Pacquiao vs Margarito | Pacquiao Fight Updates

Latest news and updates of Pacquiao fights.

Pacquiao Down Hatton

Saturday, May 2, 2009 - It was two rounds of brutal action and a two round blowout for Filipino sensation Manny “The Pacman” Pacquiao as he walked through, around, and all over Ricky “The Hitman” Hatton (45-2 with 32 KOs). It was a crowning achievement for Pacquiao who became the first man to beat Hatton.

Cotto Beats Clottey

Saturday, June 13, 2009 - Miguel Cotto retained his welterweight title with a split-decision win over Joshua Clottey. Cotto is now 34-1 (27 KOs), Clottey 35-3 (20 KOs). Cotto recorded the fight's only knockdown when he caught Clottey with a hard left jab in the final 15 seconds of the first round.

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Pacquiao can handle Floyd, says Roach

Freddie Roach sees Floyd Mayweather Jr. as the least troublesome among fighters being groomed to face Manny Pacquiao.

"The easiest fight out of those three, in my opinion, is Mayweather," Roach told ace fight scribe Robert Morales in boxing scene. "The other two guys are way stronger, way more physical. Look at Mayweather; he struggled against (Oscar) De La Hoya and his fight with (Ricky) Hatton was competitive."

"And Manny killed both of those guys. I don’t care what the excuses are. A fact is a fact. He (Mayweather) won a split decision against De La Hoya. We didn’t lose a round to either," Roach said.

Pacquiao has been penciled to return on Oct. 17 against a foe yet to be named following an easy two-round destruction of Hatton last May 2.

Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico, Shane Mosley of the US and Mayweather are frontrunners although Top Rank chief Bob Arum believes a Mayweather fight with Pacquiao is not very likely to happen within the year.

Cotto fights Joshua Clottey on June 13 in New York, while Mayweather meets Juan Manuel Marquez of Mexico on July 18 in Las Vegas and Team Pacquiao should be able to reach a decision as to who and where Pacquiao’s fight will be immediately afterwards.

Mayweather is being represented by Leonard Ellerbe and Al Haymon in the negotiating table, while Mosley is under the promotional banner of the De La Hoya-owned Golden Boy Promotions and Cotto is with Top Rank like Pacquiao.

Before his premature retirement in 2008, Mayweather was universally recognized as the best fighter in the world pound-for-pound.

Pacquiao is now the holder of that mythical title after a string of impressive wins against Marquez, David Diaz, De La Hoya and Hatton.

Pacquiao will be at ringside at Madison Square Garden when Cotto slugs it out with Clottey since he will root for Filipino title challenger Rodel Mayol in the undercard.

http://www.mb.com.ph


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Floyd Mayweather Sr.: “WE WILL DISMANTLE PACQUAIO”

Oscar De La Hoya. The moniker given to him throughout his career was “Golden Boy.” He was touted as a 10- time world champion spanning six weight classes. He was the only American boxer to bring home the gold in the ’92 Olympics. He set revenue records that may never be matched in the boxing world. HBO’s mouthpieces noted that athletes in major American sports don’t even make 100 million in “36 minutes” of fighting once a year.

Such is the power, or WAS the power of the Golden Boy that everyone will now possibly wonder aloud or privately, “was Oscar something great or was he just part of a well oiled, safely marketed product” that in the end now looks more like the bearer of pyrite instead of King Midas himself?

In an interview with Oscar’s former trainer, Floyd Mayweather Sr. I asked him to discuss Oscar’s meltdown at the hands of De La Hoya’s hand picked opponent, Manny Pacquaio..

“Joel De La Hoya, Oscar’s brother said, ‘oh we got Nacho Berstein now. This is a blessing.’ Well look what happened. Berstein had nothing. Berstein couldn’t tell Oscar what to do the entire night. If that’s a blessing then I’ll stop praying now.”

“Well the record now speaks for itself. They (Oscar’s trainers, Berstein and Angelo Dundee) did all this talking into their microphones for the media, but couldn’t do anything when it came down to the real thing.”

Though many people have written Oscar’s eulogy regarding his boxing career, Floyd Sr. is not quite ready to join the growing chorus for De La Hoya to hang up the gloves.

“ I think Oscar could’ve pulled it off. He needed to be aggressive. He should’ve thrown flurries. The power shot would’ve come behind the flurries. That’s what was missing.”

“I have never seen Oscar hunch over in a corner the way he did that night. It shouldn’t have happened like that. There was no excuse for him to have taken that beating. Thirty-five is not that old these days in boxing. Oscar hasn’t had that much damage done to his body in the ring before this.”

Mayweather Sr. alluded to signs that the fight was lost long before Oscar stepped into the ring this past Saturday night.

“I can tell you is that it wasn’t all Oscar’s fault. I know personally of two things that went on in Oscar’s training camp. There was a lot of stuff that went on in camp that was counter productive to Oscar’s training. I can’t pull the covers off the people that were in the camp that told me these things, but just know that the trainers never really came up with a strategy. They had nothing and you could see that during the fight.”

“His corner never told him how to chop his man (Pacquaio) down. It was so obvious that even Ray Charles could see that.”

This sentiment was echoed by Eric Brown (Pacquaio’s assistant trainer) as well when I asked him to recap Manny’s sensational victory.

“I’m not sure if Oscar was a hundred percent. It appeared as though he (Oscar) went overboard in trying to maintain his lower weight.

“He may have gone too long in camp in coming down in weight that his stomach shrunk and he wasn’t able to eat properly anymore because he was too drained. I believe he was over trained.”

Brown also thought that Oscar let his ego get in the way and that De La Hoya wasn’t facing just Manny that night, but Freddie Roach, Manny’s trainer, and Bob Arum, head boss of Top Rank, as well.

“Oscar, in my opinion, took this fight to rub Bob Arum and Freddie’s noses in a possible victory of Pac, but I think it overwhelmed him in the end. He made such a big deal about having all of these special trainers and I think it took its toll.”

Like Floyd Sr., Brown shares the same thoughts on De La Hoya’s Dream Team of trainers and advisors, “ he was supposed to have all those experts in his corner and you would think they would’ve known how to properly condition and train their fighter, but you saw what happened. They didn’t have answers and their fighter was drained.”

With what appears to be the end of De La Hoya’s career, the boxing world has moved on to other fights that may come to fruition. One of those fights is a promising clash between Ricky “The Hit Man” Hatton and the Mexican Assassin, Manny Pacquaio.

Both trainers expressed their interest in this fight-taking place.

“If they want Rick, they’re going to get Rick and it won’t end pretty for them.” Floyd Sr. stated empathically.

“I love this fight for Rick. We will dismantle Pacquaio. Guaranteed.”

Brown lobbied for the fight saying, “ This fight on a business level makes a lot of sense. Both fighters have a major following and this thing would sell out quick.”

“Ricky would bring it and Manny would too. Both guys are fighters and this would definitely be an all action fight.”

Finally, both coaches commented briefly on a return of former pound for pound king, the undefeated Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Brown said that Floyd Jr. being a gifted pugilist would “be the only man that would present Manny with a serious challenge and it would be a difficult fight for Pac” in light of “Mayweather’s brilliance in speed, intelligence, and defense.”

Father Mayweather believes that his son “would beat him (Manny) easy. He (Mayweather Jr.) would do to him what Manny did to Oscar, but worse.”

As a side note, Floyd Sr. assured me that his son would end his retirement next year.

“Oh he’s coming out. He’s coming next year.”

Lastly, Brown and Mayweather did find another topic to agree on, aside from their chafing remarks towards Berstein and Dundee, they equally deem WBA welter weight champion, Antonio Margarito as the one that will have his hand raised on January 24,2009 when he conquers former world champion, Shane Mosley.

http://www.eastsideboxing.com

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Peñalosa wants to retire a champ

NEGRENSE former World Boxing Organization (WBO) bantamweight champion Gerry Peñalosa of San Carlos City, Negros Occidental, (54-7-2 36 KOs), wants one more title fight this year before he finally decides to hang his gloves.

Peñalosa, who together with reigning WBO minimumweight champion Donnie Nietes of Murcia, Negros Occidental and Barangay Granada, Bacolod City, was named Negrense Athlete of the Year in 2007 by the Sports Communicators Organization of the Philippines (Scoop Bacolod) during its annual Scoop Awards for Outstanding Negrense Athletes.

"I hope to retire as a champion and I hope I can get one last fight this year," Peñalosa told Manila-based reporters Wednesday.

He said that he is hoping WBO president Francisco “Paco” Valcarel, who told him after he lost in a gallant fight against a much younger and much taller Puerto Rican super bantamweight champion Juan Manuel “Juanma” Lopez last April 25, that he deserved to fight against the winner of the bout between Fernando Montiel and World Boxing Association (WBA) light flyweight champion Eric Morel scheduled June 27 in Atlantic City.

The Negrense former world champ recalled that Valcarel told him in the ring after Freddie Roach decided to wave off the Marquez fight in the ninth round, "mark my words you will be No. 1," which is a commitment of the WBO president already reflected in the May rankings of the world organization.

www.sunstar.com.ph

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Chavez Jr.’s Dream Fight with Pacquaio Shouls Stay that Way- Just a Dream.

Why would a guy who is a legitimate junior middleweight even harbor the dream of having a fight with Manny Pacquiao whose highest fight weight was less than 147lbs.?

It is simply absurd. There is just too much disparity in weight.

Case in point:- Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr.

Junior’s dream is so far out that it may even border insanity. But then again, boxing is sometimes is insane, isn’t it?

In fact in certain places in the USA, people simply abhor it and brand it as “unwholesome”. Glendale, California until recently was one of those places.

Pacquiao is unquestionably smaller not only in weight but in height and reach as well. So a fight with Junior is not a good match.

This does not mean that Pacquiao can not blow away Junior. In fact, if they do fight, Junior may end up on his back looking at the lights.

A fight between the two is an idea gone bad. In fact, Freddie Roach does not want it to happen due to the glaring inequity.

But it seems, it is exactly for those reasons that Junior or at least his backers like Fernando Beltran likes the match. Or even Bob Arum?

Team Chavez feels that they may have an advantage and a fight with Pacquiao is winnable given the aforementioned differences particularly in “reach”.

They are even suggesting a “catch” weight of 150 pounds. What a lame idea!

Junior almost runs out of gas during a legitimate junior middleweight fight with Matt Vanda. If he cuts down to a catch weight of 150 in a fight with the Filipino spitfire, he will certainly end up like Oscar de la Hoya:- tall, big but drained!

They believe that Junior’s long reach will give Pacquiao the fits much like Eric Morales and Juan Ma. Marquez.

In reality however, I think the only reason they want the fight is for Junior to earn tons of money this early in his career.

Nothing wrong with that, after all boxing is “prize fighting”. But they have to wait for the right moment.

It’s not yet Junior’s turn! They need to wake up and accept that, at least for the moment.

It is too far early for Junior and his Team to even be thinking of mega fights such as one that involves Pacquiao. He must earn his laurels first and from opponents that are not selected to assure Junior would win. He needs to fight and beat named and ranked fighters first before he can even dream of meeting Pacquiao on top of the ring.

In so far as Pacquiao is concerned, there is no reason to fight Junior at this point. Not even for a tune up fight because it simply does not make sense, or cents, if you may.

While it maybe true that many Mexican fans will buy in to the fight, there is no way they can come up with numbers compared to a Pacquiao fight with Miguel Cotto, Shane Mosley or even a third match with Juan Ma Marquez.

Thus for the meantime, for Junior there is nothing wrong with dreaming. But for now, it should stay that way:- just a dream.

www.philboxing.com

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Mayweather vs Marquez fight on July 18

Golden Boy Promotions announced the return of Floyd Mayweather Jr. to the boxing in a press conference at the Hollywood Theater of the MGM.

Mayweather will fight Juan Manuel Marquez on July 18 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in a tiff dubbed as “Number One vs. Numero Uno.”

Mayweather, 32, has not fought since his 10th round stoppage of Ricky Hatton in a WBC welterweight title bout in December 2007. He has a career record of 39-0 with 25 knockouts.

Marquez (50-4-1, 37 KOs) on the other hand, the World Boxing Association lightweight champion, will move up in weight for the fight.


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Who Will Get the Manny Pacquiao Call Next?

Coming off an emphatic two round destruction of Britain’s Ricky Hatton, Filipino Boxing Icon, Manny Pacquiao, can now sit back and watch several prospective future opponents go to work. While the names Juan Manuel Marquez, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Edwin Valero, Humberto Soto, and Miguel Cotto have been thrown around, the boxing world eagerly awaits the announcement of his next opponent.
Rest assured, at this point in his career, every Pacquiao bout will be a great spectacle to behold. However, with rumors looming regarding an early retirement party later this year, the public is now even more intrigued. Who will get the Pacquiao call next?

Let us review a list of Pacquiao’s list of potential future opponents and assess which one is most likely to get the call next.

Juan Manuel Marquez - Bob Arum, Pacquiao’s promoter, has recently stated that if Marquez loses to Mayeather in July, the prospects of a 3rd fight will be voided permanently. It’s a real shame too because to date, Marquez has been the only fighter to give Pacquiao a real run for his money. Considering all the advantages Mayweather has in his favor, there is a high probability that Marquez, the 35 year old career featherweight, will fail in his bid to conquer Mayweather in July. Hence, Marquez will very likely not be Pacquiao’s next opponent.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. - Although Mayweather Jr. will more than likely defeat Marquez in July, the probability of the “Fight of the Decade” taking place this year is extremely low. Firstly, there is the issue revolving around money which could hamper this fight from ever taking place. ’Money,’ as he so often refers to himself, is under the delusion that he’s in the driver’s seat and should call all the shots. Secondly, since his departure from the lightweight class, Mayweather has been reluctant to face the best around. Lastly, Arum has seemed apprehensive about making the fight in the near future pointing to Mayweather’s “boring style.” In other words, due to their contrasting styles, the bout may turn out to be a real stinker if Mayweather has his way. All this considered, it’s very likely the fight would take place sometime next year “if” it ever does come to fruition.

Edwin Valero - For years Valero’s name has been mentioned as a possible Pacquiao opponent, but the truth is that Valero brings a high risk/low reward danger to the table. If Pacquiao blows him away, he probably wouldn’t garner the credit he would deserve. If Pacquiao loses, the criticism would come pouring in from all directions. Valero may or may not be the goods. Putting him in the ring with Pacquiao at this point in Pacquiao’s career, would be quite a bold move considering the risk, unless of course, Freddie Roach knows something we don’t know.

Humberto Soto - Like Valero, Soto’s name has always been mentioned as a possible Pacquiao opponent. And out of all of Pacquiao’s current choices, Soto actually seems to be the lowest risk. While Soto has proven to be a pretty solid fighter from 126-130, he leaves himself open with his aggressive style and he doesn’t have the pop that some of the other fighters on this list have. If there were ever a time to make this fight a reality, right now would be the perfect time. Pacquiao is riding high from the Hatton blowout and would draw even more attention if he were to do the same against another respectable champion. This seems like the most ideal fight to make if Pacquiao wants to take a bit of a break before tackling bigger challenges in the future.

Miguel Cotto - Outside of facing the winner of Mayeather/Marquez, this bout appears to be the biggest fight out there for Pacquiao at the moment. The bout would be huge with Pacquiao’s crazed Filipino following and Cotto’s spirited and devoted Puerto Rican following. If you’ve grown tired of watching Pacquiao consistently face Mexico’s best, how about Pacquiao versus one of Puerto Rico’s best for a change? However, Cotto must first get by the tough as nails Ghanian, Joshua Clottey, the current IBF Weltweight Champion. Years ago most boxing heads would’ve thought this fight was a mismatch in favor of Cotto, but things have rapidly changed over the last couple of years with Pacquiao’s successful ascension to 140-147 and Cotto’s fall to Antonio Margarito. The bout would be a fight fan’s dream since Cotto would provide Pacquiao with his first test against a “prime” fighter who has proven to be one of the world’s top welterweights in recent years. Of course, the prospects of this bout taking place next currently hinge on Cotto getting by Clottey on June 13. A lot of boxing insiders believe that Cotto will struggle with Clottey, but will scrape through with the victory in the end. If Pacquiao is serious about retiring at the end of the year, this would be the perfect bout for him to go out on to put a thumping exclamation point on a fine career and solidify his rightful place in boxing history.

Who Will Get the Call?

Keep your eyes glued to your television sets on June 13. If Cotto defeats Clottey, he will most likely get the call, particularly if Pacquiao is serious about retiring at year’s end. Should Cotto lose to Clottey, it may very well be Soto or Valero.

Pacquiao’s next opponent may still be up in the air for now, but one thing is for sure. Whomever faces Pacquiao next better be prepared to engage in the fight of his life.

http://boxingfanatics.com



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Freddie Roach: “Cotto, Floyd, or Mosley next for Pacquiao”

The Legendary Freddie Roach was in studio this weekend on ESPN2's "Friday Night Fights" and commented on his thoughts as to who he thinks Manny Pacquiao will face in his next fight.

“Cotto, Floyd, or Mosley,” Freddie Roach replied when asked by ESPN2’s Brian Kenny who pound-for-pound champion Manny Pacquiao would fight next. “I think it will be one of those three, and really it will probably come down to who is the easiest to deal with at the negotiating table. All three of them are good fights, and I’d like to see us fight either one of them at a catch weight of 143 or 144 pounds. My guy is the champion at 140 pounds and all of those guys are welterweights so I’d like to see a catch weight to even the playing field a little bit.” Roach was candid in studio when being questioned by Kenny and as is his trademark he pulled no punches. In a later segment Roach answered a question from a fan asking how Pacquiao would approach a possible Mayweather fight. “Floyd’s shoulder roll wouldn’t work against Manny. If he wants to lay on the rope we’d love that. Manny will go to his body and Floyd will be broken down,” Roach stated.

http://www.mannypacquiao.ph/


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