Monday, 25 October 2010

Watching “24/7” while thinking about Mexican television -- 15Rounds

By Bart Barry, 15Rounds.com

Boxing doesn’t have seasons, or much boxing either, anymore, but it does have pay-per-view events that mark artificial seasons. These happen late in winter, spring, summer and fall. This year’s late-winter and late-summer offerings were weak and dreadful, respectively. This year’s late-fall season kicked-off Saturday with the first episode of “24/7 Pacquiao/Margarito.”

If you’re not thinking that it would be better to read a column about boxing than one about television about boxing, you should be. To such a concern I offer the merest anecdote:

One summer, after suffering through a semester of Eng102 at Arizona State University I happened on its professor in the ASU Rec Center and told him what I thought of his class. And he replied, “Boring to you? I had to teach the damned thing.”

PacMan: Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquiao--the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the WorldWe make a mistake if we discount the need for boxing on television, though, and that is why we take a look at HBO’s “24/7” program and its effect. Much as we make of competitive undercard matches and b-side fighters in main events, network researchers snicker at our concerns because they know what we do not believe: Once the a-side fighter is in place, the success of a pay-per-view is determined by “24/7.”

Mayweather-Mosley in May was a more compelling spectacle than Pacquiao-Clottey in March, as we all knew it would be, but not twice as compelling. The difference in pay-per-view sales these shows garnered, if those numbers are to be believed, was roughly 100 percent. That is, Mayweather-Mosley sold about twice as many pay-per-view buys as Pacquiao-Clottey. One had “24/7.” One did not.

Look, “24/7” is not for you, the serious fan. It is for the wife or father of a casual fan. It is about helping a casual fan attain $50 of permission from his spouse or guardian by offering variable plotlines. That’s how Pacquiao’s puppy featured prominently in “24/7” before the fight with Miguel Cotto; that’s why we now know Margarito’s wife hates her husband’s flatulence.

Super fights need that sort of promotion today because there are no longer a million serious boxing fans in the United States. Boxing lost most of its fans when it left network television, though it still pretends otherwise. It lost more fans when it put an additional purchase price on meaningful fights. And it lost another healthy chunk this year when it promised something real, failed, then delivered, instead, something broken.

Which gets me thinking about Mexico. Today, having backed away from the failed American model, Mexico has great fights on basic cable. It’s a new thing. Mexicans are embracing it enthusiastically. When I talk to folks in Tamaulipas or Jalisco, now, I hear about fights in Germany and Poland I did not know about and could not have seen if I had. Beyond that enthusiasm, though, is a coming sadness.

Boxing did not suffer too much when American kids could no longer watch it on public airwaves. That is, American boxing suffered, suffered terribly, but the sport wasn’t ruined. Because of prosperity, Americans were destined to supply boxing’s audience, not its participants, soon, anyway. Not so with Mexico.

Boxing was not on Mexico’s public airwaves for most of the last decade because of the same shortsighted greed that afflicted, and afflicts, things here in the U.S. Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera, in fact, cites the renewed availability of boxing in Mexican homes as a reason for his comeback: None of his countrymen saw his glory days. Unless you were a Mexican with a satellite dish or access to a sports bar that had one, then, you probably gave up on boxing sometime after 2001.

Ten years is a long time. Imagine a Mexican who turns 20 this year; he’s spent half his life without boxing. Now imagine that Mexican was to be the next Barrera. Whatever else he may be, he’s not the next Barrera anymore.

Today, we are told Saul Alvarez and Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. are among Mexico’s greatest young fighters. The troublesome thing is that it might be so. Expect just as many Mexican “greats” to be fed to us by promoters in the next decade as we had in the last, but don’t expect many actual great fighters out of Mexico for 10 years to come.

Oh, enough of the dreary prognostications already! Very well. Back to pay-per-view season.

The first episode of “24/7” was better than it could have been. There were the same old overwrought and overproduced elements, sure. Freddie Roach’s pursuit of anonymity in a mall – while accoutered in bright Team Pacquiao garb and followed by a camera crew – was the best example. But anyway.

The first episode dealt fairly with the issue of Margarito’s hand wraps. It reported the facts of the case; the discovery of the pads, the result of the California State Athletic Commission’s investigation, the revocation of Margarito’s license, and the restoration of Margarito’s license in Texas. Then it gave Margarito his chance to convince potential buyers “he didn’t know” – that he still “doesn’t know!” (not in subtitled translation) – anything was wrong with his wraps the night he faced Shane Mosley.

And then “24/7” went to Roach casually saying Margarito is lying before showing Pacquiao, in an uncommon bit of satire, pantomiming Margarito’s path to obliviousness – complete with covering his eyes with one hand while extending the other to an imaginary trainer. Yes, Margarito’s explanation remains, in the strictest sense of the word, unbelievable.

But he still won’t make much of a villain. He has a sleepy-eyed humility that makes him pretty hard to hate. He is not going to cut it as a Mexican hero, either, though; wherever they found those extras for the car-wash plot, Margarito now cuts things a little too fine, in both beard and palliation, to be a working-class hero.

But this is good as it gets right now. Take it or leave it.

Source: 15rounds.com

Antonio Margarito believes he has received a bad rap -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

Changing his reputation might be a tougher challenge for Antonio Margarito than beating Manny Pacquiao.

"A lot of people already think bad of me, and I can't change their opinions," Margarito said.

State inspectors caught Margarito with plaster-hardened hand wraps before his January 2009 title fight against Shane Mosley at Staples Center. The wraps were confiscated, Margarito lost the fight, his title and his reputation.

Los Angeles TimesThe California State Athletic Commission revoked Margarito's license for more than a year.

Margarito is now training for his first fight in the U.S. since his suspension. But his Nov. 13 opponent, Pacquiao, believes Margarito knew his wraps had been tampered with.

Margarito contends he's an innocent party to deception conducted by his since-fired trainer Javier Capetillo. "There's never been a shred of evidence Antonio knew what was in there," Margarito's promoter Bob Arum said.

What is clear is that Margarito's reputation has taken a pummeling.

Margarito followed a tough 2007 decision loss to Paul Williams at Carson with three consecutive knockouts — including a vicious beating of previously unbeaten world welterweight champion Miguel Cotto.

Cotto, and another opponent who lost to Margarito, suggested he relied on loaded gloves to beat them.

"It really hurt to hear and read what people were saying about me," Margarito, 32, said. "I've tried to let people know this was not my doing. I was innocent."

In the Staples Center's dressing room where the plaster was seized, state inspector Dean Lohuis said Margarito was "indignant" about accusations that he knew there was something amiss with his hand wraps. "I don't believe he knew," Lohuis said.

Capetillo declined to be interviewed.

"They were my hands, and I should have been more aware what was in there," Margarito said. "But because Capetillo had been around me so long, the trust was there … Knowing I might not be able to step into the ring again, that was the low moment."

After being suspended, Margarito retreated home to Tijuana with his wife, Michelle.

"I did what I had to do as a spouse," Michelle said. "Support him, give him his space."

Margarito established a routine of waking early and meeting a group of six schoolchildren outside his home, driving them in his pickup to a nearby track to run, mentoring the boys — even if that seems mind-boggling to those who don't buy his hand-wraps account.

Out of habit, he'd also make routine visits to a small Tijuana home with an antiquated boxing ring in its basement, putting himself through the familiar paces. He was unsure what for, except that he knew little else.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., Arum failed to overturn California's banishment.

So Arum scheduled a May 8 comeback bout in Mexico for Margarito, and he won in a lackluster decision. But no U.S. boxing commission expressed interest to let him return. California even extended its license revocation over the summer, chiding Margarito for training for his Mexico fight in the U.S. without a sparring permit.

However, after Arum failed to put together a super-fight between Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr., the promoter turned to Margarito.

Arum had Nov. 13 reserved at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and decided to pair Pacquiao, the world's top pound-for-pound fighter, against boxing's most controversial figure, Margarito, the Mexican anti-hero who had once been hailed as the country's next great star.

The Texas boxing commission, unquestionably swayed by the dollar signs, delivered Margarito a license.

Now, Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) is seeking a record eighth weight-class title, and is an 8-1 favorite to beat Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) in the junior-middleweight bout.

"So much to gain," Margarito's manager, Sergio Diaz, says of the bout. "So much to lose."

If Margarito loses, it will reaffirm a belief he can't win without plaster; a victory can help clear his name.

"I guess they were thinking it's an easy fight against a guy with a lot of issues and a lot of weight on his shoulders," Margarito said. "They chose the wrong time to pick me as an opponent."

Margarito has nearly a five-inch height advantage over Pacquiao, who was fighting at 140 pounds in May 2009. The fighters have agreed to a weigh-in catch weight of 150 pounds.

Margarito says he's eager to take the fight to Pacquiao. Margarito believes his size advantage will allow him to bully the Filipino superstar and believes the smaller man's punches won't be devastating.

New trainer Robert Garcia is impressed by Margarito's commitment to the cause — his five-mile runs up Mt. Baldy early in camp, his thunderous treatment of the speed and body bags and, most important, Margarito's mission to redeem his name in thoroughly scrutinized hand wraps.

"I know many of those who once supported me have stopped. I know it will be hard to change opinions," Margarito said.

"But I believe winning this fight will change my life. I have the will to prove to everyone that I am a real champion."

lance.pugmire@latimes.com


twitter.com/latimespugmire

Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times

Source: latimes.com

Next stop, Margaritoville: Redemption means taking a licking from Manny Pacquiao -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

SAN DIEGO EN ROUTE TO OXNARD—You call it Oxnard, I call it Margaritoville.

That’s where trainer and former IBF junior lightweight champion Robert Garcia has apparently spread his wings, leaving the La Colonia Gym for one of his own, and is prepping the Disgraced One, Antonio Margarito, for his so called chance at redemption Nov. 13 against Manny Pacquiao.

This redemption is simple for the 6 ½ -1 betting underdog from Tijuana, really.
Oxnard: 1941-2004 (CA) (Images of America)
All the bigger, stronger and dare I say dirtier (in tactics) fighter has to do is to show up at Cowboys Stadium, make the specified contract weight, and then fight the fight without resorting to what he euphemistically referred to as an “unfair advantage” over the Fighting Congressman from poverty-stricken Sarangani Province.

In other words, in this fight between two foreigners (although Pacquiao is now well established as America’s Favorite Boxer with Mayweather being merely the Most Notorious), Margarito and Garcia must be sure there are no foreign objects, to wit plaster or any other cement like substance underneath the Mexican’s gloves.

It’s doubtful that even a spec, a scintilla or even a shred of anything illegal will wind up in Tone Loc’s gloves as this handwrapping procedure will the most closely observed one in boxing history.

It’s a wonder that Bob Arum didn’t try to set up a separate PPV TV showing just for Garcia’s meticulous wrapping of Margarito’s mitts.

You know, WATCH THE HANDWRAPPING OF MARGARITO, IT MIGHT BE LIKE SEEING THE WATERGATE BURGLARY IN PROGRESS.

This could be the biggest public sideshow since OJ Simpson and pal Al Cowlings were roling down the freeway in the white Ford Bronco.

I bet Arum thinks he should charge $9.95 just for that preflight look in, sort of a tasty appetizer before the $50 main course.

But, again, I expect no dressing room crimes in Arlington, Texas, as Garcia is an earnest and honest lad, this I know from the days when Scott Woodworth and I served as his co managers and Margarito is at least chastened as a result of the California commission suspension which kept him out of the ring for 16 months.

I sense Margarito’s shame. It comes through even in his appearance on the first of the four HBO 24/7 programs.

What I don’t sense is any admission of guilt and, if that ever comes out publicly, you can be sure that Margarito will sell his true story and it will happen when he’s well into retirement and no longer depending on boxing to put food on the family table.

So, at this point, I am keen on looking Margarito over, perhaps watching his assault some carefully chosen sparring partners.

Will that tell me more about any chance Margarito has to win, to upset the Pacman applecart?

Not really.

But I’m going there anyway.

I hear rumors that Pacman landed Saturday night at LAX.

I’ll get to the Wild Card shortly.

Maybe I’ll join the vagabonds at the Vagabond Inn, the low rent motel alongside Freddie Roach’s famous gym.

The Vagabond used to be a denizen of hookers and other crack heads.

These days, the only riffraff I’ve seen at the modest place where, long ago, Pacquiao used to bunk in are bedraggled boxing scribes.

But my immediate mission is to inspect Foreigner #2.

Redemption, I used to think it was when you took used bottles down to the supermarket.

Now I know the definition has been expanded and that it can be redemptive (is this a word?) to lace up a pair of gloves, have no cement in your hand wraps, and take a licking for a maximum length of 36 minutes including nine minutes of rest.

I expect no more of Margarito and I expect no less.

Margarito is a tradesman, putting aside all the cheating suspicions of his past fights where there was no sharp eyed Nazazim Richardson to blow the whistle.

But he’s a tradesman fighting a peaking craftsman. One guy's a generalist, the other a rare and unique southpaw specialist.

He’ll get his redemption, Margarito will, but what he won’t get is his hand raised in victory.

Remember, they are both Top Rank chattel and there is a reason Arum beyond self-enrichment that Margarito was the chosen one.

Margarito, he’s the guy who has been cordially invited to lose this fight.

But let’s see how the wind is blowing across the strawberry fields of Oxnard.

Maybe I can match Oxnard strawberries against the ones Hermengeildo Hermie Rivera is said to be bringing me from Baguio.

Time for a taste test becasuse, from what I hear, strawberries go well with Margaritos, I mean Margaritas.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Martirosyan promises to drop Pacquiao in sparring -- Examiner

By Igor Frank, Examiner.com

Not being able to secure a meaningful fight in a while, actually not being able to secure any fight at all agitated former Olympian Vanes Martirosyan almost got into a real fight while being a spectator at Glendale Glory 3, a night of professional boxing at Civic Auditorium.

Seated front row, Friday night, as an honored guest at a boxing show in hometown Glendale, Vanes was having a good time yelling out instructions to his stable mate from Wildcard Boxing Club, Khabir Suleymanov: " Uppercut, uppercut!" Unfortunately Khabir, while battling it out in the ring with Mexican warrior Gallo, did not hear Martirosyan who now trains kids and adults alike at his newly purchased gym, Main Event Sports Club. This timely advice would have saved Suleymanov a lot of grief, because Gallo, leading with his head often, was open for an uppercuts.

The 7th VictimMeanwhile, back in the stands, someone began screaming racial comments which really bothered young Martirosyan to the point of near physical altercation. Luckily security was able to contain the situation almost immediately allowing fans to get back to the battle inside the ring.

With god given talent and a bright future ahead, young Vanes Martirosyan should only fight for money, from now on, but the heart of a true warrior boils over, especially in times of ambiguity about his next fight.

"I really want to get back in the ring!" exclaimed unbeaten Martirosyan, who had several fights fall apart recently. Miguel Cotto turned down a big pay day to fight Vanes. Kermit Cintron didn't want to have anything to do with him either. The latest match up with once beaten contender Pawel Wolak tentatively scheduled for December 18th in Glendale is unraveling as you read this story. "He doesn't want to fight me," exclaimed Martirosyan who is scheduled to spar with pound for pound king Manny Pacquiao on Monday at the Wildcard Boxing Club. Originally projected to go to Philippines to help Pacman sparring at earlier stages, Vanes never got the call. Let’s blame it on bad economy.

“I am angry," continued Martirosyan, who can't wait to release his frustrations against the best fighter on the planet: “I will mess him up. I will drop him." Pacquiao’s long time coach and confidant Freddie Roach has issued a challenge, a bounty of sorts, to be paid to any one who drops his prized pupil in sparring. Stay tuned as Vanes will try to collect on the bounty that has eluded all others who tried so far.

Meanwhile Manny Pacquiao, who is scheduled to arrive in Los Angeles on Saturday evening, will enter his final stage of preparations for a long anticipated showdown with Antonio “Tijuana Tornado “Margarito. They are to do battle on November 13th at the newly built Cowboy’s Stadium in Dallas, Texas with seventy five thousand fans expected to attend. HBO Pay Per View will televise the event live.

Contact Igor Frank at axident@pacbell.net or check out my Southern California boxing blog.

Source: examiner.com

Team Pacquiao takes big hit on HBO's 24/7 -- Examiner

By Vivek Wallace, Examiner.com

HBO's award winning 24/7 documentary series kicked off last Saturday night for the pending showdown between fightin' Filipino Manny Pacquiao and Mexican warrior Antonio Margarito.

With the recent suspension and subsequent licensing of Margarito, as well as questions surrounding his selection as Pacquiao's opponent for the vacant WBC jr. middleweight strap, several backdrops and subplots loom large.

With a number of those subplots attracting heavy attention over the course of the half hour show, one particular clip proved quite damaging, while raising questions about the integrity of Pacquiao and his handlers.

24/7: Living It Up and Doubling DownFor months, the world of boxing sat and held it's collective breath waiting for some type of agreement between co-pound-4-pound contenders Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather jr. After several open air statements through the media, a Top Rank website imposed 'countdown', and many other attempts to place blame on the other party, many walked away feeling that Floyd Mayweather jr. had simply 'punked out' and opted not to face Pacquiao.

When pressed on the issue directly, Top Rank leader, Bob Arum, stated that he "could not get into details", while several other Pacquiao team members - to include Freddie Roach - decided to openly state that "all terms had been met", yet Mayweather decided to "vacation" rather than take the fight.

The silence of Team Mayweather throughout this process led most to assume the non-response was simply an admission of guilt, considering that there was no true effort to clear the air and let their story be known.

In an interview conducted with Jeff Mayweather on July 28th, details of information presented to me by several sources was confirmed. This info was a concession that team Pacquiao in fact never agreed to full-scale randomized steroid testing until the day of the fight like many of their representitives led the public to believe.

For the first time, Team Pacquiao has openly admitted this, as advisor Michael Koncz stated on HBO's 24/7 in absolute terms that Team Pacquiao "would not agree to be tested within 7 days of the fight".

In an era of the sport that frequently lacks integrity, this move was applaudable, as Koncz set the record straight, despite the flack he knows will be sure to come.

As Team Pacquiao prepares for another legendary night, they will do so knowing that this public admission of guilt may very well set an inescapable tone going into the one that hopefully awaits......and I'm sure you all know which "one" that is! Stay tuned.

Source: examiner.com

Freddie Roach: Manny Pacquiao 'Will Dominate' Antonio Margarito -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

FanHouse caught up to four-time Trainer of The Year, Freddie Roach, fresh off of Saturday night's Los Angeles arrival from the Philippines, where the Hall of Famer has spent the past few weeks preparing seven-division titlist and WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king, Manny Pacquiao, for his HBO pay per view televised, Top Rank Promotions Nov. 13 clash with ex-champion, Antonio Margarito, for the WBC's vacant junior middleweight (154 pounds) belt.

Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) will bring a winning streak of 12 consecutive fights, including eight knockouts, into his match up opposite Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs), against whom he is in pursuit of his eighth belt over as many different weight divisions.

The 50-year-old Roach addressed a number of issues, including a rumored ankle injury to Pacquiao, his views on the fighter's work ethic, and also his sparring partners, among them, junior middleweights Michael Medina (24-2-2, 19 KOs), Glen Tapia (7-0, five KOs), and WBA junior welterweight (140 pounds) titlist Amir Khan (23-1, 17 KOs).

Roach also acknowledged that junior middleweight contender Vanes Martirosyan (28-0, 17 KOs) and junior middleweight and middleweight (160 pounds) prospect Julio Cesar Chavez (40-0-1, 30 KOs) may be employed as sparring partners for Pacquiao over the final three weeks of training at Roach's Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif.

FanHouse: How did the sparring go in the Philippines with Amir Khan?

Freddie Roach: The sparring with Amir Khan was great. There were some days where Manny got the best of Amir, and then there were days when Amir got the best of Manny. It was back and forth and was very good.


Being the trainer of both fighters, were there any surprises for you in terms of Amir Khan's skills and Manny Pacquiao's ability to cope with them?

No, I've seen Amir spar before, obviously, and he's always been very explosive. So I used Amir to bring Manny's speed back up. Because Manny had been fighting at the pace of some of the bigger guys that he had been sparring with.

So I brought Amir Khan in for Manny to get his speed back up again, and it worked out perfectly.


I understand that there was at least one sparring session witnessed by Top Rank Promoter Bob Arum during which Glen Tapia and Michael Medina got the best of Manny?

Well, Tapia and Medina are both big guys. They're very aggressive like I want them to be and they were doing their job. Manny looked good in spots, but on that day, they got the best of him. In the end, it was a good day, because I think that it woke Manny up.

I think that when Manny read about and heard Bob's comments, it got to Manny and he made them pay for it the next day.


Can you shed light on the rumors or reports of ankle injuries or those concerning Manny's foot, among other things?

Manny had a bone spur. It was treatable with ice and with taping every day. It's not an issue. It's not a problem with running. It's not a problem whatsoever. And then, there was one day where Manny was troubled by a cold.





Will either Vanes Martirosyan or Julio Cesar Chavez be used over the final weeks of sparring?

Vanes and Chavez, maybe. I'm just waiting to see who shows up in the gym, I guess. Chavez is supposed to be there, but it's not definite. But my guess is that they will both be used, for sure, if they are in the gym. So, yes, I'm hoping to use them.


Overall, what is your assessment of Manny's training for this fight as compared to his previous fights?

I am pleased with his training, but the thing is, we had a couple of distractions in the Philippines. I mean, he was going down to Manila on the weekends and I think that those trips took a lot of things out of him than he realized.

We missed a day of training once because the president wanted to meet him.


Can you characterize what is left to accomplished over the remaining last few weeks of training that will take place at The Wild Card?

The final three week will be two weeks of hard sparring at the Wild Card. Mostly what we have to work on is just focus. You know, Congress is gone for now. We don't have to deal with that right now because it's not hear to have to be deal with right now.

His focus is there, now. When he wants to do it, he shows me that he can do it. His focus is the key.


What is your prediction on the result of the fight with Antonio Margarito and how do you believe that it will end?

I think that we will knock Margarito out along the way. I think that Margarito's defense is terrible. He's slow. I know that Margarito is supposed to be in great shape for this fight, but that's what he's supposed to be. It's a world title fight, so that's what I expect.

Margarito should be in the best shape of his life. But Pacquiao's going to be too fast, and Margarito's defense is going to be too poor, and we will dominate him.


Freddie, do you believe, as you were quoted as saying in some reports, that Manny will sooner rather than later choose politics over boxing?

Well, he loves his job. He misses his job as a Congressman. His mind was on Congress for the first few weeks of training and you could tell. It wasn't on being in the gym.

He's so proud to be a politician, and he walks the walk. He loves being a Congressman and trying to improve his country. And I feel that eventually, yes, we will lose him to politics.


If Manny defeats Antonio Margarito impressively and told you that the ride was over and that he was ready to go into politics, would you advise him to go ahead and do so even though he still might be considered to be at the top of his game?

I would tell him to call it a day. I believe that if that's where his heart is, then that's where it is. You know, if he beats Antonio Margarito, it would be his eighth world title and what more would he have to accomplish?

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Pacquiao Enters Crucial Phase of Training -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

Even though there appears to be a slight delay in the progress of Manny Pacquiao’s buildup, Freddie Roach is not about to press the panic button.

Not yet.

Silver Star White Manny Pacquiao Rising Son Premium T-shirt (X-Large)Three weeks before D-Day in Dallas against Antonio Margarito on Nov. 13, Roach remains upbeat that the Filipino pound-for-pound will regain lost ground when he kicks off the final and most crucial phase of his training beginning Monday (Tuesday in Manila) at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood.

“Too many distractions here (in the Philippines) and LA will have no distractions whatsoever,” said Roach on Saturday afternoon just hours before he and Pacquiao boarded a Philippine Airlines bound for Los Angeles.

Pacquiao and his team was welcomed at LAX International by a large crowd upon their arrival and the fighter will have one full day to recharge his batteries for the most pivotal part of his preparation.

Roach’s heartbeat is racing because he will once again work under familiar conditions, unlike during his month-long stay here that saw him getting upset by Pacquiao’s antics.

Even during the last sparring session just before they left for the US, Pacquiao was still in a playful mood against his sparring partners, something Roach believes won’t be the case once he starts working out at the Wild Card.

“We have three weeks coming and I don’t see any problems,” said Roach, who could not hide his displeasure with the way things happened in Baguio and in Manila.

“This has gone a little bit overboard with the trips coming down from Baguio to Manila and so forth, and it doesn’t seem like much when you do it on your day-off but it’s really a draining trip, a dangerous drive even,” said Roach, who had wanted that the final sparring be done behind closed doors.

With some members of the media and acquaintances of friends being allowed entry into the Elorde Gym, Pacquiao could not help but take it nice and easy.

But sparmate Amir Khan is not concerned.

“You cannot judge anyone from a sparring session because when we guys spar, we only spar 50 to 60 percent if you think about it. People should not be alarmed and you should see Manny at 100 percent and that’s when you know how good he is.”

And as soon as they landed in Los Angeles, Roach predicted that Margarito will not make it past eight rounds.

Source: mb.com.ph