Thursday, 4 November 2010

Manny Pacquiao hits back -- ESPN

By Michael Woods, ESPN The Magazine

PacMan: Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquiao--the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the WorldOn Nov. 13, Manny Pacquiao faces the heaviest challenge of his career. With seven world titles in seven different divisions (a boxing record), Pacman will go for No. 8 against Antonio Margarito, a former welterweight champ who will be the biggest challenger (both fighters agreed to a 150-pound weight limit) he's ever faced. Is Pacquiao, who is 4 inches shorter than Margarito, making a mistake? We know you're wondering, so we grabbed all your online jabs -- from the Margarito fight to Pacquiao's election to a congressional seat in the Philippines -- and threw 'em Manny's way.

Guess what: He threw back.

"Manny has never faced a beast like Margarito! I don't get how anyone can think that this fight will be a walk in the park." -- from Top Rank's Facebook feed

Pacquiao: "Margarito is my strongest opponent to date. But they've said this numerous times with past opponents: 'He's bigger, he's stronger.' It was the same result every time."

"Is it true that Pacquiao is a professional singer? I heard rumors that Manny sings, but a pro singer -- is it true?" -- Posted on answers.yahoo.com

Pacquiao: "I have two albums in the Philippines, and they both went platinum. Am I a better boxer or singer? I think fighter; I went platinum two times, but I'm seven times a world champion."

"Don't get me wrong. I'm a Pacquiao fan for life! But his training sucks! Too many distractions." -- From PhilBoxing.com message board

Pacquiao: "People say I shouldn't play basketball, but I play as part of getting ready for my fights. I don't go to parties. I practice my singing, and they think it's a party. My team is good and solid. It starts with the strategy from the master, my coach, Freddie Roach. I do not have too many distractions."

"Why not give him the chance to run the country as president? He may be the key for a better change in our nation." -- Posted on myLot.com

Pacquiao: "I'm focused on being the best representative of my people. Is the door open to be president of the Philippines? It depends on what the people want."

"He goes from featherweight to welterweight, and he's blasting the top guys. Couple that with Manny's enlarged head, and you've got to wonder about steroids." -- Posted on Ringtalk.com

Pacquiao: "Physically, maybe my head has gotten larger. But spiritually I am humble still. The person who wrote that, or any agency, can come to my camp. I have nothing to hide. When it is time for training, I put my faith in God."

"I don't think the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight will ever happen. Mayweather is afraid of Pacquiao." -- Posted on ABS-CBNnews.com

Pacquiao: "It's frustrating to me also. I've shown I'll fight anybody, in any class. I hope it gets done, because it is good for boxing. To me, Mayweather just looks at the money. You have to provide for the fans. They give us the money we make."

Source: insider.espn.go.com

Is Manny Pacquiao-Antonio Margarito Worth The Weight? -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

On Nov. 13 at the Dallas Cowboys' Stadium, Manny Pacquiao will pursue what is widely regarded as his eighth title in as many different weight classes when he faces former world champion, Antonio Margarito.

Already the WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king, the 31-year-old Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 knockouts) will face the 32-year-old Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) in an HBO pay per view televised, Top Rank Promotions clash for the WBC's junior middleweight (154 pounds) belt.

Dallas Cowboys Stadium PuzzleTheir fight is being contested at catch weight of 150 pounds, meaning that neither fighter can weigh more than that, and, marking the second time that Pacquiao's contract has mandated such an agreement for a title bout. The last time, in November of 2009, the Filipino superstar dethroned Miguel Cotto for his current belt in the 12th round at a catch weight of 145.

Because of the catch weight, however, there are some in the sport who consider it deceptive to call Pacquiao-Margarito a true title fight.

"The notion of championships has already become almost meaningless in this day and age, because you have so many different weight divisions and so many different sanctioning bodies," said boxing historian Thomas Hauser. "And then, you have them being further diluted by the idea of catch weights."

Pacquiao began his career as a 106-pound, 16-year-old with a four-round decision over Edmund Enting Ignacio in January 1995, and earned his first world title with an April 1999, fourth-round knockout of Gabriel Mira at 112 pounds.

Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports notes that Pacquiao has won crowns in either six, or, seven divisions, depending upon how it is calculated.

Pacquiao has earned sanctioning body belts at 112, 122, 130, 135, 140 and 147 pounds. At 126, Pacquiao defeated Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera, who was considered the linear champion even as he already had vacated all of his belts without having lost before facing Pacquiao.

Pacquiao has won 12 straight with eight KOs during that run, having last suffered defeat in March of 2005 against Erik Morales by unanimous decision as a super featherweight (130 pounds).

"When I look at Manny Pacquiao, I see a spectacular fighter who has gone up in weight to face increasingly more difficult challenges. What I don't see is a guy who is fighting for his eighth world championship against Antonio Margarito," said Hauser. "I believe that Margarito might very well be Manny Pacquiao's most difficult challenge of all, but I also think that the notion of a championship is irrelevant."

Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, disagrees.

"Catch weights have existed for the whole history of boxing. I remember that Sugar Ray Leonard won the light heavyweight championship [175 pounds] of the world coming in at 165 pounds when I think the catch weight was 166. When Ray Leonard and Tommy Hearns fought for the super middleweight [168 pounds] title, the catch weight was 162," said Arum, CEO of Top Rank Promotions.

"This is not something new in boxing. The maximum limit for each weight category is just that. The maximum limit. Fighters always throughout history have arranged to meet at a catch weight," said Arum. "So I don't think that it affects at all that this is the eighth title. It's being fought at a weight that is above welterweight and at a maximum weight at 150 pounds, and therefore, it qualifies as a super welterweight fight."

Sugar Ray Robinson never lost as a welterweight fight, and was beaten once in his first 134 bouts on the way to a 175-19-6 record. Robinson's lone stoppage loss was in June of 1952, when he failed to win the light heavyweight title from Joey Maxim.

But the fact that Robinson weighed only 157.5 to Maxim's 173 had nothing to do with his 14th-round knockout loss. Instead, Robinson succumbed to heat exhaustion in the 103-degree temperatures at a time when he was ahead by 10, nine, and, seven rounds, respectively, in the scheduled 15-round clash.

"When Sugar Ray Robinson went up and challenged Joey Maxim for the light heavyweight championship of the world," said Hauser, "they didn't say that Joey Maxim couldn't come in above 170 pounds."

Henry Armstrong known, historically, as one of boxing's all time, pound-for-pound, fighters, compiled a record of 151-21-9, with 101 knockouts, according to Ring Magazine's Eric Raskin. Armstrong won title belts at featherweight (126 pounds), lightweight (135 pounds), and, welterweight over a 10-month period and held them simultaneously.

Armstrong stopped Petey Sarron in the sixth round for the featherweight title in October of 1937, weighed 133.5 in May of 1938 when he beat Barney Ross as a welterweight over 15 rounds, and, in his very next fight in August of '38, earned a lightweight split-decision over Lou Ambers.

Sugar Ray Leonard may have popularized the notion of catch weights, successfully pushing for them in consecutive bouts with Donny Lalonde, and, Thomas Hearns, respectively, in November of 1988, and, June of 1989.

Leonard demanded a catch weight of 168 pounds against Lalonde, who weighed 167 to Leonard's 165 when Lalonde was dethroned as WBC light heavyweight champion by ninth-round knockout.

Leonard already had knocked out Hearns in the 14th round of their September of 1981, welterweight unification bout when they rematched as super middleweight (168 pounds) titlists, respectively, in the WBC, and, WBO.

Leonard-Hearns II was negotiated to a 164-pound catch weight, ending in a disputed 12-round draw despite Leonard's twice being floored.

"The rules say that you can still fight for a title as long as you don't exceed the weight limit, and as long as both parties in the fight agree with it. How can you argue with that?" said Manny Steward, who trained Hearns.

"But with all of these sanctioning bodies, it would be more believable if you were to allow the champion of the weight class to fight at the true division limit," said Steward. "I believe that it's more credible when you beat the champion that way."

Hearns earned six career title belts and "never asked for a catch weight," according to Steward, weighing 189 pounds when he won the IBO cruiser weight (200 pounds) crown by unanimous decision over Nate Miller in April of 1999.

Hearns weighed 146 in August of 1980 when his second-round knockout dethroned Pipino Cuevas as WBA welterweight champ. Hearns then rose to earn the WBC's junior middleweight belt with a 15-round, majority decision over Wilfred Benitez as a 153.5 pounder in December of 1982.

Next, Hearns climbed to light heavyweight in March of 1987 and weighed 173.5 for his 10th-round knockout of Dennis Andries for the WBC crown. Hearns then dropped back down to 159.5 for his very next fight and stopped Juan Domingo Roldan in four rounds in October of 1987 for the WBC middleweight title.

Two fights later, in November of 1988, Hearns edged James Kinchen by majority decision for the WBO's super middleweight belt as a 165.5 pounder.

"Thomas goes from 154, all the way up to 175, and then, back down to 160 to fight a tough Argentinian in Juan Roldan," said Steward of Hearns, who already had lost a bid for the undisputed middleweight crown by third round knockout to Marvin Hagler in 1985.

"Thomas went back up to 168 and beat James Kinchen and became the sport's first four-division champ," said Steward. "Whatever the weight limit, that's what we fought."

Pacquiao's 144 pounds against Cotto, at the time, was his highest weight since the 142 against De La Hoya, as well as 138 against Hatton. Pacquiao weighed a career-high 145 and three-fourths against Clottey, reportedly weighs around 146 so far, and has to eat to maintain that weight.

On fight night, Roach said he expects to see a 160-pound Margarito, who reportedly had to lose some 40 pounds in six weeks prior to his ninth-round, welterweight loss to Shane Mosley in January of 2009.

"This is only the second catch weight of our lifetime. It was part of the negotiation. Both fighters signed contracts, so what's the issue?" said Pacquiaso's trainer, Freddie Roach. "But size doesn't win fights. The bigger [Margarito] is, the better off we are. I don't think that this is going to be a difficult fight at all."

Margarito weighed an even 154 pounds after Wednesday's workout, and "was feeling really good and doing really well," said his trainer," Robert Garcia. "Antonio's drinking a lot of water, and he's really happy."

Could that spell trouble for Pacquiao, who stands nearly 5-foot-7 to 5-11 for Margarito, even with the catch weight?

Pacquiao doesn't think so.

"In our training, we're studying harder and working against guys who are bigger and taller and who have a reach advantage. We do our best in training and with our strategy, and so we're not worried about his size," said Pacquiao.

"For me, I'm just a fighter who trains in the gym and fights in the ring. It's the job of my promoter, Bob Arum, to negotiate," said Pacquiao. "I believe that I can fight the bigger guy, even though I'm small compared to Antonio. We will always believe in our talent."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Manny Pacquiao: 'I helped' Jerry Brown and Nevada's Harry Reid win elections -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

Manny Pacquiao didn't make his boxing trainer, Freddie Roach, too happy last week when he announced he'd be leaving after a workout Friday to board a flight to Las Vegas.

Pacquiao, a congressman in the Philippines, had some important political work to tend to: campaigning for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

"[Reid] was behind 4% in the polls before I got out there," Pacquiao told The Times on Wednesday before a workout at Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, where he's preparing for his Nov. 13 junior-middleweight title fight against Mexico's Antonio Margarito. "There's a lot of Filipinos in Las Vegas."

Population figures show an estimated 30,000 Filipinos in Las Vegas, with perhaps triple that in all of Nevada. Reid defeated Tea Party candidate Sharron Angle by 40,000 votes, with three-fourths of Asians reporting at exit polls that they voted for Reid.

Pacquiao smiled at the thought of how the assistance he provided a major Washington player could benefit his country in the future.

"I also helped Brown here," Pacquiao said, referring to the governor-elect who defeated Meg Whitman by a more lopsided margin Tuesday. "I helped him campaign. I gave a message to the Filipino community to support Gov. Brown, and they did."

Another boost to future Pacific relations.

Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

Pacquiao dabbling in US politics, too -- USA Today

By Tim Dahlberg, AP Sports Columnist

The day after the U.S. midterm election, Manny Pacquiao was talking politics. Understandable, since the boxing champion has a side career as a congressman in the Philippines.

There's talk that one day he might be president in his homeland. Understandable, too, if only because he's the biggest sports hero the country has ever had, so popular that crime virtually stops there every time he gets in the ring.

USA Today (3-month subscription)
But who would have thought that the little fighter who does things no other fighter has done could play a role in helping re-elect the majority leader of the U.S. Senate?

Hard to believe anything you hear when it involves boxing, but this time promoter Bob Arum isn't just making it up.

"I think Manny has to get a lot of the credit for his help in electing Sen. (Harry) Reid," Arum said Wednesday.

Political pundits have yet to weigh in on the effect of Pacquiao's effort on behalf of Reid, a former boxer himself who survived a brutal race to beat Republican Sharron Angle in Nevada. Listen to Arum, though, and Pacquiao's appearance at a Reid rally in Las Vegas a few days before the election was crucial in energizing the city's sizable Filipino community and getting them out to vote.

Fighter. Politician. King maker. Is there anything Pacquiao can't do?

Sing, some might say. But Pacquiao proved them wrong Monday night when he and comedian Will Ferrell teamed for a surprisingly good duet of John Lennon's "Imagine" on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," despite only a brief rehearsal.

Lennon wrote the song about world peace. Pacquiao makes his living in a world of violence.

Mainstream America will learn more about him Sunday night when "60 Minutes" profiles Pacquiao. The exposure is a promoter's dream and a boost to a sport that, as usual, is in desperate need of attention.

Six days later he'll step into the ring at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas to do what everyone expects him to do beat Antonio Margarito and win yet another title to add to his already large collection.

Score one for the ability to multitask.

"Tell the fans nothing to worry about me," Pacquiao said. "The only worry is how we can give a good fight for the people who are going to watch the fight."

That shouldn't be a problem since the only way either one knows how to fight is to move forward and attack. And no one questions Margarito's heart in the ring even if he is a disgraced fighter still banned from boxing in California and Nevada because of a hand-wrapping scandal with declining skills.

In a perfect world he would be fighting Floyd Mayweather Jr. instead. But nothing is perfect in boxing, so Pacquiao who began his pro career at 106 pounds moves up in weight once again to fight Margarito at 150 pounds.

Arum's biggest task other than getting Pacquiao to jet in to campaign for Reid is to find a way to make the fight compelling enough to sell tickets at the stadium plus pay-per-view sales to guarantee Pacquiao his millions. He's done so by teaming with HBO's "24/7" series for a campaign of his own centered on the theme that Pacquiao has been so busy that he hasn't trained properly for the fight.

Arum went to the Philippines a few weeks ago and reported Pacquiao looked "really bad" in sparring. Trainer Freddie Roach picked up the storyline last week by saying Pacquiao was having the worst training camp of his career.

Then, magically, all was well.

"Everything is on track now. We're 100 percent ready for this fight," Roach said. "Manny guaranteed me he won't disappoint me."

The people around Pacquiao better hope not. Though he makes big money every time he gets in the ring these days, Pacquiao will be risking a payday of $40 million or so that he could make sometime next spring should he win and Mayweather finally agrees to fight him.

That's pressure, but there is always pressure on Pacquiao not to let down the people back home. He represents them in the ring just as he represents them in Congress and his stature is such that he missed a day of training last month so he could confer privately with the country's president.

There's a good chance Pacquiao will get another private audience with President Benigno Aquino III when he returns home. By then he'll have stories to tell about his latest trip to America.

He may even tell the president the one about how he helped re-elect one of the most powerful men in America.

___

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. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: usatoday.com

Wild Card lock down put Pacquiao back on track -- 8CountNews

By Brad Cooney, 8CountNews.com

Let us be real here, Freddie Roach was not at all happy with the training camp in The Philippines. The distractions and extra outside of the gym activities that Pacquiao was engaged in did not make Roach happy, and he pulled no punches about it. Roach went on the record several times to express his displeasure with Manny's focus, and put it right out there that he thinks this is the worst camp that they have ever had.

When the team landed back in Los Angeles, the distractions continued. Pacquiao was whisked off to Las Vegas to show is support for Senator Harry Reid (D) who recently was re-elected in Nevada. Both Roach and Ariza voiced their displeasure with the trip right on HBO 24/7.

Culture Shock! Philippines: A Survival Guide to Customs and EtiquetteRecently when 8CountNews arrived in Los Angeles, we quickly learned that access to Manny Pacquiao wasn't going to happen, at least not while he was training Trainer Freddie Roach politely informed us that he had to lock the entire media core out of the gym because he was not really happy with where Manny was at in his training. Of course once Roach informed us of this, we respected it and moved on down the road to Oxnard to cover the Margarito camp. We got to Oxnard, and team Margarito welcomed us like family. We saw a very focused and relaxed Tony Margarito. We saw a focused team, and a determined and confident team. Will this be enough?

The lock down at the Wild Card seems to have really helped because the latest reports are that Pacquiao is back on track. This of course does not bode well for Antonio Margarito. With that said, Margarito trainer Roberto Garcia went on the record with 8CountNews and told us that he hopes that Pacquiao has the best camp possible. Garcia explained, "We don't want no excuses from them when Tony Margarito defeats Manny Pacquiao."

Even if Pacquiao had the worst camp of his career, he still will be a very tough challenge for Margarito. I'm not sure how they will deal with Pacquiao's speed. The speed of Manny will be a very difficult mountain for Margarito to climb. Yes Tony has size and strength, but speed kills.

Recent reports from Wild Card Gym paint a better picture for Pacquiao. Freddie Roach is a lot happier with the past few days, so by November 13th the fans should see a 100 percent focused and in shape Manny Pacquiao.

Source: 8countnews.com

COACH ROACH: "I Don't Think This Will Be A Difficult Fight At All" -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Manny Pacquiao's trainer, Coach Freddie Roach, said on a Tuesday conference call that he thinks his man will break down the Mexican around the eighth or ninth round, using a heavy advantage in hand speed, and will stop him.

"Margarito throws wide punches, he makes too many mistakes, has too many bad habits," said Roach, after telling the media that he gives this training camp an overall grade of B, deducting a letter solely because Pacman missed a day of training in the Philippines. "It wasn't the best," Roach acknowledged.

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the RingBut in the States, Roach said, Pacman has been doing his roadwork, running hills, and is right on target cardio-wise. He did nine round, with three different foes, on Monday, and is now tapering down, to fight night.

Manny himself said, "There is no problem," answering those that think he is too distracted, and slicing himself too thin with his politics, his hoops, his duets with Will Ferrell. (www.youtube.com/watch)

On that matter, Arum said he was pleased as punch at Manny's song choice, calling himself a big Beatles fan. "I have to say Manny did a wonderful job," he said. "I have to say it's something special to see a fighter singing a song like Imagine by Lennon." Roach too gave a thumbs up, saying that he watched it on his computer Tuesday morning, and he thought Manny looked relaxed, and like he was having a blast.

Margarito, asked to give a review, said he hadn't watched it, but that "Pacquiao is a better boxer than singer" and that he should stick to the fightgame. Pacquiao told us that he practiced the song with Ferrell just twice, after picking the song with producers on Friday, before Monday's taping. A source who was present told us that, "Manny listened to Lennon's version over the weekend. He literally did two takes with Will Ferrell and the band one hour before taping the show."

(FYI, I found is surprising that Manny, a hardcore Christian, sang the second verse, which contains the lines, "Imagine there's no countries/It isn't hard to do/Nothing to kill or die for/And no religion too." Our source tells us that producers dispensed the verses, the singers didn't choose their parts.)

Promoter Bob Arum indicated all systems are go, saying that he thinks the crowd at Cowboys Stadium will surpass 60,000, comparing favorably to the 51,000 that packed in to see Pacquiao fight Joshua Clottey in March.

Neither Pacman nor Roach seemed overly worried that Margarito, whose trainer Robert Garcia said on the second half of the call will likely weigh in the neighborhood of 158-160 pounds on Nov. 13, will be too big a tree to chop down.

"The bigger he is, the better it is for us," said Roach. "I don't think this will be a difficult fight at all."

My take: I am going out on a limb here, but I suspect deep down, or maybe even on the surface, Margarito knows that Manny's speed will be too much for him. When asked to compare Manny to anyone he's fought in the past, Tony said Manny is incomparable, and cited his speediness when asked to name a Pacman edge. "I'm going to do my best as I always do," said Margarito. What about a promise to WIN? These are not, to me, the words of an ultra-confident athlete. Fake it til ya make it, Tony!

As for foot problems, or ulcers, or what have you, Manny gave a somewhat lukewarm assurance to fans, after pausing, that he is physically 100%. "I tell fans not to worry about me, my worry is to give fans a good fight for the fans." Might there be some woes he is hiding from us?

Both Arum and Roach said that the hubbub over the 150 pound catchweight is not appropriate, with Arum saying catchweights have always existed, and Roach saying both men agreed to the terms. My take: I'd like to them chucked, and don't think a junior middleweight belt should be awarded if both men aren't allowed to come in at the junior middle max, but I do see their usefulness if it means we see more matchups between more marquee names. Manny himself told the media that this matter is out of his hands, and is in Arum's realm.

Speaking of Arum's realm, the promoter may well have tipped the Senate race pitting his old pal Harry Reid against race baiting Republican Sharron Angle toward the ex amateur fighter, Reid, the majority leader in the Senate. He had Manny stumping for Reid, and seeing as how Filipinos are the second largest ethnic group in Nevada after Hispanics, Pacman might have been the difference-maker. Reid edge Angle 55-45%, by 40,659 votes. "I think Manny has to get credit for backing Senator Reid," Arum said.

Arum always says what he feels, and he didn't back down in his defense of Margarito, who was busted with illegal hand wraps before his fight with Shane Mosley in February 2009. Arum said he thought Margarito wasn't treated fairly by the California commission, which yanked his license for at least a year, and refused reinstatement when he gained a hearing to appeal and regain his license. "I believe he did not know anything of what was in those handwraps," Arum said, and I have to say, studying Margarito's demeanor when asked about the flap, I have edged ever so slightly closer to agreeing with Arum here...But am still dubious.

Source: thesweetscience.com

Amir Khan: Sparring Manny Pacquiao Was Like 'A Real Fight' -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

If you ask Manny Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, Amir Khan did a number on the Filipino fighter during a sparring session a few weeks back in Baguio City, Philippines.

Roach told Elie Seckbach of FanHouse that Khan (23-1, 17 knockouts) "punched the sh*t out of Manny," but Khan was more diplomatic during a recent conversation.

TITLE Freddie Roach Boxing DVD Set"Well, you know, the sparring was amazing. You know, people could have paid to watch us spar. When we sparred, we didn't take it easy. It was like a fight. A real fight, because Freddie Roach wanted us to spar really hard," said Khan, the WBA junior welterweight (140 pounds) champion.

"Freddie wanted us to approach it like a fight, because you don't know what to expect," said Khan. "And if I can go with Manny like I did, then, then I can catch anyone in the world, because Manny is quick and very durable."

Khan, who is also trained by Roach but promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, the rival to Pacquiao's Top Rank Promotions, is gearing up for an HBO televised, Dec. 11 defense of his belt opposite WBA interim titlist Marcos Rene Maidana (29-1, 27 KOs) of Argentina that is slated for the Mandalay Bay Hotel in Las Vegas.

Meanwhile, Pacquiao, the WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king and seven division titlist, is preparing to meet former world title holder, Antonio Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) in a Nov. 13, HBO pay-per-view televised fight for the WBC's vacant junior middleweight (154 pounds) title at the Dallas Cowboys Stadium.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

If Manny Pacquiao loses, cause won't be failure to prepare -- Examiner

By Michael Marley, Examiner.com

Manny Pacquiao is distracted.

Pacquiao is giving short shrift to training, figuring that Antonio Margarito is the proverbial “punched ticket” served up on a silver platter to him by Boss Bob Arum.

Pacquiao is more interested in politics than in boxing.

Pacquiao is more inteterested in singing on the Jimmy Kimmel TV gabfest than in getting into dog shape for the Nov. 13.

Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark AgePacquiao is more keen on selling Nike products than in retaining his boxing's best, pound for pound crown.

Hooey! Balderdash! Nonsense!

Permit this vignette from last Thursday night, around 9 pm, at Pacman's post workout dining spot, at Nat's Thai Food, just steps from the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood.

Pacquiao was sitting with his voice coach, Helena Buscema, and another woman. The tiny eatery was filled with friends and fans.

But most of the autograph seekers had gone or were restricted to the parking lot.

The Pacman adoration crowd has thinned out considerably.

I sat in the back, near the front door, and I noticed Pacquiao in an unusual position.

The 31 year old fighter-Congressman was nodding off and could barely keep his head from using the table as a pillow.

He had a full day of morning roadwork, of afternoon boxing training and of doing stretching and other exercises with conditioning guru Alex Ariza.

The day before, there had been a full-scale media dog and pony show for Manny at the gymnasium. On Friday, Manny would jet over and back to Las Vegas to stage on a political rally platform with embattled Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

Pacquiao was the most exhaused not yet age 32 guy I had ever seen.

If you think he's taken any shortcuts, then you're just fooling yourself.

His many extracurricular activities have been conducted outside of boxing working hours and no one trains 7/24.

If, by some miracle, Antonio Margarito wins this bout, it won't be because Pacquiao did not fail to prepare.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)

Source: examiner.com

Margarito stirs up talks of rematch -- Philippine Star

By Abac Cordero, The Philippine Star

HOLLYWOOD – Manny Pacquiao was busy sparring, sweating it out at the gym, and Bob Arum was busy counting the tickets, selling the fight from his home in Las Vegas.

“There’s a lot of excitement now. Ticket sales are doing great,” the 77-year-old Arum told The STAR.

It’s not that hard to sell a fight when it’s a Pacquiao fight, but the Top Rank big boss said Antonio Margarito has just added a lot to the excitement and even hinted at a rematch if ever he wins.

Manny Pacquiao Pound 4 Pound Men's Tee, XX, BKWhat is being projected by oddsmakers as a mismatch (Pacquiao at -650 and Margarito at +425) is turning out to be dangerous outing for the 31-year-old Filipino icon.

Reports of distractions within Pacquiao’s camp, and news that Margarito is in such tremendous shape he could last a hundred rounds on fight night have made things interesting.

“I’ve been in this business for over 45 years, and one thing I know is what sells in boxing,” Arum told boxing website Fanhouse in a separate interview.

“What sells in boxing,” he continued, “is when the champion Manny Pacquiao is up against an opponent who has some physical advantage over him and can possibly beat him. That intrigues the public.”

Arum knows how to add up to them, talking a few weeks back about the great possibility of an upset by Margarito.

The other day, however, he said over the phone that Pacquiao is in sensational form, and predicted a “late stoppage or a close decision” for the fighting congressman from Sarangani.

Arum also answered questions pertaining to a possible rematch.

“If Margarito beats him then it’s good for Margarito isn’t it. That means Manny then has to do a lot of soul searching. One, does he want a rematch? And if he does I’m sure one can be arranged,” said Arum.

He told the Filipino press in Baguio City that there’s no rematch clause on the Nov. 13 fight because nobody asked for one, but in case a rematch is needed there shouldn’t be any problem making it.

Both Pacquiao and Margarito are under Top Rank.

“If the fight turns out to be a one-sided fight (favoring Pacquiao) a rematch wouldn’t be sellable. And if it’s a one-sided fight (the other way) and Manny concluded that Margarito was just too big and too strong for him, why subject him to do it again,” said Arum.

“Manny is going to win this fight,” Mike Koncz, Pacquiao’s adviser, said yesterday.

Pacquiao’s chief trainer, Freddie Roach, had said this should be the last time Pacquiao will fight at a catchweight (in this case 151 lb for the super-welterweight limit of 154).

He said if Pacquiao continues to fight, amid talks of a possible retirement due to his even busier schedule as a congressman, it will be as a welterweight (147) where he’s the champion.

Yesterday (Tuesday in Los Angeles), Pacquiao sparred nine rounds against old hands David Rodela, Ray Beltran and a new face, at the Wild Card Gym. They did 12 rounds last Saturday.

The number of sparring rounds will go down as the days go by, until Team Pacquiao leaves for Arlington, Texas on Monday, the beginning of fight week.

Source: philstar.com