Tuesday 11 May 2010

Freddie Roach: Congressman Manny Pacquiao will KO Floyd Mayweather -- Telegraph

By Gareth A Davies, Telegraph.co.uk

Freddie Roach was with Amir Khan and a contingent of British media representatives just beside Central Park in New York when he learnt that Manny Pacquiao was close to being confirmed as Congressman for Sarangani Province, in the filipino elections, late on Monday night.

Through Monday, updated reports confirmed that Pacquiao was well ahead of his political rival, Roy Chongbian, a member of the ruling dynasty.

“Pacquiao won, and by landslide victory, I’m told,” said Roach. Was he concerned that Pacquiao could now be distracted ? “I don’t think so. It makes me excited because we are now going to have Congressman Pacquiao knock out Floyd Mayweather,” Roach told The Telegraph.

A Deadly Misunderstanding: A Congressman's Quest to Bridge the Muslim-Christian DivideRoach is convinced that the fight will be made, while promoter Bob Arum is looking for a November 17 date. “I still think it needs to happen. It would be a shame if it didn’t happen. We need the best meeting the best in boxing. We will meet somewhere in the middle and I’m sure we are going to work it out,” he added.

Roach revealed that he had missed a call from The Philippines while conducting a round table interview with Amir Khan, ahead of the British fighter’s second WBA light-welterweight defence against Paulie Malignaggi at the Theater in Madison Square Garden on Saturday night.

“I just got a call from The Philippines during the round table. I might have just missed a call from Manny there. I’m sure he’s elated. It’s his ambition to improve his country. I’m not concerned that he will lose his love of boxing. He won’t be distracted. He still knows what he does best. Without boxing, he wouldn’t be where he is today. He knows that. He’s a boxer first. He still has that hunger and hopefully it will now make his fire burn that little bit brighter.”

Meanwhile, promoter Bob Arum had travelled to The Philippines to see Pacquiao, insisting to Michael Marley that: “He [Manny] is different to me than Muhammad Ali was, than Marvin Hagler was, than how any of my other great fighters were.”

“Ali was a wonderful guy, for sure, but I would say Ali was more selfish, more about himself, where Manny is about helping the people, especially the poorest of people.”

“I am so glad the kid won because he deserved to win. He went into his own pocket for a lot of money and he did without thinking of his own financial gain. With all the thrills, all the great champions I have had, this was something really special.”

“I am so proud of this kid, I really am,” Arum said. “I came over thinking he would go down to defeat but he is smart, he learned from his first election and hired smart political people with a grassroots campaign aimed at the poor people who love and identify with his life story. The whole thing is just so wonderful.”

Source: blogs.telegraph.co.uk

Pacquiao and Mayweather have reasons to be happy -- Associated Press

By TIM DAHLBERG, The Associated Press

Manny Pacquiao was counting votes early Tuesday, and seemed happy.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. was counting money, and had to be equally happy.

"There's a reason they call him Money Mayweather," Mayweather's manager, Leonard Ellerbe, said. "He's winding up making $40 million for his night's work."

Money Mayweather Freestyle
Indeed, Mayweather's mood was brightened by the unofficial tally showing 1.4 million people paid to watch him dominate Shane Mosley, which Ellerbe said meant his payday would be almost double the $22.5 million he was guaranteed for the fight.

If the numbers are accurate, it would mean that Mayweather has been in the two richest non-heavyweight pay-per-view fights ever. Just as important, it gives him pay-per-view bragging rights over Pacquiao and perhaps an upper hand if and when representatives of the two sit down to negotiate the fight all boxing fans really want.

If the numbers coming out of the Philippines are accurate, that fight won't take place until at least November, because Pacquiao will be busy working for the government. Early returns from the ballot box showed the boxer with a commanding lead in his race for Philippine Congress and he all but declared victory.

"He was floating," promoter Bob Arum said from Manilla. "He was happier than I've seen him even when he won his biggest fights."

Just as elections in the Philippines can be nefarious affairs, though, so too will be any negotiations for a Pacman-Money fight. Though the common sense prediction is that there is way too much money to be made for the fight not to happen, this is boxing, where common sense often fails to prevail.

Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, tried to get things going even as his boss was wrapping up his campaign, predicting in New York that talks would begin this week on the megafight.

"I think the fight will happen," Roach told The Associated Press.

Roach certainly wants it to happen. Not only will he and his fighter earn another big payday, but a win over the unbeaten Mayweather would both solidify Pacquiao's rockstar status and leave no question who the best trainer in the sport is.

Mayweather and his camp should want the fight, too. If they could make $40 million for Mosley, they could double that for Pacquiao and be forever assured that the Money nickname will live on in boxing lore.

But, like the Philippines election, the early returns are already in on this. And it's not going to be easy.

"Freddie Roach must be smoking something," Ellerbe said when informed that the talks might begin this week. "I haven't heard of any negotiations. There are no negotiations."

Posturing is always part of boxing, of course, but there's reason for the Mayweather camp to believe they hold the early upper hand. Not only did Mayweather's pay-per-view double the 700,000 buys for Pacquiao's fight against a lesser opponent in Joshua Clottey, but Mayweather finally gave those who paid their hard-earned money a reason to watch with an offensive performance that won him high marks.

That could mean everything is in play if and when the two sides eventually get together to negotiate. And that could mean there are more potential pitfalls for this fight than just the blood doping impasse that derailed plans for the two to get together in March.

The doping issue remains as likely the biggest obstacle to the fight. Mayweather wants Olympic-style testing at any time, while Pacquiao is adamant that taking blood within two weeks of the fight will weaken him.

But now there's a good chance that Mayweather's camp will also want more than the 50-50 split of revenues agreed to for the first fight.

"Floyd's on a whole different level," Ellerbe insisted. "Floyd has made more money in his last two fights than the other fellow has in his whole career."

Arum has already said he will not grovel to get the fight and has talked about other opponents, beginning with Antonio Margarito. But Arum said the Mayweather fight will be first priority.

"That's the fight the congressman wants so let's see if we can make it happen," Arum said.

Mayweather has other options, too, though none that will make him the kind of money a Pacquiao fight will. And while he insists he is the greatest fighter ever, he's not even in the conversation unless he takes on the best of his era in their prime.

Still, there's a very real chance the fight that has to happen may never happen. Both sides are too entrenched, and both sides are too intractable.

Boxing could be the loser, but that should come as no surprise to fans of the sport.

Remember, they've seen this act before.

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg(at)ap.org

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: google.com

Kevin Mitchell backing Mayweather in Pacquiao row -- ESPN

ESPN staff

Kevin Mitchell has backed Floyd Mayweather Jnr's stance in his blood-testing row with Manny Pacquiao.

Mayweather Jnr has insisted that Pacquiao must agree to Olympic-style random blood testing ahead of any bout, but the Filipino is refusing to comply.

The stand-off between the pugilists is threatening to prove too large an obstacle to overcome in the bid to arrange the hotly-anticipated fight.

"I think Mayweather's got a fair point with the testing," Mitchell said. "If someone won't take a drug test then there's a problem there. Mayweather's taken the test so what's the big deal? I'm not sure about Pacquiao's reason for not giving blood - that he feels weakened by it. I've never felt weakened giving blood, though maybe it's different for him."

Mitchell, who takes on Michael Katsidis on May 15 for the WBO interim lightweight title, is eyeing up a future bout against revered Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez - who has twice faced off against Pacquiao. "After Katsidis, I want the big names," Mitchell said. "And the best has got to be Marquez."

Amir Khan is in action on the same night as the Mitchell-Katsidis clash, taking on Paulie Malignaggi in his first fight on American soil. Oscar De La Hoya, founder of Khan's promoters Golden Boy, is backing the Brit to become a "super-champion."

"Amir Khan, I believe, has the speed, power and passion I had," De La Hoya said. "Those are the attributes that helped me to become who I am in the sport of boxing. It really is a privilege to me to guide his career into something special for the future.

"What sets him apart is the passion I see in his eyes. Khan has the ability to become a super-champion, a legend."

© ESPN EMEA Ltd

Source: espn.co.uk

Hammer thrower nails USADA in arbitration -- Philadelphia Daily News

Daily News Wire Services

A hammer thrower had her 2-year drug suspension reduced to 4 months yesterday, handing the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency a rare loss in arbitration.

An arbitration panel said it found Jessica Cosby's explanation about taking a "water pill" to help her urinate to be believable and that it wasn't taken to enhance her performance.

World Anti-Doping Agency: International Olympic Committee, Doping (Sport), Lausanne, John Fahey (Politician), Olympic Games
Cosby's positive test came shortly after she finished seventh at worlds last year. Upon returning home from Germany, she said she had trouble urinating and her mother gave her a pill containing banned diuretics. The next day, she failed a random drug test.

Cosby said her problem stemmed from depression that set in after a series of events leading up to worlds. She found out her fiance cheated on her, she canceled her wedding, her coach quit, and she lost her coaching job at UCLA.

She testified that upon returning home, she was depressed. Her feet were swollen, she felt "puffy" and couldn't urinate. Her mother gave her one of her pills, which Cosby said she took without doing any research because she was desperate.

Typically, an athlete's first failed drug test results in an automatic 2-year suspension. But the arbitration panel reduced the ban, saying it found Cosby's explanation of severe depression to be believable, and that "it does not believe that taking the water pill had anything to do with sport. She was not trying to enhance and she was not trying to mask."

In other drug-testing news:

* Olympic officials, acting on a tip from the World Anti-Doping Agency, are retesting some doping samples from the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin to check for use of the blood-boosting drug CERA. The IOC stores Olympic doping samples for 8 years so they can be analyzed retroactively once new testing methods become available.

* German hurdler Thomas Goller has been suspended after testing positive for anabolic steroids. Goller, 32, won the national 400-meter hurdles title last year.

Philly File
* Two local products were among four St. Bonaventure basketball players fined $250 each after pleading guilty to one charge of disorderly conduct in connection to an on-campus fight in which two men sustained minor stab wounds March 21. Junior guard Malcolm Eleby (Franklin Learning Center), freshman forward Brett Roseboro (Quakertown) and two teammates also were ordered to pay $125 each in court surcharges.

Sport Stops
* Manny Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, said talks could begin as early as today for a bout against Floyd Mayweather Jr.

* The United States was upset by Denmark at the hockey world championships in Cologne, Germany, beaten 2-1 for its second straight overtime loss. The Americans lost by the same score to Germany and must defeat Finland in the last group game to reach the next round.

Source: philly.com

Kermit Has Words For Those Who Say He Faked Injury; Doc Says He "No Mas'd" -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Monday AM update: Kermit says he wanted to continue, the doctor says Kermit twice said he wanted to quit.




Maybe I should not have been, but I was more than a bit surprised at the reaction of some fight fans to junior middleweight Kermit Cintron's abbreviated Saturday evening, as the boxer tumbled out of the ring early in the fourth round of his bout against Paul Williams at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California, had the breath taken out of him as his back struck a TV monitor, and had ring physicians tell him that they advised the referee to halt the bout, for fear that he'd punctured a lung during the fall.

Some TSS commenters opined that they thought Cintron quit, that he deliberately exited the ring when the going got tough against Williams, that he faked being hurt, that he played up his discomfort in a deliberate bid to have the fight halted. The commentary was along the lines of what I saw when Andre Dirrell was struck while on a knee by Arthur Abraham, crumpled to the mat, and was rendered unable to continue in his March 27 bout, which ran on Showtime. Dirrell was clearly in la-la land after being hammered by Abraham, and didn't comprehend that his opponent had been disqualified for the foul, and that he'd been declared the DQ11 winner. Commenters said that Dirrell's fall to the mat looked delayed to them, and some said they thought he was looking for an exit strategy, that Abraham was coming on strong, and Dirrell knew the smartest route was a con job.

People, I'm all for you offering opinions, but this ain't right. Casting aspersions on boxers under these circumstances ain't right. The evidence these slammers offered was beyond thin. It "looked" like Dirrell had a delayed reaction; it "looked" like Cintron jumped out of the ring, and twisted his body to make it appear that he'd sustained damage.

C'mon, guys. The conspiracy theorists said Cintron has shown tendencies like this before. They say he looked lost, less than resolute, while getting cut and pounded by Antonio Margarito in 2005. This, though, he went in with an iffy hand after hurting his paw before a tuneup two months prior to the Margarito tangle. This, though, he got knocked down, and stood up, four times against the since disgraced Mexican brawler. This, though, he went after a rematch of a guy who owned him, and three years after there first tussle, again was stopped by the Mexican. Maybe people didn't think the body shot that took his breath away was legit? A year later, Margarito was busted trying to use hardened hand pad against Shane Mosley. Might he have used those weapons before? Should we not give Cintron that benefit of the doubt?

On Monday, TSS caught Cintron (32-3-1) in good spirits on the phone. His kids played, and shrieked without a care as the boxer gave the lowdown on the strange ending to the Williams bout.

"I'm doing good," he said. "I'm feeling great. I don't feel down, I thought I won." The judges said different, however, with two giving Williams the win after three rounds plus completed. "I do feel disgusted by the situation, the way the doctors took it to another level, the way they treated me. I was allowed five minutes to recover, and I never got that."

The doctor who took the lead, Paul Wallace, according to Cintron, "right away told me the fight was over." The boxer said his back hit a TV monitor, and took his breath away. "That's what I was trying to recover from. I was trying to catch my breathing. I told the doctors, 'I want to fight.'" They were holding my head down, and said I needed to get to the ER. They were being cautious, OK, but they were over-exagerrating the whole situation. They said, 'You might have a punctured lung.' That was over-exaggerated."

And to the commenters who accused him of doing a WWE style leap and acting job? "I just laugh," he said. "They're just fans behind a computer, hiding, what are they good for? They don't know what's going on. I ignore that stuff. They do it to Mayweather, too. Fans or non fans, they just want to be heard. They're trying to be somebody. I know the truth. Only I knew how I felt at that moment."

Looking ahead, Cintron said promoter Lou Dibella will seek a rematch. The fighter said he wasn't sure if his contract had a rematch clause, but thought that a rematch clause was sought, by his crew, late in negotiations. "I just want the rematch, that's a fair thing to ask for," he said. "I was beating him every round, but c'mon, you can't score the first minute of the last round. I felt I hurt him in the fourth. I hope they (Team Williams, promoter Dan Goossen) give me a match."

TSS talked with Goossen Monday evening. He said he was happy with the win, and that the action to that point wasn't scintillating, and no broadcaster is chomping at the bit for a rematch. Cintron acted as if he couldn't go on, Gossen said, and that's on him. "I've been on the other side, with a fighter wanting to continue, like Gabe Ruelas, with a broken arm in 1990, against Jeff Franklin, Ruelas said he wanted to continue, and Rahman and Toney, Rahman said no. The doctors will give you the benefit of the doubt if you give them reason to. I can't say if Kermit was hurt or wasn't hurt. You gotta show it, that you want to fight. Even Larry Merchant mentioned it, that he hasn't moved since he fell. He was at my feet, he didn't give an indication that he wanted to fight. It was a victory, but we would've preferred it a different ending, a satisfactory ending."

Next for Williams if there is no Cintron redo? "I hope Pacqauio-Mayweather does get made, but if it doesn't, we should be a challenger for one of the two," Gossen said. "I don't think we should endure another Pacquiao-Clottey type of fight. Arum is talking about Pacquiao-Margarito, Paul has beaten Margarito. Three welterweights are standing there, the third is Paul Williams. I believe one has to take the challenge up with Williams. And if Mayweather-Pacquiao gets made, then Williams should fight the winner."

Guess what? In typical Libra fashion, I see things from both the Cintron and Goossen perspective. The truth, as always, may well lie in the middle...And I'm also all for Williams getting a shot, over Margarito, against Manny if Floyd doesn't want to get it on with Pacman. Would I feel even stronger saying that if Williams had been campaigning recently at 147, yes. (LTP last made 147 on June 7, 2008 against Carlos Quintana). But I'm more keen on Floyd-Williams or Manny-LTP than Manny-Margarito; I think Manny has his way with Tony in slightly less devastating fashion than he took down Clottey. And since Mosley took apart Margarito, and Mosley had little luck, save for his crackerjack 3/4 of the second round against Floyd, one can't think that there will be much market for Margarito-Mayweather.

EARLY MONDAY UPDATE

We have a case of competing recollections here..."I did say I wanted the fight stopped because the fighter twice said he could not continue," Dr. Paul Wallace told The LA Times on Monday. "He was asked, 'Can you continue?' and he said 'no.' "Twice. If he had mentioned to me something like, 'Give me a moment ... ,' I understand; these are warriors. Any hint that he still wanted to participate we would've given that to him. We would have got him up and given him a second evaluation." Yesterday, Kermit said that was not the case. Unless some late in the game home video of the interplay between Cintron and Wallace exists, we may never get to the bottom of this controversy.

Source: thesweetscience.com

Manny Pacquiao's rage against the machine: Like whipping Mayweather, Mosley, Margarito -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

MICHAEL MARLEY'S PHILIPPINE DIARY, PART 24:


What I Learned At Philippine National Elections, 2010

GENERAL SANTOS CITY—I doubted but then I came and I saw.

I was unsure as to whether political novice Manny Pacquiao, a fistfighter first and foremost albeit the best in the world including anyone named Floyd Mayweather, could demolish the deeply entrenched, dynastic political machinery known as the Chiongbians.

In rural, poverty stricken Sarangani Province, the Chiongbian clan, in cahoots the also rich and powerful Alcantra and Dominguez clans (an incestual group to be sure), has had a two decades long jron grip on everything from bullets to ballots, from fishing to farming and from electrical power to mining.

Pacman knocking out the Triad of Chiongbian-Alcantra-Dominguez?

In a political vein translated to boxing, that would be like Manny knocking out Mayweather, Shane Mosley and Antonio Margarito on the same night.

Pacquiao, a measly millionaire competing with longtime billionaires, was like a mouse attacking an elephant, like some Joe Blow trying to topple the Mayor Daley regime in Chicago or to defeat a Kennedy in Massachusetts. It could be compared to battling someone named Bush deep in the heart of Texas.

I doubted, I came, I saw, I believe as Pacquiao, learning valuable lessons from his electoral spanking in hometown Gensan at the hands of clever Dazzling Darlene Antonino-Custodio in a Congressional mismatch in 2007, was intelligent enough to put together a team of James Carville, Rahm Emmanuel, Donna Brazile types, veterans of Pinoy politics.

Now, in the wake of a resounding victory which may wind up a 2 to 1 ballot battering, Pacquiao must render unto Cesar what is Cesar's.

In this case, Cesar is a bright fellow named Cesar Y. Yamuta, a Borneo native and political operative who now works out of Iligan City.

Yamuta, working closely with Mayor Tanny Pepito and Zaldy Du, spearheaded the People's Champ Movement with Pacquiao as its standardbearer.

In the wee hours Tuesday morning, at the so called “Pacquiao Pentagon” fortress where a team of youthful workers worked the phones and computers tabulating results, Yamuta explained to me and promoter Bob Arum the winning strategy.

“We aimed our Pacquiao pitch at the poorest of the people in Sarangani, the masses of the people who have gotten nothing out of the established powers that used to be,” Yamuta said.

“Our message was simple, we asked the poorest people, 'Is Manny your idol? If he is your idol, then you should help him so he can go to Congress and help you.' We asked every person who respinded favorably to that to extend our reach, we asked them to reach out to 10 other people with the same mesaage.”

Personally, I saw if not understood the efficacy of Pacman's emotional but also factual appeal to the pobrecitos in Saragani.

When Manny thumped his chest and spoke of sleeping on the street, of peddling cigarettes to get a bowl of rice, of having next to nothing in terms of creature comforts, the “least of them” got the message.

Here is a boxing idol who has not forgotten from whence he came and who might be able to deliver a hospital, school supplies and free medicatuions in a Third World country where it is often said the majority of the people exists on less than $5 per day.

They came to see their ring hero, they listened intently and then they turned out in droves at the polling places despite some scattered reports of harrassment from the other side.

The people of Sarangani have not merely spoken.

They certainly did not whisper.

They shouted it from the rooftops of tin shacks and straw huts, from the rice fields and the tuna fishing boats.

Pacquiao is The People's Champion and The People's Choice.

All hail the Honorable Congressman from the 15th Congressional District.

Or, as he was referrred to by his happy supporters Monday night and into Tuesday, Landslide Manny.

I doubted, I came, I saw.

I consumed kinilaw, balut and quaffed frosty San Miguel Light.

I believe.

Massive popularity, genuine humility, absolute sincerity. His message ran loud and it rang true.

How long before Manny Pacquiao becomes president of the Philippines?

Not long, not long at all.

You can make book on that.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

It may not be unanimous, but Manny Pacquiao wins his biggest decision yet -- Los Angeles Times

By Bill Dwyre, Los Angeles Times

Manny Pacquiao casts his vote during elections in the Philippines on Monday, when the world welterweight boxing champion won a seat in Congress from the Sarangani province. (Associated Press / May 10, 2010)




From General Santos City, Philippines

The polls close in 30 minutes and the congressional candidate is getting a rubdown on the couch.

It is the last calm before the chaos. In the next 24 hours, his biggest prayer will come true.

It is Monday, Election Day in the Philippines, and there are several ways to describe what goes on here. "Bizarre" works.

The only reason you are reading about this in the sports pages is that the congressional candidate is one of the greatest boxers of all time. To win this election, as he has all his fights since 2005 and 51 of his 56 overall, would be to make history. After all, when was the last time a world-renowned athlete, in his prime, caucused and clenched at the same time?

Manny Pacquiao is on the couch in the family room of his home. They call it The Mansion. It is very nice, but would turn no heads in Beverly Hills. As a young woman named Rachel works his calves and thighs through his blue jeans, Pacquiao juggles several cellphones and a portable radio. Reports are coming in from the field. He is optimistic.

The TV drones on in the background. For hours, the same crawls have drifted across the bottom of the screen: Three voting machines have malfunctioned somewhere. . . . Voting lines are four hours long somewhere else. . . . Manny Pacquiao cast his vote in Sarangani.

This is the first time they have used electronic voting machines in the Philippines. Next up, the introduction of the Easel. There is controversy everywhere. Many hate this newfangled idea, even though a few results of the last big election in 2007, from a hand-counted vote, were reversed as recently as two months ago.

The new setup has people filling out long ballots and inserting them into a machine that resembles a paper shredder. Greasy or smudged hands could void the ballot. Same thing if it's not inserted exactly as the guides on the machine indicate.

Controversy is the order of the day, at least according to TV. It has a bumbling Inspector Clouseau feel to it. Save us, Peter Sellers.

So confident was the man from a company called Smartmatic that created the voting system, that he handed his passport over to Philippine officials late last week. It was quickly accepted.

The Election Day holiday drones on through early afternoon with few developments. Nothing is happening and Philippine television breathlessly reports all of it.

Upstairs, the candidate naps, then emerges about 4:30. He takes command of a dining room table and plops down three cellphones and a walkie-talkie. He is quickly upstaged by his 16-month-old daughter, whose name works perfectly as a description. Dark-eye, cute-as-bug Queen Pacquiao sits in her daddy's lap and tries to get her own answers out of the walkie-talkie.

"She's an American," Pacquiao says. "She was born in Los Angeles."

By 6:30, rubdown time, the day is looking up. Incoming calls bring optimism. It is huge news. Also shocking. His opponent is from one of the most powerful families in the Philippines.

At one point, a smiling Pacquiao puts down his mobile toys and declares that his team has won with special tactics. "We hit them with an atomic bomb," he says.

At 7:30, it is time to go. A short trip away is a small cement-block house, the real command central. People work computers. There is a big board in the middle of the room with precincts and candidates scribbled in grease pen, amid wavy and unkempt lines.

A happy mood gets happier. Each reporting precinct brings an overwhelming victory. Disbelief turns to celebration. But there is a long night and another day of waiting ahead. The voting machines are spitting out results at the speed of an Edsel, but Philippine officials seem thrilled. Apparently, everything is relative.

It is not until late morning Tuesday that Pacquiao's manager and right-hand man, Michael Koncz, the Canadian whose family lives in Orange County while he attends to all things Pacquiao more than 8,000 miles away, brings the news.

"He has won. It is now a matter of fact," Koncz says. "It is mathematically impossible for him to lose now."

As Pacquiao has done so often in the boxing ring with his lethal left hand, he has finished what he set out to do. The Philippine people, having balked in his first congressional attempt three years ago — apparently not wanting to lose a beloved athlete to the shady world of their own politics — nodded this time.

"I believe this is the biggest triumph in his life," says Koncz. "I believe it is bigger than any fight he has ever won."

All indications are that he will continue his boxing career. A November fight date is already the talk. Floyd Mayweather Jr., the obvious next challenge.

That one is tough to call. This one?

With enough precincts reporting, it is another knockout for Manny Pacquiao.

bill.dwyre@latimes.com

Source: latimes.com

Manny Pacquiao KOs Congressional Rival; Is Floyd Mayweather Next? -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse


The last time Manny Pacquiao lost a fight was by unanimous decision to Mexico's Erik Morales in March of 2005.

Since then, the seven-division titlist has steamrolled Morales, twice, by knockouts in the 10th, and, third rounds, respectively, during a run of 12 straight victories that have included eight stoppages.

Pacquiao carried that momentum into his election campaign in the Saragani province of his native Philippines, having lost his previous bid at a congressional seat.

But by Monday night, the 31-year-old, WBO welterweight (147 pounds) champion had his 61-year-old rival, Roy Chiongbian, on the ropes, so much so, that the election's conclusion -- much like many of Pacquiao's often, one-sided bouts -- already had been been decided.

Even though the final vote tallies weren't complete, Pacquiao's approximately 90,000 votes out of 125,000 registered voters made it mathematically impossible for the boxing hero to lose.

It was around that time that Pacquiao stood before his constituents at his headquarters in General Santos City and declared "a landslide victory" over Chiongbian, making the Filipino his nation's first professional boxing congressman.

"This is the biggest achievement of his life," said Pacquiao's adviser, Michael Koncz, who expects the fighter to make an official proclamation of victory at 11 a.m on Tuesday (Philippines time). "This is certainly more important than any victory that Manny has ever accomplished in the ring."

Considered among the best fighters in the world, pound-for-pound, if not the sport's No. 1 performer, Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) will be sworn into his new office in June.

Pacquiao will be required to report for his congressional duties in July, but Koncz and his promoter, Bob Arum, CEO of Top Rank Promotions, said that they expect Pacquiao to be free to return to the ring soon after.

Koncz said that the Pacquiao camp has set a target date for either November 6, or, November 13, meaning that he would likely begin training throughout the entire months of September and October.

"Those are tentative dates," said Koncz. "Nothing has been agreed upon."

Pacquiao's next fight, if it comes off, could be against 33-year-old, unbeaten Floyd Mayweather Jr. (41-0, 25 KOs), who is coming off of a May 1, unanimous decision over 38-year-old, WBA welterweight titlist, Shane Mosley (46-6, 39 KOs).

A six-time champion over five weight classes, Mayweather earned a non-heavyweight record, $22.5 million purse to Mosley's $7 million, generated 1.4 million per per buys, and earned a career-high, $40 million with the pay per view upside added in.

Pacquiao is coming off of a March 13, unanimous decision victory over Joshua Clottey (35-4, 20 KOs) at The Dallas Cowboys' Stadium, where he earned $12 million before a crowd of 51,000.

The date of Pacquiao-Clottey had originally been established for Mayweather-Pacquiao, to be contested at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

But the negotiations for Mayweather-Pacquiao reached an impasse over the issue of random blood and urinalysis testing for illegal drugs -- Mayweather's camp wants it; Pacquiao's doesn't.

At one point, in mid-December, it appeared that Mayweather-Pacquiao was a done deal, with the fighters having agreed on a 50-50 split of the purse, eight ounce gloves, and the welterweight limit rather than a catch weight.

Pacquiao had initially agreed to Mayweather's insistance that each fighter by subject to Olympic-style, random drug testing to be overseen by the United States Anti-Doping Agency, that is, until he realized that the procedure would require him to be tested all the way up to and after the fight.

Citing the loss to Morales as evidence -- Pacquiao had blood drawn within days of that bout -- the Filipino super star claimed that removing his blood any closer than within 24 days of the competition would weaken him.

Pacquiao also filed a lawsuit seeking compensatory and punitive damages for defamation of character against alleged steroid accusations, naming Mayweather, Floyd Mayweather Sr., the fighter's uncle and trainer, Roger Mayweather, and Richard Schaefer and Oscar De La Hoya of Golden Boy Promotions.

Mosley agreed to the random drug testing, and after defeating him, Mayweather said that Pacquiao would have to do the same.

Koncz, however, said that Pacquiao's stance on the subject is unchanged, and that if anything, the kid gloves are off as far as any new negotiations with Mayweather are concerned.

"Manny would like to make a fight with Mayweather, as I've said before, But everybody knows our stance on the drug testing, which hasn't changed. However, the are some new conditions, and the atmosphere of the negotiations this time will be different. There are a number of different factors involved," said Koncz.

"We're not going to make any of the small concessions that we made the last time, because the last time, we were eager to please the fans and to give them what they wanted. So it's hard to say," said Koncz. "But again, if they're expecting us to come to the bargaining table and to give in to little concessions, like who walks to the ring first and stuff like that, that's not going to happen."

Asked if Pacquiao would still accept a 50-50 split of the purse, Koncz said, "I don't see the financial terms as a stumbling block."

"But there won't be any disclosure of the financial terms," said Koncz. "Any discussions on a split of the revenue, it's my belief that that should be kept between the fighters, and I've instructed Bob Arum of the same thing."

What does remain a sore spot of the negotiations, however, occurred on the night of Arum's 78th birthday on Dec. 8. That's when Arum received a call from Schaefer canceling the next day's scheduled trip to tour the Dallas Cowboys' Stadium with owner Jerry Jones and HBO's president Ross Greenburg.

"I think that another issue will be the venue. If this fight is made, I think that the most economic thing to do and what is most advantageous to the fighters is to hold it at the Dallas Cowboys' Stadium. I mean, how can Nevada or the MGM compete against a 100-seat capacity arena? They just don't have that kind of facility," said Koncz.

"We've been treated very well by the MGM, and, specifically, the Mandalay Bay Hotel, and Manny loves fighting in Las Vegas," said Koncz. "But it's a business. It's about money. And we have to go where the biggest return on the investment is."

Along with Florida, Nevada and Texas are the three states where the purses of Pacquiao and Mayweather won't be subject to heavy taxation.

"Regardless of what Mayweather's people say, regardless of what [Pacquiao's trainer] Freddie Roach says, and regardless of how excited Bob Arum is, Manny's the one who calls the shots," said Koncz. "In the end, Manny's the one who is going to decide what we're going to be doing, and when we're going to do it."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

'Garbage Collector' Chris Aguilar: Protective eye on Manny Pacquiao, lions, wolves -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

MICHAEL MARLEY'S PHILIPPINE DIARY, PART 23:


YOU'VE HEARD OF WILD SAMOANS? CHRIS AGUILAR IS BIG, BAD BUT MILD SAMOAN AND PERSONAL MINDER (BODYGUARD) OF WORLD CHAMPION BOXER-CONGRESSMAN FROM SARANGANI, MANNY PACQUIAO

GENERAL SANTOS CITY—Chris Aguilar, formerly a pro wrestler and then a movie actor and bodyguard to the stars, is a quiet but vital part of the always growing Manny Pacquiao team.

You've heard of the old tag team, the Wild Samoans?

You might call Manila resident Aguilar, who provided muscle without bustle for the Marcos regime for two decades in power, the Mild Samoan.

He says he was also one of many Muhammad Ali bodyguards when Ali fought Joe Frazier in the "Thrilla In Manila" back in 1975, even though he was just 16 years old.

Aguilar walks softly but, when you take one look at his bulky frame, you know he's not a man to be messed about.

SILVER STAR MANNY PACQUIAO "RISING SUN" RED SHIRT LARGE“They called me the Garbage Collector back then, I wrestled during the 1980s,” Aguilar said Tuesday in the wake of employer Pacman's sensational, landslide Congressional victory over billionaire Roy Chiongbian in Sarangani Province.

“I was a human garbage collector, taking out all the trash,” Aguilar says, with a smile. “I was in the ring with Jimmy Superfly Snuka, Captain Lou Albano and that era of guys. Then I started working in movies with Chuck Norris, Christopher Walken, Robert Duvall and other big name stars. I worked on the movie, Apocalypse Now."

Keeping a minder's eye on celebrities is one thing while quietly tending to Pacquiao is another, Aguilar explained.

“I stay in the background with Manny and just do my job. I don't want people to be jealous or envious of me. I see a lot of lions and wolves around him but I don't get involved in that.”

Aguilar worked Monday as a Pacquiao pollwatcher in the province and was an eyewitness as the fighter rolled to a 2 to 1 victory over the entrenched for 20 plus years Chingbian machine in either six or seven of the key districts.

Chiongbian was expected to concede defeat later Tuesday, in late morning or early afternoon, but Comelec, which runs elections in the archipelago, may beat the beaten favorite to the punch, certifying the results any minute now.

At 1:30 am, in the wee hours Tuesday, Pacman had 53,727 votes to his foe's 24,305 and that seemed irreversible with 66.75 percent of all precincts reporting.

Manny may have eked out a victory in Alabel but it was clear he cleaned Chiongbian's clock in Glan and Kiamba. Manny also rolled up big margins in Maasim, Maitum, Malapatan and in Malugnon, the our M's.

Aguilar thinks it was a smashing victory for the little people as they now have a new voice from the new generation to fight their battles in the lower house in Manila.

“This is the work of God, I say. This was a battle between the dark side and the light side. God would not allow anymore control by the others. The people of Sarangani will suffer no more.

“Now Manny is happy, Manny is smiling and Manny will keep the promises he made.

“Now the people have someone who will stand up for them because the others had their time, all the way to the Marcos regime.”

Aguilar compared the electoral landslide to Pacquiao grabbing an eight world title belt.

“This is Manny's eighth title, it really is,” Aguilar said. “I would give my life to my Big Boss as I call Manny. He is a very good and very generous person. I told voters in Saragani don't miss this chance as it is a one in a million chance.”

Aguilar hooked up with Pacquiao in Manila in 2003 just after the fighter's last ring defeat, a loss to Mexican icon Erik Morales.

Aguilar said some sort of divine inspiration caused him to walk to Pacman's Manila home.

“I went there and he came home, I knew he was a very kind person and I needed some help, some partime work then.

“It was only Manny, (wife) Jinkee and their driver back then. I spoke with Manny and finally said, 'Hey, Big Boss, can I have permission to leave?' He told me he would use my services and he gave me 5,000 peros on the spot.”

Aguilar pointed out that the Pacman voting tsunami also carried several of his affiliated mayoral candidates to victory.

Brighter times loom in poverty stricken, very rural Sarangani, Aguilar said.

“Manny also has many rich friends in America who will help him in Sarangani. He will make tourism big there, he wants to put in a port of entry to boost tourism. I may have to start putting on my VIP suit.”

The last line was a joke as Aguilar keeps a protective eye on Pacman while he is casually dressed.

Speculation is already rife that Congress is the first step to a presidential bid, maybe six years away, for the nation's most popular personality.

“If it is God's will, then it will happen that way,” Aguilar said. “It took Manny to stand up and end the monopoly of interests in Sarangani.”

The approachable Aguilar, who asks one and all to refer to him as “agow” meaning cousin, plans to be there, keeping a watchful eye on his Big Boss all the way.

Lions and wolves, beware, the “Garbage Collector” is on the job for Pacquiao.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Manny Pacquiao Declares 'Landslide' Congressional Win in Philippines -- FanHouse

By Nancy Gay, FanHouse

GENERAL SANTOS CITY, Philippines -- Manny Pacquiao. Congressman in the Republic of the Philippines.

The current WBO welterweight boxing champion and seven-time title holder scored the most personally satisfying win of his life in his birthplace in the country's national elections early Tuesday morning, soundly defeating a heavily favored candidate, Roy Chiongbian, from an entrenched billionaire clan to win a seat in the Philippines Congress representing the province of Sarangani on the island of Mindanao.

By doing so, Pacquiao, 31, becomes the first professional boxer to hold national public office while still active in the ring. After his victory in the Philippines' first fully electronic national elections was deemed largely official by early Tuesday morning, Pacquiao felt confident enough to declare victory over Chiongbian, 61.

Earlier, as election results came into his campaign office, the country's most famous athlete had no doubt.

For, even though the final vote tallies weren't complete, Pacquiao's approximately 90,000 votes out of 125,000 registered voters made it mathematically impossible for the boxing hero to lose.

"This is the biggest achievement of Manny's life. More than any boxing match," said Pacquiao's adviser, Michael Koncz, adding that Pacquiao will make an official proclamation of victory at 11 a.m local time Tuesday.

"It's a landslide!" an ecstatic Pacquiao, clad in jeans, sneakers and a Lacoste polo shirt, said excitedly 90 minutes after the polls closed nationwide Monday at 7 p.m., marking the conclusion of an electronic voting process that was surprisingly smooth despite scattered reports of violent uprisings, random attacks and at least six killings during the final days of voting.

Widespread campaign violence and murders have marred and disrupted previous national elections in this country.

Pacquiao's confidence Monday night stemmed from polling results relayed directly to him on mobile phones and powerful two-way radios by his poll watchers stationed throughout Sarangani's 379 clustered precincts. All of them were instructed to read results as they were reported electronically to the Philippines Commission on Elections, or Comelec.

Pacquiao, along with other Sarangani candidates running on his People's Champ Movement (PCM) party ticket, packed his campaign headquarters at a small house just outside the General Santos City center.

Outside, you'd never know the house contained a computerized nerve center of flat screen monitors, multiple computer banks and walls covered with detailed precinct maps and specific campaign strategies for each area.

Defeated soundly in his previous attempt at public office, a poorly run 2007 congressional campaign in the province of South Cotabato that saw him lose to the Antonino-Custodio political clan that runs General Santos City, Pacquiao was determined to conduct a more sound, organized campaign this time.

A well-known ally of outgoing (and unpopular) president Gloria Arroyo, Pacquiao ensured he would successfully challenge the Chiongbians by pouring more than $1 million of his own money (in U.S. dollars) into a highly sophisticated campaign, one that also relied on grass roots rallies and -- in some cases -- financial incentives that would encourage his desperately poor constituents to vote for him and his PCM ticket.

Pacquiao selected a province further south, Sarangani, the birthplace of his wife, Jinkee, for this congressional campaign, and he laid his bets that his celebrity and promises of helping the poor rise to self-sufficiency would resonate with voters.

It did, by an overwhelming margin.

While Top Rank boss Bob Arum excitedly called out results Monday night at the PCM campaign center, he also said he expected Pacquiao would enter the boxing ring again on Nov. 13. Would it be against Floyd Mayweather Jr.?

Arum wouldn't say.

"I'm not here to negotiate a fight," Arum said breathlessly. "This night is all about Manny accomplishing his dream, to help his people make a better life."

Besides, that much-anticipated bout will require plenty of negotiation, something Arum wasn't interested in while his favorite client was celebrating political victory in the next room.


An increasingly confident Arum, however, beamed when Pacquiao burst into the room with more positive results.

"Mr. Congressman!" Pacquiao said excitedly, dancing into the room.

At Arum's request, a local reporter called Roy Chiongbian's nephew and made an offer: concede by 9:30 p.m., two ringside tickets to Pacquiao's next fight.

Chiongbian laughed, but politely refused the offer.

A midnight visit to Chiongbian's home in General Santos City found the favored candidate asleep. He had called it a night.

Throughout the Pacquiao campaign office, cheers erupted when a new result was reported. As night turned into the early hours of Tuesday, voting results slowly trickled in by mobile phone. By 2 a.m., most of the Pacquiao campaign office had turned in for the night as official Comelec reporting ceased until 8 a.m. Tuesday.

"I don't know how to explain, how happy I am," said Zaldy Du, a local businessman and trader who offered his home to Pacquiao for use as the campaign nerve center. "I am accepting no money for this. No payment for the power. I'm doing it because I'm the No. 1 boxing fan of Manny Pacquiao."

Pacquiao will be sworn into office in late June and can fulfill his congressional duties in July. That will allow him to continue training for the planned November fight.

By mid-afternoon Monday, during the first fully automated national election in Philippines history, the 17,000 candidates for various offices were at the mercy of several elements: hot weather, long lines, glitches in the newly installed voting machines and -- of course -- emerging reports of fraud, vote-buying and general mayhem.

Pacquiao, however, was busy at his General Santos City mansion, personally speaking to his poll watchers at the 379 precincts at schools and public meeting places throughout his area, hoping to get a sense of how the voters -- most of them desperately poor coconut farmers, tuna fishermen or laborers who exist on less than $2 a day -- were leaning.

"It's 80-20 [percent] in my favor." Pacquiao, 31, announced, beaming with confidence that he was about to bury Chiongbian, whose billionaire family owns most of the businesses and the power plant in Sarangani and has been in control for at least 30 years. It was about 4 p.m., and Pacman the politician and underdog believed he was on the verge of a knockout.

But it wouldn't be an election in the Philippines if not for corruption, even after the widely publicized $7.2 billion peso ($15.5 million U.S.) nationwide installation of the Smartmatic electronic voting machines that would record votes on smartcards. All the while, widespread eyewitness reports of bribery of the simplest kind were rampant.

How do you render an electronic voting machine useless? Pay off poor, illiterate voters in the remote regions of Mindanao Island and other areas, and simply remove them from the voting populace. Rival candidates would round up these voters, pay them $1,000 pesos (about $21.50 U.S.) and dip their index fingers in indelible ink.

That ink-stained finger -- the mark of a person who had turned in a ballot -- would immediately disqualify the would-be voter. Many of these prospective voters didn't learn of the fraud until they showed up at polling stations.

In some voting areas, machines were burned or disabled to disrupt voting.

Other voters were simply being paid to vote for one party or another. The going rate: either a $1,000 peso bill ($21.50 U.S.) or a 50-pound bag of rice worth about $27.

A visit to two distinctly different voting precincts Monday afternoon in Pacquaio's voting province, the municipality of Alabel and the tiny village of Malandag, in the barangay (section) of Malungon, revealed plenty of funny business taking place.

At the Malandag Central Elementary School in the Pacquaio-friendly municipality of Malungon (48,270 registered voters), people queued in long lines in a driving rainstorm outside two voting machines housed in the classrooms. That precinct of about 950 voters was overwhelmingly for Pacman.

"There is a feeling that Pacquiao is one of us, one of the people, so we want to choose the right candidate to help us and that's Manny," said Cynthia Leandres, a health care worker. She carried an umbrella with the logo "Totoong ("Truly") Manny Pacquiao."

In Chiongbian-favored Alabel, with 41,279 registered voters in an area surrounded by Chiongbian-owned banana and coconut plantations, it was harder to find a vocal Pacman supporter. Some people whispered that they had voted for the People's Champ.

Loyalty here came at a price.

"I've heard reports of (vote-buying) here, yes," said Liberal Party poll watcher Eugenia Manacio of Alabel. At her voting site, the expensive Smartmatic voting machine was plugged into the main power supply of the elementary school. When the daily series of brownouts, or power failures, turned the building dark in mid-afternoon, a motorcycle battery connected to the voting machine as a backup power source turned it on again.

Asked whether people in Alabel would vote for Pacquiao, Manacio was skeptical but wouldn't rule out the boxer's upset victory. "The Chiongbians are very nice people," she said, "very good people."

An outspoken Chiongbian supporter, Roldan E. Gerodius, was incredulous when asked whether he would vote for the country's sporting hero.

"No. We all vote for Chiongbian! We love him. Nobody can compare," Gerodius said.

Why not vote for Pacquiao?

"Manny has been deceived by the people," Gerodius replied.

Apparently not.

In 2007, Pacquaio -- who gives daily handouts of money and food to poor townspeople outside the front doors of his homes throughout Mindanao -- felt that way in defeat, abandoned at election time by the people he works so hard to help in his home country.

In 2010, Pacquiao's people finally gave back to him.

They made him their congressman.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Arum should be inspired on his flight home -- Examiner

By Matt Stolow, Examiner.com

Congressman-elect Manny Pacquiao's boxing promoter, Bob Arum, doesn't need any inspiration. But it appears he will have it as he makes his way from General Santos City to Las Vegas and takes out a yellow pad and makes a Mayweather vs. Pacquiao fight work over his approximate 14-hour flight.

Neither Arum, nor any foreigners, legally could do much more than support Pacquiao emotionally as it's against the law there during election periods. He couldn't speak publicly nor do interviews on the politics there.

How to make Mayweather vs. Pacquiao:

I say let them fight however each wants regarding blood-doping and let the one who did the anti-doping testing have an asterisk after his name win or lose.

Maybe it's not the very best idea out there, but the fight gets made already.

Once you pass 33 and one - half years old you are out of your physical boxing prime. I'm also giving Mayweather an additional 6 months because he did retire for 22 months, but when he came back against Juan Manuel Marquez he was as sharp as a razor with no rust.

There are so many factors that we have to go over again to make this fight. Cowboys Stadium could be available in mid November while the Cowboys are on the road for two weeks and it's going to take that long to get the stadium ready.

Otherwise it will have to be made for after late January at the earliest - after the Cowboys' season. Granted, nobody wants to travel to Texas in late January because its weather is unpredictable.

Coming back from long fights with new champions and losers Arum can handle, but the thought of a popular welterweight politician is new for Arum.

Source: examiner.com

Cintron decision will remain loss for now, head of state athletic commission rules -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

The executive officer of the California State Athletic Commission has ruled that Kermit Cintron's technical split-decision loss to super-welterweight Paul Williams on Saturday at Carson's Home Depot Center will remain a defeat, although the entire commission can still hear Cintron's appeal at its next meeting in July, a state spokesman said.

Cintron's promoter and manager earlier Monday appealed to Executive Officer George Dodd to change Cintron's loss to a no-contest after the Puerto Rican former world welterweight champion became entangled with Williams and stumbled through the ropes, falling out of the ring and crashing to the floor during the fourth round.

Ringside Dr. Paul Wallace told The Times on Monday that Cintron twice told doctors he was unable to continue because of back pain, prompting Wallace to instruct referee Lou Moret that the fight should be stopped.

California rules allowed the bout to then be sent to the judges' scorecards, and while one judge gave Cintron all four rounds, another gave Williams all four rounds. The tiebreaker went to a judge who gave Williams three of the four rounds, although the fourth was never completed.

"If ever a fight cried out to be a no-contest," Cintron promoter Lou DiBella said, "this is the one."

DiBella said he received a text message from Cintron on Monday after reading Dr. Wallace's comments on latimes.com, and the fighter said he "may have said no," to the question of whether or not he wants to continue fighting, but that he was also "gasping for air" at the time and didn't fully understand the gravity of the situation.

"It was a confusing time," DiBella said. "No one was telling Kermit what the rule was, how he had a reasonable time to recover and then decide if he wanted to resume. There was no coherent instruction as to what was happening."

Wallace said he believed Cintron fully understood what was at stake, and had also told the doctors he was not experiencing any head or neck pain from the fall. The fighter was ultimately placed on a gurney with his head stabilized so he could be removed from the arena and transported to a hospital for supervision.

The loss was only the third in Cintron's career, following two defeats at the hands of former world welterweight champion Antonio Margarito.

DiBella expressed outrage that Williams' promoter, Dan Goossen, is hurriedly moving to put this event behind the fighter and move on to fights in the welterweight division, against possible foes including Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao, instead of a rematch. DiBella said he is "angered" at Goossen's implications that Cintron wasn't that seriously hurt.

"Giving Kermit a loss is unfair, and will have a serious impact on his ability in this business," DiBella said. "Calling this fight a no-contest stops Goossen from doing exactly what he's doing right now."

Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

Talks to begin again for Pacquiao-Mayweather -- Associated Press

By DAVE SKRETTA (AP)

NEW YORK — Manny Pacquiao may soon turn his attention from campaigning for Congress to negotiating the details on the richest fight in boxing history.

Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, told The Associated Press on Monday that discussions could begin as early as Tuesday for a bout against Floyd Mayweather Jr., once results are in from the Philippine elections. Pacquiao is running for Congress for the second time.

The Associated Press Stylebook 2009 (Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law)The matchup involving boxing's two most high-profile fighters was discussed at length earlier this year, but negotiations fell apart when the sides could not agree on drug testing protocol.

Both took different fights, with Pacquiao soundly beating Joshua Clottey at the new Cowboys Stadium near Dallas, and Mayweather routing welterweight champion Shane Mosley in Las Vegas.

"I think the fight will happen," said Roach, who was in New York with another of his fighters, Amir Khan, who defends his junior welterweight title against Paulie Malignaggi on Saturday night at Madison Square Garden.

"It will probably be November, maybe October," Roach added. "November's not a great pay-per-view month, but I think it will happen."

Roach wouldn't say whether Pacquiao would budge on the drug testing dilemma. Mayweather has said that every fight he takes, beginning with Mosley, will include Olympic-style blood testing along with the typical urine tests required by most athletic commissions. That means the fighters could have blood drawn in the days leading up to the fight.

Pacquiao believes giving blood makes him weak and refused to do so within 24 days of a fight.

"If Manny Pacquiao can take a blood and urine test then we have a fight," Mayweather said shortly after his victory May 1. "If not, no fight."

Both fighters months ago agreed to what is usually the major sticking point in negotiations with a deal to split the proceeds evenly. That may not happen the second time around, though, depending on how the pay-per-view numbers shake out from their other bouts. Pacquiao-Clottey generated about 700,000 buys while Mayweather-Mosley is expected to be over 1.1 million.

That could give some additional leverage to Mayweather, even though his opponent was much better known. Other than the stadium venue, Pacquiao was the only real draw in his bout.

One thing that won't become an issue is Pacquiao's potential duties in Congress.

"When he fights they close down Parliament and all the terrorists call for a peace," Roach said, only half jokingly. "It's not going to change anything. They'll just announce him as Congressman Manny Pacquiao, that's all."

Roach had been receiving constant updates from promoter Bob Arum, who spent the last few days before the election in the Philippines. Roach said early returns show Pacquiao "winning in a landslide" against 61-year-old Roy Chiongbian, who comes from a politically powerful family.

Computer problems and campaign-related violence, which has killed more than 30 people in the past three months, were the main concerns in the voting. Official hope the results set a new standard for the country's fragile democracy, where government corruption is common.

"He wants change," Roach said of Pacquiao, who lost decisively in his first attempt at politics. "I think it's genuine. People see that he wants to help his country, and that's why they're voting. That's why they support him."

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Source: google.com

Pacquiao should agree to Olympic-style testing, says WADA -- Reuters

By Steve Keating, Reuters

MONTREAL (Reuters) - Manny Pacquiao should remove the chief stumbling block to a highly anticipated bout with Floyd Mayweather by agreeing to Olympic-style drug testing, World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) chief John Fahey said Monday.

Like millions of boxing fans, Fahey said he is among those hoping to see the undefeated Mayweather and Pacquiao fight for the mythical title of the world's best pound-for-pound boxer.

A Guide to the World Anti-Doping Code: A Fight for the Spirit of SportBut attempts to get the two fighters into the ring have been scuttled by Pacquiao's refusal to submit to blood testing, something Mayweather says the Filipino will have to agree to if they are to meet.

"We say time-and-time again, that clean athletes have nothing to hide so why wouldn't you assure that the integrity of the sport you are competing in is kept intact by virtue of undertaking this sort of scrutiny," Fahey said on a conference call to discuss WADA executive board meetings at the weekend.

"I want to say Mr. Mayweather in particular has been a strong advocate that we welcome and we applaud the statements about his sport being clean and doping free.

"We wish him every strength going forward as a result of that."

Mayweather had been expected to meet Pacquiao earlier this year until negotiations collapsed over the American's demand for random drug testing.

Shane Mosley then stepped in to take the Filipino's place after agreeing to have the May 1 bout's drug testing supervised by the United States Anti-Doping Agency.

Widely regarded as the best defensive fighter of his generation, Mayweather recorded a unanimous decision over Mosley, improving his career record to 41-0 with 25 knockouts.

"We were delighted that the Mayweather-Mosley fight agreed to work with the United States Anti-Doping Agency and undertake a series of advance testing of urine and blood in the lead up to that fight," said Fahey.

"We hope that step encourages other boxers and promoters and the numerous organizations that control professional boxing worldwide to adopt a code compliant approach, a code compliant anti-doping program."

(Editing by Steve Ginsburg)

Source: ca.reuters.com