Saturday 11 December 2010

Khan maximizes potential in ring by learning at Pacquiao's knee, fist -- Las Vegas Review-Journal

By STEVE CARP, Las Vegas Review-Journal

Imagine being a physicist and getting to work in the laboratory alongside Albert Einstein. Or being a budding rock star and jamming with Eric Clapton.

Amir Khan knows that feeling.

The WBA junior welterweight titleholder partially credits his rise to stardom in the past couple of years with his opportunity to train with pound-for-pound boxing champion Manny Pacquiao.

Ideas And Opinions"Without question," said Khan, who defends his belt against Marcos Maidana tonight at Mandalay Bay Events Center. "It has been the opportunity of a lifetime, and I'm so grateful to Manny for allowing me into his camp and to learn from him. He has made me a much better fighter."

Khan and Pacquiao met in 2008 when Pacquiao was preparing to fight Oscar De La Hoya. They became instant friends, and Khan has been a regular in Pacquiao's subsequent camps.

Khan (23-1, 17 knockouts) said being a sparring partner for Pacquiao forced him to be at his best or risk getting embarrassed -- or, worse, hurt.

"(Pacquiao) wants to be pushed," Khan said. "When we train together, it's like a competition. We try to bring out the best in each other. That's been so beneficial to me. He's improved my work ethic, and when I'm not around Manny, I still train as if he were there."

Freddie Roach, who trains both fighters, had Khan with Pacquiao during his entire camp leading up to Pacquiao's demolition of Antonio Margarito on Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium. Khan was with Pacquiao in the Philippines and traveled with him to Los Angeles and Texas. According to Roach, they sparred approximately 20 rounds together.

Once Pacquiao took care of Margarito, Roach gave Khan his full attention after they returned to Roach's Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, Calif. For Khan, it also meant being away from his home in Bolton, England, for the last four months, but he never complained.

"I never felt slighted in the least," Khan said. "I understood the priority was Manny, and I was still being trained by Freddie, so it all worked out well."

Roach said Khan's time with Pacquiao will add up to a big advantage over Maidana (29-1, 27 KOs).

"It's done wonders for Amir's confidence," Roach said. "Mentally, he's fearless. When you're in the ring with the best fighter in the world and holding your own, you're going to be confident.

"There were days where Amir kicked Manny's ass. That was a good thing because it forced Manny to work harder."

Khan said he thought he had the talent to be great, but it took working with Roach and Pacquiao to bring out the best in him.

"I now understand what it means to be professional, whether it's in training or the night of the fight," Khan said. "Everything I do now, the way I live my life, I try to do it the way a champion does."

Khan is competing in a hot division that includes Victor Ortiz and Lamont Peterson, who are on tonight's undercard in a scheduled 10-round bout. The junior welterweight class also includes Devon Alexander and Timothy Bradley, who are scheduled to square off Jan. 29 in Pontiac, Mich. A victory tonight would set up Khan to face the Bradley-Alexander winner in mid-2011.

"One thing I learned from being around Manny is to not look ahead and take each day as it comes," said Khan, who is making his Las Vegas debut and fighting in the United States for only the second time in his career. "I want to fight the best. But I have to win this fight first."

■ NOTES -- Khan, who turned 24 on Thursday, made the 140-pound limit at Friday's weigh-in. Maidana weighed 139. ... The undercard begins at 2 p.m., and one of the highlights will be Las Vegas lightweight Sharif Bogere, who takes his 17-0 record (11 knockouts) into an eight-round fight against Chris Fernandez. ... Just over 3,000 tickets had been sold as of Friday. ... Because Khan and Maidana refused to wear PunchForce sensors inside the cuffs of their gloves, HBO will not debut the technology tonight as planned. PunchForce shows how hard a fighter is punching during each round.

Contact reporter Steve Carp at scarp@reviewjournal.com or 702-387-2913.

Source: lvrj.com

If Amir Khan puts away Marcos Maidana the doubters will be silenced, writes Barry McGuigan -- Mirror

By Barry McGuigan, mirror.co.uk

AMIR KHAN'S credentials as a prize fighter will be writ large across the Las Vegas skyline in the early hours tomorrow.

All those doubters who believe the Breidis Prescott knockout was definitive will have some explaining to do should Khan put Marcos Maidana away in a manner befitting his gifts.

The argument against Khan is flawed in the sense that the Prescott defeat was explained by an inherent weakness around the whiskers.

Team Pacquiao Sports Dark T-Shirt by CafePress
Prescott would put a rhino away if it hung its chin out like Khan did that night. Khan lost not because of his delicate bone structure but because he made an elementary mistake.

In the two years that he has been working with Freddie Roach, that kind of schoolboy error has been drilled out of his game.

Boxing is a simple business if you respect the fundamentals.

Roach respects them absolutely. The question he had to answer was this: what do I need to do to improve this kid? The answer was defence, defence, defence.

Roach excels in the company of fighters with speed. He knows its value better than any. Ask Manny Pacquiao, a fighter with three knockout defeats on his card before Roach got hold of him.

Khan's hands and feet are as quick as any in the game. You can't coach that. What you can teach is how not to get hit.

When you step into punching range, or the pocket as they say in the trade, you are vulnerable.

You need to know where your chin, shoulder and feet should be. You keep your chin down, your shoulder high and your hands up.

When Khan throws the jab now his right hand is glued to his cheek. When he throws the right his left hand is locked to his left cheek.

If you miss you must minimise the risks. Make a mistake and you get nailed by a counter. Khan was caught square on and flush by Prescott, who, I would argue, sets up an opponent better than Maidana because he is a genuine combination puncher.

Source: mirror.co.uk

Koscheck brings out St. Pierre’s passion -- Yahoo! Sports

By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports

MONTREAL – For six months, Georges St. Pierre has wanted to erupt, to lash out, to tell the world how sick and tired he’s been of Josh Koscheck.

GSP UFC 111 Walkout T-Shirt - Black, XXLIf you poke a caged lion with a stick, you always have to be careful the lion doesn’t get free and maul you. You can be sure, as he spent a month-and-a-half in Las Vegas with Koscheck in the summer filming the reality series, “The Ultimate Fighter,” that there were plenty of times that St. Pierre wanted to maul Koscheck.

Koscheck hadn’t left the Octagon following his victory over Paul Daley at UFC 113 in May when he began the torrent of trash talk about St. Pierre. Then, for six weeks in Las Vegas, he poked and prodded St. Pierre, hoping to get a rise out of him. He’s continued the verbal onslaught ever since.

St. Pierre is a man who values his image nearly above all else. The thought of rolling around on a floor, brawling with Koscheck, is abhorrent to him.

The taunts and pranks didn’t go unnoticed by St. Pierre, who will defend his title against Koscheck on Saturday in front of a UFC-record crowd – expected to top 23,000 – in the main event of UFC 124 at the Bell Centre.

During the show, St. Pierre was, as he always seems to be, calm and in control. He responded with a grin and a shake of his head, largely ignoring Koscheck despite a fire that raged inside of him that told him he ought to shut his foe’s mouth for good.

Finally, on Wednesday at a workout for the media and again on Thursday at the final news conference, St. Pierre opened a window to his soul. He displayed a passion he’s rarely shown publicly before, something contrary to his carefully crafted, gentlemanly image.

As the news conference ended Thursday, St. Pierre was asked about a comment he’d made earlier, in which he said he’d be done with Koscheck after Saturday. St. Pierre won a decision over the former NCAA Division I national wrestling champion at UFC 74 in 2007 in a non-title fight. He pointed out that if he prevails again in Saturday’s title fight, Koscheck figures to be in his rear-view mirror forever. “I’m doing this job, because I want to be the best,” St. Pierre said. “I don’t want to be number two. I want to be number one. I’ve always been like this. And I don’t want to be just number one, I want to be the greatest. That’s my main goal. When I do something, I want to be the best of the best. Now I’m fighting Josh Koscheck and I fought him before. People say, ‘Oh, the pressure is on you. You’re in Montreal.’ It’s true. I’m in Montreal, but I am at my best when I’m fighting in my hometown. But also, if I win against Josh Koscheck, when I beat him, that’s going to be the end of it. It would be two times I beat him.

“If he has the same mentality as me, Josh Koscheck, he’ll have to reconsider his career. If he wants to be the best, after he loses two times to me, it’s going to take a long time again before he goes for the title. Maybe, never again. He’ll have to climb up the ladder a long time. I’m going to beat him on Saturday night and that will be the end of it. I’m not going to talk about him for a long, long time and I’m going to feel very happy.”

He spoke passionately, through clenched teeth, obviously speaking with his heart as much as he was with his mind.

St. Pierre is arguably the UFC’s most popular fighter, so in demand that UFC president Dana White dared to suggest that St. Pierre is more popular in his native country than NHL Hall of Famer Wayne Gretzky. Gretzky is merely the greatest player in hockey history and the Canadian Press Athlete of the 20th Century.

White later amended his comment to indicate he meant St. Pierre is more popular on a global basis, but the point was made: People love the guy, and not just in Canada.

He made an appearance in the Philippines and the massive turnout made it seem as if Manny Pacquiao had stopped on the street corner. St. Pierre took calls on an Albuquerque, N.M., radio station on Wednesday and so many people attempted to get through, the telephone lines crashed. He signed autographs at the UFC Fan Expo and people stood in line for hours to get a few seconds of personal time in front of him.

“It’s really incredible, when you think about it, that people were willing to give up the better part of their day to stand in a line for his autograph in order to get about 10 seconds of his time,” his manager, Shari Spencer, said.

Spencer has helped him build his brand and land him endorsements from blue chip companies like Under Armour, Gatorade and Affliction.

The brand is everything to St. Pierre, who said he’s attempted to pattern his behavior after Gretzky. Gretzky is arguably the most dominant athlete in team sports history and he was a great ambassador for hockey from the day he first stepped onto the ice until his last day as coach of the Phoenix Coyotes.

Similarly, St. Pierre has attempted to maintain an equally wholesome image and avoid some of the unsavory stereotypes that often are associated with the fight game. That’s why he continually bit his tongue when nearly everyone else watching the reality show wanted to see him lose it and haul off and give Koscheck his comeuppance.

“To tell you the truth, there were many times (when Koscheck taunted me) that I had something to say in my head, but because of my brand, because of who I am and because of the way I want to portray myself, I didn’t say anything bad,” St. Pierre said. “But sometimes, I said it to my friends and they were laughing. People don’t know what’s happening in my head. Of course, I’m a good guy on camera, because I take my business very seriously. For me, when I’m in front of the camera, it’s a business. The way I dress and everything, it’s a business, it’s professional.

“I try to portray myself like Wayne Gretzky, Michael Jordan. Of course, I’m a human being and I have some bad thoughts in my head sometimes. I’m human, I have some bad ideas, but when I’m in front of the camera, it’s business and when it’s business, I think of my business and my brand.”

Koscheck, who seemed tense and disinterested at Wednesday’s media workout, clearly has tried to anger St. Pierre in order to affect the way he fights. St. Pierre, though, was on to the game early and wouldn’t fall for it.

St. Pierre said he’d be disappointed if he won by decision, rather than finishing Koscheck, but said he’s not going to be baited into a slugfest. It’s all about maintaining control in St. Pierre’s world.

“I’m going to fight smart and methodical,” St. Pierre said. “Of course, the crowd’s going to be there and that’s what Koscheck wants. Koscheck wants me to lose my temper. He wants me to fight like an idiot and lose my temper, because that’s how he can beat me. I don’t think skill-wise, he can beat me. In boxing, the guy who is the better boxer, he wants to box. The guy who is not as good as the other guy, he wants to brawl. When you brawl, it’s like flipping a coin. That’s what he wants me to do, to go in there and lose my mind. But that’s exactly what I’m not going to do. “I have a lot of tools in my bag. If he stuffs one takedown or two, I don’t mind that. I can knock him out standing up. I can beat him on the floor. I can do whatever I want.”

Pretty much, that’s true. He’s nearly a deity in Canada, though strangely, he’s more popular outside of his native Quebec because the Francophiles aren’t into fighting as much as the English-speaking population. He’s centered his business interests in the U.S., because it’s where most of the brands he’s going to be affiliated with are located, and because it will leave him a refuge at home in Quebec where he can get away from some of the maddening crowds.

It says something about the character of the man that he’s on display nearly every hour of every day, but he has the control of his emotions and doesn’t crack.

If White was growing fighters in a Petri dish, he couldn’t have grown one to be a better representative of his business than he’s gotten in St. Pierre.

“We’re fortunate not only to have him representing our company, but also to have him as an ambassador for the sport of mixed martial arts,” said Tom Wright, the UFC’s director of Canadian operations. “He’s one of our global icons. Clearly, one of the biggest draws we’ve ever had. Certainly, in this country, when we look at pay-per-view sales, they go along like this and all of a sudden, we see this major blip that comes along when GSP fights. People just love him, not just here but truly, around the world. He’s the kind of guy you want representing your country and the sport. He’s so good, it’s almost like he’s too good to be true.”

St. Pierre waves off comparisons to Gretzky and said he hasn’t accomplished nearly in MMA what Gretzky did in hockey – yet.

So for now, it’s OK to refer to him as the Wayne Gretzky of MMA.

But don’t you get the idea that if St. Pierre keeps this up, someday in the not-too-distant future, some Canadian father will be telling his son about Wayne Gretzky and will refer to him as “The Georges St. Pierre of hockey?” It probably won’t happen. But the fact that it might tells you all you need to know about St. Pierre.

Source: sports.yahoo.com