Tuesday 12 October 2010

Redemption on the line for Margarito -- OC Register

By MARK WHICKER, THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

OXNARD – On the wall next to the ring, someone put a newspaper photo of a man carrying a crying baby in his arms.

The man looked a lot like trainer Freddie Roach. And the baby's face was Manny Pacquiao's.

This is the source of high hilarity at the Oxnard Boxing Academy, operated by Robert Garcia, who is training Antonio Margarito, who is training to fight Pacquiao.

The Orange County Register"That's what Pacquiao is going to look like on Nov. 13," Garcia said.

"A fan put it up," Margarito said, laughing.

That fan superimposed the pictures, but the problem is that there are no recent photos of Pacquiao in need of such rescue.

More often, the relatives of Pacquiao's opponents are covering their eyes or trotting to the exits.

Margarito enters that ring in Cowboys Stadium, on a night that has dominated his dreams for most of the past 21 months.

On Jan. 24, 2009, Margarito came to Staples Center as the king of Mexico and the favorite to nudge Shane Mosley into retirement.

When he left, his face resembled a piƱata and his career was dumpster-bound.

Naazim Richardson, Mosley's trainer, inspected Margarito's hand wraps beforehand and found plaster. The wraps were removed, and Margarito's head nearly was, by Mosley's speedy hands.

Then the California commission suspended him for a year, which took him out of U.S. competition.

He beat Roberto Garcia in Mexico five months ago. California reinforced its suspension but Texas granted him a license, and with Bob Arum promoting both fighters, Margarito was granted access to Pacquiao.

Although Margarito is no longer with Javier Capetillo, the trainer in question, he walks under hovering suspicion, because of the massive contrast between his pummeling of Miguel Cotto and his catastrophic loss to Mosley.

Actually, loaded gloves wouldn't have mattered at Staples. Margarito never laid an unloaded one on Mosley.

"A couple of days before the weigh-in, I was feeling very weak," Margarito said, in the lobby of the gym. "It was a question of being too heavy when I started training. I was trying to make weight rather than making the fight.

"I stopped eating a couple of days beforehand. One night I was thirsty and I got up for some water, but I had to weigh myself first. And when I did, I realized I had to take a quick drink and spit it out."

Margarito tried to have a nice meal after the weigh-in but he felt stuffed quickly, and he could not get fortified by fight night. That part of the story makes sense. He got off to his usual slow start against Mosley and then got slower.

Arum and others have said that any illegal substance would have been spotted more quickly in Nevada than in California, but you can understand some skepticism here. Obviously this will be a non-issue in Arlington, with Roach on the case.

Since the last previous fight is always the one that fully occupies the public memory bank, Margarito is considered easy meat for Pacquiao.

Margarito gets hit a lot. Pacquiao likes to hit a lot. Margarito's formula has been to weather storms and then take over. Pacquiao's formula is to follow hurricane winds with tsunami force.

"It's a fight where we'll have our advantages when it comes to the later rounds," said Garcia, ignoring the fact that the "later rounds" in Pacquiao's fights are sometimes the third and fourth.

"We're going to move a little more, have some head movement, and put pressure on. We're going to cut off the ring. If Margarito can take his punch, it will be a long night for Pacquao. Most fighters have given up against Pacquiao. But a guy like Erik Morales, who came in with the heart of a real fighter who isn't doing it for a big payday, was different."

Morales was 1 for 3 against Pacquiao, beating him by decision in 2005 but then losing in 10 rounds and three rounds.

"The fight I looked at was Josh Clottey," said Margarito, referring to a fairly unwatchable decision by Pacquiao in March.

"Clottey was hurting Pacquiao but he didn't throw punches. You have to throw punches. You have to keep it up. You can't wait for him."

The only person who isn't short-selling Margarito is Margarito.

Some mornings he runs for an hour by the beach, with Garcia's other fighters, including Brandon Rios, who is 24 years old.

Other days they go to the nearby mountains.

The kids always wind up chasing Margarito, 32.

"Brandon finally caught up with him this morning," Garcia said. "But he had to sprint."

Rios grunted. "The whole run was a sprint," he said.

"I always enjoy the rivalry thing, the competition," Margarito said, smiling.

He also would enjoy persuading fans to love him again, which will happen if he makes two grown men cry.

Source: ocregister.com

Mike Tyson, a monster in and out of the ring... so should this cheating, drug-abusing rapist be allowed into the Hall of Fame? -- Daily Mail

By JEFF POWELL, DailyMail.co.uk

Universal acclaim will no doubt accompany Manny Pacquiao whenever he ascends into the Hall of Fame, whether or not Floyd Mayweather Jnr ever braces himself to dispute the mythical title of greatest pound-for-pound boxer on earth with his fists instead of his trash talk.

No doubt America's so-called moral majority will be outraged if Mike Tyson is elected to that starry chamber next year.

Yet Iron Mike’s impact on the prize-ring has been arguably even more powerful than that of the Pacman.
The thunderous fists which made this troubled pigeon fancier the world's youngest heavyweight champion, along with the almost unbearable sensations of fear and tension which accompanied him into the ring, made Tyson one of the most menacing yet compelling figures to throw punches for money.

Ringside - The Best of Mike TysonAll those knock-outs, all that drama, all those tickets and pay-TV subscriptions sold, even being on the wrong end of the greatest upset of all time when James Buster Douglas knocked him out in Tokyo, have weighed on the decision to put Tyson on the Hall of Fame ballot for 2011.

Not the rape conviction, not the biting of Holyfield's ear, not the gruesome threats to drive opponent's noses into their brains and devour their children, not the drug abuse, not the broken marriages, not the hundreds of millions squandered on fast cars, loose women and wealthy lawyers.

There will be many protesting that Tyson's outrages should disqualify him from such lofty recognition.

Yet there are many fighters with a chequered history inside and outside the ropes who have been inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Rightly or wrongly, like it or not, the over-riding criterion is a fighter’s contribution to his sport.

And Tyson was the self-created monster who smashed boxing back into the consciousness of America and the world at a time when it was almost dying on its feet.

The hard old game knows that many of its fiercest warriors are born in the meanest of the mean streets, deprived of an education and subjected to a cruel upbringing. Boxing offers an escape route from the ghetto and the chance of self-improvement. For some, this brutal rite of passage takes longer than others but Tyson has got there in the end.

How about you? Should Tyson go the Hall of Fame?
Yes or No?

Source: dailymail.co.uk

“The best experience of my life”: Glen Tapia speaks from within Camp Pacquiao -- Examiner

By Chris Robinson, Examiner.com

Just a few months ago Passaic, New Jersey’ Glen Tapia was relatively unknown to much of the boxing world. Despite sporting an early 7-0 record with 5 stoppages, the 20-year old junior middleweight prospect garnered local exposure from working with former champions Joshua Clottey, Kendall Holt and Paulie Malignaggi yet figured to be a while away from getting serious buzz on a national scale.

That all has changed in the past month, however, as Tapia has been in the news on a daily basis because of his involvement in seven division champion Manny Pacquiao’s camp in Baguio City in the Philippines. Pacquiao is currently preparing for a November 13th clash with Antonio Margarito that will take place at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas and Tapia was brought in as a chief sparring partner with hopes that he could emulate the Tijuana fighter’s pressing style and physical strength.

Unknown SoldiersTapia reached out to me early Sunday morning, which would have been late Sunday night his time, and spoke with much exuberance in his voice and appreciation of everything the last few weeks have meant to him. Learning curves in the sport of boxing are around every corner and it’s obvious that Tapia is soaking up the experience for everything it is worth.

Read below to see what the young fighter had to say about interacting with Manny Pacquiao, sparring the dynamic southpaw, learning from Freddie Roach, taking in a new world and much more…

The best experience…
“It’s been the best experience of my life. I got a warm welcoming from the people first of all. And Manny Pacquiao is a great person. I’m just here studying, studying, and studying. I’m just hoping I can one day be one of the greatest. I’m just studying him and Freddie to see what they do.”

Breaking the ice with Manny Pacquiao…
“The first time I met him it was in Manila. He just broke the ice when we talked and he was so cool. I don’t know what it was but he said something like ‘What, did you come here to beat me up?’ and I just started laughing. We started laughing with each other and we started talking and it was great. He just broke the ice from the start. I could just tell that he was a humble, cool guy. I wasn’t star struck or nothing it was just a great experience.”

Life in the Philippines…
“Everywhere I go is just different. I could go to the mall, I could go downtown, and it’s like everybody knows me. The funniest thing was when I was in McDonalds and I’m just sitting there and I was watching TV and I see myself on the screen. I was doing an interview and everybody started going crazy. Everybody is nice and everybody treats me good.”

From Manila to Baguio…
“The first few days were in Manila and we were in the New World Hotel over there. It was so hot and it wasn’t just hot, it was humid. And we’ve been over here in Baguio City for two weeks now. It’s good over here. A little cooler over here and it’s good for running when we go to the top of the mountains and it’s been good for that.”

Handling business…
“Me personally, he’s Manny Pacquiao and everything but I think about it like this; I’m there for business. I have to go in there and give him the best work and the hardest work. He’s a world champion but it’s not about going to the game, it’s about staying in the game. I feel like I’m supposed to give him the hardest work the whole time. I actually woke him up a little bit because I gave him hard, hard work and he was like ‘Wow’. The next time he came back and he really got me back.”

What people have been talking about…
“It’s not like sparring an average lefty. He’s not like a lefty or a righty. He moves to the left, he moves to the right. You aren’t fighting a lefty or a righty. He just gives you different angles every time. He’s never in front of me. He’s always pops and moves, all the time. He has some pop. It’s like crazy power but he has a lot of pop. It’s what people have been talking about. I felt power in there. It’s the second week of sparring and we have been going at it. We’ve been having slugfests.”

Locked down…
“It’s been cool. Freddie doesn’t’ complain about anything or say ‘Manny can do what he wants’. But when it comes to training he trains very hard. With the people, during the first week there were some people in there but when the sparring started they wouldn’t allow nobody in there. Now it has been more shut down. It’s been locked down.”

Learning from Freddie Roach…
“Freddie is cool. He’s really nice to me. How he trains and how I work out, he knows where my mind is at. He knows that I’m not just trying to be a world champion; I’m trying to be one of the best world champions. He likes training with me, hitting the pads with me and teaching me. He tells me that I learn quick so he has been teaching me every day. It’s crazy because he’s showing me things I haven’t seen before and it just opens me up. It’s a blessing to be here.”

The arrival of Amir Khan…
“He came two days ago. I talked to him when he came and yesterday too. I talked to him when he came in and he’s a cool guy. He’s trained like one time with us but I really didn’t’ train with him yet. He’s not here for sparring but he’s a cool guy.”

His next fight…
“I’m going to leave a little bit earlier. I’m going to leave the 21st to New Jersey. I’m going to be leaving a little bit earlier than everybody to get ready for my fight on October 30th. Hopefully I can get this guy out of here quick so they can put me on the show on the 13th and I can have a double header. Why not, ya know?”

Highlight of my life…
“This is always going to be a highlight of my life. Always. Even if I make it big, like Manny Pacquiao one day or even better. That is my goal and I’m not going to stop until I reach my goal. Even if I reach that goal this is still going to be one of the biggest highlights of my life. Because he gave me the opportunity to come over here and train with him and learn from him. He’s one of the greatest.”

Chris Robinson is based out of Las Vegas, Nevada. He can be reached at Trimond@aol.com

Source: examiner.com