Tuesday 16 February 2010

New gym opens doors to everyone -- Tweed Daily News

By Jamie Gallagher, Tweed Daily News

NEW venue and a new start for Tony Nobbs and his team at the Tweed Stingrays Gym in Greenway Drive. Photo: CRYSTAL SPENCER D126524


WITH the completion of the new Tweed Stingrays Gym, boxing in the region has never looked so good.

The Greenway Drive facility is bigger than the old haunt within the Tweed PCYC, brighter and better laid out, and so far has exceeded all expectations in terms of turn-out.

Boasting a vastly more professional set-up, the establishment features a new ring, punch and speed bags, gym equipment, showers and office, and of course the famous plethora of boxing memorabilia that once lined the walls of the PCYC.

So great is the difference, not even the cleanest right-hook could wipe the grin from trainer Tony Nobbs’ face.

“I just couldn’t be happier, and actually look forward to going in every day,” Nobbs said.

“All the boys are excited too, and so the floor is always full and everyone’s training has really lifted.

“We were able to achieve a lot at the old shared gym, but we can do so much more here in our own space because I can run it like a proper boxing-specific gym.”

While Nobbs has spearheaded the change in venue, he was quick to acknowledge the efforts of the Tweed Aboriginal Co-op for Sport, promoter Jamie Myer, and Condong-based trainer Stuart Stone.

Nobbs hopes he can give plenty back to the community that supports the gym.

“So many people are getting behind us, it’s amazing, and the team are extremely thankful,” Nobbs said.

“I want it known that this gym is open to absolutely anyone, young or old, black or white, rich or poor, and that we welcome diversity.

“I hope we can offer people, particularly local kids, another avenue to get them off the streets, and harness all that raw energy they have.

“It’s the people’s gym and I am running it for the Tweed community, with all money coming in going straight back into the gym’s development.”

Nobbs’ current stable includes Australian top-10 contenders Trevor Jacky and Matt Burns, Australian indigenous middleweight champion Dwayne Goode, and rising North Coast lightweight champion Tom Strain.

And while he is keen to attract more dedicated fighters, Nobbs is also making a concerted effort to expand the gym’s horizons, holding box-ercise classes on Monday’s and Wednesday’s from 7.30pm to lure more females, as well as those who are solely seeking the fitness element of boxing.

Alternatively, Nobbs is around the gym every day from 12 noon.

Source: tweednews.com.au

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Scoreboard: Mayweather 1, Pacquiao 0 -- Eastside Boxing

By Geoffrey Ciani , Eastside Boxing

When negotiations for a proposed mega bout between Floyd Mayweather Junior and Manny Pacquiao fell apart, the boxing world was outraged and not without good reason. After all, this could have been the biggest fight in boxing history. That Mayweather and Pacquiao were unable to reach an agreement is inexcusable—especially when one considers they had already come to terms on the purse split. If the fight had fallen apart over money issues it would almost be understandable, but instead, negotiations collapsed because of Mayweather’s unprecedented request for Olympic style drug testing..

As a result, three general schools of thought have emerged. The first group consists of people who blame Mayweather. Since Mayweather asked Pacquiao to go beyond what the rules and regulations require, he was being unreasonable with his demands. People from this school of thought tend to believe Mayweather was afraid of Pacquiao and that he requested this stipulation knowing full well it would be rejected which enabled him to weasel his way out of the fight. The second group blames Pacquiao. If Pacquiao was clean, then he should have taken the tests in order to bring fans the fight they craved and deserved. They believe Pacquiao was either reluctant to face Floyd or that he had something to hide. The third group blames both fighters equally. Regardless of who was at fault, a compromise should have been reached—one way or another.

When the dust from this fiasco had finally settled, the battle was over. The war, however, was just beginning. Following the opening stalemate, despite being disappointed, fans were eager to know what was next for the world’s two best fighters. Since Pacquiao and Mayweather were not squaring off, each was destined to be defined by his following fight. We soon learned that Joshua Clottey would be next for Manny Pacquiao. Clottey represents yet another dangerous test for Pacquiao. He is a solid fighter, and many observers believe he deserved the nod in his fight against Miguel Cotto. To quote legendary trainer Emanuel Stweard, “Clottey is a fighter I would not want any fighter to fight. He would have been a rough fight for Sugar Ray Leonard, for Tommy Hearns, and for any other welterweights in history.”

On the other hand, Mayweather was left with few available options. If he did not take on a big challenge, his reputation was slated to take a huge hit. After all, following their failed negotiations, Pacquiao immediately jumped into a tough fight with Clottey. Mayweather needed a big fight to save face and keep pace. When rumors surfaced about the possibility of Mayweather squaring off against the unheralded Matthew Hatton, scorn and ridicule soon followed. Fortunately for Mayweather, an unfortunate event helped pave the way for a new opportunity. Following the catastrophic earthquake in Haiti, a scheduled unification bout between Shane Mosley and Andre Berto was cancelled. In a statement to the press, Berto (who represented Haiti in the 2004 Olympic Games) stated he was “physically and emotionally unable to prepare”—and understandably so.

The tragedy in Haiti opened the door for a Mosley-Mayweather showdown. This is a fight Mosley was eager to make happen. He immediately agreed to the Olympic style drug testing that Pacquiao refused, and the two quickly came to terms financially. Even still, Mayweather was reluctant to sign—but in reality, he had little choice in the matter. A fight against Mosley simply had too much upside for Mayweather to refuse. For starters, it would allow him to get one up on Pacquiao. Although Pacquiao is facing a tough challenge in Clottey, Sugar Shane Mosley is a bigger name and a better fighter. In addition, taking a fight with Mosley would help silence critics who accused Floyd of never having faced a legitimate top welterweight and it would also put an end to criticisms that he has been ducking Mosley in particular. Furthermore, Mosley is also widely regarded as the true welterweight champion so a victory would further solidify Floyd’s claims to greatness. Mayweather’s reputation had everything to lose in refusing this fight and everything to gain should he take it and win.

Mayweather ultimately did the right thing and signed to fight Mosley. This makes Floyd the winner of his second battle outside the ring with Pacquiao because there can be no doubt that Floyd is facing the tougher challenge. Mayweather deserves credit for taking this fight, even if it means he will ultimately suffer his first professional loss. Make no mistake—Sugar Shane Mosley is going to beat Floyd Mayweather. Remember, this is not a fight Mayweather actually wanted. Rather, it was a fight that was forced on him by circumstance. Mayweather is probably regretting the fact that he ever played hard ball with Pacquiao in the first place, because Pacquiao was at least a winnable fight for Floyd. At the end of the day, Mosley is going to show the whole world why Mayweather was always so reluctant to test himself against the best welterweights. Not only is Mosley going to win against Mayweather, but he is going to do so with surprising ease. This, however, is the subject for a future article.

The good news is if Pacquiao beats Clottey as expected, a clash between Mosley and Pacquiao seems inevitable sometime later this year.

***

To contact Ciani:
ciani@eastsideboxing.com


To read more by Ciani please visit The Mushroom Mag:
http://www.eatthemushroom.com/mag

Source: eastsideboxing.com

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Fil-Am Winter Games hero proud to be Pinoy -- Manila Bulletin

By FRANCIS SANTIAGO, Manila Bulletin

John Robert Celski, the Filipino-American speed skater who won a bronze medal in the Vancouver Winter Olympics last Sunday, is a die-hard Manny Pacquiao fan.

So like Pacquiao in boxing, Celski also dreams of lording his sport someday.

“I idolize Manny Pacquiao, and look up to him very much. I try to take the attitude he brings to the ring, onto the ice,” Celski, 19, said in an e-mail interview. “He (Pacquiao) is very humble and always smiling and proud of what he represents. This is what I try to do as well.”

Celski, youngest of three sons of a full-blooded Filipina who hails from Isabela, finished third in the 1,500-meter short-track speed skating event despite being a first-timer in the Games.

Although he’s officially carrying the US flag, Celski believes he’s also representing the Philippines, a tropical country with no snow, in the quadrennial event.

“I hope that the Filipino community knows that I am very proud to represent them on the winter stage this year, and the years to come,” said Celski, who is based in Federal Way, Washington.

A daredevil on ice, Celski will try to nail a gold medal in the 1,000m event this Wednesday and 3,000m on February 26.

Celski, who earned a slot in the US team and in the Games by snaring two gold, one silver and two bronze medals last year at the World Championships in Austria, partly credits his triumph to the characteristics and attitude of a Filipino blood in him.

“I believe Filipinos are very proud, loving people, people who stand together in troublesome times, and are very humble in what they do. I also believe that there are many people in the Philippines with very amazing talents. I also believe that Filipino people love to represent their country and are very proud to be Pinoy.”

Source: mb.com.ph

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Clottey laments lack of government support -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

Joshua Clottey believes his native Ghana is not fully behind him in his bold bid to kick Manny Pacquiao out of the pound-for-pound throne.

Speaking to Ghanaweb over the weekend, Clottey, who battles Pacquiao on March 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, said Ghanaian boxing officials and the government itself have not been very helpful in his request that Godwin Dzanie Kotey be given a hand in applying for a renewal of his US visa.

Clottey has been in training camp in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the last two weeks under the guidance of a substitute trainer who the African fighter is not accustomed to.

"I am with a trainer but not the one I want and you know it so don't ask me because you know I came to Ghana to bring Alloway (Kotey's nickname) with me to come with him so I will do my best," said the 32-year-old Clottey, who now lives in the Bronx in New York.

"I am fine," said Clottey sarcastically.

"Tell Ghana that they've disappointed me by not giving my trainer visa to come here with me."

Clottey had to break training camp last month when Kotey was denied a visa and while he was in the capital of Accra, Ghana officials said they will help Kotey apply and succeed in getting a renewal, forcing the boxer to head back to the US again to renew his preparation.

Coupled with Pacquiao's status as the world's No. 1 puncher, Clottey's dillema is only making it easy for oddsmakers to justify the overwhelming betting line in favor of the Filipino. On-line betting has Pacquiao a huge 5-1 favorite over Clottey.

Over at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California, Pacquiao's workouts have been fast and furious, according to his handlers.
In the next two weeks, Pacquiao's sparring sessions will reach its zenith with as many as 12 rounds of banging bodies with his sparmates in just one day on tap under the watchful eyes of Freddie Roach.

Team Pacquiao leaves for Dallas on a private plane courtesy of Hall of Fame promoter Bob Arum on March 8.

Source: mb.com.ph

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Let's not jump the gun when suggesting where fighters rank all-time -- The Ring

By Eric Raskin, The Ring

Peyton Manning trotted onto the field for the Super Bowl two Sundays ago as a one-time Super Bowl champion and the reigning MVP of the league. He left the field still a one-time Super Bowl champion and still the reigning MVP of the league. Not a whole lot should have changed because his team lost one game. But a lot did change because everyone with a microphone or a keyboard insisted on passing judgment before the opening coin toss.

If you listened to much of the pre-game talk for the two weeks leading up to Super Bowl XLIV, you heard Manning declared unquestionably the best quarterback of his generation and possibly the best ever to play the game. But just one defeat later, everyone with a microphone or a keyboard was quickly backtracking. They stopped comparing him to Joe Montana. Many re-shuffled their ordering of him relative to Tom Brady. And some even went so far as to say that Drew Brees had nudged ahead of Manning as the best in the game at this very moment.

The reality is that the pronouncements made after the game were no more correct than the pronouncements made before the game, because they were all based on partial information. Manning might have five good years left. He might win three or four more Super Bowls, or he might never return to the Super Bowl. He might hold every significant passing record when his career is done, or he might go into a depression over the fourth-quarter interception he threw and never launch another pass.

The point is, Manning’s placement among the all-time greats could still swing wildly based on how the rest of his career plays out. The football experts should have known better than to try to rank him before a pivotal game, or even after that game. And the boxing experts and fans should take an important lesson from this: Enjoy today’s great fighters, compare them hypothetically to each other or to the greats of the past if you want, but don’t try to suggest where they rank all-time while they still have monumental victories or crushing defeats potentially awaiting them.

Manny Pacquiao has become the modern poster boy for this sort of rushing to judgment. After each of his recent wins, slews of experts and fans, appropriately bowled over by the scope of what he’s accomplishing in higher and higher weight classes, are casually making serious declarations. After he KO’d Oscar De La Hoya and Ricky Hatton in succession, they insisted Pacquiao was one of the 20 greatest fighters of all-time. When he then stopped Miguel Cotto, we were told we were looking at one of the 10 best ever to lace on gloves.

Not that those pronouncements are necessarily wrong -- Pacquiao is undeniably a great fighter and might one day be remembered as one of the 10 best of all-time. But what if he loses to Joshua Clottey in a few weeks? Doesn’t that change things? It’s foolish to try to rank him before his career is over and we’ve seen the entire trajectory.

“There’s a tendency, I don’t know if I started it, but I’ve at least fallen into it, to rank people. I do books of lists. I’m probably less a writer than a lister,” said Bert Sugar, a former editor-in-chief of THE RING and a historian of boxing, baseball and just about every other sport imaginable. “So people come over to me and ask after a Pacquiao fight, ‘How does he rank?’ And I say, ‘He’s probably one of the greatest, if not the greatest, left-handed boxer in history.’ And I leave it at that, and I try to walk away before it goes any further.

“But, yeah, I fall into the trap. I sometimes rank these guys when I’m put on the spot. And you just can’t do it. It’s just so much easier when you stand back. It’s called ‘history.’ Look, Dwight Gooden was practically elected to the Hall of Fame in his rookie season. Writers tend to overreact, on both sides – they write off people prematurely, or they elevate them prematurely.”

It could certainly be argued that observers have overreacted – both positively and negatively – to the Klitschko brothers. We as fight fans always want to put our reigning heavyweight champions in historical perspective. And particularly in this era, when the Klitschkos have no comparable contemporaries other than each other, it’s natural to compare them to the all-time greats instead.

Some fans will tell you the Klitschkos are knocking on the door of the all-time heavyweight Top 10. Others would laugh at putting them in the Top 30. The reality is that either extreme is possible when all is said and done. Look at Wladimir; he could lose to Eddie Chambers next month, or he could go the rest of his career without losing again. The difference between those two scenarios could add up to a 30-spot difference in the all-time heavyweight rankings.

If there’s an argument to be made that you can rank a fighter among the all-timers before his career is over, it’s for those boxers whose primes are far behind them. For example, though Evander Holyfield is still technically an active fighter, he’s already tarnished his legacy about as much as he possibly can and it seems unrealistic to think he can score additional positive achievements.

For most fighters past their primes, the rule that applies is, “You can still help yourself, but you can’t hurt yourself.” Roberto Duran enhanced his standing with a late-career upset win over Iran Barkley, but all the losses that followed didn’t diminish him. Among active fighters, Roy Jones Jr. appears to be at this stage. Any damage to his all-time ranking has already been done, but if he happens to upset Bernard Hopkins in April, he could rise a few notches.

Ranking an athlete who isn’t finished is just a bad idea. So why do we all do it?

“Bloggers, newspaper writers, television commentators, whoever, there’s a tendency to make everything exciting and the best, which means that you’re watching or reading them because they’re reporting on the best,” Sugar said. “I was guilty of it when I had THE RING and Boxing Illustrated. You put a headline like ‘Is He The Next Joe Louis?’ on the cover and you hope it sells.”

Even after retirement, rankings aren’t always final. Remember, George Foreman was retired for 10 years, yet he forced us to re-rank him by winning the heavyweight title at age 45. And look at baseball player Mark McGwire. He retired a sure-shot first-ballot Hall of Famer, but his use of performance-enhancing drugs surfaced soon after his retirement and now he’s a long shot to ever get in to Cooperstown.

So should we wait until someone has been retired 20 years before ranking him? In order to gain complete perspective, yes, we probably should. But who has that kind of patience? We love ranking the greats, and as soon as someone is retired, he should become eligible.

Just don’t do it before he’s retired. If you’re looking for a rule of thumb, use this: A fighter can appear in either the official RING rankings or the all-time rankings, but not both.

THE ALL-GUS MINI-MAILBAG

I don’t have much to rant about this week, largely because I missed Saturday night’s pay-per-view show, so I’m going with a change of pace in place of “Raskin’s Rants.”

My brief comment last week criticizing Showtime commentator Gus Johnson generated a significant amount of e-mail, and with the exception of one response, it was all pro-Raskin and anti-Johnson. Here’s a sampling of what the readers had to say:

Mark Cunningham wrote, “Showtime is obviously going for ‘tabloid energy/excitement’ with Gus Johnson but, like with MMA, it’s a synthetic injection that has no substance and maybe even a lack of intelligence.”

Scott Grapp wrote, “I thought, Who is this goofball? Does he know who he’s talking to? … That comment about being undefeated where Floyd was concerned really iced it for me.”

Eric Voss thought Johnson disagreeing with broadcast partner Al Bernstein should have evoked a physical response from Bernstein. “I was actually hoping for the sound of a smack and a tumbling of a headset,” Voss wrote.

Matthew Blaisdell wrote simply, “Showtime should not have let Gus Johnson in the building.”

And a reader named Ken B. wrote, “Not only was Johnson wrong, but he appeared to be a Mayweather sycophant. Somehow, when Bernstein makes a personal observation, it comes out as a line from a neutral observer. When Johnson spoke, it sounded like he wanted to get in Mayweather’s pants. Bush league all the way –please excuse the pun. His over-the top enthusiasm (shilling?) is also wearing me down.”

There was one reader who disagreed with me, so here’s what Wiley Harris III had to say: “I take exception to what you said about Gus Johnson in your rants. To say that he cannot disagree with Al Bernstein is the same obtuse thinking that most so-called boxing writers have with anyone who has an opinion. Gus defended his guy, and made a statement after Bernstein said that Pac was the best. He made his statement in the flow of the conversation, and many others feel that Mayweather is the best. Who are you to say what he can and cannot say, specifically to Bernstein? Gus is on the broadcast, and has been for years, to call the action as he sees it. However, he does not have to agree with what Bernstein says and keep his mouth shut during his opinionated statement because he hasn’t ‘earned the right’ in your opinion.”

Wiley is entitled to his opinion, but one important point of clarification: Johnson was hired by Showtime in January 2009, so he has not been a part of the broadcast “for years.”

Beyond that, it’s all subjective, and I found it interesting that so many readers had such a passionate response one way or the other – though almost unanimously one way and not the other.

Eric Raskin can be reached at RaskinBoxing@yahoo.com. You can read his articles each month in THE RING magazine.

Source: ringtv.com

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SONSONA ARRIVES IN PUERTO RICO FOR TITLE FIGHT

By Ronnie Nathanielsz, PhilBoxing.com

Undefeated former WBO super flyweight champion “Marvelous” Marvin Sonsona of the Philippines has arrived in Puerto Rico for his WBO super bantamweight title fight against Wilfredo Vazquez Jr, son of the legendary former world champion.

Sonsona battles Vazquez in a clash of undefeated fighters in the main event of a fight card at the Ruben Rodriguez Coliseum in Bayamon, Puerto Rico on February 27.

The 19 year old Sonsona who lost the super flyweight title on the scales when he failed to make the 115 pound limit in his first title defense last November in Ontario, Canada has a record of 14-0-1 with 12 knockouts while Vazquez has a record of 17-0-1 with 14 knockouts.

The WBO super bantamweight title was relinquished by Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez who moved up top featherweight and won the title from Steven Lueavano. He is scheduled to face the Philippines Bernabe Concepcion sometime in June.

Concepcion who is handled by world pound-for-pound king and “Fighter of the Decade” Manny Pacquiao and his adviser Michael Koncz won the right to challenge Lopez with a solid nanimous ten round decision over hard-hitting Puerto Rican southpaw Mario Santiago last February 13 at the Las Vegas Hilton on the “Pinoy Power III/Latin Fury 13” fight card presented by Top Rank.

Vazquez Jr. is seeking to avenge the defeat suffered by countryman Jose “Carita” Lopez who lost his super flyweight title to Sonsona who put on a rousing performance to win the title last September at Casino Rama in Ontario, Canada.

Sonsona who is handled by Sammy Gello-ani in partnership with international matchmaker/promoter Sampson Lewkowicz decided to move up two weight divisions after failing to make the super flyweight limit in his first title defense.

Sonsona who trained at the Kennel Boxing Gym in California will himself try to make up for the bitter first round knockout loss suffered by Ciso “Kid Terrible” Morales who trained alongside him under Nonito Donaire Sr.

Morales told us just hours before we left Las Vegas that the morning after his knockout by WBO champion Fernando “Cochulito” Montiel who sent him crashing to the canvas agonizing in pain after a vicious left to the mid-section that his stomach still ached.

Montiel told Dyan Castillejo of ABS-CBN and this reporter who worked the fights with her that his having to reduce 12 pounds in some six days was too much and that eating a lot after virtually starving for a week told on him.

We covered several of Morales’ fights in the Philippines for Viva Sports weekly boxing show “The Main Event” presented by Tanduay, the No.1 Rhum and couldn’t understand how Morales who often fought as a super bantamweight and was growing could be asked to reduce so much and fight a veteran world champion like Montiel who was far more experienced than the Filipino and had more than twice as many knockouts to his name as the wins by Morales.

It was plainly an awful mismatch in which “Kid Terrible” took a terrible and unnecessary beating.

Source: philboxing.com

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Manny Pacquiao Vs Julio Cesar Chavez: Tackling Invincibility -- Ringside Report

By Jeff Stoyanoff, Ringside Report

What if Pacquiao had met Julio Cesar Chavez at 135 pounds? First, the fight would almost certainly have not fallen through at the negotiating table, so that’s a plus. However, the fight itself would have been compelling in so many other ways. My first reaction was to think that there is simply no way that Chavez could have handled the other worldly combination of speed and power that Pacquiao brought to the table. Chavez struggled with Meldrick Taylor, particularly in the first half of their classic fight in 1990. Taylor had ridiculous hand speed, but Pacquiao has the same kind of speed. Which fighter was faster is interesting but hardly the issue; the similarity of that speed is undeniable. Admittedly, Chavez came on in the second half of that fight and delivered a fearsome beating to Taylor which highlights some of the problems that Pacquiao would have faced even if things went well early on. However, my initial take was that Chavez would be hard pressed to wear down Pacquiao like he did Taylor. Pacquiao seemed too strong for that to take place. And there it was, my first question came to mind.

Which Pacquiao?

There may not be a fighter in the world that has undergone a greater metamorphosis in a single career than Manny Pacquiao. Pacquiao began his career at the astoundingly low weight of 106 pounds. Since then, Pacquiao has moved up seven divisions and, incredibly, he has only become more dominating as he has moved up. The scary thing about Pacquiao is that he may only now be reaching the weights where he can truly fight his best. In order to deal with Chavez, Pacquiao would have to be strong. That is not a problem because apparently he is.

Pacquiao just weathered a strong offensive assault by a hard punching welterweight in Miguel Cotto. The astounding thing is that Pacquiao not only took the punches, but he never appeared close to being dazed or hurt in the fight. Miguel Cotto has world class power at 147 pounds, how in the world could little Julio Cesar Chavez hurt that Manny Pacquiao? He most likely couldn’t, but that is not necessarily the Manny Pacquiao he would face.

The Manny Pacquiao that fought at 126 and 130 pounds was the same man that is now devastating the welterweight division. As such, Pacquiao had to drain himself to make that weight. Consider the following; Pacquiao has been stopped twice in his career. Both stoppages took place south of 126 pounds. Pacquiao was young and inexperienced and those dynamics probably played a part in his demise. However, at least one of the stoppages came on a body shot. That kind of result is only more likely if a fighter is a little weakened by trying to make an unnatural weight. The last time Pacquiao was noticeably stunned came in his second fight with Juan Manuel Marquez. Marquez caught Pacquiao with a perfect counter left hook as Pac closed in and the after effect was startling. Pacquiao wobbled and nearly went down. Of course, Pac gamely held on and stayed on his feet. Granted, that fight came at 130 pounds, but Pacquiao was also older. As Pacquiao aged, it no doubt became increasingly important that he not continue to drain himself to make weight. Since Pacquiao has moved up, what has been most striking is his increased ability to take punishment; obviously he is much stronger at the higher weights. Manny at 126 pounds at Manny at 145 pounds are equally tough, but not equally strong and just how strong Pacquiao would be at 135 pounds is hard to say definitively.

Punching Power

Still, the increased ability to withstand punches is only part of the story. At the lower weight classes, Pacquiao was incredibly fast, a little awkward, and a strong puncher. However, his power was still cumulative. In his big fights against top competition, he was dominating, but he often wore down his top opponents. In his first fight with Barrera, Pacquiao dominated from the outset, but still did not gain the stoppage until the 11th round with Barrera still on his feet. In his first fight with Marquez, Pacquiao stunned Marquez and the entire boxing world by dropping him three times in the first round. Yet, in the rounds that followed, Marquez was not only able to survive but in fact turned things around. The point is, Pacquiao had more than enough power to gain your respect at featherweight, but he didn’t possess the kind of power to put out the lights on top opponents early on. As it turned out, that kind of power only came later. Pacquiao had his first early stoppage in a big fight in his initial foray into the Junior Welterweight Division. Pacquiao devastated Ricky Hatton with a picture perfect left hook in the second round. It was the single most impressive knockout of his entire career given the stage and opponent.
Pacquiao followed that up by depositing the incredibly rugged Miguel Cotto on the canvas twice in the first four rounds of their fight last November. Cotto had endured some questions regarding his chin, but that came at 140 pounds. Cotto’s ability to take punishment at 147 pounds simply could not be questioned; until he met Pacquiao. Once again, there can be no doubt that Pacquiao had power at any weight class. However, his single punch power seemed to increase as he moved up in weight. Where he always possessed the power to stun and hurt his opponents, he subsequently seemed to develop the power to close the show with a single punch early on only later in his career. Once again, how much power Pac would have at 135 is difficult to measure. Still, the increase in strength and durability is still merely the beginning of the story of Pac.

Which Pacquiao – Part II

Pacquiao has not only become stronger with age, he has become better. Pacquiao’s increase in terms of acumen rivals his obvious increase in strength. Pacquiao’s first fight with Marquez typically provides the first chapters of this story. Pacquiao came out like a tornado and ravaged Marquez for what must have seemed like the longest three minutes in the history of boxing. As has been well documented, Marquez made it out of the round and turned the tables on Pacquiao for much of the remaining eleven rounds. Pacquiao continued to fight hard, but once Marquez adjusted to his straight left, Pac didn’t have a whole lot else he could bring. By any objective measure, Marquez had the better of it for much of the fight. Ironically, Pacquiao was denied a win by a scoring quirk in which he was not given an additional point for his third knockdown of the first round. However, in a greater sense, it would be hard to argue that a draw didn’t represent a just result for such a tremendous effort by both men. At that time, Pacquiao was talented, explosive, but somewhat limited. That was a long time ago.

Unlike his apparent spike in terms of power and durability, Pac’s ascent as a technical fighter has been one of a slow and steady arc. For a long time, it has been a familiar refrain as Pacquiao has looked a little better each time out. The right hand has been the story. Once nowhere near the weapon that his left represented, it is now more than formidable.

In his second fight with Marco Antonio Barrera, Pacquiao showed just how far he had come as a fighter. Barrera was a tremendously smart fighter whose technical prowess could not be overestimated. It would be hard to forget the way in which Barrera utterly exposed Naseem Hamed in their mega-fight years before. Barrera thoroughly dominated Hamed taking full advantage of the holes in Hamed’s defense brought on by his deficiencies in balance and distance. Hamed had been more than good enough to overcome these weaknesses thanks to a combination of speed, power, and awkward style. That is, until he met up with a fighter as good as Barrera. It was a shocking performance that demonstrated beyond any doubt that Barrera was far from just a gutty warrior, he was a master boxer as well.

Needless to say, upon gaining a second look at Pacquiao, one could be assured that Barrera would be ready for the straight left that had bedeviled him three years before. And, for the most part, he was, Pacquiao did not land the left nearly as often and when he did, Barrera took it well as he was better able to see it coming. On top of that, most of the positive moments for Barrera came when he slipped the left and landed his own right hand counter. Yet, Pacquiao still cruised to an easy decision. The key to his win was his own right hand which he used to score points, to disrupt Barrera’s timing, and to stifle any offense that Barrera attempted to mount. In the end, the development of his right hand was something that even a brilliant tactician like Barrera could not have anticipated nor prepared for. Since that time, Pacquiao’s right hand has only gotten better; improving each and every time he enters the ring. Pacquiao’s rise has been so measured and consistent that Freddie Roach himself suggested that only now, nearly six years after the first fight with Marquez, does he have his man right where he wants him to be.

So Chavez has no shot?

It would be more than fitting if that were the take on this one. The reality is, Chavez is often underrated as a fighter by many fans. In fact, Chavez was underrated by more than a few opponents as well. Greg Haugen once infamously ridiculed Chavez’ then unblemished record suggesting that he had compiled that record against a parade of Tijuana cab drivers. Haugen can be forgiven for his words for a few reasons. First, he stood in there and took his beating like a man when the two met in 1993. Second, this was his opponent, what was Haugen supposed to do? Talk him up? But, the third reason is the key to forgiveness; when asked after the fight (Haugen lost by 5th round TKO) about his earlier comments, Haugen said, “OK, so they were tough cab drivers.” You have to like a guy who can admit he was wrong and be funny at the same time.

Yet, the Haugen story underpins any underestimation of Chavez. After all, anybody who remains unbeaten for so long must have had his share of walkovers. Frankly, that is probably true to a certain degree. One is not going to win 80 plus fights in a row over non-stop championship level opponents. So the argument goes as follows: Chavez has some easy wins, thus his record is inflated and therefore he is not invincible. From that logic, it became possible to view Chavez as primarily a brawler who relied on strength and durability primarily to eventually overwhelm often overmatched opponents; Chavez as an excellent, albeit one dimensional fighter. But, a closer look at his resume will yield the absurdity of that notion.

Obviously, Chavez had more than his share of tough opponents. Moreover, with over 100 fights in his career, it seems safe to say that he saw just about every body type and fighting style there is. To have compiled such an insanely impressive record against such a brutal combination of quality and variety leads to the inescapable conclusion that not only was Chavez a great fighter, but he was incredibly complete as a fighter. After all, he never saw the style that completely befuddled him, with the possible exception of Pernell Whitaker and whom did he not befuddle? If Chavez didn’t have the versatility to adjust; didn’t have the intelligence to set up his man; didn’t have the ability to fight different styles himself; he would not have suffered only his first loss… at 31, in his 13th year as a pro, in his 6th weight class. The sheer numbers speak volumes.

Erik Morales, Marco Antonio Barrera, and Juan Manuel Marquez will probably always be tied to each other in boxing lore. Together they represented a golden era in the 122 to 135 pound range in Mexican boxing during the last 10 to 15 years. However, there is another way in which they should be linked. They all followed a ring legend in Chavez. Each one of them demonstrated a warrior’s heart; a trait that is so often used in describing Chavez. However, they also all demonstrated tremendous versatility and intelligence in the ring as well. In so clearly demonstrating these traits, each man was continuing the legacy of Chavez who, no doubt, influenced all of them.

Morales had never been one to shy away from contact in the ring, yet he pulled off the most impressive win of his career when he boxed magnificently to win a unanimous decision over Pacquiao in 2005. Barrera had already apparently been exposed as a mere brawler by Junior Jones when he demonstrated remarkable and, at that time, largely unseen counter punching and defensive skills in dismantling Hamed in 2001. Marquez was nearly out in the very first round against Pac, but then adjusted and, as the fight progressed, even began to earnestly go after Pacquiao. All three men were tough, but also incredibly sound technically; each uniquely able to break down what his opponent was doing and take full advantage of the holes that were inevitably created. Each man was a master at the art of the possible in the ring. Chavez was possessed of this gift to the rarest of degree. If there is a trait for Chavez that would be problematic for Pacquiao, it is most certainly that.

How would it go down?

It is almost impossible to imagine that the Manny Pacquiao fighting right now could lose. It is ironic, for a few years, it must have seemed that a machine like Chavez couldn’t lose either. There doesn’t seem to be any way to prepare for Pacquiao’s speed and power, while a couple of decades ago, it didn’t seem like there was any escape from the relentless power and precision of Chavez. Predictably, when analyzing greatness, parallels abound. My take on a matchup between these two once again arises out of the arcs of their careers.

Chavez was the prototypical ring legend. At the lower weights, Chavez was a more devastating puncher scoring a much higher percentage of early KO’s. As Chavez moved up, the knockouts came a little more slowly. As he aged, the skills diminished slowly but inexorably. Eventually, Chavez began to suffer losses. The cracks started to appear at 140 pounds where he struggled and was a Lou Duva brain freeze away from losing to Meldrick Taylor. The cracks deepened when he appeared lost at times trying to find Pernell Whitaker. However, Taylor and Whitaker at that time were among the best fighters around and two of the toughest opponents Chavez would face in his career. Thus, the walls truly tumbled against Frankie Randall where Chavez was finally dropped and lost a split decision that shouldn’t have been that close. Eventual losses to Tzsyu and Willy Wise merely provided a sad denouement to his career. The career of Chavez was the textbook story of a legendary fighter; profound greatness gently sliding into sad mediocrity as the effects of aging finally set in.

Not so for the Pacman. Perhaps, Pacquiao is simply still in his prime and the inevitably dwindling of his formidable skills is sadly yet to come. However, for now there is no debate; Pacquiao is getting stronger. As he has moved up, he is better able to withstand punishment and, incredibly, he seems to hit harder. Manny Pacquiao stopped Hatton in two rounds. Pac delivered a more savage beating to Miguel Cotto than a giant welterweight who likely had plaster on his hands in Antonio Margarito. And finally, Pac was about to KO De La Hoya when DLH refused to continue. Only a huge middleweight in Bernard Hopkins had performed that feat. All of this from a man who generally wore down his top opponents when he was fighting in lighter weight classes. The whole data set defies any rational explanation.

As for the fight, it all depends on when and where they met. For Chavez, the earlier the better; if Chavez only had to get by the left hand, he would be in good shape. If Marquez could turn the tables on Pacquiao then a stronger and similarly intelligent Chavez would likely have been able to do the same. If he had Pac at a lower weight class where apparently it was at least possible to hurt him, he would similarly be looking good. There can be no doubt that Chavez was a fearsome body puncher at any weight; the kind of guy against which every fighter had a plan until he felt that punch. At a lower weight class, Chavez might have been more successful slowing Pac down with his devastating body attack.

On the other hand, if it was this Pacquiao, a two handed beast, ridiculously strong at 140 plus pounds, 115 fights or not, even the great Julio Cesar Chavez would have almost certainly finally encountered something he had never seen before.

Source: ringsidereport.com

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Thankful Z Gorres arrives in Manila -- GMA News

GMANews.TV

A wheelchair-bound but thankful Filipino boxer Zeta Celestino Oliveros “Z" Gorres arrived home before dawn Tuesday, three months after suffering a traumatic brain injury as he fought Luis Melendez in Las Vegas in November last year.

Gorres, who lost weight and had slight difficulty in his speech, thanked fellow Filipinos for their prayers for his quick recovery.

“Nagpapasalamat ako sa lahat ng Pilipino na nagdarasal para sa akin, thank you (I thank all Filipinos who prayed for me. Thank you)," he said in an interview on dwIZ radio.

Amid his fading dream as a boxer, he said he will not stop his children from taking up boxing if they want, even as he voiced regrets he could not realize his dream of becoming a world champion.

“Depende sa anak ko kung kursunada, wala tayong magawa kung gusto talaga nila (It depends on my children. If they want to take up boxing, I can do nothing to stop them)," he said when asked if he will stop his children from taking up boxing.

The dwIZ report said Gorres will be brought to Cebu shortly after his arrival, to continue his rehabilitation.

Gorres’ wife Duchess said that in the first weeks after her husband was hurt, they communicated through writing.

“Laki talaga ng pasasalamat namin sa Diyos at sa lahat ng mga taong nag-pray para kay Z, malaki ang pasasalamat namin sa kanila kasi tinulungan kami nila na marinig ang panalangin namin na ipahiram uli sa amin si Z kaya maraming salamat po (We thank God and Filipinos who prayed for Z. God heard our prayers to have Z stay with us)," she said.

Despite his condition, Gorres struck a pose for photographers upon his arrival at the Ninoy Aquino International Aiport Terminal 2 past 5 a.m., following a Philippine Airlines PR-107 flight from Las Vegas.

US-based Filipino doctor Benito Calderon said Gorres’ progress was amazing, and that while he may no longer be able to fight, he is likely to walk again.

Calderon said Gorres, who was paralyzed in the left side of the body and had to be carried since his injury, had been able to move his hands and knees, and walk with the help of a walker.

“His improvement was so fast, we did not expect it," Calderon said.

“Malamang di na siya makakalaban. But ang question will he lead a normal life? I think he wants to be able to lead (a normal life), he can still walk. With the showing yung improvement ng lakas niya I think he can walk (He is not likely to fight again. But the question is, will he lead a normal life? He can still walk. And with the improvement he made, I think he can walk)," he added.

Pacquiao to help shoulder rehab efforts

Filipino boxing icon Emmanuel “Manny" Pacquiao will help shoulder the rehabilitation expenses of Gorres.

According to Gorres wife, Pacquiao approached her husband while they were watching the “Pinoy Power 3" card in Las Vegas, and told him to get well soon.

“Z, pagaling ka, huwag kang mag-alala, tutulungan ka namin (Z, get well. Don’t worry, we’ll help you)," she recalled Pacquiao telling her husband.

On the other hand, Calderon said Nevada taxpayers will likely shoulder the bulk of Gorres’ $550,000 (P25.473 million) hospital fees, and are pushing for a law that will increase insurance coverage for fighters.

At present, Calderon said fighters can only avail of up to $50,000
(P2.315 million) in insurance.

Surgery

Gorres underwent brain surgery after a life-threatening subdural hematoma (traumatic brain injury) he suffered from a fight last November in Las Vegas.

The convalescing Gorres made his first public appearance at the Pinoy Power card last Saturday at the Las Vegas Hilton (Sunday in Manila).

He watched compatriots Nonito Donaire, Jr., Bernabe Concepcion and Mark Jason Melligen beat their respective opponents, and Ciso Morales and Gerry Peñalosa bow to their rivals.

Gorres got hit by a left cross from Melendez in the final round of that nightmarish fight, managed to get up for his win. However, he fell unconscious before leaving the ring. - LBG, GMANews.TV

Source: gmanews.tv

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Boxer Manny Pacquiao to perform with his band at Waikiki Shell -- Honolulu Adviser

By Dave Dondoneau, Honolulu Adviser

Manny Pacquiao, regarded by many as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, is coming to the Waikiki Shell on March 21 — but not to box.

The current WBO Welterweight Champion, Ring Magazine Light Welterweight Champion and recipient of the "Fighter of the Decade" Award by the Boxing Writer's Association of America, is coming to O'ahu to perform with The MP Band and Filipina star Madona Decena, Big Ben Entertainment, Island Fire Productions and Cox Radio Hawaii announced today.

Pacquiao and the MP Band have had two albums go platinum in the Philippines, and he played gigs at The Beach at Mandalay Bay following his second-round knockout victory over Ricky Hatton in May of last year and at The Mandalay Bay Convention Center following his victory over welterweight champion Miguel Cotto. At the Shell, they'll be performing Top 40 and rock music.

Pacquiao has won seven world titles in various weight divisions, ranging from 112 to 147 pounds, the most in boxing history.

Tickets go on sale at 9 a.m. Friday at all ticketmaster outlets, ticketmaster.com and 800-745-3000.

Prices are $25, $35, $45, $55, $75 and $150. Pacquiao will also be signing autographs and giving away a signed replica of the IBO Light Welterweight Championship Belt (one of only two in the world) he earned with his victory over Hatton.

Billed as a concert and celebration, other entertainers scheduled to perform are Pussycat Doll's semifinalist Melissa Reyes, Ten Feet, Augie T., Guy Cruz, Jordan Segundo, Lauren Silva, Al Waterson, Jesus Salud, Yasmin Dar, EMKE, Kalei Gamiao, MIC3, magician's Mark and Landon Mauricio, juggler Greg Gabaylo, Hypersquad, D.J. Kutmaster Spaz, D.J. IA, Allysandra Baniqued, Cristy Agres, Angeli Callo, Paul Cortez, Eddie Lactaoen, Elsa Udasco, Briana Abregano, Beauty Queens and Tahitian Groups.

Decena, who was introduced to Pacquiao when he was promoting his fight with Hatton in the United Kingdom, reached the semifinals of "Britain's Got Talent" and is a rising star in the Philippines.

Also performing is street dancing sensation Angelo "Lil Demon" Baligad, who has appeared on "Oprah" and "Ellen," along with Ciana Pelekai, who was the first singer from Hawaii to make it to the "America's Got Talent."

Reach Dave Dondoneau at ddondoneau@honoluluadvertiser.com.

Source: honoluluadvertiser.com

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FLOYD ON MOSLEY: "I'll Break Him Down" -- The Sweet Science

By Ron Borges, The Sweet Science

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. - Floyd Mayweather has done the math, give or take a tablespoon or two, and that has left him even more baffled than he was before at the demise of his much-anticipated fight with Manny Pacquiao.

In the end that fight didn’t happen because, well…who knows, but it sure wasn’t the math.

“You got 380 tablespoons of blood in your body,’’ Mayweather said recently. “When they draw blood they draw out one tablespoon. You still got 379 tablespoons left. You lose more than a tablespoon of blood in a fight. You lose more than that from your nose and mouth. I’m not talking about me! I’m talking about them other guys (who get hit more in a fight than Mayweather has been in his 40-fight career).

“I never knew a fighter didn’t want to take a $25 million drug test. If I was all about the money (with a guy who calls himself “Money’’) like people say I would have taken the (Manny) Pacquiao fight. I just feel we should clean up sports, period. Records are being broken by cheaters.

“This should happen in all sports to separate the good athletes from the great athletes. In boxing if you start good you usually are all the way good or you start to go down with age. You don’t start off average in this sport and at 25 suddenly become great. You don’t get knocked out at 106 pounds and then come knock out bigger guys. Boxing’s not like that.

“I know I’m a clean athlete. They can come whenever and take blood or urine. Any other athlete who’s clean should do the same. If you’re not on nothing, what’s the problem? A tablespoon of blood?’’

We may never know the real problem that caused Pacquiao to refuse a guaranteed $25 million to fight Mayweather and then settle for far less to face Joshua Clottey March 13 in a fight, frankly, that pales in comparison not only to Mayweather-Pacquiao but also to what Mayweather ended up with, which is a long-awaited showdown with 38-year-old welterweight champion Shane Mosley.

That fight came about because Mosley immediately agreed to the random blood testing Mayweather demanded, insisting he welcomed the chance to prove he is not using performance enhancing drugs as he did prior to his rematch with Oscar De La Hoya. Mosley has long insisted he did not know what he was using under the direction of since deposed strength and conditioning coach Darryl Hudson and one can debate that all day and never know the answer, but one thing is clear.

Both fighters will be clean on May 1 and boxing will be the better for it because unlike baseball, track and field, football and a growing list of other sports, two of prize fighting’s biggest names have decided they won’t wait for the men who run their sport to take a step. They’ll do it themselves.

That Pacquiao refused doesn’t mean he’s guilty of anything, but in the present climate it casts a dark shadow on him because professional athletes long ago lost the presumption of innocence when it comes to PEDs. With the making of the Mosley fight, Mayweather dragged his sport a step closer to the 21st century by stepping into the ring with a guy as willing as he is to prove he’s running on regular, not high-test, a statement that sadly seems it has to be made in these chemically-fed days of sports achievement.

While that is good news for boxing, which has been maligned for so many years in so many ways as being behind the times, what is better news is that Mayweather landed the best opponent not named Manny Pacquiao that money could buy.

Of late it had become fashionable for know-nothings to claim Mayweather had been “ducking’’ Mosley when the facts were he had pursued him back in 1999 when Mosley was still undefeated. At that time Mosley chose not to face Mayweather, moving up in weight for bigger money fights, which was understandable from a business standpoint but could have opened him up to the same charge.

Yet when Mayweather was in the driver’s seat and refused to give Mosley a shot years later, after Mosley had lost several times and no longer carried the same cachet he had earlier, he was accused of avoiding Mosley. Now that, like the lingering doubts about PED use in boxing, have disappeared in this fight because the two men found themselves in a position where they needed the other and didn’t feel like fighting over the particulars. Instead they opted to take the old fashion route and fight where it counts – in the ring.

“The thing is in the sport of boxing, like life, everything is timing,’’ Mayweather (40-0, 25 KO) said. “Just like inside the squared circle. A lot of people need to realize in 1999 I was trying to make a fight with Shane Mosley when he was still undefeated. Now, five losses later, I got the bad end of the stick.

“We’re a lot older now. I don’t know what he’s got left. He looked tremendous against (Antonio) Margarito (who he stopped in nine one-sided rounds) but if I knock him out then it’s ‘He was supposed to knock him out.’ If I don’t then ‘He didn’t knock out Mosley.’ But I don’t care about the negative things people say. I’ll box. I’ll be smart. I’ll be me. I’ll break him down.

“When my career is over, fans will appreciate my skills and boxing ability. There’s nothing cool about taking punishment. What’s cool is dishing it out. I’m in a brutal sport. We’re in hand-to-hand combat. If a guy is on (steroids) I’m basically fighting a robot. It’s like putting steel in the glove.’’

The major reason Mayweather came back to boxing (short of the obvious financial windfalls) was for fights like this one. It is why he sought a match with Pacquiao, who unseated him as pound-for-pound champion after the former went into a self-imposed exile from the sport for 21 months.

Mayweather is back only to fight mega-fights. Only to face mega-challenges from fighters nearly as talented as he is. Along the way, he will make mega-money but the latter comes with the former and he knows that. What also comes with it is what really drives him.

“I missed the sport of boxing,’’ Mayweather said. “I truly did. I missed testing my ability against the best. Shane got to this position for a reason. Just because you had 40 good nights and he had 37 good nights (45 actually) and three he wasn’t (five to be frank) doesn’t mean he’s not a great fighter.

“I could have easily gone on a world tour fighting stiffs and made $200 million but it’s about testing my skills against the best fighters of my era.’’

Shane Mosley is surely that. Mosley destroyed Margarito in his last fight, a year ago, at a time when many felt it would be his demise. Instead he took apart the man who had taken apart Miguel Cotto and Kermit Cintron, revitalizing his own career and creating an opportunity to finally settle the debate between him and Mayweather over who ranks where in boxing’s bloody pecking order.

“You got two guys who are fast,’’ Mayweather said of Mosley. ‘That’s where timing comes in. Timing and inches. I know what I can do. I know a lot more is coming after this.’’

Maybe even Manny Pacquiao... but that will be up to how many tablespoons of blood are too many to lose to decide once and for all who the best fighter of this era really is. Two guys agreed to begin that debate by leaving no debate that they are clean athletes. If Manny Pacquiao ever wants to continue the discussion it will only cost him one tablespoon of blood for the chance to make his case.

The day he does, Floyd Mayweather will be waiting for him…gladly.

Source: thesweetscience.com

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Floyd Mayweather likens himself to Malcolm X, Martin Luther King -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

Either Floyd Mayweather Jr. has lost his mind or else I've been so, so wrong.

If it's the latter, and indeed it is shown that Mayweather is a historical figure (hysterical?), then I take back every mean, nasty and downright unpleasant thing I've ever written or said about the undefeated boxer.

I mean, I plead ignorance as in being too stupid to recognize that he ranks right up there with social change giants Malcolm X ("Random drug testing by any means necessary") and Dr. Martin Luther King ("Free at last, free at last for random blood testing").

I thought it was awful when Don King had an Atlanta fight poster emblazoned with Dr. King's name and the implication that the civil rights leader, long dead, had some connection to a fight card.

But that King never compared himself to Brother Martin or Minister Malcolm.

But here's the bottom of a story by hometown reporter David Mayo--he's to the Mayweather beat what Cristianne Amanpour is to the Middle East--which spells out the delusions of Money May:

“If it was all about money for me, I would’ve said ‘I don’t care what Manny Pacquiao does, just give me the money, I’ll take it,’ ” he said. “But it’s me taking a stand for something that means something. And it’s for the fighters who are up and coming.

“It’s sort of the same stance Martin Luther King and Malcolm X made, so we could have freedoms, so everybody could tell the world that we’re equal. The only thing I’m saying is that we are equal. So if you’re not on nothing and I’m not on nothing, then let’s go take the test. That’s all I’m saying."

Who knew?

I used to put Mayweather on the scale of social change right next to Lady Gaga and Peewee Herman, really, no more.

(By the way "Hold The Mayo" if you scribbled for a self respecting tabloid like the New York Post that last graph would've been your lead and your front page headline. Mayo's work can be seen here on the Grand Rapids Press/Mlive.)

I am on bended knee after this shocking revelation, this ultimate disclosure by Mayweather.

If he's a latter day Dr. King, does this make Floyd Sr. another Ralph Abernathy?

Is Roger "Lamp Unto My Feet" Mayweather another Rosa Parks, the stout-hearted woman who refused to give up her seat for a white man on a Montogmery, Alabama, bus?

Extrapolating this beyond its already ridiculous parameters, I guess Oscar de la Hoya becomes A. Phillip Randolph.

I do detect one key difference between the X Man, Dr. King and Mayweather, though.

It may seem a picayune comment given Mayweather's hysterical importance but...

Dr. King had a dream.

Mayweather has only a scheme.

This is, really, a wake up call for all the fools--"White Gorilla" Marley in the driver's seat--who thought it was asburd when Mayweather compared himself to the iconic likes of Ali, Louis and Robinson.
That wasn't absurd. They threw jabs, they had nifty footwork and they trained hard like Mayweather does. Some sort of comparison could be drawn.

But when it comes to societal impact, I guess Mayweather means more than Louis as a symbol of African American pride in the time of segragation, more than Ali for refsuing to step forward to fight the Viet Cong.

I was in denial on all this.

Thank you, Minister May, for showing me the error of my ways.

Malcolm went to Mecca. Dr. King wrote the Letter From The Birmingham Jail.

And now Mayweather is carrying their torch onward.

If anyone knows how to reah the NAARBT, please let me know. I want to send in a token donation know that I've been alerted to the impact of the Mayweather cause.

NAARBT?

Come on, brother and sisters, you don't know about the National Association for the Advancement of Random Blood Testing?

It's not about white, black, brown or yellow.

The NAARBT's motto?

Better red than dead, baby.

Learn, baby, learn.

Preach, Mayweather, preach and teach, Mayweather, teach.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

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