Monday 8 March 2010

Hatton to be offered Marquez fight -- ESPN

ESPN.co.uk

Ricky Hatton would 'love' his comeback fight to be against Juan Manuel Marquez, according to the head of the Mexican's promotion company - which is trying to organise the contest.

Marquez turned down a bout against Amir Khan last month after his trainer said that the 36-year-old was being used as a stepping stone in Khan's bid to raise his profile in America.

Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer says that Marquez would relish the prospect of a match-up against Hatton, who will return to the ring in 2010 for at least one more fight.

"I talked yesterday with Juan Manuel Marquez. He called me from Mexico City," he said to Fanhouse.com. "He's going to be coming to my office next week, and we'll be trying to put together his next fight.

"He really wants Hatton, and so I'll be talking to Ricky's people. And maybe both of those guys will do a fight in the fall. That's what Marquez wants to do. Hatton's people indicated to me that they would love to have a Marquez fight, and Marquez confirmed to me yesterday that he would love to fight Hatton."

If the bout takes place, it will be the first time that the 31-year-old Mancunian has entered the ring since a second-round defeat to Manny Pacquiao in May 2009.

Paulie Malignaggi, who will reportedly face Khan on May 15, has stated his desire to face off against Hatton in late 2010.

Source: espn.co.uk

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Pacquiao Focused for Clottey -- SecondsOut

By Steve Kim, SecondsOut

If Joshua Clottey should pull the upset this upcoming Saturday night at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, it won’t be against an unfocused or under-trained Manny Pacquiao. Yes, this fight is certainly a let down on many levels from the expected and highly anticipated showdown versus Floyd Mayweather and Pacquiao is in a bit of a no-win situation by taking on the tough but relatively unknown Ghanaian, but make no doubt about it, the “Pac-Man” is focused and locked in for the task at hand.

That much was clear on Monday, March 1st, when Pacquiao went through a rigorous two-and-half hour workout. His trainer, Freddie Roach, schedules his sparring sessions for Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. The other days are dedicated to hitting the pads with Roach and then working on the double-end and speed bags. Followed by a session jumping rope for about ten minutes and then floor work, Pacquiao shadowboxes in a ring that is exclusively his domain from the moment he steps foot into the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, California.

On this particular afternoon, Pacquiao arrives much later than his usual time of around one in the afternoon. With no sparring partners waiting for him, he shows up at around 2:30. Alex Ariza, his strength and conditioning coach, who was among a group of people awaiting his arrival, explained, “He wanted to sleep in a bit today.” During this period, Roach had time to work the pads with young prospect Jamie Kavanagh and old pro Steve Forbes.

As you waited for Pacquiao to arrive, you wonder if he’ll ever arrive. Rob Peters, who heads his security around the gym, joked that we were really early because Manny is always on time. Well, it does give new meaning to “Pacquiao time,” which was coined by Peters, as he signals to the regular clients of the Wild Card that their time at the gym would soon come to a close with the arrival of the world’s best fighter.

As Roach finishes up with Forbes, he himself looks a bit anxious for his fighter to get to the daily task of preparing for Clottey, a fighter who is as tough as a combat boot and has never been halted in a professional prizefight. During this time, some rather salacious locker room jokes and boxing tales are bantered about, bringing loud laughter from everyone in the gym (And no, I’m not at liberty to discuss just what was said, but trust me, it may have been the funniest and raunchiest discussion I’ve ever heard).

Finally, the man arrives, rather quietly, and after shaking a few hands and greeting his coach, he goes into his dressing quarters. After about 15 minutes, he finally emerged, ready to get to work.

On this day, he went 16 full rounds on the pads with Roach without using any of the one-minute break periods to catch his breath. The power and speed are striking enough, but what really stands out is Pacquiao’s ability to almost float effortlessly on the canvas and let go of booming combinations with balance and accuracy. Like a cat, he always ends up on his feet. At one time, Pacquiao was as one-armed as any slot machine in Vegas. But with the steady and persistent guidance of Roach, he now has a wide and varied offensive attack with punches that come from angles that can only be conceived by a trigonometry professor.

If he’s complacent, then he must be the most energetic complacent fighter on the planet.

"For me," said Pacquiao afterward, “I don’t worry about motivation. I focus on training. I’m always focused in my training and especially if I have a fight.” Through all this boundless, almost nuclear energy, he smiles and laughs throughout. This is clearly an individual enjoying his craft. While most other boxers trudge and grind through their workouts, it almost seems like Pacquiao whistles while he works. “Yeah, I’m always having fun in my training,” he agreed. “Being tired is only in the mind. Don’t think ‘tired’ in your body, just keep going and going because in the fight, nobody helps you."

It doesn’t matter if it’s Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto or Clottey in front of Pacquiao; Roach gets the same amount of effort, regardless.

"We train the same way for every opponent, shape-wise, condition-wise," said the renowned trainer, after his work with Pacquiao had concluded. "I mean, the only difference is the sparring partners and the strategy of the fight, of course. Manny respects everyone, he doesn’t take anyone lightly. We’re two weeks out from the fight; we just went 16 rounds straight, in the mitts and we peaked on Saturday. We did 12 rounds (of sparring); tomorrow we’ll box nine rounds and we’ll start going the other way, nine, eight, six, four (rounds) and the last day of sparring will be Monday, the 8th."

Roach sees the intensity of Pacquiao every day, up close and personal, yet it still leaves him in awe. "Unbelievable," he says. "It’s been like this since Day One. Well, it’s probably better now than ever because he knows how to control the energy level and he’s in shape. The thing is, he works hard, he fights hard; that’s why he’s the best fighter in the world today. It’s funny, I hear Floyd has a similar work ethic; he works hard, he’s a little sporadic, of course, in his workouts, but I think that’s probably why they’re the best guys out there because of their work ethics."

Of course, the main reason why Pacquiao-Mayweather didn’t come to fruition is that Mayweather’s camp believes that Pacquiao is getting a little extra help. Allegations of illegal performance-enhancing drugs became the central storyline of the failed negotiations between the two sides, ultimately becoming tiresome. Also, Mayweather and his minions are allegedly keeping Filipino journalists from even broaching the issues with Mayweather. Pacquiao told Maxboxing last week, "[I’m] not tired of that because I’m a very honest person and clean. For me, it’s God and sacrifices. That’s all, nothing more."

On that issue, Roach says, "The thing was, he [Mayweather] wanted to run the sport and make the rules and we’re not going to do that. Unfortunately, I think he came up with excuses not to fight the fight and he found a way out." Bottom line, they were adhering to the Mayweather State Athletic Commission. "It actually rubbed me the wrong way because people say, ’Why didn’t he just take the test?’ The thing is, why would we let a fighter dictate what goes on in the fight game? That’s what the commissions and sanctioning bodies are for. The thing is, we let him call that shot; next thing you know we’ll have one minute rounds. You give him a little power, it’s going to grow. The thing is, it’s like giving the first two rounds away and giving him confidence. He can dictate what happens in boxing? He’s not that big!"

Well, he can when it’s Shane Mosley, who really had no leverage. But with Pacquiao, it was a different story. In that case, there were two super-powers who refused to budge. The United Nations or NATO could have intervened and this fight still wouldn’t have gotten made. Who knows if this fight will ever become a reality? When asked about the possibility of meeting Mayweather in the near future, Pacquiao says, "Yes, if everything is done good. It depends on the negotiations with my promoter. I’m just a fighter, my job is to fight and train."

But what all this speculation has really done is take away from the fact that from a technical and fundamental standpoint, Pacquiao has made huge improvements from the first time he walked into this gym back in 2001. Back then, he was all left hand, with very little in the way of balance and alignment and his boxing IQ has risen immeasurably. During this camp, he has even worked a few rounds and sparred from the orthodox stance. And he looked rather comfortable doing so.

"There’s a lot of big differences, how I learn," said the Filipino idol. "It’s like you went to school and you started in grade school, high school and college. Right now, I think I’ve already graduated from college."

Some would say he’s already earned his Master’s degree from the School of Hard Knocks.

"100-percent," agreed Roach. "He’s come such a long way. We’ve been working on improving those skills a long, long time; everything is coming together, now. He knows who to study tapes, he knows what to look for, the flaws to work for, look for mistakes and habits. He’s very good at that, now. The game plan is not my game plan anymore, it’s our game plan."

If Pacquiao is Joe Montana, then Roach is his Bill Walsh. Two masters who work towards the same goal, who have forged a synergy whose level of success is nearly unparalleled. Roach lays out the game plan and Pacquiao executes with stunning precision. The West Coast Offense has never been this hard-hitting and punishing.

In watching Roach don his body armor and mitts, you aren’t just struck by what Pacquiao is doing, but by what Roach is instructing his pupil to execute. Many times, pad work is just an endless stream of repetitiveness, where the same combinations are thrown ad nauseum, bringing about a familiar cacophony that is heard in gyms across the world. But with Roach, there are large pockets of time when the action is halted and Roach is in the ear of his fighter, giving him instructions and reminders of what is to be expected on fight night. He and his fighter often practice their strategy in slow-motion. And then over and over again, ‘til the movement is perfected.

It’s not so much training, but a choreography on canvas of what is to be expected.

Most mitt work is done in a linear fashion, as if the fight will be fought on a railroad track. But with Roach, it’s clear that he focuses in on three layers. First, the path in which his fighter will advance upon his target, followed by a sequence of punches that Roach believes can puncture the flaws in the opponent’s guard and followed, perhaps most importantly, by an exit strategy; choosing a direction or angle in which his fighter will be the least susceptible to counter-punches. It’s a blueprint on hitting-and-not-getting-hit.

For Roach and his charge, the point from A-to-B is not in a straight line.

As Pacquiao gets into the heart of his work, Forbes, who worked about six rounds with the trainer earlier, marveled, "It’s the little things with Freddie that he shows you. Just small, little adjustments that he shows you." Forbes, a former world champion, is one of Roach’s newest clients and had previously worked with the Mayweathers earlier in his career.

The trainer has seen enough to make the bold prediction of a knockout in Texas.

"I thought the fight would go the distance at first, but after studying the tapes and the game plan we have, I feel we can break this guy down, be the first fighter to knock him out. Pacquiao’s on top of his game, right now, and that’s what we’re looking for."

His fighter isn’t quite as audacious.

"Joshua Clottey, I never underestimate him; he’s tall and big and a very good defensive fighter and he’s strong. He’s a former world champion. It’s hard to underestimate that kind of fighter," said Pacquiao. "I’m not going to promise to knock the guy out. But what I can give is a good show and to make people happy. That’s my concern.

"Not only myself, my family, but to all the people who are going to watch, especially the Filipino people."

AA

As Pacquiao finished off his day’s work last Monday, well after the sun had set, with a series of abdominal work, Ariza was intently watching. Afterward, a few of Pacquiao’s assistants started rubbing his shins, as he was suffering from a case of the shin splints.

"See, that’s what I worry about. He’s got shin splints right now because he’s going so hard. I have to beg him to pull back a little bit, but he won’t," Ariza told me.

In the past few months, Ariza, has become a notable figure as the man in charge of Pacquiao’s physical condition and what goes into his body and has come under a good deal of scrutiny. When asked if he felt he was besmirched in any way due to allegations of PED use by Pacquiao, he quickly responded, "No, I don’t think so; not at all. If they came from a credible source or even if there was some validity to it or they had some substantial evidence, paperwork, something. For it to come out of a Mayweather’s mouth is just garbage.

"The people that choose to listen to a Mayweather, it’s just the same kind of people the Mayweathers are. It doesn’t bother me, I think it’s more of a compliment to the work that we’ve done."

Ariza says that Pacquiao is the hardest working client he’s ever worked with.

"No question. It just goes to show what real hard work will do. Manny’s just the pinnacle. He doesn’t believe in rest; he doesn’t believe in quitting, having an off day. Soon as he puts those wraps on, he knows it’s just time to go to work. I just think it’s the desire for fighting."

There has been some talk of this being Pacquiao’s swan song if a fight with Mayweather can’t be negotiated or if he’s elected into political office, but Ariza believes that if Pacquiao continues, there is plenty left in his gas tank.

"The way he takes care of himself and he never lets himself get out of shape, he doesn’t abuse his body and when you take care of yourself like that, your body takes care of you. So if he wants it, he could be like Bernard Hopkins; he can go into his 40s if he wants."

DALLAS

Big D (well, actually Arlington) here I come (On Wednesday)! But that’s still the earliest I’ve ever gone to cover a fight in all my years covering the Sweet Science. I got a haircut on Friday for this trip and I came THIS close to getting a Cowboy star carved into the back of my head, or at least having three stripes shaved on the side ala Michael Irvin and doing the whole “Korean Playmaker” thing, but I chickened out.

But if I can get to the middle of the field, I will stand on the star like Terrell Owens. Hopefully George Teague won’t be around to knock me off it (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=URaBENN4sFo).

I can’t wait to see this stadium and I love Texas, in general. I mean, what other fight will I cover anytime soon where I can tailgate before the fight card (Which by the way, a crew of guys I know are already planning this)? Tailgating (which I think will be preferable to that undercard put together by Top Rank) and boxing: Does it get any better than that?

I might even wear my suit to this special event.

PLAYMAKER FLURRIES

Can I start banging the drums for Tim Bradley-Devon Alexander? Regardless, let’s hope Don King really pushes Alexander in St. Louis, where he belongs, and not places like the Mohegan Sun or Treasure Island...I thought the “Countdown” show for Pacquiao-Clottey on HBO was very good. It’s much better when they don’t try and make up a storyline like they do too much on “24/7” and just let it flow...Also, HBO’s documentary on Magic Johnson and Larry Bird was excellent. If you haven’t seen it, you should definitely catch it...That ‘84 Finals meltdown by the Lakers and Magic is still the most heart-wrenching thing I’ve ever been through as a Lakers fan. Every once in awhile, I see Gerald Henderson in my dreams, picking off the pass from James Worthy...Speaking of which, Lakers fans, are we now officially worried?...Vic Darchinyan won on Saturday night, but it was really the courage and chin of Rodrigo Guerrero that I’ll remember...”Celebrity Fit Club: Boot Camp” on VH1 is great. To see Bobby Brown with a beer gut is just wrong...This past week’s edition of “The Main Event” featured Darchinyan and Bradley...Any questions or comments can be sent to k9kim@yahoo.com and you can follow me at www.twitter.com/stevemaxboxing. We also have a Facebook page at www.facebook.com/MaxBoxing

Source: secondsout.com

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Nike Trainer Manny Pacquiao SC 2010 -- Sole Redemption

Sole Redemption



Being a part of world’s giant sneaker brand, Nike, is a great honor especially when someone doesn’t belong to the dominant race, White. For the number 1 pound-for-pound boxer in the world, Manny Pacquiao, receiving a signature shoe from Nike is like winning another world title. Similar to his previous Trainer 1 releases, the Nike Trainer Manny Pacquiao SC 2010 is again a shoe inspired by the Philippine flag.

This year’s Pacquiao signature sneaker bears the colors Red, White, Blue, and Gold. Basically, the Red comes to be the major hue while it is being complemented by White that makes up the base, sole, lace panel, and laces. Red toe and mid-panel rest atop with Flywire-designed straps that hold through the lace section. The Gold-tinted tongue depicts Manny’s exclusive logo and on the heel is a White panel with embroidered “PAC” (left shoe) and “MAN” (right shoe) in large font size. The interior of this Trainer adopts the Philippines’ symbol for peace, Blue, as it was also utilized by the outer sole.

Furthermore, Nike integrated a visible Air Unit on the heel with Gold inner that coincides with the Swoosh. All in all, the Nike Trainer Manny Pacquiao SC 2010 is one of the Champ’s authentic sneakers since he entered the boxing world.

For Manny’s fans, this latest Trainer is now available at NikeStore for $110.




Source: soleredemption.com

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THE PACQUIAO 2010 WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE: SOME MAKE IT, OTHERS DON’T -- PhilBoxing

By Ed de la Vega, PhilBoxing.com

LOS ANGELES -- It was a fun day today at the Palazzo. But then again that is a day to day happening in that place. It’s no small wonder Manny Pacquiao loves to keep the status quo in that place year in and year out. There’s just no substitute for the fun and the chaos that go with it.

Take the 2010 weight loss contest put up by the Pacman.

Today was the day of reckoning for the almost 60 odd persons that took part in the contest.

At a little bit after 1:00 p.m., Pacquiao gave the order to bring out the “official” weigh-in scales to the open air patio of the condo to begin the final weigh-in and determine who made the challenge of losing 15% of their body weight.

Everyone who does, gets a sizzling $3000.00 prize.

With Pacquiao manning the scales himself and Joe Ramos assisting, one by one, the people stepped in on the scales.

First one on the scales was Nonoy Neri. Neri gingerly stepped on the scales much like a fighter doing a weigh-in. He barely made the 15% he needed to get. Then he quickly put on his shirt and warm up pants and headed straight to the kitchen to eat.

Buboy Fernandez was not so lucky. Hard as he tried, he still needed some 10 pounds more to reach the minimum required for him to lose.

Then the rest followed. Many were successful and others failed.

Some of those that missed the required weight by just a pound or two were given two hours to do it. Of course they hurriedly went down to the sauna room downstairs at the Palazzo gym to sweat it out. Others who were too far off simply gave up.

The fellow that lost the most weight incidentally was awarded $20,000. His name is Tim Sladek. He lost 22% of the body weight he had 4 weeks ago. He beat a couple of past winners, Mike Koncz and Alex Ariza.

Some people who have read about the contest criticize it as a “waste of resources.” But Pacquiao simply swats those arguments. As he told a media man who was there today, his aim is to give those who hang around at the Palazzo a taste of what it takes and how it feels to lose weight much like he does every fight. “I just want them to appreciate better the sacrifices I go through, but most of all," he added, "I want them all to be in good shape."

Pacquiao leaves for Dallas tomorrow afternoon after a ceremonial send off at the Wildcard Gym to attend the fight week hoopla before he stakes his WBO Welterweight crown against Joshua Clottey at the Cowboys Stadium at Arlington, Texas on Saturday, March 13th.

Source: philboxing.com

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At Age 50, Freddie Roach Reflects on His Life, Past, Future -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Four-time Trainer Of The Year, Freddie Roach, turned 50 on Friday, and celebrated his birthday, in part, as a guest at The Santa Anita Race Track on Sunday.

There, Roach took part in the Winner's Circle ceremony of The Joe Hernandez Stakes, presenting the trophy for the afternoon's featured race.

On Friday, even on his birthday, Roach was spending his milestone day doing what he loves best -- training, three-time Fighter Of The Year, and, one-time Fighter Of The Decade, Manny Pacquiao, and others, at his Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif.

A seven-division champion, the 31-year-old Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 knockouts) is preparing for his March 13, WBO welterweight (147 pounds) title defense against Ghanian-born Joshua Clottey (35-3, 20 KOs) of The Bronx, in New York, to be held at The Dallas Cowboys' Stadium in Arlington, Tex.

But on Friday, FanHouse caught up with Roach, who reflected on his life as a trainer, and his influences, such as his late mentor, Eddie Futch. Roach touched on what his life is like enduring Parkinson's Desease, and many other things. Roach and Pacquiao will break camp on Monday to leave for Texas.

FanHouse: Hello, Freddie, happy birthday, and thanks for spending time with us on such a busy day. Remember, you wanted to first begin by thanking and recognizing people you wanted to mention in your life for helping you to become who you are today?

Freddie Roach: Well, there's my mom, Barbara, and, my dad, Paul Roach, of course. All of my brothers and sisters, Allen, Julie, Cindy, Pepper, Joey, Paul, and of course Eddie Futch, my trainer and mentor.

My family supports me, tremendously. Eddie Futch taught me the game of boxing, the finer arts of how to be a trainer and a fighter. My dad for teaching me how to be a fighter. Frank Pusateri, a fighter out of Boston, he coached me when I was six years old when my dad was working a couple of jobs.

Manny Pacquiao for making me famous. James Toney for trusting me to be his coach. We won the light heavyweight title with James. Michael Moorer for trying so hard in the Evander Holyfield fight. He showed a lot of guts in that fight that we lost.

Mike Tyson is one of my favorite people in the world, and it was just a great relationship, talking about the history of boxing together. Johnny Tapia for being so crazy in a great way, just high-intensity and just working hard all of the time. We won the bantamweight (118 pounds) and super bantamweight (122 pounds) championship.

There's Virgil Hill, who was my first champion. We won the WBA light heavyweight (175 pounds) championship when I was 27 years old. I thank Virgil for asking me to help Eddie, because Eddie was too busy and had Michael Spinks and Larry Holmes and was too busy, so Virgil asked me if I could help Mr. Futch, and that's why I got into training in boxing.

I want to thank Steve Collins for coming over with us. He won the title at super middleweight (168 pounds), and he beat Chris Eubank, twice, and he beat Nigel Benn, twice. And I was in his corner every time. Just all the champions that I've had are special people. I know that there's 26, or, 27 of them.

Amir Khan is my up and coming star, and he can do me a big favor and shut Paulie Malignaggi up for good. And I can't wait. David Haye, who called me last week and ask me if I could get up and get him ready for a fight, but I had to turn him down because I can't go to England, I just don't have any time.

I'd just like to thank all of my fighters for making me look good. When I sit down with them, we have a good rapport with each other. They're great fighters and I love every single one of them.

FH: What about your doctors, with helping with Parkinsons?

Roach: There's Dr. Joseph Chung. I go to him every three months. He monitors me and make's sure everything is intact and that my medications are all in order. He's pretty lenient because the medications are sometimes hard to take, and I tell him I'm going to cut down with this one or that one.

But I tell him when I'm going to do it and he gives me the okay if it is okay. Sometimes, he makes me stay on some medications. But the thing is, sometimes, the medications are worse than the symptoms of course. That's a part of my life.

I see the best doctors in the world, from the Mayo Clinic to the Cleveland Clinic, to the University of British Columbia where I was diagnosed. There are people all over the world trying to help me. Everyone has their cure, and I've tried them all, and they haven't worked yet.

But there are people looking out for my best interest, and that's people everywhere that I go. So I thank them all for trying to help me.

Things Freddie Roach Likes About Boxing:

1) The fighters

2) A good fight

3) Training Fighters

4) Boxing writers. They're great. Without them telling our stories, we wouldn't be here. I get along with all of them, and I'm a very honest and open person and don't lie. Of course, they've voted me Trainer Of The Year four times now, and love that award because it's my favorite award because it's named after my trainer, Eddie Futch.

5) The travel. I love it. I've been to 26 countries in my life, now. Without boxing, I'd probably still be Las Vegas. But I've been almost everywherre.

6) Wild Card Boxing Club. This is my home. I have a house, but I don't live there, I live here. I just sleep at my house. The thing is, I'm here 12 hours a day, and I love every minute of it. Boxing gyms have the biggest characters in any town, I love those characters. The ex-fighters. They're great.

7) My favorite boxing glove is Reyes. Real fighters where Reyes. Real punchers wear Reyes. Guys that go in there with bad intentions.

8) My favorite boxing commission is Nevada's. They're well-run. Best in the world. Very respectful. They're on top of their game. They let you work with your fighters, wrapping hands and so forth. They let you protect the fighter. Very fair. Sometimes, I wonder what the judges are watching. But that's a part of boxing.

Things Freddie Roach Dislikes About Boxing:

1) The politics of rating fighters. People getting ratings that don't deserve it. People being overlooked and ducked and things of that nature.

2) I don't like religion in boxing. I think they should keep that for the church, or wherever it may be. I mean, Amir Khan fights Dimitriy Salita, and they tried to make it a Jewish-Muslim thing. That's all bull****. It's a sport. It has nothing to do with religion. Keep religion where it belongs, keep politics where it belongs, let the sport be a sport.

Just because you pray more than me doesn't mean you're going to win the fight. That doesn't win fights. I mean, God has a lot more better things to do than worry about a boxing match.

3) Fighters staying around too long. They need to retire sooner. That's a very difficult thing to do, and I know it, because I stayed around too long.

4) I don't like corner men who don't watch out for their fighters. A lot of guys throw a towel over their shoulders, and all of a sudden, they're a trainer. They need to protect their fighters, and they don't have the knowledge to protect their fighters.

It's a hard decision to make of course, but you have to protect their fighters. I wish that there were a lot more people who would do that. We'd have a lot less injuries in boxing if we had more qualified trainers.

Word Association:

FH: I will mention a subject or word, and you respond with the first thing that comes to mind.

Roach: Okay.

Paulie Malignaggi: Girl

Parkinson's Disease: Sucks

The Mayweathers: Scared

Winning: Everything

Golden Boy: Future

Losing: Sucks

Alex Ariza: Good guy

Steroids: Not necessary

Joe Santiago: Young, getting better

Mike Tyson: Great

Typhoon: Sucks

Michael Koncz: A**hole

Nat's Thai Food: Good

Bob Arum: Okay

Catch weight: Sucks

Ricky Hatton: Good guy, funny

Olympic-style drug testing: Not relevant

Eddie Futch: The best

Retirement: Hard to do

Mom: No. 1

Dad: I miss him

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

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Manny Pacquiao: Fighter, icon, politician…and pop star? -- Telegraph

By Gareth A Davies, Telegraph.co.uk

Manny Pacquiao is a rarity – a man who fights with a smile stitched onto his face. The Filipino fighting icon still enjoys soaring popularity, in spite of the collapse of his much anticipated contest this year with Floyd Mayweather Jnr.

Pacquiao’s last few weeks leading into his match-up with Ghanaian Joshua Clottey have seen him in the public spotlight. There have been nearly 240,000 hits on You Tube watching Manny sing on Jimmy Kimmel Live (posted above). That number is growing by the hour.

For me, it was a little like karaoke, but what do I know ? Pacquiao’s courage certainly knows no bounds.

Manny has had busloads of celebrities visiting his training camp, including the actors Jeremy Piven, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Steven Segal, Robert Duvall and Ron Perlman (Hell Boy movies).

“It has been the place to be,” one camp insider told me earlier today. Undefeated No. 1 light-middleweight contender Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. watched Manny work out last Friday.

Clearly, Pacquiao has no fear. But I think he should stick to the day job. The Filipino world will stop revolving once more and grind to a halt when the great fighter steps through the ropes to contest another title, having dispatched Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton, and Miguel Cotto in his last three contests.

Later today, a specially designed plane will charter 100 Pacquiao VIPs into Dallas, and the fighting team will travel in a specially designed tour bus…

It promises to be some spectacle. One only hopes that there is one man who is not reading the script…one Joshua Clottey, because everyone is hoping that they will get to see a fight at the Dallas Cowboys Stadium.

Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

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Talk of boxing's demise is nonsense -- The Guardian

By Kevin Mitchell, Guardian.co.uk

One of the obviously good things about the internet is access. It allows us to trade views of varying wisdom right across the world in an instant. One of the bad things about the internet is that some of those views could fuel a hot-air balloon forever and a day.

Take this contribution at the weekend on the Bleacher Report, a shouty site for mainly American tastes in sport. "Could it be," asks Bryan Flynn, "that before we are even halfway through 2010 the sport of boxing could be in its death throes?"

Nothing personal, Bryan, but this is Yankocentric nonsense. The author thinks the sport is doomed: a) if Joshua Clottey beats Manny Pacquiao; b) if Shane Mosley beats Floyd Mayweather Jr; c) if Mayweather Jr beats Mosley and has nobody else to fight; and d) if Pacquiao wins and retires.

There is, it seems, nobody else "out there" capable of saving the sport. "Out there", in this case, is defined by the shores of the United States. We will have to see if David Haye can persuade Mr Flynn and like-minded experts to think otherwise by doing a number on John Ruiz in faraway Manchester next month.

I expect Dagenham's Kevin Mitchell to establish himself as a star if he beats Michael Katsidis for the lightweight title in London in May. And who's to say Germany's Arthur Abraham or Nottingham's Carl Froch won't win Showtime's Super Six series for the super-middleweights?

Maybe Amir Khan will look spectacular against Paulie Malignaggi at Madison Square Garden in May and go after Junior Witter's conqueror, Devon Alexander, who stopped Juan Urango impressively on Saturday night and who holds two of the other light-welterweight belts now.

There are scores of good fighters and good fights "out there", if you look for them. There is no denying America is still the centre of boxing. It is where most of the money is. But it is not necessarily where most of the common sense is.

Get yourself a passport, buddy.

Hidden treasures

If your first memories are your strongest, I am stuck with Sugar Ray Robinson in my head forever as the template for the perfect boxer. I could have done worse.

Jim Jacobs, who went on to be Mike Tyson's trainer, did a lot of the eerily disconnected voiceovers on Greatest Fights Of The Century, the priceless collection of old films he and his business partner Bill Cayton put together in a television package which went around the world and which served as sort of an Open University course on the sport.

Over many years of trawling archives – mainly in Europe, where a lot of the old American fight films had ended up because it was illegal to transport them across state boundaries in the United States – Jacobs and Cayton compiled snippets and even some complete accounts of a staggering 16,000 contests for their company, Big Fights Inc.

I would wait expectantly for each edition and no fighter would engage my attention more than Robinson, a sleek marvel of smooth movement and power in a discipline where to combine those two skills without any seeming effort was beyond anyone in our little gym.

You might be able to dance, but you couldn't hurt – or vice versa. This one obvious conundrum almost accidentally described boxing, reinforcing the impression that, beyond argument, it is the most difficult of all sports.

Robinson was its distant god, far removed in time and image. He could never lose. But, of course, he did – most memorably once in six meetings with the very antithesis of the boxing art, Jake LaMotta. Even though I knew I was watching a fight that was many years old, I could never accept the result (especially as the Raging Bull was more than a stone heavier than Robinson). It is said we did not even see the best of Sugar Ray on film, that he was at his most imperious at the lower weights earlier in his career.

There were other artists in that series: Tommy Loughran, who hardly ever lost; Gene Tunney, a ring classicist with literary pretensions who twice took a fading Jack Dempsey to school, yet lost (for the only time) to the smaller brawler, Harry Greb; George Carpentier, destroyed but not disgraced by Dempsey; the incomparable Benny Leonard and hundreds more.

It didn't matter that they seemed so pale and thin, or that their movements were often jerky because of the flickering film. They were gone, untouchable and preserved forever. Nobody could beat them now.

They are still there, of course. Still punching and gliding, winning and losing – and silent, mostly, apart from the odd stilted interview, as some of them stare hypnotically into a camera and mouth rehearsed nonsense.

If you want to be reminded – or discover for the first time – what makes boxing great, seek out these old fight films. Jacobs and Cayton are gone, but the fruits of their obsession are still there, in the hands of ESPN, and occasionally, they turn up in the small hours on the channel's Classic Sports outlet. Get on the phone and make them give Greatest Fights Of The Century a regular slot.

Slipping and sliding

There are several ways to avoid being hit in a boxing ring. Some fighters make getting out of the way look like art. Jack Johnson used to pat punches away with his gloves like kids swat flies, content to wait until his opponent wore himself out swinging at fresh air before he unloaded his own.

Roberto Durán and Julio César Chávez, of the modern greats, were masters at getting in the hitting zone and slipping oncoming traffic with deft head movement, then countering from close range. Muhammad Ali's eccentric backward leaning and spoiling tactics made him as hard to hit as an eel until he slowed down and went to the ropes.

Andy Morris of Wythenshawe wouldn't put himself in that class, of course, but he is one of those well-schooled boxers who knows how to defend himself and make it look easy. The judges in Huddersfield on Friday night didn't think so, though, as they saw him a unanimous loser to the all-action Gary Sykes in a terrific scrap for the vacant British super-featherweight title.

This was Morris's third loss in 21 bouts (John Simpson stopped him in 2006 and 2007), but he's better than that, and he didn't get caught with too many on Friday night. Morris moved smoothly right and left, ducked, slid and parried, taking a lot of Sykes's blows on the gloves on the arms, but was outworked overall – and that is what the judges rewarded.

It is a pity, though, that the art of self-defence is not regarded as part of a boxer's point-scoring armoury. The man who considers himself the best fighter in the world, Floyd Mayweather Jr, is the dying art's most vocal advocate. Lesser fighters would do well to listen to him here, talking calmly and intelligently, for once, about looking after yourself in the ring.

Source: guardian.co.uk

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Boxing’s Finest Sound Off on Pacquiao vs Clottey -- 15Rounds

By Brett Mauren, 15Rounds.com

On the cusp of boxing’s super-season the world’s focus remains on Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather. While we await their hopeful showdown both men have tall tasks in front of them this spring. Mayweather will face Shane Mosley on May 1, a bout that will be touched off on in the coming weeks, while Pacquiao dukes it out with the upset minded Joshua Clottey. I have compiled the thoughts of a number of boxers, and am lucky enough to be able to put together an amazing list of predictions. I consulted fighters from lightweight to heavyweight, male and female, amateur prospect to world champion, from America to Australia to see how they see this event playing out. Some were elaborative, while some kept it short and sweet. See how their predictions match up with mine and your own, and tune in March 13 to see who’s vision plays out.

I think Pac will overwhelm Clottey with a lot of activity, I look for a late stoppage or unanimous decision. I also see very game and tough Clottey throughout. Steve Forbes, former super featherweight world champion

Manny is too fast and elusive for Clottey. Clottey is Strong, stronger than Cotto but he doesn’t throw enough punches. Pacquiao’s speed will be too much. Bobby Gunn, cruiserweight world title challenger

Pac is too fast and too strong for Clottey, too awkward to be honest. I love Josh but he had Cotto and let him get away, if he doesn’t have the killer instinct with Pac he is done. It will be a great fight but I give Pac the edge. Ishe Smith, junior middleweight contender

I pick Manny by decision because Clottey fights safe enough not to be ko’ed but too safe to win the fight.-  Jeff Mayweather, world class trainer, former lightweight contender

This is a much more difficult fight for manny than people think. It will be a hard fought bout with pac winning on points. Billy Dib, featherweight contender

I like Clottey by a twelve round decision. He’d have to be able to take the punishment then work. A.K. Laleye Contender Season 4 participant

It will go the distance and it will go to Pac-Man. Jason Litzau, NABF super featherweight champion

I like Clottey’s relentless pressure. I think Pac-Man’s fire is going to ignite Clottey, it will be a close fight but Clottey comes out with the decision. Hasim Rahman Jr. world class amateur fighter.

I’m Going with Pacquiao by U.D. Mia St. John, former female lightweight world champion

A dangerous fight for Pac-Man because of Clottey’s size and strength but I think the speed will be too much for Clottey to overcome. I’m going with Pac Man and I will be VERY impressed if he wins by stoppage. Caleb Truax, WBF International super middleweight champion.

Mmmm, I don’t know, this is a pick ‘em Nate Campbell, former undisputed lightweight champion

My only thoughts are do I get to fight the winner? Emanuel Augustus, former IBA champion

This is a tough one. Clottey is such a physical terror for any welterweight to handle and he boasts an iron jaw. Still, I think Pacquaio will get by him. Not because of speed, power, or combination punching, but because he’s got too much riding on a potential showdown with Mayweather/Mosley. Great fighters find a way to win and I think Pacquaio will do just that. Ryan Coyne, cruiserweight prospect, Contender Season 4 participant.

I said it prior to the Cotto fight, and it proved obsolete but I’ll say it before this one too, Clottey has to knock Pacquiao out. If you think Mayweather-Pacquiao isn’t still in HBO’s fold this fall you’d have to be punch drunk. For Clottey to derail this event he’s going to have to stop Pacquiao which I don’t see happening. I thought Oscar, and Cotto would both be too big for Pac-Man but I’m not making that mistake again, Pacquiao at his best is not too small for anyone. It will come down to aggression and Pacquiao will win that war every time, I’ll take Manny via wide UD. Brett Mauren, 15rounds, Phantom Punch Productions

Final Tally

Pacquiao: Mauren, Forbes, Gunn, Smith, Mayweather, Dib, Litzau, St. John, Truax, Coyne

Clottey: Laleye, Rahman Jr.

Neutral: Campbell, Augustus

With as many different viewpoints as we have just seen, someone’s call is bound to play out, and we will find out which one on March 13. Please support these exciting fighters as their careers unfold and stay tuned for the Mayweather-Mosley prediction piece in the coming weeks.

Source: 15rounds.com

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Manny Pacquiao will not take Joshua Clottey lightly -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

It's not the fight most wanted to see, and many casual sports fans probably don't know much about this guy who's stepped into Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s void to fight Manny Pacquiao.

Understandable. So much about why that mega-bout crashed over a drug-testing dispute, with $25-million guarantees to each fighter, is head-scratching.

Time, then, to bring some simple reasoning to the sport now as fight week arrives for Pacquiao vs. Joshua Clottey on Saturday night at Dallas Cowboys Stadium.

The soundest logic says the man considered the best boxer in the world will have his way against the African challenger.

Any reason to think differently? A letdown? A visit to Pacquiao's Hollywood gym brings an onslaught of rebuttals from those asked if the Filipino superstar has shown any sign he's blowing off the threat of this lesser-known opponent.

"I wish we were fighting Mayweather this time the way Manny has worked," Pacquiao's conditioning trainer Alex Ariza said.

A gym regular said he saw Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs) unleash a barrage of two-dozen unanswered blows to respected veteran sparring partner Steve Forbes.

"I hear Vegas has the over/under for rounds at 10," said Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, who's been so sharp in projecting his prodigy's latest conquests of Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto. "I'll take the under. We've watched a lot of tapes on Clottey. He's predictable. Manny will be the first to stop him."

The 32-year-old Clottey, a native of Ghana and current resident of the Bronx, is 35-3 with 21 knockouts, and his lone losses have come to world champions: Carlos Baldomir in 1999 (controversial disqualification), Antonio Margarito in 2006 (close decision), and Miguel Cotto (close decision) in in June, his most recent bout.

Pacquiao watched Cotto-Clottey from ringside, scouting Cotto at the time before beating him by 12th-round TKO in November. In Clottey, Pacquiao will be fighting a second-straight true welterweight who has victories over the accomplished Zab Judah (a world title fight) and the late Diego Corrales on his resume. Clottey performed strongly against Cotto, but oddly stopped asserting himself in the final rounds.

"Clottey, he's a good defensive fighter," Pacquiao said. "He's bigger than me [by 2 ½ inches, with a three-inch reach advantage], so I've had to study his style and maybe he's trying to learn some new techniques. But from what I've studied so far, I think he's a good formula for me. I'm still sure he's studying different techniques he can try against me."

And how's that going?

"It is not easy. [Pacquiao's] good, but I tell people I'm going to beat him," Clottey said. "They don't believe me, but I'm a confident guy and I will keep my word. I will make him think a lot in the ring because of my defense. … I believe in my defense. He's going to throw a lot of punches. I'll block nine out of 10."

Clottey has been groomed in his country by impressive natives, including the tough Ike Quartey. Like Pacquiao, he came from a poor family and hawked goods on the street, including fish, oranges and bananas.

So is Clottey bound to frequently go into a self-made shell, stalling like he did late against Cotto? Clottey says he won't, wanting Pacquiao to stay cautious of the size advantage and punching power that is considered by some to be suspect. Clottey's last true knockout was in 2004, at a club show in Laughlin, Nev.

"What about mine?" Clottey asked of his punches.

Roach has openly said, "We don't know what Clottey has. We're concerned with his uppercut and hook, but we'll keep Manny out of that pocket."

Pacquiao, guaranteed $12 million plus a pay-per-view cut for this fight, has some bigger days ahead of him this year, including the election he's seeking for a congressional seat in the Philippines, along with the expected resumption of talks with Mayweather.

Clottey, meanwhile, wants to keep logic thrown out the window. He never expected to get this fight, was negotiating for a bout against 154-pound champ Yuri Foreman when notified Mayweather was out and he was in.

"I'd like to think good things come to good people," Clottey said. "We'll see. I know he's a good fighter. If he hits me, and I don't feel his punches, I'll jump on him. If I do feel them, I'll just have to hit him more."

lance.pugmire@latimes.com

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

Source: latimes.com

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SUNDAY SPECIAL: Freddie Roach's Underrated Strength As A Trainer -- The Sweet Science

By Frank Lotierzo, The Sweet Science

Last week the Pacquiao and Clottey camps held a press call for the boxing media. One of the things that came out during the Clottey call is that he'll be without the services of his first trainer for this fight, Godwin Kotey. Kotey was denied a US visa, and instead Lenny DeJesus will work his corner the night he fights Manny Pacquiao.

The following day team Pacquiao held their conference call. During the call Freddie Roach was asked if he thought Clottey would be drastically effected by him not having Kotey in his corner during the fight. Roach basically said that it might play at small part, but it wouldn't matter as to the outcome. Freddie continued on and said that it doesn't matter who works Clottey's corner, and that he had the greater fighter and that is what determines the outcome of the fight, not the trainers. This is a sentiment I totally concur with.

When Roach was asked about Pacquiao's weight, he said Manny would weigh-in at "147 and come into the ring about 149/150." He went onto say, "size doesn't win fights, skills do." Roach likes to come off as the "aw shucks" type of guy and act as if he doesn't deserve any credit for Pacquiao evolving into the great fighter that he's become. But he must get at least 5% of the credit for it. As it's been stated here before, professional boxing is 95% the fighter and 5% the trainer. However, great fighters need that last 5% that a great trainer brings.

Roach's statement suggesting that Pacquiao is the greater fighter and that it doesn't matter who trains Clottey couldn't be more honest and accurate. Roach has nothing to do with how fast, hard and accurate Pacquiao can punch. He also has nothing to do with the angles in which Manny can get off in tight spaces with such hard shots.

Going into this fight Clottey's style and fundamentals are pretty much what you'd want for your fighter to posses if he was fighting Pacquiao. His high guard with his chin down and elbows in should be pretty effective against Pacquiao. But Manny's quick straight lefts may be able to penetrate it and if he's able to punch around Clottey's gloves with his right, there's a good chance he can open Clottey up. And you know what? There's nothing any trainer working Clottey's corner can do about that.

Trainers are limited by the physical limitations of their fighter. Pacquiao's attack angles won't be such a big factor if Clottey can handle his power, but Manny's hand speed and ability to get off so fast will be. Blazing hand speed often causes fighters to fight in a more measured manner and pick their spots more, and since Clottey isn't known as a fighter who throws punches in bunches and overwhelms opponents with his work rate, this puts him at a huge disadvantage. Again, Roach has no bearing on that whatsoever.

Later in the call Roach said Pacquiao won't follow Clottey to the ropes nearly as much as he did Miguel Cotto in his last fight. He emphasized that since Clottey's best and most effective punch is his uppercut, he doesn't want Manny to be where he's most vulnerable to that. Now that's something where the trainer does play a major role. Then again, if Pacquiao gets carried away during the fight and goes after Clottey on the ropes and gets clocked and loses the fight, that's not his trainer's fault.

Here's a great boxing truth: You've got to have the right horse in the stable. No trainer can "make" a fighter. A great trainer can improve a fighter tremendously. But if a guy can't fight, you can't make him into a fighter. And it's seldom that a trainer, regardless of how good he is, can transform a good fighter into a great one.

Since Pacquiao has become such a superstar and thought of by many boxing aficionados as being the best pound-for-pound fighter in boxing, Roach has been considered one of the few premier trainers in boxing. Granted, he's a very smart ring strategist and is excellent at figuring out his fighter's opponent's weakness. But lately Roach has been quoted saying "I have the greater fighter" during the build up to Pacquiao's fights. And that may be Roach's biggest and most underrated strength as a trainer. The fact that he doesn't try and put his handprint on every little thing that Pacquiao does. Freddie knows that little things here and there make the all the difference in the outcome of fights.

Roach has been a great asset to the ascension of Manny Pacquiao. And the fact that he hasn't tried to add too many ingredients has been huge. He sees the great physical skill-set and fighting aptitude that his fighter posses, and lets the greatness come to the fighter instead of trying to force it. And he must also be credited for not allowing Pacquiao to over-train and leave his fight in the gym the week before it. This is something that Pacquiao and a plethora of other world class fighters would do without a seasoned and top-tier trainer like Roach being there to rein them in.

Frank Lotierzo can be contacted at GlovedFist@Gmail.com

Source: thesweetscience.com

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Let's 'tap the brakes' on this Floyd / racism nonsense -- The Examiner

By Matt Stolow, Examiner.com

DALLAS, TX - I was talking with a few local fans that came to the Media Day for Dallas super bantamweight Roberto Marroquin Wednesday afternoon at the Maple Avenue Boxing Gym.

They got in because no Rob Peters East exists yet for Marroquin. OK that's sort of an inside joke as Rob is head of security at the Hollywood Wild Card.

Anyway, Marroquin is on the televised portion of the Pacquiao vs. Clottey card and these fans were pretty wired - in to the days boxing news.

When talk of Floyd Mayweather, Jr. popped up, as it did a few times in our conversation, these fans, that were Mexican, spoke only of Mayweather in a reverent tone meant worthy of a great boxer.

Now the LA presser would occur 24 hours later, but there weren't any negative comments about Floyd in or out of the ring from among the most knowledgeable and neutral fans I have ever spoken to.

So I say let's tap the brakes on this ugly racist talk until the facts are out for all to see. And maybe let's not bring it up again anyway because it serves no moral purpose. Don't we have enough to write about without stirring up what can't be substantiated? Maybe it adds hits or page views but it doesn't sell tickets nor bring the fight we all want to see closer.

Ultimately it turns off readers, fans, and fighters.

What we have are writers taking bits and pieces from other closer to the scene reports and wrapping a controversial headline and ending around it and declaring it journalism.

It ain't journalism. It's a form of craft though, but not worthy of constitutional rights.

Then the accused reporter says it's his opinion and he can write whatever he or she wants. That's how World War II started and I thought we were passed that by the year 2010.

If you don't like Floyd Mayweather, Jr., stop writing about him and do the rest of us a favor. If you haven't made your point by now, give it up.

Source: examiner.com

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Mayweather spits in journalists' faces, tell them it's raining -- The Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

"I don't really have time to read the secondary sites. I know that Floyd Mayweather gave interviews. And I don't want to get involved in a back and forth with Bob Arum," said Schaefer. "I have nothing else to say about it."

Everytime I try to stand tall, to defend the Forces Of Evil when I think they might not be wrong, they kick me in the teeth.

That's Golden Boy's Richie Rich Schaefer, on the defensive about L'il Floyd completely dissing some Filipino journalists and refusing to even speak to them at the Thursday Mayweather-Mosley press tour shindig in Los Angeles.

Schaefer, in speaking to Lem Satterfield at AOL Fanhouse, is basically spitting in all our faces and then telling us it is raining.

Let's parse this brusque and supremely arrogant response from Oscar de la Hoya henchman:

1. Schaefer has no time for “secondary sites,” does that mean Examiner.com and does that mean all the Pinoy sites including that of huge TV network GMA (whose Chino Trinidad was among those brushed off by the petulant Mayweather? Pray tell what Schaefer has to do that is more important than taking the pulse of the boxing public as reflected on any and all sites? In other words, Richie Rich is too busy to survey what his paying customers are reading and thinking about? Bottom line, he could care less.

2. Imagine if Mayweather and his minions had rejected ALL Mexican journalists, the shock, the horror, the weeping and gnashing of the Goldens. All RRS cares about is his solid information that the mercurial Mayweather granted SOME interviews. Ignoring journalists from the Philippines...well, who cares? RRS is a busy, busy executive who doesn't want to dirty his hands to probe this disturbing incident.

(See Dennis Guillermo on Pacman's "that's not nice" reaction and the continuing fallout.)

(See Paula Duffy's column in which Mayweather flack Kelly Swanson, respected boxing veteran who got her start working with Riddick Bowe and his mercurial promoter Rock Newman, contends that Mayweather refused to discuss Pacquiao or drug testing with ANYBODY Thursday in Los Angeles.)

3. RRS doesn't want to play verbal volleyball with Arum on this isssue because he knows Arum is in the right, not always, but is in the right but this time. On this issue, he is absolutely correct. Having just spent five successive days at Manny Pacquiao's Wild Card workouts, I did not see a journalist of any nationality, race, creed or religion (“No Buddhists or Mormons Allowed”), even those miserable wretches from the “secondary sites” were freely admitted and even on days besides the Media/Open Workout designated day. Basically, what I saw at Pacquiao Central was free, untramelled access for ALL boxing journalists. No questions, no subject was deemed taboo.

4. Schaefer dismisses the whole topic as in it's worthy of my important time and energy, he is such a puffed up important guy, you see. So what if a few guys from a Third World nation got no time from Mayweather, who really cares?

Schaefer is right about one thing, now it's time to let this issue go. Someone said the Pinoy journalists were late for the presser and that's why they were brushed pff by Mayweather. He couldn't spare a few minutes for guys who flew all the way from Manila to get to LA?

5 .But you Filipinos, whether you are journalists or just their readers or viewers, are on notice.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. doesn't think you matter. He doesn't think refusing to speak to a respected, fair and balanced guy like Trinidad, someone who has millions upon millions of viewers, is any major deal.

Maybe you should not forget this public slight.

Maybe you can return the favor to him and to Golden Boy.

It might be impertinent of me to ask but when will Oscar The Grouch speak out, give his take on the situation?

My guess would be May, June or July...when Oscar hears about it!

By then, Oscar may have perused even the secondary sites, lol.

For Mayweather, for his hired, Golden hands, this is strictly a secondary issue.

It's not an issue of racism, or of discrimination, it's just thoughtless conduct borne of arrogance.

Second class treatment for second class journalists.

I mean, they're Filipinos, not Americans, right?

How important could they possibly be?

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

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