Thursday 11 November 2010

High stakes for Pacquiao, Margarito -- ESPN

By Dan Rafael, ESPN.com

ARLINGTON, Texas -- Manny Pacquiao, the pound-pound-for-pound king, and the controversial Antonio Margarito are fighting for different stakes. One fights for history. One for redemption.

Pacquiao had hoped to be in the ring with Floyd Mayweather Jr. defending his welterweight title, but Mayweather refused to fight him and is, as he says, "on vacation," while also now fighting a variety of criminal charges stemming from alleged domestic dispute in September.

Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPNSo while Mayweather's next fight will be in the courtroom, Pacquiao has moved on with his career and is moving on up in weight yet again as he seeks a vacant junior middleweight belt when he and Margarito meet Saturday night (HBO PPV, 9 ET, $54.95) at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington in front of a crowd that could draw 70,000, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum said at Wednesday's final news conference. That would be a record for an American indoor fight.

If Pacquiao wins, he would claim a title in a record-extending eighth weight class, which, even in this era of title proliferation, is still eye-catching.

"It would be an eighth title, which nobody else has ever done, but Manny Pacquiao is a different kind of athlete," said Arum, who also promotes Margarito. "He's very special and the type of accomplishments he has shouldn't really surprise anybody.

While Margarito, a former two-time welterweight titleholder, will also be looking to win a vacant junior middleweight belt, he will be seeking a measure of redemption following the well-publicized hand-wrap scandal he was at the center of when he attempted to enter the ring with loaded hand wraps before his welterweight title fight with Shane Mosley in Los Angeles in January 2009.

Margarito had his license revoked and his once-solid reputation went into the toilet. He was not allowed to fight in the United States and only after California rejected his plea for a return of his license did Texas regulators give him one in September. It was a controversial move, but it paved the way for his fight with Pacquiao, which will be contested at a contract limit of 150 pounds even though the limit for junior middleweights is 154 pounds.

"Antonio knows he needs to win the fight. He's hoping he's going to redeem himself with the victory," said Sergio Diaz, Margarito's co-manager. "But at the same time he says he doesn't really think he'll get the credit he had before [the scandal]. He thinks if he wins there will be people who will say, 'Well, he got lucky. Maybe it was the weight and Manny was too small and Margarito was too big.' I feel, and he feels, he will carry this scandal the rest of his life.

"But I do believe it's going to diminish and you'll hear about it here and there and every time he fights it's always going to be written about and spoken about. It's going to always be there. It's tough to accept it."

So while Margarito aims to resurrect his reputation as best as he can, Pacquiao goes for more history. He's used to it.

From flyweight to welterweight, where he currently holds an alphabet title, Pacquiao has roared up the weight classes like nobody in boxing history. He set the mark of winning titles in seven divisions when he knocked out Miguel Cotto in the 12th round last November to win a welterweight belt.

After one defense, a near shutout of Joshua Clottey at Jerry Jones' $1.2 billion Cowboys Stadium in March, Pacquiao is moving up in weight yet again to fight for the belt vacated earlier this year by Sergio Martinez, who went on to win the middleweight championship.

Pacquiao has never bragged about his run of titles. Instead, he has remained humble about his accomplishments and the possibility of adding another.

The Filipino icon -- elected to congress in his home country earlier this year -- showed little emotion when asked about the prospects of claiming another title.

"This is why I do my best in training this time," Pacquiao said. "This is going to be another record in boxing and I have to be in great condition to win. We consider this a very important fight in my whole career."

"All the people around him have made it into a big deal, but Manny has not," Top Rank promoter Bob Arum said. "[Trainer] Freddie [Roach] is excited. [Adviser] Michael Koncz is excited. All the other guys around him are excited about it. Manny never even mentions it except when he's asked."

Arum knows a thing or two about fighters moving up the scales to win titles in multiple divisions. Besides promoting Pacquiao, he promoted Oscar De La Hoya for most of his career, during which he won belts in six weight classes before Pacquiao pummeled him into retirement.

Arum also promoted such fighters as Sugar Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns and Alexis Arguello, who all won titles in multiple divisions.

He won't be surprised if Pacquiao gets No. 8.

"Who would believe that after the first fight with Erik Morales [Pacquiao's last defeat in 2005] that he would be here in this kind of fight and be a congressman in the Philippines," Arum said. "Who would believe that he would come to Nevada [on a last-minute campaign appearance] and help win an election for the majority leader [Harry Reid] of the United States Senate? If I said things like that before he really did them you'd have said it was just typical Arum bull----. So nothing he does surprises me, including if he wins an eighth title."

Roach, Pacquiao's longtime trainer, however, has no problem bragging about the fighter he hooked up with in 2001 and helped lead to six of his titles.

"Manny's a freak, let's face it," Roach said. "We're not going to see another Manny Pacquiao in our lifetime. He's a once in a lifetime deal. If you get four world titles it's a big deal. One is hard enough. To win eight is unheard of. He continues to amaze me."

Roach was a well-known trainer even before Pacquiao came into his Hollywood, Calif., gym for the first time but with Pacquiao has his star pupil, Roach has reached a new level of fame.

So, of course, he's excited about the opportunity to be part of an eighth title.

"I feel great about it," Roach said. "It's a record that will stand for a long, long time. He's the history books and he's changed my life. Having Manny in my life has made me better and made me a better life. One day he walks into my gym as a 122-pounder. He breaks [Lehlo] Ledwaba's nose in the first round and knocks him out [in the sixth round]. The rest is history. Who would think we'd be here going for an eighth title?"

Margarito is happy just to be getting a chance to fight a major fight, one for which he'll make at least $3 million, a figure likely to more than double if the pay-per-view performs well.

He has maintained all along that it was his former trainer, Javier Capetillo, who put the illegal pads in his hand wraps before they were discovered in the moments before he went to the ring for his knockout loss to Mosley.

After serving his year license revocation, Margarito did have a fight in Mexico in May under the guidance of new trainer Robert Garcia, a former junior lightweight titlist. Margarito did not look particularly good after such a long layoff as he outpointed the obscure Roberto Garcia [no relation to his trainer].

Then came the battle to get a license. Nevada tabled his request and told him to go to California first. California then denied him. Finally, Texas gave him one.

"I try not to dwell on the negative," Margarito said. "I know people will ask the questions and I have to answer the questions and I have no problem with them. To me, all I am concentrating right now is on the fight. I know it is going to be asked, but, for me, I have to concentrate on the fight. Everything is in the past and I can't wait until [Saturday].

"I thank God for getting this opportunity. Of course, Bob Arum has been behind me the whole time and I thank him too. I know it is a great opportunity and I'm going to take advantage of it. I know how hard it was to make the fight real and I'm very happy that it's finally here."

Dan Rafael is the boxing writer for ESPN.com. Follow him on Twitter @danrafaelespn.

Source: sports.espn.go.com

Javier Capetillo Breaks Silence on Antonio Margarito's Illegal Wraps -- FanHouse

By Lem Satterfield, FanHouse

Trainer Javier Capetillo, who has been blamed for the hand wraps scandal that has haunted the career of Antonio Margarito since it happened prior to a loss to Shane Mosley in January 2009, broke his long silence during a recent interview with Doug Fischer, co-editor of RingTV.com.

Margarito has been boxing's biggest bad boy since the discovery was made by trainer Naazim Richardson of a plaster-like substance that was removed and confiscated prior to the fighter's ninth-round knockout loss to Mosley at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

Playbox Plaster of Paris - 25 lb, Plaster of Paris, BoxSince having his license revoked by the California State Athletic Commission in February of 2009, Margarito has claimed no knowledge of the illegal hand wrappings in his gloves that led to his being exiled from fighting until August, when Texas licensed him to face Pacquiao.

Margarito has blamed Capetillo, claiming that the trainer acted on his own.

Capetillo told Fischer that Margarito is telling the truth.

"I made a mistake. I wasn't trying to hide anything. I just screwed up, and I did it in front of Mosley's trainer and the commissioners. I was just under a lot of pressure because I knew we shouldn't have taken the fight," said Capetillo, adding that dramatic weight loss drained Margarito, and led to his loading the gloves.

"I knew Tony was in trouble and I knew that I had put him in that position. I wrapped Tony's hands four times in front of Mosley's trainer and the commissioners and two representatives from Golden Boy Promotions after they found the gauze. I admitted then that I made a mistake."

Capetillo's admission comes on the eve of perhaps the biggest fight in the career of Margarito (38-6, 27 knockouts), who faces Manny Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs), the WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king, for the WBC's vacant junior middleweight (154 pounds) crown at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Saturday night.

Pacquiao has a 12-fight winning streak that includes nine knockouts as he pursues his eighth title in as many different weight classes.

Since the Mosley fight, however, members of the boxing community and Roach and Pacquiao, in particular, have speculated that Capetillo may have tampered with Margarito's gloves in other fights.

In two of them, Margarito vanquished rivals Kermit Cintron and Miguel Cotto, both of whom were beaten savagely and bloodily before being knocked out.

Capetillo dismissed those assertions.

"They think Tony cheated to beat Kermit Cintron? Give me a break. All you have to do is mad dog and rush Cintron, and he gets scared. Tony beat him by being Tony," said Capetillo. "He beat Miguel Cotto because he has the style to beat Cotto. He'll wear Cotto down and stop him every time they fight."

But against Mosley, the story is different, said Capetillo.

"[Margarito's] weight was a problem for that entire camp. He put on a lot of weight, not just water pounds but muscle, after he beat Cotto. He had to chop 20 pounds before he left Mexico to begin his camp for Mosley, and then he dropped another 30 in camp. He kept dropping weight and dropping weight until he had nothing," said Capetillo, adding that Margarito also had back problems that caused him to miss crucial training days.

"Then he would gain back whatever weight he lost the previous week. He was 16 pounds over [the welterweight limit] one week before the fight, and the closer we got to the weight, the sicker he got from dehydration," said Capetillo. "Four or five days out from the fight it was like he had the flu. He was shrinking before our eyes."

Capetillo's concern, he said, led to his sudden decision to go with the illegal wraps, a move that he said was not planned far ahead of time.

"I started panicking the week of the fight. I knew we were in deep s**t, and we couldn't tell anyone. It was too late to pull out of the fight. But I want to make it clear that I did not plan what happened," said Capetillo. "Maybe I was feeling the pressure of the fight and not paying attention to what I was doing when I reached into my bag and grabbed the training gauze, but I didn't do it on purpose."

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Manny Pacquiao says this won't be his last fight -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angles Times

There were a few minutes Wednesday when the future of boxing became a black hole.

Manny Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach was asked what becomes of the Filipino superstar if he again fails to make a fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. next year, and the candid, well-connected Roach said, "I think this could be it.

"Where else do we have to go? Without Mayweather, there's no challenge."

Stop the presses.

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the RingThere are obvious problems with Mayweather, and let's skip any amateur psychological assessment for now.

First, he had his initial court appearance pushed to Jan. 24 on Tuesday in a Las Vegas criminal case that threatens to force him to prison. Pacquiao's promoters say they can't arrange anything until they know what's going to happen at that hearing.

"I can't put millions of dollars in the hands of a judge who may set a trial date in September," Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said.

Yet, a legal source in Clark County (Nev.) has told The Times it's possible a Mayweather trial for domestic violence won't even be conducted in 2011. That would allow a super-fight to proceed in the May-June window promoter Arum would like.

Pacquiao's business manager, Michael Koncz, said he and Pacquiao will not open negotiations this time.

"It's up to Mayweather," Koncz said. "He either wants the fight or not."

Koncz speculates an oft-suggested theory that the Mayweather interest will not come, because "his bragging rights about being unbeaten are more important than boxing. He wants to say he's the best because he's unbeaten. Twenty percent of people will believe him, and he's content with that.

"He's not going to take that fight until he sees a downside with Manny."

Arum said if Mayweather's disappearing act continues into 2011, he'll explore bouts against world welterweight champions Shane Mosley and Andre Berto or junior-welterweight champion Timothy Bradley if he wins a tough fight in January against Devon Alexander.

Roach scoffed at Mosley, saying the 39-year-old "needs to retire."

When asked about his future, Pacquiao, 31, maintained with little hesitation that "this is not my last fight." He said even if Mayweather stays in hiding or appears headed behind bars, Pacquiao has "two to three fights" left.

Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

Pacquiao and Margarito take the stage; Sulaiman steals the show -- 15Rounds

By Bart Barry, 15Rounds.com

ARLINGTON, Tex. – Unless the weekend’s combatants come to blows on the dais itself, Wednesday press conferences usually are dull affairs. Television executives, beer sponsors, secondary and tertiary promoters, personal trainers, all, read rehearsed remarks to writers who patiently await lunch. Business as usual.

The president of a sanctioning body, though, can be a refreshingly different story – as the media learned at Cowboys Stadium.

Decision PointsWednesday afternoon in the final pre-fight press conference Filipino Manny Pacquiao and Mexican Antonio Margarito will have to attend before their Friday weigh-in, the president of the World Boxing Council, Jose Sulaiman, made his way to the podium and stole the show. More about Mr. Sulaiman in a bit.

Pacquiao and Margarito and their entourages gathered in the “House that Jerry Built” – though the builder, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, was not present – to say one last time that they were ready for one another.

Pacquiao, introduced by promoter Bob Arum as “the greatest credit, in our era, to the history of boxing,” presented his customarily likable self, filled with a gracious smile, words of thanks for everyone gathered, and a becoming humility that has not changed one bit throughout his rise to international prominence.

His opponent in Saturday’s superfight, Antonio Margarito, cut a grimmer figure. Exonerated fully by his promoter, if no one else, for the illegal inserts found in his hand wraps before a 2009 fight with Shane Mosley, Margarito and his team have recently acted several times in questionable taste. There was the footage of Margarito wrapping a piece of concrete over his knuckles during the second episode of HBO’s “24/7” series. And now footage of several people, from Margarito’s camp, imitating the effects of Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach’s Parkinson’s disease has surfaced on YouTube.

Margarito trainer Robert Garcia spoke at the podium about this, Wednesday, saying that he had admonished his fighters about inappropriate behavior like that in his gym. He further explained that one of his fighters claimed not to know even that Roach has Parkinson’s disease. Garcia did not, however, simply turn a few degrees to his right and offer an apology to Roach.

Freddie Roach, for his part, did not address the Margarito camp at all, preferring to focus on Congressman Pacquiao’s initial distractions.

“Little bit of a different training camp this time,” Roach said from the podium. “Just a little bit mental at first. (Pacquiao) wasn’t 100 percent there.”

But things did apparently improve when the camp relocated from the Philippines to California, and Roach saw no reason for concern.

All of those statements, though, were preceded by Jose Sulaiman, president of the WBC. Dressed in a silver suit with a white shirt and blue tie, Sulaiman ambled to the podium, apologized for his English and then offered Wednesday’s most entertaining spectacle.

He asked who could have imagined, way back in a time of short pants, that his friend Bob Arum would grow to become boxing’s “greatest promoter.” When that title was inadequate, Sulaiman then announced the WBC’s annual convention had just voted, unanimously, to declare that “in the 300-year history of the WBC,” Arum was one of boxing’s “two greatest promoters.” And then Sulaiman presented to Arum a curious piece of hardware that appeared to be a gray figurine balanced on green felt.

Finding his stride, Sulaiman next explained the colors of his suit. In a nod to Cowboys Stadium, Sulaiman declared not just himself but also his family “Cowboys.” He raised his blue tie and waved it at the media for dramatic effect before proclaiming the depth of his clan’s loyalty to Dallas’ professional football team:

“We cry when they lose, and we get drunk when they win!”

Friday’s Pacquiao-Margarito weigh-in will take place at Cowboys Stadium at 5:00 PM local time and will be open to the public.

Source: 15rounds.com

Margarito mocks Pacquiao boxing trainer's disease -- AFP

By Greg Heakes, AFP

DALLAS, Texas — The build up to Manny Pacquiao's WBC world title fight took a sad and distasteful twist when a video surfaced showing Antonio Margarito mocking legendary boxing trainer Freddie Roach.

The video, which was shot several weeks ago and appeared Wednesday on YouTube, shows Margarito's camp making fun of Roach - who suffers from Parkinson's disease which causes him to shake uncontrollably at times.

Margarito is seen shaking his hands and speaking with a tremor. Boxer Brandon Rios, who is on the undercard of Saturday's World Boxing Council super welterweight title fight between Pacquiao and Margarito, is also shown shaking his body and making fun of Roach in the video.

The Parkinson's Disease Treatment Book: Partnering with Your Doctor to Get the Most from Your MedicationsMargarito's trainer, Robert Garcia, is seen pointing at Rios and saying "that's Freddie Roach right there."

With Roach and Pacquiao sitting just a few feet away, Garcia took the podium at Wednesday's news conference at Cowboys Stadium and issued a half-hearted apology saying that no one in the Margarito camp knew that Roach suffered from Parkinson's.

"This was nothing personal. Nothing to do with his disease," Garcia said. "I apologize for people who think we are making fun of people with that disease."

After the news conference ended Garcia admitted his fighters were mocking Roach.

"These guys were just going back at Freddie," Garcia said. "They were making fun of Freddie Roach but nothing to do with the disease."

Roach isn't buying the apology and has vowed to ban Garcia from his Wild Card gym in Hollywood.

"(Garcia) certainly didn't apologize." Roach said Wednesday. "There was no apology. It is unreal that they said they didn't know I have Parkinson's. Everyone in the world knows I have Parkinson's.

"He is trying to cover it up. I won't speak to him ever in my life."

Roach said Mexico's Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) and American Rios (25-0-1, 18 KOs) should watch what they say because he believes he got the disease as a result of his own boxing career.

"The thing is that this is something that boxers can obtain because it is trauma related," Roach said. "They (Margarito and Rios) are in the sport and they both don't have good defences. I just hope it doesn't happen to them the way I have to live my life.

"Even though they are just making fun. They think it is funny right now and so forth. Brandon Rios is like a 2-year-old kid. He is like a child. He has the mind of a baby. He is not even a world champion. Don't talk (expletive) until you can beat my guys."

The effects of the disease on Roach were evident Wednesday at Cowboys Stadium as he spoke with reporters. He said he "doubled up" on his medication Wednesday morning "so I wouldn't shake as much but it is not working."

"At one time I thought Margarito was a pretty good guy. I don't think he is a good guy. I do hate those guys," Roach said.

Garcia said he admires Roach's work as a trainer but with the fight so close he now considers Roach an "enemy".

Garcia said he didn't know about the Parkinson's disease until someone told him Wednesday. He added he won't apologize face-to-face until after Saturday's fight.

Told Roach has vowed to never speak to him again, Garcia said, "that is his business.

"I apologize for what my fighters did. After the fight I am going to do it. But right now we are enemies because we got two fighters and I want to win the fight and he wants to win.

"Win or lose I am going to go up to Freddie Roach and apologize.

"We been to his gym to spar and right away he has sparring partners lined up for us. I am always going to respect him. I admire the work he has done with Manny Pacquiao."

The mocking incident is another blow to Margarito's already tarnished reputation.

On Saturday, the former world champion will step into the ring for the first time in the United States since he was slapped with a one-year suspension for using illegal hand wraps against Shane Mosley.

Filipino superstar Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs) has asked officials to allow him to send an extra person from his camp into Margarito's dressing room prior to the Dallas fight to observe the taping.

Margarito did not refer to the mocking incident when he took the microphone Wednesday.

Pacquiao said Wednesday that he has not seen the video but found the idea of it distasteful.

"For me it is not good," Pacquiao said. "We have to respect people. I am kind of person that doesn't like people talking about the personal lives of others."

Roach, who has been known to go after other trainers during weigh-ins and news conferences said he didn't confront Garcia Wednesday for Pacquiao's sake.

"I am doing it (staying calm) for (Pacquiao)," Roach said. "We've got a big fight coming up and I can't get excited. He can't get excited."

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

Source: google.com

Antonio Margarito mocks Manny Pacquiao trainer in video -- Reuters

By Mark Lamport-Stokes, Reuters

Antonio Margarito's trainer Robert Garcia has apologized for an internet video in which two of his fighters appear to mock the Parkinson's disease suffered by Manny Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach.

Garcia's public apology, later described as a cover-up by Roach, overshadowed a news conference held jointly by Margarito and seven-times world champion Pacquiao on Wednesday in the build-up to their November 13 super welterweight bout.

After being introduced on a raised stage by promoter Bob Arum at Cowboys Stadium, the fight venue, Garcia said he wanted to clear something up "before it gets any bigger".

The trainer then added: "Earlier today there was a video posted up on YouTube about two of my fighters joking around making fun of Freddie Roach.

"This was nothing to do with the disease that Freddie Roach has. We know it's something that we don't wish on anybody. I would never allow (talk of) that in my gym."

The video, posted on several internet sites before being taken down, showed Margarito, Garcia and fighter Brandon Rios apparently making fun of Roach's Parkinson's disease symptoms.

Margarito aped Roach's involuntary twitches by shaking his arms and Rios stuttered the words "Manny Pacquiao" before Garcia said to Rios: "Hey, there's Freddie Roach".

While issuing his apology during Wednesday's pre-fight news conference, Garcia described the video antics as "something personal, something between Team Pacquiao and Team Margarito".

He added: "When I told Brandon Rios this morning that (the video) was out there, that everyone was thinking that we were making fun of people with that disease, he was surprised.

"And I said: 'Well, the disease that Freddie Roach has.' He didn't even know Freddie Roach had a disease."

APOLOGY REJECTED

Roach, who controls his symptoms through medication and by training with his boxers, rejected Garcia's apology.

"He doesn't I know I have Parkinson's and all of that?" Roach told reporters. "Please. It wasn't really an apology. It was just a cover-up."

Garcia said later he would personally apologize to Roach only after Saturday's fight.

"I apologize for what my fighters did but right now, I don't want to go to him (Roach) personally," Garcia told reporters. "Right now we are fighting against each other. Right now, we are enemies.

"I want to win the fight and he wants to win the fight. But right after the fight, win or lose, I am going to go up to Freddie Roach and I am going to apologize to him and ... give him all the respect that I've always given him."

The war of words between Garcia and Roach added unexpected spice to a news conference in which Pacquiao and Margarito were upbeat in a very measured way about Saturday's fight.

Filipino Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs), who will be competing for an eighth world title in an unprecedented eighth weight class, said he expected a strong challenge from the much bigger Mexican.

"This is the fight I have been waiting for," said Pacquiao, who wore a black suit, a purple tie and a white shirt. "He is a very aggressive fighter and throws a lot of punches, and that is what I want in the fighter I am going to fight."

Three-times world champion Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs), casually dressed in a long-sleeved black shirt and blue jeans, said he had never been in better shape.

"This is my best camp ever," added the Mexican, who also wore sunglasses. "I want to show everyone that I am back and what I can do on Saturday night. The time is here ... you will have a new Mexican champion on the 13th."

(Editing by Frank Pingue)

Source: reuters.com

Margarito's trainer says his camp didn't know Roach had a disease -- Yahoo! Sports

By Steve Cofield, Yahoo! Sports

When it comes to Antonio Margarito's claim that he didn't know about the loaded hand wraps, who's buying the story? His new trainer Robert Garcia said he believes his fighter. His objectivity can be called into question and after Wednesday's prefight press conference, we're not sure we can believe anything Garcia says.

The Oxnard-based trainer, a former fighter himself, decided to address the brewing controversy caused by a YouTube video where it appears Margarito and his training partner Brandon Rios were mocking on the fact that Freddie Roach has Parkinson's disease (2:45 mark). Talking about Manny's Pacquiao trainer, they shook and froze up.

Wednesday afternoon, Garcia gave this explanation:

"We already talked about it and this has nothing to do with the disease Freddie Roach has," Garcia said. "I would never allow that in my gym. This is something personal between Team Pacquiao and Team Margarito."

Garcia then said his guys were unaware of the fact that Roach had the disease.

"When I told Brandon Rios this morning that [the video] was up and everybody was thinking that we were making fun of people with that disease ... he was surprised. He said 'what disease? I don't even know what disease you're talking about.' So it's nothing personal. It had nothing to do with his disease."

Roach has been around the business forever. He's been involved in countless huge promotions over the years. Is it believable that anyone in boxing could be unaware that he shakes and stutters because of the disease?

Just like Muhammad Ali, it's likely that Roach developed Parkinson's from his years in the ring. If anyone should be extra sensitive to his malady shouldn't it be other folks in the boxing world? Frankly, after seeing something like this video and Team Margarito constantly mocking on the hand-wrap allegations, could you blame anyone if they automatically characterized Margarito as someone who would cheat without a second of hesitation?

Source: sports.yahoo.com

Margarito makes fun of Pacquiao trainer in video -- NBC Sports

By STEPHEN HAWKINS, Associated Press

ARLINGTON, Texas - Antonio Margarito has repeatedly said he is sorry for a hand-wrapping scandal that almost ended his boxing career. Now his camp has had to apologize again, for something else only days before getting into the ring against Manny Pacquiao.

A video interview posted by Elie Seckbach of FanHouse recently raced across the Internet, in which Margarito and Brandon Rios — both of whom are trained by Robert Garcia — appear to mock the Parkinson's disease of Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach.

What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About Parkinson's Disease: A Holistic Program for Optimal WellnessBefore even talking about the junior middleweight title bout during a news conference Wednesday at Cowboys Stadium, Garcia first apologized for the video.

"This was nothing to do with the disease that Freddie Roach has. We know it's something that we don't wish nobody," Garcia said Wednesday. "It's something personal, something between Team Pacquiao and Team Margarito. I just wanted to make that clear."

When Roach was at the podium a few minutes later, he didn't acknowledge what Garcia said or even refer to the video. After the formal program was completed, though, Roach said he wasn't buying Garcia's apology.

In the video, Margarito makes a twisted face and raises a shaking hand for the camera before it pans to Rios, who also makes faces and stutters while saying Pacquiao's name.

The video has since been edited to remove Rios and make it appear as though Margarito is doing a scared impression of Roach, who has routinely questioned Margarito's integrity following the hand-wrapping scandal nearly two years ago.

Garcia also takes part in the mockery by holding up a thick chunk of metal and telling Roach he'd better watch as Margarito's hands are wrapped so that it doesn't end up under the tape.

"They're so disrespectful to me and the hand pad issues. ... It's like a slap in the face, like 'we got caught with something, but we're still here fighting. ' I think it shows his true character. I don't think they are a good group of people," Roach said. "I'm not going to bother Manny Pacquiao with that. Manny doesn't hate anybody and so forth, but I do hate those guys."

Pacquiao said he hadn't seen the video.

Roach does plan to make sure Margarito is being watched when his hands are wrapped before Saturday night's bout. That's not a joke.

"I will watch him. I asked the (Texas) commission to have a person from my camp in their training room from start to finish, and they can do the same with me," Roach said, adding that his request was approved. "I don't trust those guys. He'll do anything to win. He's done it before. He's a cheater."

The bout will be Pacquiao's second at Cowboys Stadium, where more than 50,000 fans are expected to attend along with an expected pay-per-view audience of 1 million or more.

In March at the $1.2 billion showplace, Pacquiao dominated Joshua Clottey from the opening bell to retain his welterweight title with an unanimous decision.

Pacquiao has since been elected a congressman in his native Philippines, a job that initially seemed to be affecting his training for this fight. He even missed a day of workouts.

"Everything is back to normal," Roach said, declaring Pacquiao ready for the fight. "It was never physical. It was all mental. His mental focus wasn't there."

Margarito, the former welterweight champion, was approved to fight in Texas after being denied a license in California and having another application in Nevada tabled.

Promoter Bob Arum again Wednesday applauded the decision by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation and defended Margarito. Both Pacquiao and Margarito fight under Arum's Top Rank banner.

"When other people in boxing, some other commissions feasted on innuendoes, lies and smears, this commission read the record, read every scrap from the California hearing to the appeals," Arum said. "For 18 months (Margarito) has gone through hell, but he's taken it like a man, he's accepted it and believe me on Saturday night he will give you the fight of his life."

Margarito hasn't fought in the United States since January 2009, when a plaster-like substance was found in his hand wraps before a fight against Shane Mosley in Los Angeles.

Margarito's license along with that of his former trainer, Javier Capetillo, were revoked for at least one year by the California State Athletic Commission, a decision that was upheld by other states.

Margarito has repeatedly said he wasn't aware of the substance found in his hand wraps.

"I wrap guys every day," Roach said. "Believe me, if I put a rock in their hand, they would know it."

In his only fight since, Margarito won an unanimous decision over Roberto Garcia in Mexico in May.

While Garcia acknowledged that they were making fun of Roach in the video, he insisted that Rios didn't even know about the Parkinson's disease that affects Pacquiao's trainer. Garcia said the video was made about five weeks ago.

"He didn't even know Freddie had a disease," Garcia said. "He thought it was from 13 losses that Freddie Roach had when he was a professional boxer."

Roach said Margarito and Garcia have been nice to him in the past.

"But they stooped kind of low this time," Roach said. "They showed their true colors."

___

AP Sports Writer Dave Skretta in New York contributed to this report.


Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source:

THREE DAYS TIL FIGHT NIGHT: Not Manny-Money, But There Will Be Butterflies -- The Sweet Science

By Michael Woods, The Sweet Science

Three days til fight night. Three days until boxing's undisputed face, the keeper of the fistic flame, Saint Manny Pacquiao, will glove up, and gun for a title in an unprecedented eighth different weight class. For that reason, the air of excitement is crackling that much more.

We can debate whether that 8th crown would be asterisk free, with Team Pacquiao having secured a concession from foe Antonio Margarito, when he agreed to weigh 150 pounds, or less, at Friday's weigh in. But no one, save for a tiny pocket of Floyd Mayweather team-members, and Floyd himself, could argue that anyone other than Manny is the man who represents boxing today.

If this wasn't confirmed before last Sunday, the Bob Simon piece on "60 Minutes," which was intended to introduce the Filipino fighter/politician to people who don't follow the fight game, or perhaps have not since Ali, or Mike Tyson reigned, did so.

All of us hoped that this clash Saturday would pit Pacquiao against Mayweather, and we all hope that, for the good of the sport's profile, that will still happen next year. But that doesn't mean there won't be that touch of butterflies in the belly of fight fans come Saturday morning.

I see the Pacquiao-Margarito fight as a less lopsided version of the Pacquiao-Joshua Clottey "fight" in March, because Pacman's hand speed, and footwork, will outstrip any weight "advantage" the Mexican might have come fight night, after he re-hydrates to middleweight. But only a Pacmaniac drunk on the aura of Manny would argue that Margarito couldn't plausibly land that wrecking ball which sends the Filipino to the loss column for the first time since 2005 (a March UD12 loss to Erik Morales).

Delay the Disease -Exercise and Parkinson's Disease
"Boxing is taking its proper place on the world's stage," Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, said on Wednesday afternoon, at the final press conference before the Saturday tussle at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, Texas. I cannot deny my lack of objectivity, and my gratitude that Pacquiao has elevated himself to be the face of the sport, which too often is saddled with a seedy, or sociopathic, or inauthentic leader. His perseverance, and constant amiability, and entrance into public service, make him a solid role model, in a world sadly in need of them.

"The Congressman from the province of Sarangani, the fighter with the title of the best in the world, with the realization that he might be the greatest fighter of all time," said Arum, in his introduction of Pacquiao.

He thanked, with the skill of a vet pol, all the principals who helped put the bout together. He said he expects a good fight, because of Margarito's aggressive style. "There's no problem about my training camp," he said, for the 7,096th time. Early on in camp, he wasn't moving well, he said, because he was a few pounds too heavy, so he dropped down to 147, and maintained that weight channel. He then plugged his book, which comes out on November 19. "I hope you will buy it, there's my story, thank you," he said.

Arum said the California commission didn't "give him a fair shake. As far as the record is concerned, this man has done nothing wrong. Please welcome my friend, Antonio Margrito."

The fighter told the media and those watching the live stream that "there are no excuses. I'm ready for this fight, and I want to tell Jose Sulaiman he's got a new Mexican champion on the thirtheenth. This is our best camp, I want to thank God and I want to show everyone I'm back, and what I can do, on Saturday night."

"A man treated with the reverence which once went to his mentor, Eddie Futch," as Arum put it, also spoke. Freddie Roach said Pacman came to camp in a bit worse shape than usual, because he was concentrating on politics. "We know it's a tough fight, we're ready, don't miss it," he said.

Margarito's trainer, Robert Garcia, said a YouTube video showing two of his fighters making fun of Freddie Roach does not indicate any insensitivity regarding Roach's struggle with Parkinson's. One of the fighters, Brandon Rios, Garcia said, did not know that Roach suffers from the disorder.*

Alex Ariza spoke briefly, and said he assures all that Manny is in "100% condition."

SPEEDBAG Arum lauded the Texas commission for granting Margarito a license, and slammed the Cali commission for "smearing" the boxer.

---The promoter also welcomed "my friend," Jose Sulaiman, the WBC chie. He presented Arum with a statue-trophy for his success in keeping boxing afloat. "I believe this fight is going to be much better than what people say," Sulaiman said. "I believe in the heart of this guy," he said, pointing at Margarito. He then drew a laugh when he said he and his family are Cowboys fans. "We cry when they lose, and get drunk when they lose," he said.

--There will be a press conference for the undercard Thursday morning.

---The weigh in will be at 4:30 local time, on Friday.

*---Decide for yourself. It looks to me like Garcia is knee deep in the mockery, and it looks to me like Rios is mocking the facial expressions and tremors which stem from the Parkinson's. Does he get a pass because he says he didn't know the tremors result from the Parkinson's? www.badlefthook.com/2010/11/9/1804989/video-hype-antonio-margarito-and-brandon-rios-make-fun-of-parkinsons

Source: thesweetscience.com

Manny Pacquiao Having Doubts about Winning against Antonio Margarito -- Ringside Report

By “Bad” Brad Berkwitt, Ringside Report

Skullduggery Eyewitness Kit Mold It Molding and Casting KitRSR was just informed by a inside source very close to “Team Pacquiao” that contrary to reports that Manny is on track, he has behind closed doors expressed doubts that he can beat “Hands of Plaster” Antonio Margarito. The source went on to say, “Manny is concerned because he knows that his duties (Congress) have greatly affected this training camp and his mind is not even 75% into this fight.”

This sham of a fight may turn out to be the winning lottery ticket for Antonio Margarito if Manny is not up to the task. It has been reported that there is no rematch clause in the contract because the odds are so high against the Mexican fighter. Expect the odds to be heavily against him going into this fight, but with Pacquiao’s lack of focus, some gamblers may be cashing in on Saturday night.

Source: ringsidereport.com

Manny Pacquiao versus Antonio Margarito: Margarito plays it cool -- Examiner

By Edward Castro, Examiner.com

Through it all Antonio Margarito never lost his cool.

He didn’t break down nor did he ever lash out.

Margarito took it like a man.

And now, after more than a year of dealing with relentless speculation, accusations and criticism, Margarito gets his one and only chance to redeem himself. On Saturday he will step into the ring to face Manny Pacquiao in front of an internationally televised audience.

“I tried not to dwell on the negative,” Margarito said during a conference call. “I know people will ask the questions and I have to answer the questions…and I have no problem with that.”

Margarito handled himself with poise during a series of chaotic media events.

“To me, right now all I am concentrating on is the fight,” Margarito said. “I know it’s going to be asked of me but I have to concentrate on the fight. Everything is in the past and I can’t wait until November 13.”

Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach put the controversy to rest a long time ago.

“There will be no tampering with hand wraps this time…it’s not an issue,” Roach said. “We are past that now. We are fighting on equal terms.”

There are some, however, who say this fight is not on equal terms. This relates to the size of the fighters – Margarito is naturally bigger than Pacquiao, who has struggled to reach the catch-weight of 150 pounds.

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum says the catch-weight is a non-issue.

“I remember Sugar Ray Leonard winning the light heavyweight championship of the world coming in at 165 pounds; the catch weight was 166,” Arum said. “This is not something new to boxing.”

Arum added, “It (Saturday’s fight) is being fought at a weight that is above the welterweight limit and at the maximum weight of 150 pounds. Therefore it qualifies as a super welterweight championship fight.”

Pacquiao, who will be fighting for his eighth world title in an unprecedented eighth different weight class, has shown little concern about Margarito’s height or reach advantage.

“We had plans for this camp to train for him and prepared ourselves with that strategy, so we have no problem with him,” Pacquiao said.

Pacquiao has fought as light as 105 pounds.

“With our strategy, we are not worried about the size,” Pacquiao said. “I believe I can fight the big guys even though I am small compared to them.”

Speaking of strategy, Margarito trainer Robert Garcia seemed confident that Margarito could expose Pacquiao weaknesses.

“I have always admired Pacquiao’s career,” Garcia said. “He has done good things in boxing. He is a seven time world champion. You can’t beat that. But watching his fights over and over, we know he makes mistakes.”

Margarito has faced some solid fighters in his career, but Pacquiao is by far the most talented opponent he has faced. Perhaps too talented.

“I couldn’t tell you anyone that comes close to his style or the way he fights,” Margarito said. “I have never fought anyone that comes close. I see his speed; I know he is a fast guy. But he is a smaller guy also. I see some things there.”

Roach has supreme confidence in his fighter.

“I think we will overwhelm him with punches, with fast hands and combinations,” Roach said. “In eight or nine rounds I think we will break him down. Margarito throws a lot of punches and he makes too many mistakes. He has bad habits and we are going to take advantage of all of them.”

Source: examiner.com

Manny Pacquiao versus Antonio Margarito: 'Pacman' focused despite distractions -- Examiner

By Edward Castro, Examiner.com

It may be unfair to say Manny Pacquiao has under estimated Antonio Margarito.

But at this point it is clear that Pacquiao has been distracted during the training camp that leads into Saturday’s bout at Cowboys Stadium.

Pacquiao’s training camp has been split into political get togethers, long road trips, media events and even dirt lot basketball games.

Dallas Cowboys Stadium PuzzleStill, Team Pacquiao maintains he is focused and ready to win an unprecedented eighth world title.

“For me, there are no distractions as long as I train hard,” Pacquiao said. “You train hard and you do your job and there are no distractions. Of course the focus is still there. There is nothing to worry about.”

Pacquiao, a newly appointed congressman in the Philippines, was often at the beckon call of the Philippine President. Pacquiao on occasion made long road trips to deal with political matters. Every now and then Pacquiao took time out to play spur-of-the-moment basketball games, which annoyed trainer Freddie Roach.

Pacquaio made a late night talk show appearance where he performed a song and dealt with the media throughout the training camp, which reached its peak with a handful of chaotic media stops upon his return to the United States.

“No, the political career has not affected my boxing career,” Pacquiao said. “I have time for politics and I have time for boxing. Right now my focus is still into boxing. Once I get into the training there is full focus on the fight so that I am ready.”

Together, all this gives the impression that training for Margarito wasn’t Pacquiao’s first priority.

“I agree with Manny,” Roach said. “You see him singing on the Jimmy Kimmel show and you think things. But it is very relaxing. Manny likes to sing. He relaxes and he’s always been a multi-tasker. There is no way Margarito has trained harder than us.”

Another issue Pacquiao has had to deal with is ‘retirement.’ Countless media reports say Pacquiao is contemplating retirement and that it is time to be a full-time politician.

Pacquiao stamped that notion out during a conference call. “No retirement. Not yet. I can still fight.”

For the most part Pacquiao has given Margarito a pass in terms of the hand wrapping scandal.

“I know he is going to try his best to win the fight,” Pacquiao said. “My concern is what an exciting fight we can give to the people who are going to watch.”

Roach was a bit more direct.

“To me, he was suspended for a year; he did his time and now he is a free man now and is eligible to fight,” Roach said.

And Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum was even more direct.

“I am a trained lawyer and I believe in justice and I believe that Antonio Margarito was not treated fairly by the California commission,” Arum said. “I believe Antonio Margarito did not know anything of what was in those hand wraps and did not have an opportunity to try that end and that the revocation of his license was unfounded.”

Roach broke it down. “The bigger he is the better it is for us,” Roach said. “Size doesn’t win fights. Skill does and we outweigh him in that department. This will not be a difficult fight for us at all.”

Source: examiner.com

Margarito takes cheap shots at Freddie Roach's disease, predicts KO of Manny -- Examiner

By Rick Rockwell, Examiner.com

For a man who was supposedly all about second chances, redemption, and vindication his latest act has shown his true colors. In a video that has gone viral, Antonio Margarito can be seen mocking Freddie Roach and his suffering from Parkinson's disease. This comes on the heels of Margarito and his trainer Garcia mocking the "hand wrap" scandal.

Parkinson's Disease: A Complete Guide for Patients and Families, Second Edition (A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book)I thought Margarito deserved a second chance because he served his suspension and was saying all the right things about why he's fighting and what he's trying to accomplish. All of that has been thrown out the window. Margarito's classless act destroys the small amount of integrity that I and others wanted to believe he had. This act was additionally disturbing because Margarito did it in front of an audience and his training partner joined in.

Since when is it humorous to make fun of a serious disease? To me, this is a sign of who Margarito truly is and the fact that he's cracking under the pressure of facing Pacquiao.

If Margarito was truly innocent, and dedicated to redeeming himself, then he wouldn't need to resort to the juvenile and disgusting antics of mocking someone with a terrible disease. Margarito and his team went too far with this. In fact, it "cements" his true nature and leads me to believe that he wasn't innocent at all in the "hand wrap" incident. He's lost all credibility with me.


Do you think Margarito and his team went too far?

In related news, when Margarito isn't mocking Freddie Roach, he and his trainer are predicting KO of Manny Pacquiao. In a media workout, Antonio Margarito and his trainer Robert Garcia made the following comments:

“Knockout. Knockout. No other way. I like the 11th round,” Robert Garcia

"I have the power to take Manny out." Antonio Margarito

I think Margarito's comments and mocking have added fuel to the fire. I don't see this fight going into the later rounds anymore.

Source: examiner.com

Ines Sainz weighs in on Pacquiao-Margarito -- Los Angeles Times

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

There were hoots and hollers at a hotel workout session Tuesday.

Antonio Margarito appeared; Manny Pacquiao was there.

So was Ines Sainz.

La Piedra del SolThe TV Azteca reporter drew attention earlier this NFL season when some New York Jets behaved inappropriately in her presence. She had sought an interview with quarterback Mark Sanchez in the team's locker room.

Now Sainz has been hired by boxing promotion company Top Rank to provide interviews for the company's website, toprank.com.

The hiring drew some criticism at this newspaper. Sainz has covered boxing before for her network, and she was busy chatting with Pacquiao, Margarito and others Tuesday in advance of the boxers' world junior-middleweight championship fight Saturday night at Cowboys Stadium.

"My style is friendly and fresh," Sainz said.

The man who hired her, Top Rank President Todd duBoef, said Sainz was hired because "it's everything we're doing with this sport to broaden our horizon, bring people in who might not usually care about boxing.

"We could've got a Jeremy Schaap or Al Bernstein, but that's been done every time," he said. "Ines is obviously pleasing to the eye, and we're repositioning our sport to hit all markets, to make us more contemporary."

Sainz chatted with fans Tuesday, and said she looks forward to the bout in which pound-for-pound king Pacquiao seeks his record eighth weight-class title and former champion Margarito of Tijuana attempts to resurrect a career besieged by allegations he tried to cheat by having plaster in his hand wraps last year.

"Margarito is the strongest, the tallest and has more punching power," Sainz said. "I think this fight is all about Manny's speed. The fans I talked to earlier today truly believe Margarito will pull a surprise, but most of them were from Mexico.

"I'm very excited to be here."

Sainz said she continues to cover the NFL, attending Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys games recently. She said that after the Jets scandal, she continues to stay out of locker rooms by her own choosing.

"It's a big show if I go in there, and I don't want that," she said. "I've worked hard with [team] public relations people to do it outside, and I believe all of them will do that for me."

She said she's working to get an interview with three-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Tom Brady of the New England Patriots.

On Wednesday, she'll monitor the fighters' final news conference at Cowboys Stadium.

"I've been looking for years for a reporter who speaks Spanish and English," duBoef said. "I believe the ecosystem around the fight, like writers talking to promoters at this workout, is interesting. That's what I want to bring to the fans, and Ines helps us do that. This stuff is amazing."

Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

Should sponsors jump on board with Margarito? -- Yahoo! Sports

By Steve Cofield, Yahoo! Sports

The storm of controversy is coming in Dallas. A huge crowd will gather in Big D to watch Manny Pacquiao face Antonio Margarito. The cash registers will ring and both fighters will haul in great paydays. After being suspended for loading his handwraps with a plaster-like material and serving a one-year suspension, does Margarito deserve this sort of windfall?Eric Samson, who works in a marketing capacity with Ecko Unlimited, says Margarito should be untouchable for sponsors. From Business Insider:

Antonio Margarito has been anything but honorable, and as a sponsor I refuse to represent anyone who has exhibited that kind of behavior. Any company that sponsors Margarito needs to seriously reconsider what they represent as a brand. To sponsor Margarito is not to sponsor boxing. It is a decision to pay an athlete who has risked doing irreparable physical harm to fellow fighters.

BoycottIs this view naive? This is a short-attention span society. How many customers are still irked about Margarito allegedly attempting to cheat before the Jan. 2009 Shane Mosley fight? With that in mind, should sponsors bother following any rules of morality?

Samson also thinks the fight is pointless.

The upcoming fight between Margarito and Manny Pacquiao (for the vacant WBC Super Welterweight title) creates a no-win scenario for boxing. If Margarito loses, then fans have additional evidence that his career was built on dishonesty and cheating. And if he wins, we will call a cheater a champion. Should boxing fans admire someone who used cement to attain a level of pain and destruction that can’t compare with human flesh and muscles?

Is it enough that Pacquiao says Margarito deserves a second chance? Or should fans and sponsors take a stand and boycott the fight?

Source: sports.yahoo.com

Mexican camp sees KO in 11th -- Philippine Star

By Abac Cordero, The Philippine Star

DALLAS – Nothing less than a knockout for the Mexican.

“Knockout. Knockout,” said Robert Garcia, chief trainer of Antonio Margarito, Tuesday.

“No other way. I like the 11th round,” he added.

Margarito, the taller, bigger and heavier fighter, will rely on all these attributes when he faces Manny Pacquiao, now the world’s top boxer, at the Cowboys Stadium on Saturday.

You Got Me! - Philippine Movie DVD
“I have the power to take Manny out,” he told the media.

But whether he can use that power against the fastest boxer in the planet remains the question.

“His advantages are size and strength. Mine is my speed,” said Pacquiao, who did look the faster one, even twice faster perhaps, during their public workout at the Gaylord Texan Hotel.

Margarito was in slow-motion when compared to Pacquiao, and questions were even raised whether or not he’s having problems making weight.

Even from his training camp in Oxnard, California, Margarito always had his sweat suit, whether it’s the top or bottom or from top to bottom, on.

Still, Garcia insisted that he has Margarito’s weight in check.

“We have no trouble making weight. This morning he’s 150. He’s on weight already. He will be 150 for the weigh-in, and in the ring, 160 to 162 maybe. No, we won’t go up at 165,” he said.

The catchweight for this WBC super-welterweight contest is pegged at 150 lb, four less than the limit.

“No problem making weight. I have never had a problem in past,” said Margarito, the former world champion out to redeem himself from the ugly handwraps incident of last year.

“He’s (Margarito) now 152, and when he finishes this workout, he’ll be on weight,” said Bob Arum.

Pacquiao said he’s keeping his weight at around 148 lb until the day of the weigh-in or the fight itself.

Freddie Roach said a few days ago he received word from Oxnard that Margarito has already made weight, and said it was just “ridiculous” to do so because fighter normally make weight on the day of the weigh-in.

But seeing Margarito during Tuesday’s public workout, Pacquiao’s chief trainer has started thinking otherwise.

“I think he’s still overweight,” said Roach, who must have watched Margarito up on the ring from behing the huge curtains at the spacious exhibit hall.

Source: philstar.com

Pacquiao's killer speed awes crowd -- Philippine Star

By Abac Cordero, The Philippine Star

DALLAS – Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito went under public scrutiny Tuesday at the spacious Longhorn Exhibit Hall of the Gaylord Texan Hotel here.

And it came very clear to the hundreds who came who the bigger fighter is, who the faster one is.

“Hey, Manny! Show us your speed!” shouted a Mexican fan, one of those who rooted for the Filipino boxing superstar, and carried his picture, during the public workout.

SILVER STAR MANNY PACQUIAO WHITE WALKOUT SHIRT X-LARGEPacquiao did not disappoint, putting his vaunted speed on display as he shadow-boxed on top of the ring, worked the mitts with his chief trainer, Freddie Roach, the speed ball, and on his abdominal exercises.

He gave the public more than what Margarito did.

Pacquiao was on display for nearly two hours. He faced and fielded questions from the media for so long that the fans started chanting, “Let Manny go! Let Manny go.”

Then he worked the line, planting a thousand signatures on photographs, paintings, gloves, hats and even the white beach towel he used up the ring, which his trainer, Buboy Fernandez, tossed to the crowd.

Margarito didn’t stay longer than an hour, and opted to do the media interview behind the black curtains.

He was first to get up the ring, and smiled a lot as he exercised. In his sweat pants and long-sleeved shirt, he seemed to dance to chants of his name, pointing his fist to the crowd.

The bigger and taller Mexican worked the mitts with Robert Garcia for only three rounds. His hand wraps were tossed to the crowd, and a male fan gladly picked it up from the floor.

Even before the show began, Top Rank chief Bob Arum spoke to the media.

“The issue in this fight is Margarito is the bigger, stronger guy. But you can see from this workout that he’s much slower than Manny Pacquiao,” he said.

But Arum warned that Pacquiao’s speed won’t carry him to victory if he can’t keep it the entire evening.

“That speed has to be maintained throughout the fight. If Manny is not in good shape, and that speed became less in the later rounds, he would be in trouble,” Arum added.

“If he can do that, Margarito, as the fight wears on, will get weaker because people do. And that’s when he’s vulnerable to Manny.”

Arum said what he saw up the ring is the same old Pacquiao.

“He seems to be in top shape now, which means that he can maintain his speed for the entire fight,” he said.

There’s no one who can say no to that.

Source: philstar.com

The Trainers Have Made Their Predictions: Freddie Roach Says Pac-Man To Win Between Eight and Nine, Robert Garcia Says Margarito Will Score 11th-Round KO! -- Eastside Boxing

By James Slater, Eastside Boxing

Freddie Roach, trainer, of course, of Manny Pacquiao, is known for making pre-fight predictions involving his own fighters. Roach is also recognised as a man who is often dead right with his forecasts. For this coming Saturday’s big fight between Pac-Man and Mexico’s Antonio Margarito, Roach has stuck with his prediction of a Pacquiao KO win, “between rounds eight and nine.”

The Wild Card: Hard-Fought Lessons from a Life in the RingOn the other side, is “Tony’s” trainer, Robert Garcia. Less vocal than Roach and not overly known for making pre-fight predictions - certainly not when it comes to picking the exact round anyway - Garcia has also weighed-in with his opinion on what will happen in the ring in Texas when the two fighters battle over the vacant WBC light-middleweight belt..

“I like it in the later rounds,” Garcia is quoted as saying by Pinoy Boxing Republic. “I’m picking [round] 11. The longer the fight goes, the better our chances. That’s guaranteed. Knockout, knockout! No doubt about it. But it’s going to be a tough fight.”

A tough fight would surprise no-one. Promoter Bob Arum has also predicted a Pac-Man win, but he has warned that “The Tijuana Tornado” has the stuff needed to upset his prize. And even Roach himself has admitted he has some concerns over this fight, primarily due to how his fighter had his “worst ever” training camp.

Ask a hundred experts, however, and it’s more than likely eighty or more will tell you Pacquiao will prevail on Saturday, and pick up his history-making eighth “world” title.

But Garcia is having none of it. Saying he has studied the Filipino southpaw for a long time, the trainer claims to have found flaws in Pac-Man’s fighting style.

“I know my fighter,” Garcia said, in answer to why he is so confident Margarito will pull it off on Saturday. “I know the condition he’s in, the heart that he’s got. And I’ve been watching Pacquiao fights over and over again the past three months. Margarito’s height and reach will be a big advantage, we’re gonna push him to fight.”

Garcia wouldn’t reveal the “flaws” he has seen in Pacquiao, but he did say “we will see that on the day of the fight.” Has Garcia picked up on just one flaw?

The trainer spoke about the weight Margarito will step into the ring at.

“He’ll be coming in at 150 during the weigh in,” he said. “And come fight night, 160, 162 maybe. But no, we won’t go up to 165.”

So, if this prediction is a correct one, Pac-Man will be facing a fully-fledged middleweight in a little over three day’s time. Could this one actually be Manny’s toughest fight in a long, long time?

Source: eastsideboxing.com

Margarito to fight smart -- Manila Bulletin

By NICK GIONGCO, Manila Bulletin

DALLAS — Antonio Margarito has vowed not to be overwhelmed by Manny Pacquiao’s renowned fast and furious start this Saturday night, even insinuating that the famed Filipino fighter might end up getting knocked out early for that.

Notorious for being a slow-starter, Margarito said on Tuesday afternoon that he has mastered the gameplan and that he expects Pacquiao to come out with his guns blazing.

PacMan: Behind the Scenes with Manny Pacquiao--the Greatest Pound-for-Pound Fighter in the World“They’re going to take advantage of the first few rounds but we are going to be smart in the first few rounds, hands up high and go through the early rounds,” said Margarito through his chief trainer Robert Garcia as his hands were being wrapped for a short public workout.

“They say they’re going to knock me out in the first few rounds but we’ll never know, there might be a surprise and I might be knocking him out instead in the first few rounds,” said the 5-11 Margarito, who has a five-inch height advantage and a six-inch edge in reach over his renowned rival. “I know he is faster than me but we are ready for that.”

Margarito and Garcia hardly missed a beat during the nine-week training camp that kicked off in Los Angeles and reached its peak in Oxnard and are looking forward to shocking the world come fight night at the Cowboys Stadium.

“On Saturday night, we will let the fans find out about his weaknesses and prove that I am better than Manny Pacquiao,” said Margarito. “I am much bigger, much stronger and has a bigger heart.”

Margarito actually didn’t have to go to the makeshift gym as Garcia stressed that they’re “done with all the hard work.”

“If not for this, we wouldn’t have gone here because all he is going to do until Thursday is run (in the treadmill),” said Garcia, who will be calling the shots for only the second time for Margarito.

In contrast, Pacquiao’s workout was much longer although he and trainer Freddie Roach just went through the motions as fans watched from the sidelines, their collective pulses racing with a few days remaining before the two combatants finally lock horns before a crowd that could go past 60,000.

Understandably, Pacquiao’s interview sessions were a lot more extensive, longer and attracted more people considering that he is not an ordinary boxer, but a fighting congressman being the representative of the under-developed province of Sarangani.

In a few days, Margarito plans to change all of that.

Source: mb.com.ph

Manny Pacquiao, Antonio Margarito have public workouts in Texas, but Jerry Jones doesn't show -- New York Daily News

BY Tim Smith, New York Daily News

GRAPEVINE, Tex. - Cowboys owner Jerry Jones usually doesn't shy away from media. But Jones, who fired Dallas coach Wade Phillips and replaced him with offensive coordinator Jason Garrett on Monday, was a no-show at the public workouts of Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito at the Gaylord Hotel Convention Center Tuesday.

Pacquiao and Margarito will headline a boxing card at Cowboys Stadium on HBO Pay-Per-View on Saturday night. It is the second time this year that Pacquiao will headline at Jones' $1.6 billion palace.

Dallas Cowboys Apron"He said he didn't want to come out, answer 30 questions about the Cowboys and one question about the fight," said promoter Bob Arum of Top Rank.

Jones is supposed to appear at the final press conference Wednesday, but there is no guarantee that he will take questions about midseason coaching changes at a function to promote the mega-card. The weigh-in is at the stadium on Friday and Jones is also expected there.

Margarito and Pacquiao hardly seemed to notice Jones' absence.

Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) worked out first, doing a few rounds of hitting the mitts of trainer Robert Garcia, took on the speed bag, jumped rope for about 90 minutes and then spent nearly as much time signing autographs for a large crowd that chanted his name.

Judging from the response, Margarito has overcome the stigma of having his license revoked by the California State Athletic Commission for trying to enter the ring with loaded hand wraps in a fight against Shane Mosley at the Staples Center on Jan. 21, 2009. Margarito was denied a license by both California and Nevada, but was licensed by Texas without a hearing in order to fight Pacquiao.

Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs) defeated Joshua Clottey at Cowboys Stadium on March 13 in a lopsided 12-round decision. Clottey hardly threw a punch the entire fight.

Pacquiao, who is giving away weight and height to Margarito, knows it will be different this time.

"Margarito is coming to fight, not like the last fight," Pacquiao said. "He will throw a lot of punches. It should be a very good fight."

When told that he could have more victories at Cowboys Stadium than the Cowboys (1-7) in the last eight months, Pacquiao, who was elected to congress in the Philippines in May, was very diplomatic. He simply smiled.

Source: nydailynews.com