Sunday 7 March 2010

Gate-fee hike could spur higher ticket prices -- Las Vegas Review-Journal

By STEVE CARP, Las Vegas Review-Journal

Beginning July 1, it's going to become more expensive for boxing promoters to do business in Nevada.

The Legislature last week raised the gate fee from 4 percent to 6 percent. That 50 percent tax increase on tickets will mean less profit going back to the promoter, and it could mean higher ticket prices as promoters try to recoup some of their lost revenue.

For every ticket sold to a boxing match or mixed martial arts event, 4 percent goes to the state. Nevada Athletic Commission executive director Keith Kizer said that amounted to $2.6 million in revenue for Nevada in fiscal year 2009. By going to 6 percent and using the same figures as 2009, that would generate an additional $1.3 million in revenue for the state, which is dealing with a budget deficit of $887 million.

The money generated through the tax increase will go into the state's general fund.

"It remains to be seen if it will negatively impact boxing in Nevada," Kizer said. "This came directly from the Legislature, and it's being done to help close the budget deficit in the state."

Promoters will have three options. They can raise ticket prices to cover their costs; they can pay their fighters less in purse money and keep ticket prices the same; or they can move their events to other states where it costs less to do business.

Top Rank chairman Bob Arum, whose company is based in Las Vegas, said he understands the state's decision.

"Am I happy about it? Of course not," Arum said. "But ... everyone has to realize that money has to come from somewhere to pay for education and for services. Everyone has to pay their fair share."

Crown Boxing's Frank Luca said he is concerned the fee hike could impact how he promotes his shows at The Orleans.

"If I have to pass on the expense to my customers, a $25 ticket may cease to exist," he said. "Or, I may have to pay the fighters less, which would impact the quality of my shows and would turn off the fans.

"If you keep taxing small businesses, you're going to drive business out of Las Vegas, and the net result would be less revenue for the state."

Nevada's 6 percent tax is double that of some states. In Texas, where Manny Pacquiao will fight Joshua Clottey on Saturday, the tax on tickets is 3 percent.

It's also 3 percent in New York and Illinois. In California, the tax is 5 percent but capped at $100,000 (anything more than that figure is not taxed). Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Missouri also have a 5 percent ticket tax.

"I don't see it impacting what we do at all," Arum said. "We'll still do business in Nevada, and it doesn't necessarily mean higher ticket prices. It depends on who's fighting who and what the demand is."

■ CROWN CARD -- North Las Vegas featherweight Brian Battease has landed a main-event fight after an impressive performance in January.

Battease (6-1-2, one knockout) will face Allen Martinez (5-1-1, three KOs) in a six-round fight to highlight Crown Boxing's card Friday at The Orleans.

Battease won a four-round unanimous decision over Jairo Delgado on Jan. 22. Friday's fight will be his first at six rounds. Martinez, who will be fighting in Las Vegas for the first time, has won five straight.

The first bell for the six-bout card is scheduled for 7 p.m.

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

Source: lvrj.com

***




Points win takes toll on Darchinyan -- Sydney Morning Herald

By ADRIAN WARREN, The Sydney Morning Herald

WORLD Boxing Association and World Boxing Council super flyweight champion Vic Darchinyan injured himself battering Mexican Rodrigo Guerrero on a historic night for Australian boxing.

The Sydney fighter dominated the contest in Rancho Mirage, California, but gutsy Guerrero somehow survived and the champion had to settle for the first 12-round points win of his professional career.

Darchinyan, 34 (33-2-1, 27 KOs), earned the judges' decisions with scores of 120-108, 118-110 and 117-111. He skinned his left knuckles pounding Guerrero's head.

''His left knuckles are all worn,'' said Darchinyan's trainer, Angelo Hyder. ''It's like he's been punching a punching bag with no gloves on … never in boxing have I seen anyone wear the skin off their knuckles from hitting someone so much.''

In the first American pay television promotion featuring two Australians in the major bouts, Sydneysider Lenny Zappavigna also scored a 12-round unanimous points win, defeating Venezuela-based Ecuadorian Fernando Angulo.

Zappavigna, 22 (23-0 15 KOs), dominated the early rounds but was forced to dig deep after suffering injuries near both eyes on his way to collecting the vacant IBO lightweight boxing world title. Some at Agua Caliente Casino booed when Zappavigna won by two scores of 116-111 and another of 114-113.

While his injuries required stitches, Darchinyan was amazed by his opponent's durability.

''I was surprised how many big punches he was taking; I just kept feeling my knuckles on his head,'' Darchinyan said.

''From the first round I threw many big punches and I thought he was going to go down. I've never fought a kid that takes those punches and stayed in front of me.''

Guerrero, whose record dropped to 13-2 (9 KOs), was an unknown quantity coming into the fight and the Darchinyan camp could not find any footage of the challenger. He tried to take the fight to Darchinyan but lacked the power and technique to worry the champion.

Zappavigna said his bout with Angulo was the toughest of his career. ''He's a tough boy,'' Zappavigna said. ''It was awesome - I enjoyed it.''

AAP

Source: smh.com.au

***




FANS AND WITNESSES DISPROVE MAYWEATHER PUBLICIST'S CLAIMS; RESPECTED PINOY BROADCASTER CRIES FOUL -- PhilBoxing

By Dennis 'dSource' Guillermo, PhilBoxing.com

This thing that they did to us is something we can't just ignore. This is truly disrespect towards us Filipinos. We can't let this go unpunished." -- Chino Trinidad

Freedom of speech is something that is preached and held paramount in this glorious country of ours that is the US of A.

Top Rank chief Bob Arum knows that. Several esteemed members of US media who contacted me during this controvery know that.

In response to the statements published by Sports Examiner Paula Duffy wherein she quoted Floyd Mayweather's publicist Kelly Swanson categorically denying claims by members of the media and fans and as first reported in my article titled "Philippine media BANNED from interviewing Floyd Mayweather last Thursday that she blocked them from interviewing Floyd Mayweather Jr., highly respected veteran Filipino sports broadcaster and journalist Chino Trinidad together with other fans and witnesses to the alleged incident responded emphatically and further elaborated on the actions taken against them.

In an interview I did with Trinidad after being informed of Swanson's denial, the earnest broadcaster said, "She can not deny that. She can not deny that," and added, "So they're making liars out of me and Joseph Pimentel. Maybe I can provide her with some video to show and get her saying very clearly to my face, we Filipinos can not interview Floyd Mayweather Jr. and she's denying it right now. I'm willing to go to court here in the US to prove a point. I think right now she's denying it right now because she's getting all the flack for mishandling and treating Filipinos in such a bastardly manner."

Trinidad's story was also corroborated by people that have reached out to me who were in the said press conference and in an article published by Oliver Suarez of Sporthype.com, the LA based scribe quoted Jeff De Guzman who is also a fixture in boxing events in the area and was around Trinidad and Pimentel saying,

"My sister who was trying to get an autograph by Mayweather and my sister was one of the first ones to enter and he was ignoring her. Then the Mayweather people was asking her, "Are you Filipino?"

Suarez also wrote,

According to Jeff De Guzman, he asked Kelly Swanson for the reason why Filipinos were refused to allow to interview Mayweather and she responded by saying that they was only following Mayweather's instruction.

However when, Mr. De Guzman asked Monica Sears, who is the public relations coordinator for Golden Boy Promotions, to get some answer on why the Filipino media were banned from speaking to Floyd, the latter said she was unaware of any such instructions.

If Swanson's statements was a part of 'damage control', a term used in the PR industry, she might have to address the several eye-witnesses that have spoken about the incident which has even prompted some astute US media people to reach out to me and voice their disgust over the matter, similar to Top Rank head Bob Arum expressed to me his embarrassment and sent his apologies to the Filipino people with the way they were treated in the press con.

Now was this an act of discrimination or racism? Depends on who you talk to. But to say it's definitely not discrimination is an arrogant statement. As a respected African-American journalist told me during this ordeal, perception of people matter. A white person can say 'Oh black people are being over sensitive about racism' but if a group of people are given valid reasons to have these in their heads, who are those who have no idea what it is to walk in the shoes fof Arfican Americans, or Filipinos for that matter feel this prejudice to dismiss what they feel? Unfortunately, some people based in America might have forgotten or lost touch with their true roots as well like that blogger Simeon Vergara for him to announce his self-assured and insensitive opinions. What can you expect from a doodler who wrote that Nonio Donaire Jr. is a charry picker without doing research on why big named fighters avoide one of the best Pinoy fighter around?

I'm not saying Swanson acted in such manner either, but if the stories I've heard, read and quoted are true, it needs to be addressed and not go unnoticed. Arum even went as far as saying that any entity that promotes such actions should be banned from the sport. But if they are indeed instructions from Mayweather as De Guzman said, it only further adds to the list of insults Mayweather has done to the Filipino people.

* * *

Dennis "D Source" Guillermo is a freelance writer and a lifelong boxing fan. He has written for various sports publications on boxing and basketball. You can read his daily column on Examiner.com.

***




Local ref lands Pacquiao-Clottey fight -- San Antonio Express

By John Whisler, San Antonio Express

San Antonio referee Rafael Ramos says being assigned to work Saturday's Manny Pacquiao-Joshua Clottey pay-per-view fight at Cowboys Stadium is the highlight of his career.

Yet Ramos knows if he's doing his job properly, no one will know he's there.

“Fans don't pay to see me,” he said.

It's a philosophy all officials acknowledge but not all of them embrace. Some like to put their imprint on a bout when it's not warranted, irritating fighters and fans alike.

Ramos doesn't do that, which is a major reason the 53-year-old native of Puerto Rico has become one of the top ring officials not only in the nation, but also the world.

One of his biggest fans is veteran matchmaker Wayne Harrison of Fort Worth.

“He's a world-class referee,” Harrison said. “He knows what it means to be neutral, when to step in and when not to. He does a very professional job.”

Ramos was not the first choice for Saturday's main event. The World Boxing Organization, the sanctioning body whose title belt will be at stake, wanted Laurence Cole as referee.

But William Kuntz, executive director for the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, which oversees boxing in the state, reportedly overruled and assigned the fight to Ramos.

That probably was a good move. While Cole also is a top referee, he carries some baggage. He's been involved in a couple of controversial, high-profile fights, including one in 2006 that resulted in a fine and suspension for Cole.

To boot, Cole is the son of longtime state boxing coordinator Dickie Cole, so with eyes of the boxing world focused on Arlington on Saturday, Kuntz no doubt wanted the attention on the fight and not the choice of referee.

Ramos says he's looking forward to the big event. A crowd of more than 40,000 is expected.

“Manny Pacquiao is the No. 1 fighter in the world,” he said. “Jerry Jones, the Dallas Cowboys. That alone is reason to be excited.”

Ramos is no stranger to the big stage.

Since his first pro bout in 1987 in Toscana, Italy, Ramos has refereed more than 300 fights and 50 world title fights, in places such as Japan (20 times), Korea, Thailand, France, Germany, Spain and Panama.

Prior to Saturday, his biggest assignment came Feb. 28, 2009, when he refereed the Juan Diaz-Juan Manuel Marquez world title fight in Houston in what was considered by many as the fight of the year.

Ramos was praised for his work in the fight.

“You have to be honest with yourself and the fighter,” Ramos said. “You have to allow the fighters to fight as long as they stay within the rules. And you have to be consistent.”

Morales on card: One San Antonio fighter is scheduled to appear on Saturday's non-televised undercard.

Joe Morales (20-13, 4 KOs), who trains under Tony Ayala Sr. at Zarzamora Street Gym, is set to take on Michael Farenas (26-2-3, 23 KOs), a southpaw from the Philippines, in an eight-round featherweight matchup.

“This is a great opportunity,” said Morales, 35, who will earn $6,000 for the fight. “I can say I was one of the first ones to fight at Cowboys Stadium.”

Morales' record is nothing to write home about, but he has fought tough competition that includes Joel Casamayor, Zahir Raheem, Rocky Juarez and Joan Guzman.

Morales is coming off a win Nov. 6 in Laredo when he beat Idelfonso Martinez in a 10-round decision.

JOHN WHISLER'S VIEW FROM THE CORNER

Opening flurry

Saturday’s fight card at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington (pay-per-view bouts only):

- Manny Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs) vs. Joshua Clottey (35-3, 21 KOs), 12 rounds, WBO welterweight title

- David Diaz (35-2-1, 17 KOs) vs. Humberto Soto (50-7-2, 32 KOs), WBC interim lightweight title

- John Duddy (28-1, 18 KOs) vs. Michael Medina (22-1-2, 17 KOs), 10 rounds, middleweights

- Alfonso Gomez (21-4-2, 10 KOs) vs. Jose Luis Castillo (60-9-1, 52 KOs), 10 rounds, welterweights

Straight shots

Title fight in S.A.? A Paul Williams-Kermit Cintron world junior middleweight title fight is in the works for May 8, and San Antonio is in the running to host it.

Regional promoter Lester Bedford of Fort Worth said he submitted a proposal Friday to Williams’ promoter Dan Goossen to bring the fight to San Antonio.

Bedford said the fight, to be televised on HBO, likely would be at the Alamodome.

Toney tries MMA: Former super middleweight and cruiserweight champion James Toney is switching from boxing to mixed martial arts.

Toney, 41, signed a multifight deal with UFC this past week. Former football star Herschel Walker won his Strikeforce debut on Jan. 30, and former boxer Ricardo Mayorga is scheduled to make his MMA debut May 15.

King denies rumors: Promoter Don King has denied rumors that Mike Tyson, age 43, has signed to fight 47-year-old Evander Holyfield for a third time, later this year.

But the promoter didn’t deny that a Tyson comeback was in the works. Tyson (50-6, 44 KOs) has not fought since he retired following a loss in 2005 to Kevin McBride.

Yankee Stadium comeback: Boxing is making a return to Yankee Stadium, where icons such as Muhammad Ali and Joe Louis once plied their trade.

WBA junior middleweight champion Yuri Foreman will defend his title against former welterweight champ Miguel Cotto on June 5 at the year-old ballpark in the Bronx.

Local notebook

Scholarship recipient: Armando Cardenas of Angel’s Boxing Club has been named the winner of the first Caesar A. Cano Memorial Scholarship.

The $2,000 award was given Thursday night at the Real Estate Council of San Antonio’s annual “Fight Night” fundraiser.

Cardenas won one of the three amateur bouts held that night. Other winners were Mark Martinez of Angel’s and Estefania Ibarra of TNT Boxing Club.

OJ fight set: Omar Gonzales Jr. (1-3) of San Antonio is scheduled to fight Gino Escamilla (5-7-1, 2 KOs) on March 26 in Laredo.

Suarez loses: Eloy Suarez (11-8-1, 5 KOs) of San Antonio lost to Carson Jones (25-7-1, 15 KOs) of Oklahoma City in a five-round unanimous decision Jan. 28 in Oklahoma City.

jwhisler@express-news.net

Source: mysanantonio.com

***




A Filipino icon, 'PacMan' Pacquiao has fans everywhere -- Fort Worth Star Telegram

By TOBIAS XAVIER LOPEZ, Fort Worth Star Telegram

For years, Manny Pacquiao has possessed the ability to paralyze a nation, to freeze 96 million Filipino citizens and hypnotize them with every punch.

Yet, his influence grows. He forced Oscar de la Hoya to quit. He destroyed Ricky Hatton in two short rounds. He systematically dismantled Miguel Cotto.

On Saturday, the fighter regarded as the best pound-for-pound in the world returns to the ring against Joshua Clottey at Cowboys Stadium to defend the WBO world welterweight title.

The Philippine Islands make up only a portion of the Pacquiao universe. "I am expecting a lot of Mexican fans to be at the fight," Pacquiao said during a teleconference.

Pacquiao, 31, reigns as the boxer of this generation, dabbles as a singer, aspires to be a political candidate and continues to grow in popularity, whether with Mexican fight fans or the late-night television crowd.

Boxing society has evolved to a point where race doesn't matter as much as the individual fighter's ability to induce a thumping heartbeat and uncontrollable screams pleading for a knockout.

"PacMan" provides just this with fists that fly like uninhibited falcons, feet that glide like a marble on ice and a willingness to fight as if he wore an invulnerability cape.

Fort Worth boxing trainer Vincent Reyes serves as an integral part of both the Mexican community and the local boxing scene.

"He's beat the top Mexican fighters and the Mexican fans like a crowd pleaser," Reyes said. "He's certainly a crowd pleaser. He's not boring. The Mexican fans want action and that's what he gives."

George Rincon holds a Texas State Golden Gloves championship and at 18 sits fully entrenched in pop culture awareness. The Hispanic fighter and his father both appreciate the pure fighting skills Pacquiao exhibits and consider him the fighter of this generation.

In fact, the boxing community thought it laughable that Tiger Woods, a golfer, was named the "athlete" of the decade. The notion that someone in a non-contact sport, who demands complete quiet, doesn't worry about opposition hindering his efforts and walks during his competition is simply ridiculous.

"I believe in boxing you have to be tough," Rincon said. "When you say you are a boxer, that's saying a lot. When you say you are a boxer, you are a true athlete."

Hall of Fame promoter Bob Arum said having Hispanic fighters on Saturday's undercard helps sell the bout locally. However, he suggested the Mexican population has embraced Pacquiao because of his accomplishments. Pacquiao became the first fighter in history to win seven world titles in seven weight classes.

"Our goal when we started with Manny was to break him out from the Filipino base that he had," Arum said. "We were able to pick up millions of Hispanic fans and we have broken him into the general conscience of the people around the world.

"He is truly a crossover star. How many fighters of our time go on Jimmy Kimmel Live and go on Good Morning America and have a big article coming out in Time magazine? I think that is saying something."

Something else to be said is that Pacquiao plans to run for Congress in the Philippines with campaigning beginning on March 26.

If he wins, it certainly will force him to split time between political service and jumping rope, working the speed bag and knocking people out.

"After the fight I will go back to the Philippines and start campaigning," Pacquiao said. "It is going to be busy. I want to pass some bills that will be good for the livelihood of the people there and education for the children."

As for Rincon, he'll continue to support/emulate Pacquiao as long as his career lasts.

"He has speed and power, good defense and offense and he's very aggressive," Rincon said. "He has been beating the top Hispanic fighters and to me it doesn't matter. It's not about his race."

TOBIAS XAVIER LOPEZ, 817-390-7760

tlopez@star-telegram.com

Source: star-telegram.com

***




Will the Pac Man win? -- BASN

By Tom Donelson, Black Athlete Sports Network

IOWA CITY (BASN) On Saturday, March 13th, Manny Pacquaio faces Joshua Clottey in a match that could be a dangerous bout for the "Pacman" who is risking a multi million dollar gate against the winner of the Mosley-Mayweather fight.

Clottey has a 1-2 title record in title bout but he has the skills to pull off an upset. He is a technically sound fighter with good jab and nice left hook. Clottey has spent his career as a Welterweight and his two big losses were to Antonio “Hands of Plaster” Margarito and Miguel Cotto.

In the case of Margartio, he injured his hand early in the fight and fought the tough Mexican with one hand after easily winning the first four rounds. The Cotto fight was one of those affairs that could have gone either way.

The difference was a flash knockdown early in the fight where Clottey got nailed with a left hook and quickly bounced back up after his butt hit the canvas. As ESPN's Ted Atlas noted recently, Clottey may be the strongest fighter Pacquaio faced and he may be able to weather the Pacman's withering attack.

The biggest weakness for Clottey is his lack of activity.

The sound technician is judicial with his punches and in a fight with a quicker handed fighter, he could end up losing rounds that maybe he should win. Atlas believes that some where in this fight, Clottey will hurt Pacquaio and this may be the deciding factor.

Will the Pacman take Clottey's best? If so, Pacquaio wins.

Pacquaio is riding high as he’s essentially been knocking off lightweights, junior welterweights and welterweights over the past couple of years. His resume includes former lightweight champion David Diaz (the former title courtesy of Pacquaio), Oscar De La Hoya, former junior Welterweight champion Ricky Hatton (the former title courtesy of Pacquaio) and most recently Miguel Cotto.

In the Cotto fight, Pacquaio took Cotto's best shots early and after the third round, the fight was essentially his as Pacquaio's quick hands simply overwhelmed Cotto.

Clottey is slightly taller than Cotto and he has an excellent jab of his own plus this is the fight that could put him on the map. After two close losses to elite welterweights already on his resume, Clottey needs this victory to become a big ticket item. If he wins, he'll become a star and maybe he gets a shot at the winner of the Mayweather-Mosley.

As for Pacquaio, this fight is the stepping stone to the big mega fight with Mayweather providing that Mayweather defeats Mosley, not an automatic conclusion.

Never mind past negotiations, if both Pacquaio and Mayweather win their respective bouts, then the fight will happen. Bob Arum and Oscar De La Hoya -- the two big promoters in this tangled web -- will not allow a second negotiation to fail.

But before the super fight, both Pacquaio and Mayweather must win their bouts and they are fighting opponents who have nothing to lose and everything to gain including their place in boxing history.

Pacquaio should uphold his end but it will be a tough hard fought decision.

tomdonelson@blackathlete.com

Source: blackathlete.net

***





Jerry Jones says he's a true contender -- Dallas Morning News

By BARRY HORN, The Dallas Morning News

It started with a chance question back in September. Jerry Jones had gassed up his private jet and flown to New York to appear on Joe Buck's talk show on HBO. The topic: owning a professional sports franchise in a struggling economy.Back in the green room later while the likes of Joe Namath and Dan Marino and Curt Schilling were chatting with Buck on camera, Jones and Ross Greenburg, president of HBO Sports, made small talk. Then Greenburg, who worked with Jones through two Cowboys appearances on the training camp Hard Knocks series, popped a big question.

"Would the Cowboys Stadium landlord be interested in possibly hosting a fight?" asked Greenburg, whose network is a heavyweight in the boxing world.

It would not be a match between up-and-comers or faded stars like Evander Holyfield, who three years earlier had attracted 9,000 paying customers to American Airlines Center. It would be a bona fide bout between two of the sport's brightest lights – Manny Pacquiao, considered by most experts to be the best fighter in the world, and Floyd Mayweather, a legitimate, undefeated contender for the title.

The game begins

Jones, whose boxing background was limited to promoting a pre-Cowboys 1984 cruiserweight fight back home in Little Rock that drew an announced crowd of 2,500 lost souls, fought to contain his enthusiasm. Some of the very first architectural renderings for his Cowboys Stadium included a boxing blueprint that featured the ring set smack dab on the star at the 50-yard line.

Of course, there were a couple of roadblocks. Pacquiao still had to win a November fight, and lots of other places, including Los Angeles' Staples Center, New Orleans' Superdome, New York's Madison Square Garden and Las Vegas' MGM Grand Hotel, were interested in what would be boxing's biggest fight of 2010.

Jones could do nothing to help Pacquiao's ring fortunes against Miguel Angel Cotto at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, but while that was going on, he managed to piece together a bid for Pacquiao-Mayweather. He began to make inquiries, using contacts made with the Cowboys and the NFL. He came up with a dollar figure he was certain would beat the other contenders. It didn't hurt, Jones said, to have inside information detailing potential rival bids.

And so, soon after Pacquiao disposed of Cotto on Nov. 14, Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter, opened an e-mail that contained Jones' bid for a potential March 13 Pacquiao-Mayweather bout.

"Jerry said he was in for $25 million," Arum recalled as he lovingly repeated the dollar figure over the telephone. "And he said he could go higher if need be."

Consider that the largest site fee to date is believed to be the $18 million that brought Oscar De La Hoya-Mayweather to the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in 2007.

"That told me right there that Jerry was ready to compete," Arum said. "Dallas, Texas, was suddenly a heavyweight contender in the world of boxing."

Jones said he never hesitated to offer $25 million.

Jones believed the mega-fight could ultimately attract the same kind of 100,000-plus crowd to his stadium that the NBA All-Star Game brought last month.

"I don't want this to sound wrong, but we write checks like that around here all the time," Jones said while sipping iced tea in his Valley Ranch office last week.

The offer, however, was not enough to entice Mayweather. His handlers preferred Las Vegas, where fight plans died when he insisted he would fight Pacquiao only if there were Olympic-style drug testing, an unusual condition. A retired federal judge tried to mediate a solution.

In the end, Mayweather, who has won his last five fights in Las Vegas, decided he would be better off fighting past-his-prime 38-year-old Shane Mosley at the friendly confines of the MGM on May 1.

Undaunted and still intrigued with the publicity a major fight could bring his stadium, Jones lowered his sights. Arum came up with the credible if unspectacular Joshua Clottey of Ghana to challenge Pacquiao of the Philippines. Jones, who calls Pacquiao "a sexy draw by himself," lowered his site fee guarantee to $7 million.

It's about the stadium

HBO hung in and will offer the fight Saturday on pay-per-view in the United States. The rest of the world will watch on free television.

"I am certainly a fan of boxing," Jones said. "But that is not what this fight is about. This is a very logical way to introduce our stadium to the world and lift its aura."

Jones is serious about aura and dollars. He needs big events for his big stadium. He is eager, he reiterated several times in an hour-long conversation, to challenge Las Vegas for fights.

The desert town, backed by high-roller dollars, has long established itself as the big-fight boxing capital of the world. California and Texas may put on more boxing shows every year than Nevada, but no one matches Las Vegas for high-dollar bouts.

Casinos use fights to attract gamblers. Most of the expensive ringside seats are handed to wealthy customers, who in turn pay for the privilege at craps tables or poker rooms or by busting at blackjack. It is a tried-and-true formula that has worked for decades.

Atlantic City, using the same schematic, tried and failed to challenge Las Vegas. Madison Square Garden, saddled with an oppressive New York tax structure, has been unable to compete. Stadiums like the Superdome and Alamodome have tried big fights, but in the end, promoters found New Orleans and San Antonio, with relatively small populations, unable to regularly support boxing.

Eight of the 10 mega-fights that have drawn the highest pay-per-view audiences have taken place in Las Vegas. A dozen of the top 15 were fought in Las Vegas.

"I can compete with Las Vegas," Jones said. "I can hold my head up high, keep my credibility and say that.

"I can and I will."

If Richard Sturm considers Jones a worthy competitor, he isn't saying. Sturm is the executive who books fights for the MGM Grand hotel, where the arena comfortably seats 17,000 and has become the top fight site in Las Vegas. Sturm's public relations representative, who asked if his boss might see sample questions, was unable to get him to return phone calls.

Arum, who lives and runs his Top Rank boxing promotions company in Las Vegas, assured that his hometown has taken notice of Jones and takes him and his stadium seriously.

"Not only can Cowboys Stadium compete, it can beat Vegas," Arum said.

Home-field advantage

Jones believes his stadium's seating capacity, its ambiance and its heavyweight video screen combined with North Texas' growing population – which includes a large Hispanic demographic that embraces boxing – are his aces in the hole.

HBO's Greenburg calls Cowboys Stadium "a potential Woodstock for sports," equating big fights with major events like NCAA Final Fours and NBA All-Star Games.

"Put on a quality event and people will come," he said.

Arum and Jones preach that the sheer number of seats at Cowboys Stadium offsets the tonier price of seats in Las Vegas.

"It's simple math," Arum said. "And watching replays on the big screen during the fight is something that has to be mind-boggling. ... Anybody misses anything, and believe me that happens even at ringside, and there it will be replayed bigger than life."

For Pacquiao-Clottey and its heavily Hispanic undercard, Cowboys Stadium has been configured for 45,000 seats. More than 35,000 tickets have been sold. That's a big number for boxing in Texas, where day-of-the-event ticket sales traditionally are huge.

Mega-fights, matches between two high-powered boxers, don't come along every year. But competitive fights that include at least one big-name boxer are relatively plentiful. Jones said he thinks he can host "three to five fights" a year.

Arum said talks already are under way for a bye-week fight at Cowboys Stadium during the football season.

Arum and Jones agree that they will both make money on the first fight card at Cowboys Stadium.

"Even if we didn't make a dime," Jones said, "in the context of exposure worldwide for our stadium and opening it up to the small guy who can't buy Cowboys tickets, this will be a successful promotion."

Workouts open to the public

Boxers Manny Pacquaio, Joshua Clottey and Humberto Soto will hold workouts free to the public this week in advance of Saturday's card at Cowboys Stadium.

The workouts will take place at the Gaylord Texan Hotel in Grapevine. On Monday, Clottey will work out at 1:30 and Soto at 2:30 p.m. Pacquiao will work out at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Pacquaio and Clottey meet for the world welterweight championship in Saturday's main event. Soto meets David Diaz for the WBC lightweight championship in an undercard bout.

PACQUAIO VS. CLOTTEY

Who: Manny Pacquiao, General Santos City, Philippines (50-3-2, 38 KOs) vs. Joshua Clottey, Accra, Ghana (35-3, 21 KOs).

What: 12 rounds for Pacquiao's WBO welterweight (147-pound) title

Where: Cowboys Stadium

When: Saturday. Undercard at 5 p.m. Main event at approximately 10:15 p.m.

TV: HBO pay-per-view with suggested retail price of $49.95

KELL EYES PAC & CO -- Daily Star

By Nick Parkinson, Daily Star

KELL BROOK can become Manny ­Pacquiao’s No.1 challenger on Friday – but admits he is not ready for the fearsome Filipino yet.

Sheffield welterweight Brook takes on Poland’s Krzysztof Bienias for the WBO Inter-Continental title WBO Inter-Continental title at Liverpool’s Echo Arena – and the chance to become Pacquiao’s mandatory challenger.

Pacquiao defends the WBO world title against Ghana’s Joshua Clottey in Dallas, USA, on Saturday before an expected showdown later this year against the winner of Floyd Mayweather Jnr-Sugar Shane Mosley, who meet on May 1.

Unbeaten Brook, 23, who has stopped 13 of his 20 victims, told the Daily Star Sunday: “Maybe it’s a few years before I can fight the likes of Manny – but then I will be ready.

“Maybe I will have a few defences of the WBO Intercontinental title before I fight for the full world title. But I’m looking at fighting the likes of Andre Berto, Floyd Mayweather Jnr and Miguel Cotto eventually.”

Liverpool super-middleweight Paul Smith, 27, defends his British crown against fellow Scouser Tony Dodson on the same bill.

Source: dailystar.co.uk

Boxing Matchups: Pacquiao vs. Clottey Odds & Picks -- The Spread

The Spread

March 13 when boxing phenom Manny Pacquiao defends his title against Joshua Clottey.

This fight came together when a proposed bout between Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. fell through due to the two being unable to agree on the drug testing policy. This fight will take place next Saturday from Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Pay Per-View.

Pacquiao is the favorite heading into the fight with a betting line of -675 while Clottey has a line of +475 according to online sports book.

The fight card begins at 9PM ET on Pay-Per-View. Here is a closer look at both boxers and their odds heading into this fight.

Manny Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KO’s)

Strengths: Pacquiao has perhaps the fastest hands in boxing, which have allowed him to win his last four fights by KO or TKO, including a second round KO of Ricky Hatton in May and an eighth round TKO of Oscar De La Hoya last December. His last fight against Miguel Cotto saw Pacquiao score the TKO win in the 12th round, but he still dominated the fight for the 12 round duration.

Weaknesses: It has yet to be shown as a weakness, but Pacquiao continues to fight in larger weight classes than what he is accustomed to in order to make a big pay day. He fought most of his career as a Super Bantamweight (122 lbs.) or a Featherweight (126 lbs.), but has found success at the larger weights, including his fight with De La Hoya, where he fought at welterweight (147 lbs.). Already having a series of fights at welterweight gives him enough experience where the size shouldn’t be an issue. The dispute with Mayweather has caused some to question Pacquiao for not wanting to get blood tested. Some have accused him of using performance enhancing drugs, so Pac-Man will need to put on a good performance to make people forget about the issues with Mayweather.

Last Five Fights:

12th round TKO win over Joshua Clottey on Nov. 14, 2009

Second round KO win over Ricky Hatton on May 2, 2009

Eighth round TKO win over Oscar De La Hoya on Dec. 6, 2008

Ninth round TKO win over David Diaz on June 28, 2008

Split decision win over Juan Manuel Marquez on March 25, 2008

Joshua Clottey (35-3-0, 20 KO’s)

Strengths: Clottey is a tough fighter out of Ghanian. He has never been knocked out in a fight as his three losses have come by decision or disqualification. Clottey was able to win the IFC Welterweight Title in 2008, but lost to Cotto in his bid for the WBO title that Pacquiao now owns. Clottey has shown he is one of the top fighters in the world and perhaps the most resilient fighter in boxing.

Weaknesses: While Clottey is a tough fighter, he hasn’t been able to get past the elite level fighters like Cotto or Antonio Margarito. Clottey won’t be able to match the speed and power of Pacquiao in this fight as he has just 20 knockout wins in 39 fights. Clottey simply looks to be out-matched and collecting a big paycheck as Mayweather-Pacquiao broke down.

Last Five Fights:

Split decision loss to Miguel Cotton on June 13, 2009

Ninth round TKO win over Zab Judah on Aug. 2, 2008

Fifth round TKO win over Jose Luis Cruz on April 3, 2008

Decision win over Shamone Alvarez on Dec. 20, 2007

Decision win over Felix Flores on Aug. 9, 2007

Who will win: Pacquiao is just too much for Clottey. Look for Clottey to come out spirited and game early, but Pacquiao to slowly pick him apart before earning a late round TKO.

Additional Lines:

Fight Outcome:

Pacquiao by Decision or Technical Decision 1/1

Clottey by Decision or Technical Decision 7/1

Draw or Technical Draw 25/1

Round 1 Pacquiao win 20/1

Round 2 Pacquiao win 18/1

Round 3 Pacquiao win 15/1

Round 4 Pacquiao win 10/1

Round 5 Pacquiao win 8/1

Round 6 Pacquiao win 6/1

Round 7 Pacquiao win 4/1

Round 8 Pacquiao win 4/1

Round 9 Pacquiao win 4/1

Round 10 Pacquiao win 2/1

Round 11 Pacquiao win 2/1

Round 12 Pacquiao win 2/1

Round 1 Clottey win 40/1

Round 2 Clottey win 35/1

Round 3 Clottey win 35/1

Round 4 Clottey win 35/1

Round 5 Clottey win 35/1

Round 6 Clottey win 35/1

Round 7 Clottey win 35/1

Round 8 Clottey win 25/1

Round 9 Clottey win 25/1

Round 10 Clottey win 25/1

Round 11 Clottey win 35/1

Round 12 Clottey win 35/1

Round Betting:

Pacquiao to win in rounds 1 to 3 6/1

Pacquiao to win in rounds 4 to 6 3/1

Pacquiao to win in rounds 7 to 9 2/1

Pacquiao to win in rounds 10 to 12 10/13

Pacquiao by Decision or Technical Decision 1/1

Clottey to win in rounds 1 to 3 20/1

Clottey to win in rounds 4 to 6 17/1

Clottey to win in rounds 7 to 9 15/1

Clottey to win in rounds 10 to 12 13/1

Clottey by Decision or Technical Decision 7/1

Draw or Technical Draw 25/1

Source: thespread.com

***