as part of his hand-wrappings just before his WBA welterweight title fight with Sugar Shane Mosley over a year ago.

I sought the opinion of some experts on this delicate issue and here’s what they had to say:

Geoff Poundes, Ringside Report
No, he should not. For him to claim that he had no knowledge that his wraps had been doctored is a nonsense – he’s shown no remorse that I’ve heard of. However, even he admitted to it, I’d still want him banned for life. Boxing is a dangerous enough sport without it allowing cheats to play fast and loose with their opponents health. Of course, he will fight again – because he’s now a freak show and people will pay to see him, which is all that seems to matter to the so-called “authorities”.

Mark Whicker, Orange County Register
Yes. Obviously his opponents and the commissions will be watching him like a hawk.

Bill Dwyre, Los Angeles Times
No, Margarito endangered people's lives (Cotto's). That he is even in a conversation to fight again (and apparently will be on Arum's Dallas undercard) is disgusting.

Frank Lotierzo, The Sweet Science
Yes. I don't think his career should be taken from him via one offense.

Tony Nobbs, Eastside Boxing
Margarito should be allowed to fight again. It was his trainer who wrapped his hands. A fighter usually goes along with the trainer. There is no doubt that if he fights again his wraps will be checked.

Matthew Goldstein, Boxing Talk
If Antonio Margarito is guilty, and I'm not sure if he is, he should be banned for life! No question.

Chris Ackerman, Doghouse Boxing
If the commission is satisfied that Margarito himself knew about the illegal wrapping, then no. I find it hard to believe he wouldn't notice that he had casts on his hands, rather than a proper tape job...so I am leaning towards favouring a lifetime ban. It's difficult to think of any more egregious, disgraceful and dangerous actions. If the facts are what they appear to be, he could have killed someone and the hammer should fall.

Michael Rosenthal, Ring Magazine
This is a tough question. I'll tell you this: One year isn't long enough. I think he knew the illegal pad was being used.

TP Walker, Eastside Boxing
I personally thought the sanction should have been more than a year. Still that's the time they gave him, he served it and he should be allowed to earn a living just like anyone else. He has lost a lot of respect and I think the scrutiny will follow him the rest of his life. He will be under the microscope from now on.

Brandon Estrict, Doghouse Boxing
Margarito should be allowed to fight again as long as he gets rid of his trainer, which I'm told he has done. To be fair, we're all suspicious, but we have no way of proving he was loaded for any other fight, including the ones with Cintron and Cotto. He tried to cheat against Mosley but he got caught and he's paid the price. I say let him fight, but monitor him closely.

Tony Penecale Jr, Fight News Unlimited
Before being allowed to fight again, I think Antonio Margarito and his trainer need to testify in front of a panel of boxing officials. I believe something more sinister than just "not knowing" happened when his trainer Javier Capitello wrapped his hands. To gain an unfair advantage and put your opponent at an additional risk of danger is absolutely disgusting. I would force both of them to watch the HBO Documentary "Assault in the Ring" just to fully understand the dangers of their actions. Should he be allowed to fight again? I give a reluctant yes. He deserves the opportunity to make a living but he will now be under heavy scrutiny and no matter what he does the rest of his career, his wins and titles will always be tarnished.

Jim Amato, DM Boxing
Margarito should NEVER be allowed to box again. How many fighters did he overwhelm with "loaded" gloves? We will never know. He may have changed the course of Miguel Cotto's career with that beat down he gave Miguel. Against Mosley with "unloaded" gloves, Margarito looked very ordinary.

Springs Toledo, The Sweet Science
He should not. After what Nazim Richardson found, Margarito does not deserve the right to be given the benefit of doubt about those wins against, for example, Cotto and Sebastian Lujan (whose ear almost fell off from Margarito's punches). What he attempted to do before the Mosley fight was criminal. He could have knowingly killed someone. He betrayed the sport and should be cast off. The Golden Age of Boxing is long since over but boxing needs to act decisively in order to reverse the long decline. Boxing can become a flagship of not only drug testing but of honorable combat. It used to be called the "manly art of self-defense" and was appreciated for not only its violence but also its chivalry. MMA is more savage -knees to the face and "ground and pound" are not exactly aesthetically pleasing to the eye. Boxing can carve a wider nitch for people who want to see a more civilized form of violence. Genteel sciences like fencing and karate have fans, MMA does too. Why not see that boxing is between them -offering the best of both extremes?

Michel Joseph, Boxing Talk
Yes. Margarito should be allowed to fight again. As it stands, he was caught cheating, and was reprimanded for it, and served his suspension. He should now be allowed to continue his career and livelihood. To not allow Margarito to fight anymore, would be a precedent setting decision which would, based on other fighters who served similar punishments for similar violations, be the wrong move here.

Now, would I endorse a rule created by boxing commissions and endorsed unanimously by them all, that states any fighter found loading his gloves or wraps will be barred permanently from the sport? Yes I would, such a rule would promote first and foremost, the safety of fighters, and second, it would promote a level playing field by creating such "one and you're done" consequences that would follow for getting caught. I would certainly favor such a rule, as I think fighters or trainers using loaded gloves or wraps are reprehensible, and in fact, should be criminal. It's worse than Bonds or Sosa juicing it up - yes, both Margarito and Sosa cheated, but one could have, as a result, directly injured or killed another human being.

I think commissions should strongly consider the good image of sportsmanship and discipline they would help to create and further expand by creating such a rule. It would give fans and the public alike, the peace of mind in knowing that the athletic contests they witness are without more thing to worry about. Fans and the public alike already have a distrust for the sport of boxing because of poor judging and scorecards (putting it lightly), shoddy ranking systems from a multitude of ridiculous commissions, and oftentimes, overhyped, underwhelming match-ups. The sport could and should do all it can to minimize the problems it currently faces, and creating such a rule would help to do so - again, hasn't this sport got enough problems? Loaded gloves and wraps is something it could eliminate with the creation and enforcement of such a rule.

Paul H. Burbridge, Eastside Boxing
Antonio Margarito is a disgrace to boxing and an embarrassment to Bob Arum. His attempt to cheat in the manner he did is morally repugnant and he should never be allowed back in a professional boxing ring ever again. Mexican fighters are some of the proudest and CLEANEST fighters the sport has ever known and many of them are flat out disgusted by Margarito. The guys I've spoken to have told me they wished he wasn't Mexican which pretty much says it all. The fact that Arum is trying to bring him back says more about his greed than it does about his integrity. Boxing will continue to be considered a "rogue" sport until we act in a fair and legal manner ALL THE TIME rather than making exceptions. Margarito KNEW that what he was doing could kill another man yet winning a sporting event was more important to him than his opponent’s life. There is something very wrong with that kind of logic and it tells you everything you need to know about Margarito the man!

I'm embarrassed for boxing.

Amy Green, BoxingInLasVegas
Margarito... I am undecided about.

Don Stewart, Reading Eagle
Margarito should be banned for life. Examples need to be set. If you willingly and knowingly break the rules and put your opponent's safety at risk, you're done. It's fair to ask how the banned fighter is supposed to make a living when you're standing in the way of him and his profession, but what about the guys he's damaged? How were their careers and lives affected? And is a one-year ban really enough to atone for that damage? The ban should be permanent.

David Greisman, BoxingScene
Margarito should not be allowed to fight again. Why should he get off easy just because he was caught before getting in the ring? If this were a fighter who was a villain and wasn't as fan-friendly as Margarito, people would be calling for a lifetime ban. I'd love to see Margarito fight again, but I don't think he should be allowed to do so.

Igor Frank, Burbank Times
Antonio Margarito maintains his innocence; he asked Freddie Roach to train him and told him that he did not know that he was fighting with loaded gloves. Many experts believe that it would be impossible for him not to know. So if you believe Antonio, he should be given a second chance and if you don’t , then he should not be allowed to box.


How about you fellow boxing fans, what’s your say?

– Marshall N. B., marx7204@lycos.com

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Roach cuts down on Pacquiao’s sparring -- GMA News

GMA News

Filipino ring icon Manny Pacquiao is not too far off his top fighting shape that trainer Freddie Roach will cut down on his sparring sessions in his preparations for his March 13 duel with Joshua Clottey in Texas.

In an interview with GMA News’ Chino Trinidad, Roach said 100 to 110 rounds - instead of the usual 150 rounds - will be enough to make the 31-year-old Pacquiao ready for Clottey.

“We don’t need that many rounds. We’re sharp from the last fight (against Miguel Cotto last November). We don’t need 150 rounds for this fight – maybe about a hundred, maybe 110, somewhere in that neighborhood," Roach said.

Pacquiao has so far logged 32 rounds of sparring with younger and bigger guys like Jose Buenavidez, Ray Beltran and Mike Dallas entering the last five weeks of training camp at the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles.

Last Saturday, the Pacman got accidentally hit below the belt by Dallas (11-0-1) but instead of sulking, Trinidad reported that Pacquiao was fired up to unleash clean right hooks and left upper combos that nearly knocked out his 5-foot-9 sparmate down.

(Language: Tagalog)

For the latest Philippine news stories and videos, visit GMANews.TV

Roach said Pacquiao, the Boxing Writers’ Association of America’s “Fighter of the Decade" and three-time “Fighter of the Year" Awardee, is fast getting there in so far as reaching 100% is concerned.

“He is already in good shape. The first day he came in the gym, he weighed around 147 pounds already. We have to keep the weight up and feed him five meals a day just to keep it up," the four-time Trainer of the Year winner said in an earlier interview with Fight News.

“He is doing great in sparring and we are studying his game plan as we watch Clottey tapes. He’s not ready to fight yet but we have about four and a half weeks till fight night and he will be ready then," he added.

Roach reiterated his confidence that Clottey, who has never been knocked out before, will suffer the same fate as previous Pacquiao foes like Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Cotto.

“I have been studying him (Clottey) quite a bit now. He is very strong and has a good chin but he makes too many fundamental mistakes and I think Manny will be the first person to knock him out," he said.

Pacquiao will be defending his WBO welterweight title against Clottey, who has previously vied for the same belt in June 2009 but yielded a close split decision to then champion Cotto. - GMANews.TV

Source: gmanews.tv

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Mayweather vs Mosley: Several Valid Reasons Why Sugar Shane Beats Money Mayweather -- Eastside Boxing

By Dax Ferguson, Eastside Boxing

Well, fight fans, the fight of this decade is apparently going to happen. It’s not that often that two of the three greatest fighters on the planet have the opportunity to meet in the ring. Or that the three greatest fighters are all boxing in the very same weight division. Of course, I am referring to Sugar Shane Mosley, Floyd Money Mayweather and Manny Pacquaio.

I, for one, was really looking forward to seeing Manny and Floyd get it on; now it’s Shane and Floyd in what promises to be one of the most important welterweight fights of all time; and that is saying a lot when one remembers some of the great battles in that division in the last half of the century. One of the greatest battles was between all time great Kid Gavilan and unbeaten Gil Turner, who possessed at age 21 a 31-0 record with 25 KO’s and ex-champs Ike Williams and Beau Jack on his kayo roster. Gavilan triumphed in the 11 the round in a bout that drew 47,000 fans to the Philly arena back in July of 1952.

Then there were the epic battles pitting Gavilan vs Billy Graham and Carmen Basilio..

And for sheer tenacity and unbridled action, the two Carmen Basilio-Tony DeMarco battle royals are hard to top, both won on knockout by Carmen.

In more recent times, Sugar Ray Leonard played the starring role vs Wilfred Benitez in a boxing classic chess match won by Leonard with six seconds to go in the 15th round, which was a classic pre-mature stoppage. Leonard also figured in a couple other great welterweight matchups, against all tjme great Roberto Duran (twice) losing the first and winning the second when Duran turned away, saying “No Mas!” The best Leonard effort however was against the hard hitting unbeaten Tommy Hearns who took him to hell and back before he finally triumphed over the weight weakened Hit Man.

Those are some of the matches by which the Mosley-Mayweather fight will be judged by. It shows promise of being a great fight, based more on Mosley’s aggressive style than Mayweather’s slip and slide counterpunching persona.

It will be Mosley who will make this an exciting fight if it is indeed to be the classic that most boxing enthusiasts expect it to be.

Let’s match these two up potentially on paper:

Experience: Have to give Shane the nod here, as overall he has fought better fighters.

He has fought a prime DeLaHoya twice, winning the first with no doubt and a controversial close decision in the second. Lost twice to Vernon Forrest when Forrest was at his best. Styles make fights and Vernon had Shane’s number. Pity they never fought a third time, I believe Shane would have won. Shane has also fought Winky Wright twice and lost both. However, as in the Forrest fights, Shane came a lot closer in the second, losing a razor tight decision and having Winky in trouble in the final round. Shane also lost a razor thin decision to Miguel Cotto in a bout I felt he won by one round. Again, he came on strong in the final rounds.

Shane’s best win at welterweight undoubtedly was his virtual annihilation of Tony Margarito, a one sided beat down that left Margarito fans dumbfounded. Mosley twice hammered Fernando Vargas into submission, leaving no doubt who was the better man. He also culminated a tough fight with rugged, free swinging Ricardo Mayorga, who not incidentally stopped and decisioned Vernon Forrest in their two matches. Mosley has never turned down the best opponents which is more than can be said for Mayweather, who is well known for looking for soft touches. Mayweather’s most dominant fight was with Diego Corrales when he dropped Corrales five times but that was at 130 pounds and nine years ago. His credentials at 147 pounds are less than impressive. He stopped a used up Shamba Mitchell in six, rallied to beat Zab Judah, one of the best “four round” fighters in the world, shut out oft beaten Carlos Baldomir, barely edged Oscar DeLaHoya. Floyd had fits early with Judah, DeLaHoya and even plucky little Ricky Hatton until Hatton ran out of gas. His return to the ring match up with much smaller and much older Juan Manuel Marquez was a mismatch but feather fisted Floyd couldn’t even put him away, despite a quick knockdown in the second round.

Speed: Both these guys have the reflexes of a scalded cat. I would give Mayweather a slight edge but it would be very, very slight. I don’t see speed being a culminating factor either way.

Defense: Both are very hard to hit, Mayweather is about as elusive as a tumbleweed in a high Nevada wind storm. Mosley is a little more hittable but is no easy target.

Punching Power: If this matchup ends up in a fire fight, Mosley wins by knockout. Mosley is a deadly puncher. According to Joe Goosen, one of the best trainers in the business, his left hook to the body is totally devastating. Goosen claims Shane knocked out a sparring partner with 16 ounce gloves and that takes some doing.

Chin: Gotta go with Sugar Shane on this one. He’s been in with bigger and stronger punchers and has only been on the canvas once in his entire amateur and pro career encompassing well over 250 fights. Mayweather on the other hand has been rocked by DeMarcus Corley and Zab Judah. It’s my personal opinion that once a fighter who can punch finds a way to penetrate his shoulder roll defense, Mayweather will be exposed as having a china chin comparable to Roy Jones Jr. Shane just might be that guy.

Size and Strength: Mosley wins out on both counts. He is naturally a bigger man and is also a much stronger man. At one time Mosley was credited with being able to bench press well over three hundred pounds. In a case of push and shove, it’s Shane, hats down.

Stamina & Conditioning: These two will bring a new level of conditioning to the table. Both have the reputation of getting better and stronger the longer the battle goes. The difference being is that Shane as pointed is the bigger and stronger guy and I believe he will wear the smaller Mayweather down if it gets into a distance fight.

Bottom Line: I predict that Sugar Shane will prevail by a stoppage somewhere between the 9th and 12th rounds. Mosley will have a devastating answer for Mayweather’s shoulder roll on the ropes and he will pin Mayweather in this suddenly uncomfortable position with precision power punches, some of which will slip through Mayweather’s guard, evasive as it is. Mayweather is going to find Mosley an entirely different breed of fighter, a better, more skilled fighter than he has ever faced before and he will not have the answers to the challenge.

Source: eastsideboxing.com

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America honours Pacquiao to leave Mayweather staring at his date with destiny -- Daily Mail

By Jeff Powell, Daily Mail

The Holy Grail of boxing is to be found deep inside the minds of the blood brotherhood and within that labyrinth the Pacman is defeating the Money Man without them throwing so much as a single punch at each other.

From the rooftops of the Las Vegas casinos in which he treats dollar bills like confetti, Floyd Mayweather Jr screams denial of Manny Pacquiao's claim to be the supreme pound-for-pound fighter in the world today. But in the esteem of the congoscenti he is just whistling into the desert wind.

America's boxing writers have spoken, voting Pacquiao as not only their fighter of the year but their boxer of the decade just ended.

Not only that, but 2009 represents the third time in four years that they have bestowed their Sugar Ray Robinson Trophy upon the Filipino phenomenon who has now won world titles in an unprecedented seven weight divisions.

In direct comparison, Pacquiao obliterated and concussed our own Ricky Hatton while Mayweather took longer to inflict an orthodox stoppage. But clearly the Pacman's willingness to meet the toughest rivals virtually regardless of differential in poundage weighed most heavily on the ballot.

Pacquiao receives his latest awards at a New York dinner in June. By then, on March 13, he will have fought - and by most predictions defeated - Ghana's dangerous world welterweight champion Joshua Clottey in the first boxing event to be staged in the Dallas Cowboys stadium.

Such is Pacquiao's popularity that the venue will be configured for a 50,000 seat sell out. This, in the wake of his stunning 12th round KO of two time world champion Miguel Cotto last autumn which drew such huge crowds to the Strip that it is credited for kick-starting a post-recession recovery of the Las Vegas economy. Then, in May, Pacquiao is expected to win another election, this time for a seat in the Philippine congress.

Mayweather, meanwhile, will confine himself to his hometown Vegas and a May 1 encounter with the veteran Shane Mosley, which would have been one helluva fight had it taken place when the now 38-year-old Sugar Shane was five years younger.

While there is no doubting Mayweather's mastery of the noble arts, this is in keeping with his apparent preference for taking on opponents who are either past their prime or smaller than himself.

Of course, the Pacman and the Money Man should be making an even more massive fortune by fighting each other. That match was made for next month and, naturally, each is blaming the other for its cancellation.

Mayweather called for constant dope testing. Pacquiao, who has no history in that regard, resented the insinuation that he was guilty of malpractice.

The terms of this dispute have been documented exhaustively and will be delved into yet deeper if and when Pacquiao's libel action goes to court.

Only Mayweather can tells us whether it is really the undiminished punching power which the smaller Pacquiao, quite exceptionally, has carried up with him through the weight classes which is preying on his mind.

It does not convince us to the contrary when he keeps carping on about how his next fight will be subject to an Olympic-standard drugs regime. Not when Mosley has tested positive in the past.

But if Mayweather wants to challenge the Boxer of the Decade for the mytholgocial pound-for-pound title, there is only one place he can do so. He will have to meet Pacquiao face-to-face in the ring...and sooner rather than later.

That is the best news from our boxing writing colleagues in the US. By honouring the Pacman they apply moral pressure on the Money Man to meet that date with destiny, perhaps as early as September in what would be the first candidate for Fight of the new Decade.

Wise Warren wants last laugh

A crop of promising young British boxers are ready to fight 'til they drop on Saturday night but one man who wears a suit, not shorts, will be exhausted even as he arrives at Wembley Arena.

Once upon a time the most strenuous demand on a promoter was carrying the takings from the box office to the bank. Not now. Not when it is the fighters who are calling the financial shots. Still less so when the entrepreneur in question is investing in the boys of the future, rather than cashing in on the big names of his immediate past.

For Frank Warren, boxing's opening show of 2010 represents the first arch in his bridge between the defection of Joe Calzaghe, Ricky Hatton and Amir Khan - after he guided them to world titles - and his building of a new decade of young champions.

To get this project started in earnest, Warren has had to work night and day to keep reconstructing

A British heavyweight championship match between the retiring Derek Williams and a barely emergent Sam Sexton was not the usual top-of-the-bill material. When Sexton called in injured, Tyson Fury declined to take up the title challenge and then Williams had an attack of the disappearing vapours, Warren could have been forgiven for pulling the plug.

Instead he kept plugging away, determined to keep open his showcase of promising talent. Derek Chisora versus Carl Baker in a final eliminator for the Lonsdale Belt may not be the stuff of ring fantasy but Del Boy is an unbeaten prospect and The Fridge did defeat Williams in the heavyweight Prizefighter tournament.

More importantly, it keeps the undercard in place. This, after so many postponements in Italy, enables Nathan Cleverly to go ahead at last with his European light-heavyweight title battle against Antonio Brancalion. It should also enable a burgeoning Kevin Mitchell to close in on a world lightweight challenge to Michael Katsidis, as well as keeping firmly on track the professional careers of Warren's stable of Beijing Olympians, including gold medallist James DeGale, Frankie Gavin and Billy Joe Saunders.

This promotion is being billed as The Night Of The Champions. Perhaps it should be entitled The Show Must Go On. If it comes to be remembered as The Night Of The Future Champions, Frank Warren will have the last laugh.

Ricky's tricky comeback

As Ricky Hatton begins preparing for his return for one last hurrah, he has to find not only an opponent with a big enough name to help him fill Manchester City's football ground in early summer but also a new trainer to get him back into shape after his holiday in Australia's lager-land.

Juan Manuel Marquez was envisaged as the marquee attraction but the Mexican legend who recently took Floyd Mayweather Jr the 12-round distance is being enticed away by Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy promotions as the May opponent for Amir Khan's American debut.

Now, with Mayweather's father Floyd Sr discarded after the crushing KO by Manny Pacquaio which appeared to end the Manchester Hitman's valiant career, Hatton's long-time back-up trainer Lee Beard has moved to the US. Ring comebacks are notoriously complicated and always hazardous.

THE OCTAGON

Romance is not a word used very often to describe the violent happenings in The Octagon.

But when the most adored legend of the UFC comes back from the Hall of Fame to defeat his oldest foe - in a battle between two veterans with a combined age of 91 years - the emotionial juices flow.
Randy Couture first fought - and lost to - Mark Coleman in Olympic wrestling in 1989.

On Saturday night, in the eight-sided cage at the Mandalay Bay casino in Las Vegas, he won the re-match with a submission- forcing choke hold in the second minute of the second round.

In the intervening 21 years, Couture won five world titles. Now, at 46 but looking at least 10 years younger, he is in line to challenge for a sixth. Who loves ya, Randy.

Source: dailymail.co.uk

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Mayweather Jr ‘I’ve dominated the sport of boxing for years and done so in a very clean fashion' -- Examiner

By Rick Rockwell, Examiner.com

Floyd Mayweather’s latest claims of dominating the sport of boxing for years and doing so in a very clean fashion has prompted some quick and harsh responses from his critics. It’s no secret that many Mayweather critics believe that Floyd has had a questionable career. Add in the use of a controversial drug and now you have critics once again shaking their heads over the insanity of Mayweather’s latest comments.

“We need to clean up boxing and all sports. I’ve dominated the sport of boxing for years and done so in a very clean fashion.” FMJ, FightFan.com

Floyd’s comments go right to the heart of what his critics shout to the heavens about. They say that Floyd ducked all the tough fighters through the years like Mosley, Cotto, and a rematch with De La Hoya. Here’s what Floyd has to say in regards to those who claim he ducks opponents:

“First they say I’m ducking everybody. Like I say, line ‘em up.”.. FMJ, BoxingInsider.com

“Line em up”? There have been tough fighters who’ve come along Floyd’s career that he chose to avoid like the ones I previously mentioned. It only took 10 years for the Mayweather and Mosley fight to happen. Yet Floyd says to “line em up”. Jackie Evans Rancho Cordova, CA “Who does he want us to line up, the ducks or the chickens?” Jackie, I think he means the “cherry picked” opponents that he has faced over the years; Guys who are smaller and match up well with his strengths.

Adam Barnes Sacramento, Ca “Didn’t he retire and then come back and fight an easy opponent? How’s that dominating boxing?” Adam, yes he did retire in 2008, and then came back about 1 year later to fight Juan Manuel Marquez. Now, Marquez isn’t a bum but he was clearly a smaller fighter who was handpicked for Mayweather. The problem is, it’s easy to say you have dominated a sport when you fight smaller fighters and/or fighters who are clearly inferior.

“In a very clean fashion”

Either Mayweather doesn’t think Xylocaine is “unclean” or he thinks most people are too stupid to know what it is. For him to say that he has dominated boxing “in a very clean fashion” is hilarious. How many times do we have to point out the illegalities and bans of Xylocaine? How many times do we have to point out the side effects and the benefits of this drug? When will reporters hold Mayweather accountable for his past actions when they interview him?

Hey readers, do you think Mayweather has dominated the sport for years and in a clean fashion?

Source: examiner.com

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