Sunday 8 May 2011

Paris Hilton Parties With Manny Pacquiao After Vegas Victory -- Contact Music

ContactMusic.com

Socialite Paris Hilton got into the fighting spirit as she watched Filipino boxing icon Manny Pacquiao defend his title in Las Vegas on Saturday (07May11).

Hilton and her sister Nicky were part of the sold-out crowd cheering on Pacquiao at the Mgm Grand Arena, where he defeated American boxer Shane Mosley after 12 rounds to retain the Wbo (World Boxing Association) welterweight title.

After staying behind to watch a post-fight news conference, the heiress turned from fan to friend after she was introduced to Pacquiao and his wife Jinkee.

In a series of posts on her Twitter.com page, Hilton writes, "Pacquiao is the champion! Pac Man is an incredible fighter! Hanging out with Manny Pacquiao and his beautiful wife Jinkee. They are such a sweet & down to earth couple! Love them!

"Wow! Such an honour to be brought on stage by Manny & his wife Jinkee after the fight."

Hilton even made plans to visit the world champion when she next visits his native country, adding: "Can't wait to visit them when I go to the Philippines!"

Source: contactmusic.com

Mayweather isn’t gaga about Pacquiao fight -- Yahoo! Sports

By Martin Rogers, Yahoo! Sports

LAS VEGAS – Floyd Mayweather Jr. delivered a fight night taunt to Manny Pacquiao by claiming he would tune in to a Lady Gaga concert instead of watching the Filipino star’s easy victory over Shane Mosley.

While Pacquiao was cruising to a comfortable points victory at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in a Showtime pay-per-view telecast broadcast, Mayweather was at his Las Vegas home watching Lady Gaga on rival network HBO – and urging his fans to do the same.

Born This Way“Everyone watch Lady Gaga tonight on the best network in the world, HBO,” Mayweather said on his Twitter account.

Only Mayweather and his family knows if he really did watch the music special from Madison Square Garden instead of the showdown in the ring just a few miles from his home. Yet either way, his apparent ambivalence to Pacquiao’s win appears to suggest that a superfight between the pair – a bout that all boxing fans crave more than any other – is further away than ever.

Attempts to set up a Pacquiao-Mayweather fight collapsed in January, 2010, with the primary sticking point being Mayweather’s insistence on Olympic-style drug testing. Talks were set up again in July, but fell through once more, with Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum and Mayweather’s representatives at Golden Boy Promotions failing to reach common ground.

“For me I don’t care about that fight,” Pacquiao said. “I am satisfied with everything I have done in boxing. I want to fight because the people want the fight.”

A fight between the two biggest names in the sport would generate huge pay-per-view revenues and potentially give boxing a much-needed boost amid an increasingly tough sports marketplace.

Arum is in no doubt about what would be the outcome. “He would beat Floyd, I guarantee it,” Arum said. “You are watching a phenomenon. You are watching the greatest fighter I have ever seen. Nobody can compete with it. He will take every single fighter out of their game plan.

“The guy who knows that best is a real student of boxing named Floyd Mayweather Jr. He knows us and how we do things, if he had any desire to fight Manny he would call us. Mayweather has said that if he comes back he wants a tune up fight first. If he took that it wouldn’t be until next year that he was available.”

Pacquiao is instead likely to fight Juan Manuel Marquez next, although his continuing domination may be in danger of turning off some fans. Indeed, the champ was so confident of beating Mosley that he committed to performing in a concert at Mandalay Bay just a few hours after Saturday night’s bout.

Source: sports.yahoo.com

Mosley failed to put up a fight against unmatched Pacquiao -- Sports Illustrated

By Bryan Armen Graham, SI.com

LAS VEGAS -- Manny Pacquiao put on yet another clinic, but an unaccommodating dance partner kept boxing's pound-for-pound kingpin from a more satisfying showcase of his brilliance.

The hard-hitting Filipino spent most of Saturday chasing a strangely passive Shane Mosley around the ring at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, coasting to a unanimous-decision victory before a crowd of 16,412 in the biggest fight of the year to date.

Pacquiao's 14th consecutive victory wasn't close, and it was never in doubt. The judges' scores were 119-108, 120-108 and 120-107, with the punch stats reflecting the disparity in action: Pacquiao landed 182 of 552 shots, compared to just 82 of 260 for Mosley.

"I was surprised he ran and ran," said Pacquiao (52-3-2, 38 KOs), the eight-division champion who was making the second defense of the WBO welterweight title he took from Miguel Cotto in 2009. "My opponent had a lot of respect for me."

Too much respect. With the ultraconservative effort, the 39-year-old Mosley effectively signed his own walking papers from the sport's top flight. Now just 8-7-1 since opening his career at 38-0, the clamor for Sugar Shane's retirement will surely begin in earnest.

And why shouldn't it? Mosley (46-7-1, 39 KOs), who received a minimum of $5 million, did little to dispel the impression he was just happy to be here. He'd thanked everybody but the janitor at Wednesday's final pre-fight press conference and spent most of Saturday making conciliatory gestures in the ring: the fighters touched gloves at least 15 times (mostly at Mosley's lead) and even hugged before the 12th round.

The bruised challenger described seeing "different types of punches that I wouldn't have fallen for with anyone else" when he emerged in sunglasses to meet with the press nearly 75 minutes after the fight.

"I don't think he tried to win the fight, I think he just tried to survive," said Freddie Roach, who trains Pacquiao, "and when you get to that point in boxing I think it's time to [retire]."

Mosley held titles at lightweight, welterweight and junior middleweight, rising to the mythical pound-for-pound summit Pacquiao now inhabits. But the future Hall of Famer who twice upset Oscar De La Hoya bore little resemblance to the faded talent who looked so out of his depth Saturday against a younger, faster champion.

The Pomona, Calif., native looked fast and strong but hesitant to engage, and it was clear from the second round he was outmatched.

A cagey opening saw Pacquiao probe with the right jab, while Mosley tried to set up body shots with a leading left hand. In the third, Pacquiao made more concerted attacks, but a cautious Mosley stayed out of range. Mosley did a good job of picking off punches but couldn't or wouldn't return with fire.

With 1:17 left in the third, Pacquaio connected with a lunging right jab just sharply enough to blind Mosley momentarily, following it up with a short left hook that dumped Mosley to the canvas. "He surprised me with that power," Mosley confessed. "He has speed and power that I have never felt before."

From there, it was all Pacquiao, even as he contended with a left leg muscle cramp that struck in the fourth round and undercut his leverage.

"The first knockdown I felt I got him, and I felt I was stronger than him," Pacquiao said.

Mosley spent the rest of the night just trying to keep Pacquiao in front of him. He was picking off the champion's increasingly diverse offerings -- hooks to the body, straights upstairs, uppercuts with either hand (which Pacquiao rarely throws), the occasional overhand right -- but proved unable to follow up with any substantial offense.

Pacquiao worked the angles, attacked and tried fastidiously to crack the code. Even as he barely missed with whipping hooks, his straight left was doing significant damage. More glove-touching invited scattered boos from the crowd, a din that only grew as the night wore on. The fight evoked memories of Pacquiao's forgettable 12-round decision victory over Josh Clottey in March 2010, in which the Ghanaian challenger turtled up, refused to engage and seemed perfectly content to be spared the indignity of a knockout.

Even when Mosley tried to open up -- like the well-timed right uppercut that caught Pacquiao flush in the sixth -- it only emboldened the Filipino. Mosley closed the sixth with a big right followed by a bigger left, but they weren't nearly enough to win the round.

Mosley appeared easily discouraged by the flurry of activity, demoralized by his opponent's endless reserves of energy. Midway through the fight, he appeared exhausted.

The most interesting sequence of the fight's second half came in the 10th, when Mosley either struck or pushed Pacquiao to the canvas with his right glove. Referee Kenny Bayless ruled it a knockdown, though replays revealed it to be a push (and Bayless apologized to Roach for the missed call after the final bell). Pacquiao appeared incredulous, then completely invigorated: he bumrushed Mosley, amping up the pressure and went for the knockout as the crowd erupted. Mosley backpedaled furiously, absorbing punches and briefly using his right glove to balance himself along the top rope.

Spurred on by the injustice of the faux knockdown, Pacquiao bore down for the knockout but couldn't finish a challenger in full retreat. (Consider the 11th round, when Mosley threw just 13 punches, landing four.) The pro-Pacquiao crowd greeted the final bell with a cascade of boos, clearly underwhelmed by Mosley's unwillingness to come forward and fight.

Still, it's difficult not to stand back and admire Pacquiao's latest Hall of Fame scalp and how it fits within the greater legacy of the Pambansang Kamao -- or National Fist.

The details of Pacquiao's improbable rise from street urchin to worldwide superstar are well-documented -- the squalid living conditions in General Santos City, the flight from home after his father killed, cooked and ate his pet dog, the ferry ride to Manila where he learned his craft in the capital city's barely legal smokers.

After stealing to Hollywood and teaming with Roach in 2001, Pacquiao stockpiled world titles at 112, 122, 126, 130, 135, 140, 147 and 154 pounds -- a record haul that may never be matched.

Now the 32-year-old is done scaling weight classes. What's left is the third act: a messianic desire to heal the world.

Elected to Congress in the Philippines last year, Pacquaio is emerging as a champion of social justice unlike anything known in sporting life since Muhammad Ali. "I have a special message to all of you," said Pacquiao at Wednesday's press conference. "All my life, I have had to fight. As a child, I had to fight just to eat. And now when I fight, Filipinos call me a hero. I believe the biggest fight of my life is not in boxing. The biggest fight in my life is how to end poverty in my country."

Pacquiao's higher calling prompted the decision to wear yellow gloves Saturday as a "symbol of unity in the fight against poverty." He encouraged people attending the fight to wear yellow also, which many did.

Already a global superstar, Pacquaio's stock only rises in the United States. He earned at least $20 million for Saturday's effort, a figure that promises to swell once the pay-per-view receipts are counted. His English is light years better than even three years ago, when he first burst onto the mainstream radar with his upset of De La Hoya. He's tapped IMG veteran Lucia McKelvey to help consolidate a notoriously scattered and dysfunctional endorsement portfolio.

Many hope the final chapter of Pacquiao's career will include a long-awaited showdown with Floyd Mayweather, but Top Rank CEO Bob Arum didn't seem overly optimistic during Saturday's post-fight press conference. Nor did Pacquiao, who remained non-comittal on a fight the public has already made.

"For me, I don't care about that fight," Pacquaio said. "I am satisfied with everything that I have done in boxing. I want [the Mayweather fight] because the people want the fight."

Arum said he's made an offer to Juan Manuel Marquez to fight Pacquiao on Nov. 5 or Nov. 12. If Marquez is unavailable, he'll fight Timothy Bradley or Zab Judah, who hold belts in the 140-pound division where Pacquiao is still lineal champ.

"The problem is that this is becoming a pattern," said Arum of the fight's one-sided flow. "Manny doesn't allow any opponent to fight his fight. He takes the opponent out of the fight because of his speed and because of his power. Shane had no answer, but neither did De La Hoya, neither did Miguel Cotto, neither did Margarito.

"You've got to understand what you're watching now. You're watching a phenomenon."

Source: sportsillustrated.cnn.com

Cramps prevent Pacquiao from scoring KO -- Sydney Morning Herald

By Greg Heakes, AFP

LAS VEGAS: Philippine boxing champion Manny Pacquiao, who hasn't lost a fight in six years, said the only thing preventing him from knocking out Shane Mosley was a cramp in his legs.

Pacquiao successfully defended his World Boxing Organization welterweight title for a second time, winning by a unanimous decision after 12 rounds in front of a sold-out crowd at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino Saturday.

Pacman floored Mosley in round three -- the challenger's first knockdown for nine years -- but quickly felt a twinge in his left leg.

"After the first knockdown I felt I had him and I got him and that I could finish him," Pacquiao said. "But the next round I have a problem with my left foot it is tight.

"I told my coach to press my legs because they are too tight."

Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach said his fighter had problems with cramping before but usually in training sessions and not in the middle of bouts.

They have tried different remedies including stretching and other exercises but nothing worked against Mosley.

Despite the pain 32-year-old Pacquiao put on an impressive performance Saturday, dominating from start to finish.

The only blot on an otherwise convincing display was a knockdown awarded to Mosely in the 10th round, a decision the referee later apologised to Pacquiao for.

Mosley claimed he would expose Pacquiao's weaknesses but there was no turning back the clock for the 39-year-old former world champion, who looked every bit his age Saturday.

Mosley's main goal appeared simply to survive the onslaught launched by the Philippine icon and to keep his record of never being knocked out intact.

The challenger maintained that record but was booed loudly for his negative tactics, especially in the eighth and ninth rounds.

Even Pacquiao gave him the cold shoulder in the ring after the final bell and then questioned Mosley's game plan at the post-fight news conference.

"I was expecting him to fight with me for at least five of the 12 rounds so we can test each other's power," Pacquiao said. "I did my best to try and give a good fight. What can I do? It is not my fault."

AFP

Manny Pacquiao turns 'Sugar' sour -- LA Daily News

Los Angeles Daily News

Mosley is no match for welterweight champ, who dominates on way to decision.

LAS VEGAS - One of Manny Pacquiao's ever-present goals is to make fans happy when they watch one of his fights. He has done that by providing incredible action nearly every time he steps into the ring.

But his welterweight world title defense against "Sugar" Shane Mosley on Saturday resembled more of a glorified sparring session.

They touched gloves before rounds, and after. They did that with the slightest bumping of heads. Very friendly stuff.

Never have so many boos been doled out at a Pacquiao fight. Since most of the 16,412 at MGM Grand were rooting for Pacquiao, that's saying a lot.

Pacquiao did drop Mosley in the third round with a right-left combination, and Mosley got credit for a knockdown that was obviously a push in the 10th.

But it was the only two times the fans had a chance to really go bonkers, although the Pacquiao faithful did go a bit wild when an angry Pacquiao went after Mosley after the bogus knockdown in the 10th.

It all added up to a rather unpleasing fight, but Pacquiao did retain his championship with a unanimous decision. He won by scores of 120-107, 120-108 and 119-108.

Pacquiao followers did cheer when the decision was announced, but not all that heartily.

Afterward came the excuses.

"I got a blood blister on my right foot in the sixth round," Mosley said.

Pacquiao did him one better.

"My leg tightened up," said Pacquiao, who is now 54-3-2. "It was the same thing that happened against (Juan Manuel) Marquez (in one of their two fights). I couldn't move because my leg got tight. They tried massaging it between rounds. It's a problem I've been having."

Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, said Pacquiao came back after the fourth round and told him about the condition of his leg.

"He had no leverage to move after that," Roach said. "It was a very gutty performance in my mind because of the problem with his leg."

Bottom line is, the times when the respective fighters threw more than one or two punches in a sequence were few and far between. Aside from the excuses for the dull nature of the fight, the fighters discussed the specifics.

"I just fought the best fighter in the world," said Mosley, who will be 40 in September and looked it; he had a bump on the right side of his face. "I've never been hit like that before. He has exceptional power, power that I have never been hit with before."

Mosley (46-7-1) also said Pacquiao is the fastest fighter he has ever faced.

When asked why he didn't take more chances, Mosley intimated it was out or respect for Pacquiao.

"I wasn't going to take those kinds of risks," he said. "I was looking to land my shot."

Mosley said his age had nothing to do with anything that happened.

"I don't blame my age," he said. "Manny is exceptional. He is so fast and powerful. He is cut from the same cloth that I am, so I had to box today."

Naazim Richardson, Mosley's trainer, said that his fighter just "started too late."

Mosley said he didn't know if he would retire.

"I don't even want to think about that right now," he said.

Pacquiao wasn't thrilled about what transpired Saturday, either.

"I did not expect this result," he said.

Pacquiao, 32, was asked if he still would like to fight Floyd Mayweather Jr. Their two camps have twice negotiated for a fight, with nothing coming of either discussion.

"If I could fight him, it would be a great fight," he said. "I leave that to my promoter. If it never happens, I won't lose a minute's sleep over it. I want to fight Mayweather because the people want it."

Pacquiao was involved in a fender-bender a few hours before the fight, as his car tapped bumpers with another in the pound-for-pound champion's caravan.

Pacquiao wasn't hurt in the minor car accident Saturday on the way back to the MGM Grand from the nearby Mandalay Bay casino, where he attended Mass, according to The Associated Press.

Pacquiao's publicist Fred Sternburg told the AP that a security car lightly tapped the back bumper of Pacquiao's car at a stoplight. Nobody was injured, and no police report was filed.

On the undercard, Jorge Arce of Mexico stopped super bantamweight world champion Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. at 55 seconds of the 12th and final round to win the belt.

In his first fight in nearly 13months because of two alcohol rehabilitation stints, former middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik (37-2) appeared rusty and tired easily during his 10-round super middleweight fight against Alfonso Lopez (21-1). Pavlik won a majority decision, however, making his return somewhat successful.

One judge, Adalaide Byrd, scored it 95-95. Dick Houck and C.J. Ross gave it to Pavlik by respective scores of 98-92 and 92-91.

Former heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield stopped Brian Nielsen on a technical knockout in the 10th round in Copenhagen, Denmark. ... Daniel Geale (25-1) took the International Boxing Federation middleweight title from Sebastian Sylvester (34-4-1), winning a split decision in Neubrandenburg, Germany.

Associated Press contributed

(57-6-2, 44 KOs) (20-1-1) Also ...

Source: dailynews.com

Pacquiao takes unanimous decision over Mosley -- Los Angeles Times

LA Times

Las Vegas, NV — Manny Pacquiao remained unbeaten in six years and toppled another likely Hall of Famer with a unanimous 12-round decision over non-violent 39-year-old challenger Shane Mosley in the Saturday night main event of a star-studded card at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Both fighters were knocked down in the fight, Mosley from a crunching straight left hand in the third round and Pacquiao after he missed with a right hand and was pushed to the floor in the 10th.

Referee Kenny Bayless initially hesitated to rule it a knockdown, but ultimately gave a mandatory 8-count to an obviously irritated Pacquiao.

It was the third knockdown suffered by Mosley in his career and the fifth against Pacquiao.

"I think he felt my power. He's a smart fighter," Pacquiao said. "I wanted to go toe to toe, but he has good defense and I had some pain in my legs, so it was hard to move forward as much."

Mosley has never been knocked out. He spent much of the final three-quarters of the bout on the defensive, drawing intermittent boos from a reported crowd of more than 16,000.

Pacquiao continually pressed the action, moving forward from a southpaw stance with flicking right jabs and occasionally stinging straight lefts that caused moderate swelling on Mosley�s face.

He outpunched Mosley, 552-260, and outlanded him by a 182-82 count.

The win, which improved the Filipino to 53-3-2 in a pro career that began in 1995, came by scores of 119-108, 120-108 and 120-107.

Sports Network scored it 118-109.

"I don't care who my next opponent is. I'd be satisfied with what I've done in boxing," Pacquiao said, answering a query about his desire to fight enigmatic pound-for-pound elitist Floyd Mayweather Jr.

"I want the fight because the people want it."

Pacquiao has won 14 straight fights since a unanimous decision loss to Erik Morales at 130 pounds in March 2005, also at the MGM Grand.

"I was in there with the best tonight," said Mosley, now winless in three fights (0-2-1) since defeating Antonio Margarito in January 2009.

"He surprised me with his punching power. That was the most legitimate knockdown I've had against me in a long time, and I said to myself, 'Wow, this guy's really got some power.'"

The defeat of Mosley was Pacquiao's second successful defense of the WBO welterweight title he won via 12th-round stoppage from Miguel Cotto in November 2009.

Mosley, a former champion at 135, 147 and 154 pounds, fell to 46-7-1. He sidestepped immediate post-fight questions about retirement, refusing to blame the loss on advanced age.

"I thought I did a pretty good job," he said. "I can still get in there with young guys and do what I do. This guy is amazing."

* * *

On the undercard: Mexican veteran Jorge Arce won his third weight-class championship with a dramatic 12th-round stoppage of incumbent Wilfredo Vazquez Jr. in a WBO junior featherweight title bout.

Vazquez, who scored the lone knockdown with a counter left hand in the fourth, tired badly in the late going and was pinned against the ropes for a lengthy flurry before his corner - led by his father, three-time champion Wilfredo Vazquez Sr. - threw in the towel at the 55-second mark of the final round.

Arce, a former champion at 112 and 115 pounds, was leading 107-102 on one scorecard at the time of the stoppage while the final two cards were even at 104-104.

He is 57-6-2 and scored his 44th knockout while improving to 12-4 in championship fights.

Vazquez, who'd won his belt 15 months ago and defended twice, fell to 20-1-1.

Sports Network had Vazquez ahead, 105-103, at the time of the stoppage.

* * *

Comebacking ex-champion Kelly Pavlik returned after 13 months on the shelf with a combative 10-round decision over previously unbeaten Texan Alfonso Lopez in a super middleweight bout.

Pavlik, who recently completed a stint in rehab for alcohol dependence, won two scorecards with counts of 98-92 and 99-91 to override a 95-95 result on the final card.

A title-holder at 160 pounds from 2007-2010 before losing his belts to Sergio Martinez, he is 37-2.

Lopez is 21-1.

Sports Network scored it 96-94 for Pavlik.

* * *

Junior welterweight Mike Alvarado won the vacant WBC Continental Americas championship and moved to 30-0 overall when opponent Ray Narh quit on his stool at the end of three rounds of the scheduled 10-rounder. Narh is 25-2.

* * *

Former 108-pound world champion Rodel Mayol scored a majority decision over Javier Gallo in 10-round junior bantamweight bout, winning two scores of 98-92 to overrule a third card that read 95-95. Mayol improved to 28-5-2 while Gallo is now 17-4-1.

* * *

French-Canadian junior welterweight Pier Olivier Cote is 16-0 with 11 KOs as a pro after his fourth-round TKO of Aris Ambriz in a scheduled eight-rounder. Ambriz dropped to 15-2-1.

* * *

Unbeaten lightweight prospect Karl Dargan won his ninth straight with a unanimous six-round decision over Randy Arrellin, earning the verdict by scores of 60-54, 60-54 and 59-55. Arrellin is 8-5.

* * *

Eighteen-year-old knockout artist Jose Benavidez improved to 11-0 and scored his 10th stoppage with a fifth-round TKO of James Hope in a junior welterweight bout scheduled for six. Hope fell to 6-8-1.

Source: latimes.com

Pacquiao’s best, even when not at his best -- Yahoo! Sports

By Kevin Iole, Yahoo! Sports

LAS VEGAS – This is how good Manny Pacquiao has become: His legs were cramping, he wasn’t on top of his game and he still nearly shut out Shane Mosley.

Pacquiao, who was once dismissed as a small fighter, knocked Mosley down hard in the third round and sent the one-time pound-for-pound king scurrying around the ring for most of the rest of the fight, unwilling to engage.

It was far from a scintillating performance and the crowd booed frequently in the second half of the fight. Pacquiao, though, has improved to such a degree that even when he has an off night, he blows guys out. Pacquiao won by scores of 120-107, 120-108 and 119-108 on Saturday before a sellout crowd of 16,412 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Pacquiao wasn’t thrilled that Mosley didn’t stand and engage. That left him with cramped legs trying to chase Mosley and resulted in the rare less-than-entertaining Pacquiao bout.

“I’ll tell you the truth: I was expecting him to fight with me at least five rounds of the 12 rounds toe-to-toe with me so that we could test our power, our stamina,” Pacquiao said before heading across the street to Mandalay Bay to perform a concert. “But what could I do if my opponent doesn’t want to fight toe-to-toe? It’s not my fault.

“I’m happy, because I know I won the fight. But I said my first concern is the satisfaction of the people. I want the people to be satisfied with my performance and to leave happy.”

No one who was expecting a great fight could have been happy, whether they bought tickets or plunked down the money for the pay-per-view. It was a low-drama, low-action match and the outcome wasn’t in doubt over the final 10 rounds.

Mosley, who said after the fight that “this could be it” for his superlative career, said he was shocked by Pacquiao’s punching power. He said before the fight that he wasn’t fighting a small guy and Pacquiao’s power proved that.

But Pacquiao throws with such little effort that it often doesn’t seem like it’s a dangerous blow until it lands.

“Manny Pacquiao has the type of power I had to watch out for,” Mosley said. “Usually, I can go in there and punch with guys, but it seemed like he had something a little different. I had to watch out.

“There were different punches that he threw that didn’t seem to be hard, but the impact definitely was hard. I really had to watch out for those particular shots he threw. Like I said, Manny is a great fighter and he threw some great punches.”

Mosley’s plan was to work off the angles and try to counter Pacquiao, but Mosley was unable to get off. He looked like a fighter within sight of his 40th birthday and didn’t have the speed and explosiveness that was such a big part of his game earlier in his career.

Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach said Mosley also didn’t appear to have the desire for combat that he displayed for most of his career.

“I don’t think he tried to win the fight,” Roach said. “He just tried to survive. When you get to that point in boxing, it’s time to call it a day.”

Pacquiao is so good that he’s lapped the field a second time and is almost making his fights anticlimactic. Top Rank’s Bob Arum said he will submit a new offer to the management team of lightweight champion Juan Manuel Marquez. Golden Boy has the right to match the offer and if Golden Boy matches, it would pit Marquez against Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.

If Golden Boy does that, Arum said he’d offer a Pacquiao bout, tentatively slated for Nov. 12 in Las Vegas, to one of two super lightweight champions, Timothy Bradley or Zab Judah. But as great as they are, it’s hard to imagine either being able to do much against this fighting machine.

Arum, though, isn’t afraid that he’ll lose pay-per-view sales even though Pacquiao’s fights have become predictably one-sided.

“People will pay to see Manny Pacquiao,” Arum said. “Because he is not dull. He is the aggressor. He is an entertaining fighter. I believe most people who saw the fight bought it not with the expectation that Shane Mosley would win. They bought the Margarito fight, not because they thought Margarito would win, but because they wanted to be entertained by Manny Pacquiao.”

Even Pacquiao had difficulty being entertaining given the circumstances on Saturday. Mosley was given a knockdown in the 10th when he hurled Pacquiao to the canvas. Referee Kenny Bayless ruled it a knockdown in favor of Mosley, but later apologized to Pacquiao for it.

Pacquiao was angered by it and he went hard after Mosley looking for the finish.

“I got a little angry,” Pacquiao said.

It’s too bad that he didn’t get angry earlier. He spent much of the night touching gloves with Mosley in a display of sportsmanship that didn’t do much for those who were looking for action.

Even when he’s not firing on all cylinders, Pacquiao is far better than the rest of the field. There aren’t a lot of guys around his weight who he could fight, particularly if Floyd Mayweather Jr. continues to be more interested in watching Lady Gaga than he is in boxing.

Arum said he wouldn’t rule out a bout with middleweight champ Sergio Martinez, though he is wary of it because by fight time, Martinez might weigh nearly 30 pounds more.

“I still think Manny would beat him, but it’s not fair to ask him to give up that much weight,” Arum said.

It’s also not fair, though, to ask mere mortals to get into the ring with Pacquiao. If Mayweather doesn’t take the challenge – and he’s showing no inclination he wants to do so – we might be in for a long string of these one-sided routs.

Source: sports.yahoo.com