The Trilogy is set! Pound for Pound King Manny Pacquiao will face old rival and reigning Lightweight Champion Juan Manuel Marquez on November 12, 2011 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas... Please Bookmark this page for the latest PACQUIAO vs MARQUEZ 3 NEWS and UPDATES... Thanks!

Thirty Thousand Mexicans can't be wrong showing public love for Manny Pacquiao

Fan Frenzy as Guesstimated 30,000 Fight Fans Turn Out to Cheer Both Homeboy Juan Manuel Marquez and "Honorary Mexicano" Manny Pacquiao.
 
MEXICO CITY--Some of those windbags and layabouts who "serve" the American people in Washington like to prattle on and on about "reaching across the aisle" seeking viable compromises with the opposing party.

From what I saw and heard today, the Congressman from Sarangani named Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao could teach Democrats, Republicans and maybe even staunch Tea Party types how to effectively work with those with a different perspective.

Pacman, you see, had most of the guesstimated 30,000 Mexcian fight fans--young and old, male and female--who combined for a massive wall of people across and around historic Revolution Square eating out of his Filipino hands.

Fresh from a morning visit to the Mexican Congress, where he was hailed and mobbed by fellow legislators, Pacquiao said just the right thing in front of his Nov. 12 "Chapter Three" PPV TV fight opponent Juan Manuel Marquez and all his countrymen.

Pacquiao did not avoid a reference to his old unofficial nickname as "the Mexican Assassin" (earned by beating legends Erik Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera and others and including his points victory and draw against Juan Ma). Instead, he handled it diplomatically.
Resplendent in a gray suit, blue shirt, red tie and wearing a flashy diamond in his left ear, Pacquiao said in Spanish, "I didn't want to fight another Mexican boxer, it just happened and I am just and only doing my job."

Pacman laughed and the crowd inside a tent where a post-rally press conference was held did as well.

Later, in the semi-privacy of the third floor lounge at the swanky St. Regis Hotel, just before a helicopter took the Pinoy Idol and his entrourage to Azteca TV network studios so he could sing a song for the company which has the Mexican broadcast rights to the big fight, Pacquiao said he was overhwelmed by the positive reception he got here.

"I am very surprised and very happy about this reception," Pacquiao said as the four city (Manila, New York and Beverly Hills came first) media tour was winding down.

An enthusiastic but exhausted Bob Arum said the big turnout here gave the promotion huge momentum.

He even told Pacquiao that he's getting recieved on foreign visits like Muhammad Ali did.
"It's like Muhammad Ali for Manny now," Arum said. "It's the same thing I saw happen when Ali left America. "I mean, we expected 8,000 people or so. We could have gotten 3,000 but we got 30,000.

"It's like when we took Ali to Ireland, Malaysia, to Indonesia and to the Philippines. I remember once we brought Ali here to Mexico, when he wasn't fighting, and we almost had a riot. I think this fight will do huge numbers on pay per view."

It reminded me of when I stood with Don King in the parking lot of Estadio Azteca as "El Gran Campeon" Julio Cesar Chavez prepped for a free public workout. Many thousands of people came from all over this massive metropolis to see their greatest sports hero and legend.

Suddenly, a helicopter came out of the sky, armed police and security forces jumped to combat readiness and the then president of Mexico emerged.

He had come, the president explained, to check on Chavez's vaunted left hook. If you recall, Chavez then drew boxing's alltime biggest crowd, 136,000 people to the stadium to see him pummel gamester Greg Haugen.

I spoke to Hall Of Famer Barrera, now a manager-promoted now celebrating his first world champion (WBO 105 pound champ Moises Fuentes, a Chilango from this city) about how wildly Pacquiao was recieved.

"Yes," Barrera said, "I was surprised. I was very surprised at how the Mexican people treated Manny but he is very charismatic and very humble and they like that."

WBO President Francisco "Paco" Valcarcel, extremely happy to have Pacman as one of its reigning and defending beltholders, reached way back for a comparison.

"For me, I see Pacquiao as being as charismatic as Sugar Ray Robinson," the Puerto Rican attorney said. "I think Manny wins people over when they see him fighting and beating such tough guys, such good punchers, as Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito. Those two guys hit so hard, Manny took some hard shots from both and yet he beat them both."

Top Rank's Tijuana-based collaborator Fernando Beltran said he had a crew of 300 people setting up the event. Beltran handles Marquez.

"We had all 300 working to set up the stage, the boxing ring, the confetti and the music and dancing girls, all of that," Beltran said. "It was so much worth it. I was glad because Pacquiao and his team were such great hosts to us in the Phillipines so we wanted to do the same for them."

Another Mexican ring legend and Hall Of Famer, the brilliant Rubin Olivares, was also on hand for the event.

"In my heart, I want Juan Ma to win this fight but, in my head, I will go with Pacman. Pacman has the punching power and Marquez does not."

(Thanks to old friend, longtime Reuters reporter and British expatriate James Blears, now based in this capital city for 20 years, for passing on the Olivares quote.)

On this afternoon, in the Mexican sunshine, the winner was boxing.

The greatest boxing country in history--past, present and future--gave a proper tribute to the world's pound for pound best fighter.

Sympatico, that's what the Mexican public has become when it comes to Pacquiao, sympatico.

Source: http://www.examiner.com

PHOTOS: 30,000 FANS SHOW UP FOR PACQUIAO, MARQUEZ IN MEXICO

Sept. 8, 2011, Mexico City, Mexico -- Superstar Manny Pacquiao waves to the reported 30,000 plus fans during his public press conference in Mexico City Thursday during the world tour to announce the third world Welterweight title mega-fight of the Pacquiao-Marquez trilogy against three-division world champion Juan Manuel Marquez. Promoted by Top Rank, in association with MP Promotions, Marquez Boxing, Tecate and MGM Grand, Pacquiao vs Marquez III will take place, Saturday, Nov. 12 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and be produced and distributed by HBO Pay Per View. -- Photo Credit: Chris Farina - Top Rank.



Source:  http://philboxing.com

Pacquiao expected to silence Marquez

BOXING king of the ring Manny “PacMan” Pacquiao is expected to silence his old archrival Juan Manuel Marquez of Mexico with a decisive win, according to his renowned trainer Freddie Roach. 

Roach declared at the Los Angeles stop of the media tour of third Pacquiao-Marquez fight scheduled for November 12 that he wants his prized Filipino boxer to knock out Marquez to finally stop talk that the Mexican was robbed in their two previous encounters.

“This fight is more personal for Manny,” he said. “When Marquez came to the Philippines with those T-shirts … it was a slap in the face to Manny. He will get his payback,” Roach added.

The renowned trainer said that Pacquiao took offense with that Marquez antic shortly after the
Mexican boxer lost his World Boxing Council lightweight title in 2008 to the Filipino boxing king.

“Manny let [Antonio] Margarito and [Shane] Mosley off the hook. In this fight, that’s not going to happen,” said Roach, who has trained Pacquiao since he started fighting in the United States 10 years ago.

Pacquiao will defend his World Boxing Organization welterweight title (147 pounds) against Marquez, a unified world lightweight champ, who is going up in weight for the title fight at an agreed weight of 144 pounds.

Bob Arum of Top Rank Promotions, Pacquiao’s promoter, shared Roach’s observation about the prospect of seeing a more aggressive Pacquiao in the big-money fight to be held at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas.

Settling the score
Arum observed that Pacquiao usually waits until the last minute to start his eight weeks of training.
Pacquiao, 32, indicated on Wednesday that he had been unhappy with Marquez’ gesture.

”Everybody knows Marquez has been talking too much,” he said at the Los Angeles stop of their international promotional tour at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

“If my opponent is no good, I will be no good in the ring. You know what I mean? My opponent is not a good boy…..What I think about is, ‘How can I shut [his] mouth?’”, Pacquiao added.

In their first fight in 2004 at featherweight, Pacquiao knocked Marquez down three times in the first round but Marquez came back to salvage a draw. Four years later, Pacquiao won the junior lightweight title by split decision — the victory swayed by a left hook to the chin in the third that sent Marquez to the canvas.

At the post-fight press conference in 2008, Ignacio “Nacho” Beristain, Marquez’ trainer, complained lengthily about what he thought was a bum decision, prompting Arum to grab a microphone and unloading epithets at the trainer.

But what seemed to get the ire of the kind-hearted Pacquiao was Marquez confronting him during a boxing card in the Philippines demanding a quick rematch. Marquez wore a T-shirt reading “We were robbed.”

Now a first-term congressman in Sarangani province, Pacquiao (53-3-2, 38 by knockouts) has been observed to take it easy against opponents in recent fights.

He took it easy in the final rounds against badly beaten foe Margarito last year. He also failed to put away Mosley in a lopsided fight in May this year, PacMan’s third consecutive unanimous decision after several consecutive knockout victories.

The 38-year-old Marquez (53-5-1, 39 KOs) said that he is going for a knockout of his own to counter Pacquiao’s speed and explosive power.

”I know I will see the best Manny Pacquiao, but I’m ready,” the Mexican said, adding that he would not allow the judges to decide the outcome of the fight this time around.

Source: http://www.manilatimes.net

Manny Pacquiao – This time it’s personal

“Any news from Pacman Marquez promotional tour?” inquired Big Steve while assaulting a heavy bag at the Y in Glendale. 

Global tour to promote the final chapter of a historic trilogy between Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez found its way to the City of Angeles where media only press conference was held at the opulent Beverly Hills Hotel earlier today. Top pound for pound pugilist, Manny Pacquiao will defend his WBO welterweight title against his long time rival, undisputed lightweight champion, Juan Manuel Marquez. The historic battle is set to take place at the Mecca of boxing, MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas and will be televised live by HBO’s PPV.

 “It’s going to be a good fight on November 12th,”said Pacquiao from the podium:” Because this is the answer of all the doubts for the past two fights with Marquez. I improved a lot on my style and I will do my best for the happiness of the people.”

I don’t know whether it is a pressure of a long promotional tour or the fact that Manny is getting tired of listening to Marquez say that he won the first two fights, but normally soft spoken and friendly, Pacquiao got a little edgy after the press conference. It seems like their third encounter is getting personal.

Source: http://www.examiner.com

Pacquiao Nice Guy no more

LOS ANGELES — They’ve been telling the public that they’re friends and there’s nothing personal between them.


But there’s a feeling of revulsion whenever Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez are within spitting distance of each other as evidenced by their actions in Manila and New York and here on Tuesday during the dizzying four-city press tour promoting their Nov. 12 trilogy.


The last few times he has fought, Pacquiao has been very friendly with his foes to the extent that he has been oftentimes criticized for being too nice to them.


Pacquiao horsed around with Ricky Hatton during a darts exhibition match in Manchester, posed for pictures with Miguel Cotto’s kids in Puerto Rico, burst into laughter during a staredown with Joshua Clottey in Dallas and smiled a lot and shook hands frequently with Shane Mosley in Las Vegas.


But with Marquez, the feeling is not all too the same and the sentiment is that the lid will blow over when they let loose their furious fists at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas in two months time.


One could easily count the times when Pacquiao and Marquez shook hands and during their third face-off at the Beverly Hills Hotel, they only got to shake hands once and they did it without even looking each other in the eye.

“They never did (break into laughter),” acknowledged trainer Freddie Roach.


Pacquiao looked stern and didn’t break a smile when he was requested by the photographers for the customary staredown, unlike during the buildup to the Clottey and Mosley bouts when it took only a fraction of a second before he erupted in laughter.


In the Philippines over the weekend, Marquez regaled the media, saying that while he remains bitter over the result of their first two fights, he has grown to respect the man many regard as worthy of being mentioned in the same breath as Joe Louis and Muhammad Ali.


From what they have exhibited the last couple of days, Marquez and Pacquiao have been frugal in showering each other with praises and it remains to be seen whether Marquez will revert back to being a diplomat when the tour makes its fourth and last stop in Mexico City on Thursday.


The last time Pacquiao acted unreceptive was against the brash Erik Morales and that was five years ago.


That feeling of hatred is back again, said Pacquiao lawyer Franklin Gacal, who has been told many times by the pound-for-pound king about his animosity towards Marquez.


“Galit siya kay Marquez,” said Gacal on board a private plane that took Team Pacquiao to Toluca, Mexico, late Wednesday night. “Nanggigigil siya.”

Source: http://www.mb.com.ph

Pacquiao says improved skill, style will beat Marquez, not weight

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. -- If Manny Pacquiao dominates Juan Manuel Marquez in their anticipated third bout on Nov. 12, many observers will chalk it up to weight and the 5-to-1 underdog’s inability to carry it.

Although Marquez gave Pacquiao hell in their first two bouts -- a draw at featherweight and a split-decision loss at junior lightweight -- the general consensus is that the Filipino icon is better suited to fighting at the contracted 144-pound catchweight of the their third bout than the Mexican master boxer. 

However, Pacquiao and his promoter, Bob Arum, don‘t believe that weight is as much of a factor in this fight as odds makers and boxing writers have made of it. 

Pacquiao says he has evolved as a fighter since his first two encounters with Marquez and the decisive victory he’s vowed to score in the third fight will have more to do with his improved skill and technique than weight. 

Arum says the fight will come down to styles. And since he’s the promoter the Nov. 12 event, which will be televised live on HBO Pay-Per-View from the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, he has no problem promising the public another barnburner based on their contrasting styles.

“Manny Pacquiao is all about aggression,” Arum told the media at the recent Los Angeles-area press conference at The Beverly Hills Hotel. “He takes the fight to his opponent. That’s why he has so much trouble with Juan Manuel Marquez, who in all the years I’ve been in boxing, is the greatest counter puncher that I’ve seen.”

Although Arum has a point, the weight factor is still hard to ignore. 

Since their rematch in March of 2008, Pacquiao has won major titles at lightweight, junior welterweight, welterweight and junior middleweight, dominating and sometimes battering naturally bigger fighters along the way. 

Marquez has won titles at lightweight but he floundered in his only bout above the 135-pound limit, a one-sided 12-round decision loss to Floyd Mayweather in ‘09.

Arum says Marquez’s loss to Mayweather had nothing to do with weight and everything to do with styles.

“Of course Marquez didn’t do well against Mayweather,” he said. “Mayweather is a defensive fighter, maybe even a defensive genius, the worst kind of fighter for a counter puncher. A defensive fighter takes away a counter puncher’s main asset. There’s nothing for him to counter punch and he has to become the aggressor.

“Marquez won’t have to do that against Manny. And Manny won’t put on a lot of weight after the weigh-in. It’s not like Manny is going to blow up to be a middleweight by fight time. To do that would take away from his speed and reflexes. They’ll be within one pound of each other (on fight night). 

“The increased skills of both fighters is what’s going to determine who will have the advantage.” 

Pacquiao believes his skills have improved drastically since their last fight.

“I’ve changed a lot,” Pacquiao said. “I’ve had years to improve my technique and my strategy. There’s a big difference in my style now compared to my style the last time we fought.”

The key differences between the way Pacquiao fought Marquez in ‘08 and his current fighting style is his ability to fight effectively in close and his patience. 

Pacquiao doesn’t simply jump in and out of range with quick power combinations these days. He’s choosing the right moment to slip or get under his opponent’s punches and then he advances close enough to attack their body and head before he steps around to either side.

He’s not in a rush to mix it up as quickly as he used to be. Pacquiao has been willing to occasionally allow his opponent to make the first move in recent fights. Sometimes he forces their hand by feinting and then catches them with counter punches once they are out of position. 

Pacquiao counter punching Marquez? It sounds surreal but his trainer says it will happen on Nov. 12.

“Manny can turn the tables on Marquez a little bit,” Freddie Roach told RingTV.com. “He can do it because he knows how to feint now, so he’s not as predictable. Opponents don’t know if he’s coming or going.”

Nobody could have imagined a feinting and counter-punching Pacquiao when he overwhelmed Marco Antonio Barrera with his frenetic fight pace in 2003 or when he struggled with Marquez after dropping the technician three times in the first round of their featherweight title bout in ‘04.

However, the first bout with Marquez and the close decision loss to Erik Morales in 2005 were the starting points for Roach’s project to develop Pacquiao into a complete fighter.

The version that fought Marquez in ‘04 was painfully raw in comparison to the fighter who is now recognized as the pound-for-pound best.

That fighter was a stalking one-armed puncher who often squared up in front of his opposition. Pacquiao’s offense consisted of a repetitive one-two combination. The jab was merely a set-up for his powerful straight left. 

His only footwork was constant bouncing and occasional in-and-out movement. His defense was a high guard mixed in with methodical side-to-side head movement. 

It wasn’t difficult for seasoned technicians such as Marquez and Morales to time and catch Pacquiao, who often bounced straight back after getting clipped. 

If he didn’t make an effort to add more technique to his awesome natural talent it’s possible that he would have peaked as a fighter six or seven years ago. However, neither the fighter nor his trainer was going to let that happen.

Roach, who began training Pacquiao in 2001, is a little embarrassed that he didn’t work on improving the young champion’s style earlier.

“It was more my fault than Manny’s,” Roach said. “I was satisfied with him knocking everybody out with his left. After the Morales loss I made it my mission to make his right hand just as dangerous. 

“It took about a year to bring it out. You can see the improvement during the three fights with Morales. He always had the right hand but he didn’t have the confidence to use it during a fight.”

Roach says Pacquiao’s challenge of WBC lightweight beltholder David Diaz in June of ’08, which immediately followed the Marquez rematch, was the fight his star pupil put it all together.

“Diaz was the perfect opponent for Manny to put everything we had worked on in the gym into practice,” Roach said of the tough-but-limited brawler, who Pacquiao stopped in the ninth round. “He finally tried everything in that fight -- using angles, lateral movement, the right hook -- and it worked so well that it gave him the confidence to use the style against Oscar De La Hoya in his next fight.

“When it worked against Oscar I knew he would stick with it.”

It hasn’t failed Pacquiao yet and it doesn’t figure to do so on Nov. 12. 

Source: http://ringtv.craveonline.com

Manny Pacquiao intends payback against Juan Manuel Marquez

Pacquiao's camp says a Nov. 12 bout in Las Vegas is 'more personal.' Marquez had worn a shirt proclaiming 'We were robbed' after a previous loss to Pacquiao.

Manny Pacquiao's road to stardom was established by power punching and a pair of compelling back-and-forth bouts against his rival from Mexico, Juan Manuel Marquez.

As Pacquiao prepares for his third fight against Marquez on Nov. 12 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, the Filipino star's attention is locked on the goal to reaffirm his power reputation by quieting Marquez once and for all.

"Everybody knows Marquez has been talking too much," Pacquiao said Wednesday as he and Marquez continued their international promotional tour at the Beverly Hills Hotel. "If my opponent is no good, I will be no good in the ring. You know what I mean? My opponent is not a good boy.

"What I think about is, 'How can I shut the mouth?'" 

Pacquiao knocked Marquez down three times in the first round of their 2004 featherweight title fight, but Marquez rallied to claim a draw. In 2008, Pacquiao won a super-featherweight title by split decision thanks to judge Tom Miller's 114-113 score.

Marquez's trainer, Ignacio "Nacho" Beristain, complained so much at the post-fight news conference after the 2008 loss that Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, grabbed a microphone and unloaded epithets at the trainer.

Marquez later visited the Philippines wearing a T-shirt reading "We were robbed."


Pacquiao's kindhearted nature is part of his charm. He's a congressman in the Philippines who has successfully pushed for a new hospital to be constructed in his district and often takes up charitable ventures.

He showed compassion in the final rounds against badly beaten foe Antonio Margarito last year, and he also failed to put away Shane Mosley in a one-sided fight in May — Pacquiao's third consecutive unanimous decision as he improved to 53-3-2.

But Pacquiao became boxing's most popular star by scoring 10 knockouts and retiring Oscar De La Hoya
in a span of 16 fights between 2003 and 2009.

Now, it's no more Mr. Nice Guy.

"He let [Margarito and Mosley] off the hook. In this fight, that's not going to happen," Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, said of Marquez.

The Pacquiao-Marquez bout will be for the WBO welterweight title to be fought at a 144-pound catch weight.

"This fight is more personal," Roach said. "Those [prior two Marquez] fights were good for boxing. It wasn't our fault the judges voted for us. But when Marquez came to the Philippines with those T-shirts … it was a slap in the face to Manny. He will get his payback."

Arum was seen shaking hands with and briefly embracing Beristain on Wednesday, but the promoter notes Pacquiao is less forgiving of his old foe.

"Manny usually waits until the last minute to start his eight weeks of training," Arum said. "For this fight, he's already started. He's dying to win this decisively. He's a competitor, and on a competitive basis, he's tired of hearing Marquez is the puzzle he can't solve."

The 38-year-old Marquez (53-5-1, 39 KOs) expects to rely on his counterpunching strength to again frustrate the aggressive Pacquiao.

"I will see the best Manny Pacquiao, that's what I'm waiting for," said Marquez. "Everybody knows I wanted this fight. I didn't win before because the judges were no good."

Music to the ears of a seething Pacquiao.

A part of Roach is nervous about Pacquiao's fight against Marquez

LOS ANGELES – On an intellectual level, Freddie Roach breaks down the third fight between Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez fight on Nov. 12 in Las Vegas and can see only one result: a one-sided victory for his fighter.

On a gut level, a small part of him isn’t so sure.

Pacquiao and Marquez fought on even terms in 2004 (draw) and 2008 (Pacquiao split decision), which failed to answer the question of who is the better fighter. Maybe Marquez simply knows how to be competitive with Pacquiao.

“Sometimes people have people’s number,” said Roach, speaking at a news conference Wednesday at The Beverly Hills Hotel. “Will Manny fall into the trap, fall into Marquez’s plan like he did in those fights? … You never know.

“In the back of my mind … I think sometimes guys just have a style that you have difficulty with. This could be one of them.”

Roach has respect for Marquez, who at 38 remains one of the best fighters in the world.

The famous trainer said Pacquiao’s rival presents a challenge bigger than anyone except Floyd Mayweather Jr. Marquez, he said, is the best counterpuncher on the planet.

Still, when Roach is asked why the third fight won’t be anything like the first two, he exudes confidence.

Promoter Bob Arum said anyone who judges Marquez based on his performance against Mayweather, a near-shutout decision in 2009, is crazy. Counterpunchers need their opponents to come to them. Mayweather didn’t; Pacquiao will.

That doesn’t necessarily mean the fight will be close, Roach said. Pacquiao has evolved.

“Manny doesn’t go in recklessly like he did in the first two fights,” Roach said. “Manny doesn’t fall into the traps of a counterpuncher. He knows how to feint now. He uses in and out motions. You don’t know whether he’s coming or going.

“Counterpunchers start reaching for him and the counters that.”

Roach is predicting a knockout – which would be the first time Marquez has been stopped -- in part because that's what Pacquiao needs.

If the sport’s biggest superstar is going to eliminate any doubt that lingers after the first two fights, he’s going to have to win convincingly this time. Plus, Roach said, Pacquiao has a small grudge against Marquez.

“I don’t see him going into this fight being compassionate, letting (Marquez) off the hook the way he did with Shane (Mosley) and (Antonio) Margarito  in the end," Roach said. "He has a little grudge. (Marquez) came to the Philippines wearing a T-shirt that said, ‘We got robbed’ and so forth.

“… I’ve urged him not to be compassionate and take him out. That’s the only thing that will make the controversy go away.”


UNDERESTIMATION

No one who saw the first Pacquiao-Marquez fight, on May 8, 2004 in Las Vegas, will forget it. Marquez went down three times in the first round yet fought back to earn a draw.

The Mexican admits now that he took Pacquiao lightly even though the Filipino was coming off an 11th-round TKO of Marco Antonio Barrera. And, Marquez said, he was stunned to find himself on the canvas again in the third round of the second fight.

“The first fight, I think I have an easy fight. Then he surprised me,” Marquez said in his ever-improving English. “In the second fight, in the third round, it’s the same."

He certainly won’t underestimate Pacquiao this time.

“This is more of a challenge for me because he’s the best pound-for-pound fighter. I'm training hard for this fight,” Marquez said.


WEIGHTY ISSUES

Mayweather’s style definitely was all wrong for Marquez, as Arum said. Another problem might’ve been Marquez’s weight.

The natural lightweight weighed in at 142 pounds for their fight, seven more than he had ever weighed. And he looked painfully slow in the ring, although Mayweather’s quickness obviously played a role in that.

Marquez said he’d weigh a pound or two less for Pacquiao.

“If I come in heavy, maybe I’ll lose speed,” he said.


MAYWEATHER WATCH

Roach was asked for the millionth time whether he thinks Pacquiao will ever fight Mayweather. He was polite, saying, “I hope it happens as much as you do because it’s a challenge. And I like challenges.”

Then someone brought up the possibility of Mayweather fighting another of Roach’s fighters, Amir Khan.

“Mayweather said Khan has to go through Jessie Vargas first,” a reporter said, referring to a prospect Mayweather handles.

Roach responded: “What is he a matchmaker now?”

Source: http://ringtv.craveonline.com

Pacquiao/Marquez Los Angeles Press Conference

After a self made, man-fulfilling steak and egg breakfast and a 20-minute strengthening workout, I trekked, for the second time this year, to the Beverly Hills Hotel on Sunset in Los Angeles for a Manny Pacquiao press conference.

Sitting in bumper to bumper traffic through most of my journey with the odometer hitting upwards of 90 plus degrees, (it would hit 109 before the day was done) I was happier than ever to reach my destination and receive a valet ticket and jump inside the plush hotel.

With oodles of time before the conference even began, I found myself on a couch listening to the new Jay-Z/Kanye West album as I watched the circus begin. Some of the main players were already in plain view as Nacho Beristain held court in the lobby. Freddie Roach was flanked by HBO crews, no doubt supplying footage for Roach’s soon to be reality series set for a 2012 release, Marquez strolled by to talk to his trainer before going into hiding until the conference began, and actor and ‘Entourage’ producer Mark Wahlberg walked back and forth, hoping to make himself part of the Pac Man’s entourage, but to no avail. He evidently hasn’t heard of ‘Pacquiao Time’, as most in Pacquiao’s groups knows all too well. Manny isn’t here yet, Marky Mark.

I stepped out briefly and watched as WWE wrestler ‘The Miz’ rolled up to the front. His PR person was standing next to me, and the wrestler hopped out of his chauffeured ride, walked up and asked him bluntly, “What the hell am I doing here?” His PR walked him in and said he would go over things.

More on the Miz later in this story.

I checked in and walked down to the ballroom area of the hotel, which was a great relief because the hotel’s ‘Rodeo’ room is small and at ground level where the days heat was, and it was just as hot in Hollywood as it is in my humble surroundings of the Inland Empire.

I stood and chatted with Maxboxing’s dynamic duo of Steve Kim and Gabriel Montoya while we waited to enter the grand ballroom, which was a lovely, wide spread room with a rose tipped chandelier. Smart media typed run towards the tables first to get premium seating, then to the food spread. I secured my location with a pretty much 50-yard line view of the dais then approached the food.

Once again, I was faced with numerous types of spread to place on my gourmet turkey burger. “Oh no, Mr. Horseradish, you’re not getting me again. Fool me once,” I said to myself as I was yet again faced in a situation where there was sinus clearing condiments on hand to fool me, like they did at the last press conference I attended in Beverly Hills for the Pacquiao/Mosley fight. (At that conference, I applied  generous portion of white/yellow looking spread that immediately made my eyes water and my nose run just as promoter Bob Arum walked by my table and gave a gentlemanly head-nod as I tried diligently not to sneeze, cough, throw up or worse.)

I wisely selected the most American looking, bright yellow spread I could find and proceeded to the hawk-like waitered tables, where your tea never runs dry and the hell if any opened sugar packets see the light of day on a table for more than a few seconds after opening.

Now, the burgers in this semi-nice joint in the 90210 are generally the best food they have to offer. Not today. What outdid the ‘gooble-gooble’ burgers was the ‘piece de resistance’ as I told writer/friend Igor Frank, a divine mix of noodles and cheese that us small types call ‘macaroni and cheese’. I’m sure 90210 residents have a luxurious name for the side dish, but hey, they say tomato’, I say tomato.

The second best item up for grabs is what I dubbed ‘the bottomless passion tea’. It’s a higher end tea, which I happen to love as a tea drinker.

Top Rank head Bob Arum opened the show by announcing that the November 12 fight was a sell out, and tickets were being sold at high premiums by those websites who love to make as much as they can above the original price of the ticket.

Freaking ticket vultures.

The fighters were announced with a cool, pre-taped introduction using the voice of Michael Buffer, as Marquez made his way first to the podium, and the Mexican great dressed sharply, suited out in a black two piece, followed by Buffer’s intro for Pacquiao, and the Pac Man dressed in his best ‘Brett Favre’ outfit; some blue Lee’s and a white collared shirt. Did he shoot a jean commercial on Sunset before the press conference began or what?

Arum then invited WWE wrestler The Miz to the front of the line, and the charismatic young gun took to the microphone and told a story that when he told his parents he was going to the press conference and Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez were going to be there, they asked him to take pictures and grab autographs. He said he himself is in the entertainment business, and his parents have never asked HIM for any memorabilia! Ouch.
Aren’t your parents supposed to be your number one fans? ‘Miz man’ closed in style by giving each fighter some of his shirts with his slogan on it, and screamed into the mic, “You guys, as well as myself, are truly Awesome!”

Arum would also touch on the hotly debated weight issue heading into fight night at the MGM Grand. A catch-weight of 144 was agreed to for the third installment of Pacquiao/Marquez, which pundits agree favors the bigger man in Pacquiao.

“They both have to make the 144 mark. Look, Manny isn’t a middleweight. It’s not like Manny is going to make the 144 mark at the weigh-in, and weigh 160 on fight night.”

On a personal note, being mere inches from both warriors during interviews, it’s hard to argue that weight is going to be an issue once the bell rings. Both of these guys stand tiny at a mere five-feet-nothing and a walking around weight similar to that of a junior high student.

Then it was trainer time. As announced, both fighters were flanked by their trainers, and recent Hall of Fame inductee Beristain was up first. Nacho thanked the press for their attendance, then proceeded to talk faster than his interpreter for the day, Zanfer Promotions own Fernando Beltran. Nacho stated that the first two Pac/Marquez battles will never be forgotten, and the third edition will be the best of the trilogy.

The bell rang, and each corner was given seconds to rest on the stool before the next round started and fellow HOF trainer Freddie Roach took to the stand to offer his best verbal swings. Roach was his casual self in jeans and a shirt and relayed that training will begin in the Philippines and then move to Hollywood for the finishing touches.

“I think I have a challenge in Nacho Beristain, and I have a great student in Manny Pacquiao.”

Roach’s close-line (Miz type reference) regarding the fight was simply, “don’t miss it.”

Another rest period ensued, and it was then time for fighter speeches. Marquez went first, (which is odd being that he is a counter puncher by nature). Arum had introduced Marquez the greatest counter puncher in the game, and touched lightly on when ‘Dinamita’ fought Floyd Mayweather in September 2009. Marques put on a lackluster effort, suffering a knockdown and lopsided decision loss. Arum had his opinions on that though.

“Of course he looked bad against Mayweather. Mayweather is a defensive fighter. Maybe a genius,” was Arum’s choice of words when pronouncing that the Pac/Marquez fight will be a better showing simply by Marquez facing a more offensive minded opponent in Pacquiao.

“Good morning, good afternoon, good night. I don’t know what time it is!,” Marquez told the media. The four-city, three country press tour was already making its impression on the fighter as they already hit stops in the Philippines, followed by New York before hitting the B.H. Hotel in Los Angeles. Good thing for Marquez is the tour makes its last stop tomorrow in his native Mexico. No word on if Pacquiao plans anymore singing as he did during the New York version of the tour. Come on, just a few notes from “Sometimes When We Touch!”

Marquez said he has been working hard on his speed and strength in training camp, and closed by dedicating the fight to his father-in-law, who passed away a few months ago.
Another rest period ensued, and then it was the Congressman’s time.

Arum made numerous over and above introductions of Manny as not only the pound for pound best boxer but the “greatest athlete in the world” and a dozen other monikers for his fighter, and all of them were hard to argue against. Simply put, at this present time, Pacquiao is an international superstar. Look it up, it’s in the Geneva Conventions. (Will Ferrell reference)

The Pac Man thanked all the sponsors and his supporters in a gingerly manner while telling the press that he is training hard and knows Marquez is as well. Pacquiao himself is not remiss of the fact that his two previous efforts in the ring against Marquez are looked at and debated almost as much as a potential dream match between himself and Mayweather are.

“This (fight) is the answer of all the doubts of the last two fights against Marquez,” said Pacquiao.

The circus ensued with the fighter ‘nose to nose’ ‘I don’t smile and you don’t smile’ stare downs, followed by one on one interviews and a closing to yet another great

It was almost too bad that I went from eating gourmet burgers and bottomless passion tea in a plush Beverly Hills hotel, only to tip the valet a buck, (hey, I’m sure that the Ferrari that pulled out in front of me tipped a solid 20-bill or above) and get on the freeway in 100+ degree heat to make my journey home.

Oh well. Such is life on the press beat.

Thank the Lord above for air conditioning and sports talk radio.

Source: http://3morerounds.com

Manny Pacquiao hints at retirement; reacts on 'lousy singer' jab

MANILA, Philippines – It seems like Manny Pacquiao’s days in boxing are numbered, with the champ already dropping hints that he’s retiring soon.

“By 2013 I’m running for governor and it’s gonna be hard for me to continue my boxing career,” Pacquiao said on “TV Patrol,” Sept. 7, during his press conference in New York for the promotion of his fight against Mexican pugilist Juan Manuel Marquez on Nov. 12 at MGM Arena in the US.

 In the round table interview, Pacquiao stressed his intention to quit boxing.

 “Like what I said, I wanna be (an) executive on 2013,” he said on “24 Oras” the same evening.

With this declaration, the boxing champ was asked if his much-awaited fight with Floyd Mayweather will no longer be possible.

 “On Mayweather,  I don’t really need that fight. If that fight happens, well it’s good because that’s [what] the fans want. If that fight does not happen, I’m happy… I’m also happy because I’m already satisfied with what I’ve done in boxing.”

 Before the start of the presscon, Pacquiao did a duet with Dan Hill in “Sometimes When We Touch.”

In his speech, Marquez said he’s aiming for a knockout in his third encounter with the pound for pound boxing champ.

“A lot of people like us to fight. I’m looking for a knockout. We’re more focused on intelligence.”

Pacquiao shared that he will improve on something in this fight.

“I’m pretty sure there’s a lot of boxing in the ring because I want to show that something is wrong and something is right,” he said without mentioning what he intends to correct.

He stressed in his “TV Patrol” interview that “I’m not saying that it’s gonna be an easier fight. I need to bring it hard.”

During the huddle, a reporter surprised everyone when he seemingly took a swipe at Pacquiao’s penchant for singing.

 “Anybody told you that you’re a lousy singer?” the reporter asked.

 To which the cool Pacquiao replied, “I’m not a good singer but I can sing. I love to hear a song.”

No more Mr Nice Guy as Pacquiao girds for battle

LOS ANGELES — Manny Pacquiao says he is through making friends with opponents in the build up to his championship bouts and vows to take a hard-line approach in his next fight against Juan Manuel Marquez.

The 32-year-old Filipino boxing champion has decisively won his last. three fights but failed to score knockouts over Shane Mosley, Antonio Margarito and Joshua Clottey.

“If my opponent is nice and friendly to me then that carries over into the fight,” Pacquiao said Wednesday. “Then I am not eager to finish the fight.”

The Filipino southpaw has vowed not to go easy when he puts his World Boxing Organization welterweight title on the line against Mexico’s Marquez on November 12 in Las Vegas.
“Before Marquez was saying bad things about me. Now he is saying good things about me,” said Pacquiao (53-3, 2 draws, 38 KOs).

In a sport that thrives on hype to sell tickets, staredowns and angry exchanges are usually common when two fighters get together to promote the fight. But that’s not been the case with nice-guy Pacquiao.

Mosley and Clottey were able to disarm Pacquiao with plenty of compliments and talk of how grateful they were the champion was giving them an opportunity to fight for a title, not to mention millions of dollars.

Margarito mocked and insulted Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach but stayed away from firing verbal jabs aimed specifically at Pacquiao.

The 144-pound bout will mark the third time Pacquiao and Marquez have tangled.

Both previous fights were close with just one round.separating the two. The judges’ scored the first bout a draw and Pacquiao was awarded a split decision in the rematch. Marquez insists he won both fights.

“I am thinking how can I shut this guy’s mouth,” Pacquiao said at a news conference at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

One boxer “Pacman” Pacquiao says he would have no trouble getting motivated to knock out is undefeated American Floyd Mayweather.”If that fight happens it would be a fight like there is no tomorrow,” Pacquiao said with a wink.

Previous fight talks between the two broke down over how drug testing would be conducted. Mayweather angered Pacquiao by accusing him of taking performance-enhancing drugs.

“I haven’t taken any drugs in boxing,” Pacquiao said Wednesday. “I don’t even know what he (Mayweather) is talking about. I don’t know what testosterone is. I don’t have any idea what he is talking about. He doesn’t want to fight.”

The Marquez bout will be a change from Pacquiao’s previous fights where he moved up in weight class to fight bigger, stronger boxers.

Pacquiao says this time he will be in his comfort zone and isn’t afraid of getting hit by a smaller fighter.

“For this fight I don’t have to worry about weight and size,” Pacquiao said.

“I won’t have to worry so much about the punches that I am taking in the ring because bigger guys punch harder.”

Marquez is no shrinking violet. He captured his first world title in 2003 and has won belts in three different weight classes. He has recorded victories over Marco Antonio Barrera and Joel Casamayor but lost a 12-round decision to Mayweather in September 2009 in Las Vegas.

“This is the biggest fight for me because Pacquiao is the best pound-for-pound fighter,” Marquez said. “Clottey didn’t want to fight and Mosley was the same. But if Pacquiao wants to fight I will give him a fight.”

Pacquiao and Marquez have been on a whirlwind tour across the ocean to promote the fight. They were in New York on Tuesday and the Philippines before that where 100,000 people came out to cheer Filipino congressman Pacquiao.

The tour finishes in Mexico City Thursday where thousands of Marquez fans will get a chance to see their hero.

“The Philippines, New York and now here. I don’t even know what time it is,” said Marquez (53-5, 1 draw, 39 KOs).

Marquez is another in a long line of current and former Mexican champions Pacquiao has defeated in recent years. Pacquiao said he doesn’t have a scorched-earth policy against Mexican fighters but is just trying to find the best opponents out there.

“I am just doing my job in the ring. It is not my intention to fight all the Mexican fighters.”

DID REALITY FINALLY SINK IN?

Beverly Hills, CA:- Watching both Pacquiao and Marquez today at the third leg of the promotional press conference held at the famed Beverly Hills Hotel to hype their third fight scheduled on November 12th at the MGM Grand Arena allowed me to capture a few poignant photos.

As a photographer I do not mind too much what is being said at the podium. That is the job of the “writers”. I primarily focus on people hoping to capture telling photos related to the event.

That is exactly what I got today.

Juan Manuel Marquez must not be a seasoned traveler. Jet lag caught up with him. In fact, he himself said that they traveled thousands of miles in so short a time that he really does not know what time it is. Therefore, when he addressed the press he begun by saying- “Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening” to cover all his bases. It was a tad funny but it worked.

As he sat listening to the proceedings, Marquez appeared bored and tired. His demeanor showed it too. He was yawning and was listless.

It would not be too surprising to assume that Pacquiao is as tired as the poor JuanMa.

But he had a way to hide it somehow. At least that is true today.

I never caught him yawning or looking bored although I took more photos of him during the entire proceedings that I did of Marquez.

Pacquiao kept alert by interacting with the press corps. He blinked an eye or smiled at them. And he kept a quiet private conversation with Freddie Roach who sat next to him. That kept him busy and occupied until it was time for him to stand up on the podium to speak. Oh, he said nothing new that I have not heard before but at least he appeared very alert and focused.

JuanMa in the other hand almost kept to himself. He seldom turned to his trainer Nacho Beristein to speak to him unlike Pacquiao who always had Roach close for a chit chat. Perhaps, if Marquez did he would not have been so bored of the proceedings.

Marquez almost appeared to be alone in his deep thoughts. I wonder, was he really that tired or did reality finally sink in about his coming fight which I believe he can never win?

I like to think it’s the former because if it’s the latter, then we could all be in for a boring fight on November 12th.


Source: http://philboxing.com

Images from L.A.: Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez meet once again

Earlier today in Los Angeles, inside of the Beverly Hills Hotel, Manny Pacquiao and respected rival Juan Manuel Marquez met once again. The two men are scheduled to meet on November 12th inside of the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada for a third time but much more than Pacquiao’s WBO belt will be on the line.

Pacquiao and Marquez first battled to a split-draw in May of 2004, a fight that saw Marquez dropped three times before the Mexico City star recovered to make a fight out of things. Nearly four years later Pacquiao would edge Marquez via split-decision in an equally thrilling battle.

So far the candor between both teams has been respectful, with the fight still over two months away.


Is Pacquiao-Marquez 3 the Right Fight at the Wrong Time?

Critics of Manny Pacquiao like to point fingers and make claims of cherry-picking and convenient matchmaking and, Lord knows, I have engaged in such behavior over the years as the Filipino Phenom has gotten bigger, both literally and figuratively, as a pugilistic icon.

In my opinion, the criticisms have been warranted in five of his last seven fights. However, as Manny's November fight with Juan Manuel Marquez approaches, this critic will go on record as saying that Pacquiao is fighting the right fight for all the right reasons. The one question, though, is whether the right fight is taking place at the wrong time.

The first two furious bouts between the modern day icons, contested at featherweight and then super featherweight, were pure fistic joy. Two battles between proud warriors who not only wouldn't back down, but, almost literally, couldn't.

In the eyes of many, Marquez, who came away with a draw and a close decision loss, actually won both encounters. The second fight was especially controversial, with even the likes of Filipino Sports analysts Ronnie Nathanielsz, Recah Trinidad and Ed Picson giving the nod to Marquez. But any way you cut it, both battles were close, fiercely fought affairs.

And ever since the controversial decision was read at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino, Juan Manuel Marquez has been aggressively campaigning for a rematch.

But Manny, literally, had bigger things in mind as he would immediately move up to lightweight to take on WBC titlist, David Diaz. 

Three months after Manny moved up to 135, so did Marquez and he continued to call out his rival, in search of redemption. By then, though, Pacquiao was counting the coins that accompanied a fight at welterweight with golden goose, Oscar De la Hoya. Marquez would keep up his campaign, but Pacquiao was no longer even pretending to pay attention.

Marquez stayed busy, cleaning out the lightweight division and taking his own money bout, a 2009 welterweight blow-out loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr.

After exhausting all other options, Pacquiao finally came back to Marquez, who was still working toward a rematch and more than willing to sever his relationship with Golden Boy for the chance to even the score while collecting a mid-seven figure payday.

The best time for this contest would've been three years ago when both fighters were lighting up the lightweight division, but it just wasn't in the cards. So, now, fans will get the second best possible fight (need I see which is first?) at a weight and a time that is less than ideal for Marquez.

The Mexican warrior definitely has the style and mindset to beat the reigning WBO welterweight champ, the question is whether the 38-year-old will be able to execute effectively at an artificially bloated 144 lb. limit.

We shall see, November 12th. 

Manny Pacquiao Hospitalized; What Does it Mean for Marquez?

Three words that all boxing fans dread hearing became a reality recently when the following headline sprung up all over the web: Manny Pacquiao Hospitalized.

One of the two biggest stars in his sport, Pacquiao, was hospitalized recently as a result of his reoccurring battle with acid reflux. The Filipino champion reportedly spent one night in Cardinal Santos Hospital in San Juan, Philippines before being released the following morning. Pacquiao’s wife, Jinkee Pacquiao, cited her husband’s tendency to skip meals as a possible cause of this repeated situation.

Pacquiao, of course, was famously hospitalized for acid reflux in May of last year as well.  

The big question surrounding all of this, however, is – how does this impact his upcoming November 12 bout versus Juan Manuel Marquez? Does Marquez now have a better shot at proving all of the doubters (read: experts, oddsmakers, etc.) wrong and pulling off the upset victory?

Absolutely not.

Pacquiao could lose two hands and a leg before November and he’d still be the odds on favorite to beat Marquez in the third and final part of their trilogy. This fight, frankly, is coming at least a year too late and is really more of a stopgap/payday for Pacquiao than anything else. At this point, Pacquiao is just kind of walking around in circles, stalling and patiently waiting for his arch nemesis, Floyd Mayweather Jr., to come around and drop lawsuits. Assuming that Pacquiao’s nonsensical court games don’t push Mayweather away, that bout actually seems possible now.

But who knows, maybe Marquez will get a little boost of confidence or something as a result of this latest happening. Maybe he now sees at least one chink in Pacquiao’s seemingly infallible armor.

Or maybe Marquez is smart enough to know that not even lightening striking Pacquiao would change the unavoidable proceedings scheduled for November 12.

Source: http://www.opposingviews.com

Notebook: The HBO Pacquio deal, Pavlik update, and more

It seems that Bob Arum is depending more on his stepson, Todd duBoef who also is the President of Top Rank. That is now evident after the deal was made last week with HBO pay-per-view to distribute and produce the Manny Pacquiao welterweight title defense against Manuel Marquez on November 12 from the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas.

Arum took part in the negotiations, but the ultimate decision making process was in the hands of duBoef, the eventual successor to Arum in the company. Showtime PPV had the rights to the last Pacquiao title defense against Shane Mosley in May, and there was every reason to believe that they would get another deal for the next Pacquiao fight. And now HBO is back in the driver’s seat to get a hopeful and eventual Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr. showdown.

That, though, is looking down the line, but possible because HBO has this working relationship with Mayweather, and they have rights to Mayweather going after the WBC welterweight title held by Victor Ortiz next month. 

There are also reports the Pacquiao fight deal with HBO can also shutout Showtime from handling the Miguel Cotto-Antonio Margarito redemption bout scheduled for New York at Madison Square Garden on December 3rd. But that is all speculation and still subject to negotiation.
 
So HBO scores big and gets back Pacquiao in a third fight with Marquez. Showtime is disappointed, understanding this is a business. They knew all along that the Pacquiao fight with Mosley could be a one-time deal. But Arum was indicating that there could be more with the new alliance that had, HBO, the leading boxing television provider pondering the future. First they lost Cotto to Showtime and the most popular fighter in the business in Manny Pacquiao. But things changed when HBO forced Ross Greenburg out as president.

In stepped duBoef, who was pleased with Showtime, because the CBS owned network had the ability to put Pacquiao-Mosley previews on CBS owned television and radio affiliates. That granted huge coverage that the sport has not seen in years, let alone granted Pacquiao an additional fan base to the one he already had. However, there have been reports that duBoef was more comfortable with the camera angles and overall production that HBO had produced in the past, a feeling that Showtime needed to upgrade their production as compared to the way HBO has televised previous fights of Pacquio and Cotto.

Whether that can be believed or not, realizing that this all a matter of who offered the best financial deal, Pacquiao is back on HBO and very content from all reports. Pacquiao has always considered himself an HBO fighter and has been reported to say it will be good to be, back home, meaning of course once again HBO has his fight. And the deal will include coverage on the Time Warner stations of TNT, CNN, and spots during the Major League Baseball postseason games televised on the TBS and TNT networks.

Showtime did their part, and Pacquiao scored over a 1.3 million buy rate with the Mosley fight. Much of that was attributed to the CBS coverage Pacquiao received with appearances on CBS owned stations around the country. There was no rift or change of thinking with Arum and duBoef. In the end it was Arum handing the television side of the business to duBoef, who said it was a tough decision but good for boxing, because it shows how the two major boxing networks value the sport.
Now we see where all of this goes. Does Cotto-Margarito also go to HBO? An announcement is expected this week, and the feeling is, with duBoef in command, that soon Cotto will also return home to HBO.

PAVLIK MAY BE DONE: The future of former middleweight champion Kelly Pavlik is in question. He was supposed to oppose Darryl Cunningham Saturday night in Youngstown Ohio in a Showtime televised fight, but suddenly pulled out last week. At first the speculation was Pavlik was again suffering from alcohol addiction and then the report came that it had something to do with the negotiated $50,000 purse against Cunningham, and his purse for a proposed next fight for the title against super middleweight champion Lucian Bute.

His promoters at Top Rank are more than disappointed, let’s say annoyed and pondering their next move for their once promising and valuable champion. “It’s not like Kelly to do what he did, unless he does not want to fight no more,” they have been heard saying. They say Pavlik, possibly from the previous addiction had a different attitude about the sport and they are leaving the decisions to Kelly Pavlik.
Supposedly Top Rank negotiated a lucrative deal for Pavlik to fight Bute, though Pavlik went public on a television station in Youngstown and said, “I am not going to fight a southpaw for peanuts.” It has the Top rank office in a fury and wondering, what to do next. Pavlik has not been available to comment and a source close to the fighter said he has been like himself and constantly in disputes with family and friends.

With Top Rank busy promoting their next two big fights, Pacquiao and Cotto, the overall opinion is the former champion needs to weight his options and perhaps move ahead. But another source also said Bob Arum always looks at Kelly Pavlik as a second son and is willing to give this more time and get the ball rolling again.

Either way now, Pavlik is perceived as a damaged fighter and difficult to deal with. Just ask Showtime how they perceive his image. They had to cancel their telecast and big time boxing in the summer is an important entity to the network.

Loaded Dynamite: Marquez Looks to Prove He’s Better Than Pacquiao

The boxing world received quite a hit last week when respected trainer Nazeem Richardson spoke about lightweight champion Juan “Dinamita” Manuel Marquez in an interview. Nazeem, trainer of veterans Shane Mosley and Bernard Hopkins, stated that Marquez is no doubt one of the best fighters of the current era and that Juan may even be a better boxer than his nemesis and pound for pound number one fighter in the world Manny Pacquiao.

No one can reasonably dispute Richardson’s knowledge of the game as he’s been around the sports for many, many years and has recently guided his charge Bernard Hopkins to a history making win over ex champ Jean Pascal; making the 46 year old Hopkins the oldest fighter ever to win a major championship. 

But to declare that Marquez (or any current fighter for that matter) is a greater skilled boxer than the lightning quick and amazingly accurate Pacquiao is a major statement for anyone to make.

Everyone knows about the rivalry between these two men; back in 2004 Juan and Manny battled to a thrilling draw for the featherweight championship and more recently in 2008 Marquez dropped a split decision to Pacquiao for the super featherweight title in a very close battle. These two will engage each other again later this year at welterweight on November 12 in order to finally clear any doubt on who is the better man.

Since 2006 Marquez has lost twice, to the top two fighters in the sport in Floyd Mayweather and the close contest with Pacquiao. 

In that time he has won titles in three weight divisions (featherweight, super featherweight & lightweight) and has beaten credible opponents Marco Antonio Barrera, Rocky Juarez, Joel Casamayor, Juan “Baby Bull” Diaz (twice) and Michael Katsidis. Marquez has found this major success in the ring by landing excellently timed counter shots on his opponents and breaking them down with a beautiful mix of body-head attacks after his somewhat slow starts.

Juan has established himself as a top tier boxer and pound for pound top ten fighter with these performances. What Juan lacks in natural speed and power he makes up in strategy, timing and precision. His losses to Floyd and Manny (particularly his washout points loss to Floyd) has kept Juan from getting that career defining win that pushes him to the absolute top of the sport. He has for the majority of his career been given the “second best” tag and has almost been labelled into a Tommy Hearns and Fernando Vargas brand of fighter; where he can absolutely dominate the average to good fighters out there but is missing an element that enables him to hang with the very best.

I personally have noticed a trend with Marquez that makes me very interested in his upcoming clash with Manny. What I have noticed is that whenever Juan goes down in a fight, he seems to get stronger. Manny famously knocked him down three times into their first encounter but Marquez was able to salvage a draw after adjusting to Pacman’s deadly attacks and countering him with crisp shots to the head. In their second fight Marquez went down early on in the fight again but was able to adjust this time as well and went on to score clean shots against Manny before losing the hotly contested split decision that many experts and fans had him winning.

In addition to his brawls with the Pacman, Marquez was also dropped by Mayweather but Floyd was unable to finish him off. 

Against Katsidis, Juan went down yet again early on but came back very strong and knocked out his foe later on in the fight. 

These situations combined with the fact that Juan has never been knocked out before has me very curious to see what happens once he steps in the ring with the new and improved Manny. Since their last meeting Pacquiao has gone on to knock down men much bigger than Juan such as Miguel Cotto and Shane Mosley, as well as busting up taller and heavier boxers such as Oscar De La Hoya and Antonio Margarito.

Therefore something will have to give when they meet up; either Juan will finally fall completely to Manny’s now devastating power or he will once again prove that he will not stay down for anyone; and will only hit you with stronger firepower if you hurt him.

The time is now for Marquez to make the leap from number two to number one. Even though the fight will be at welterweight, where Juan has only fought once with lackluster results, he cannot use that excuse at this point in time as this is sure to be his final meeting with Pacquiao if he once again comes up short against the Filipino warrior. I don’t see him ever fighting Mayweather again so in all likelihood this could be his last shot to prove himself as the best in the world and get that “second best” tag off of him.

I personally feel that the fight is more about whether Manny will be able to be the first one to finish Marquez before the bell or not more so than Juan being able to win, but Juan has earned the right to step inside the ring and have the opportunity to show the world what he believes; that he is the more skilled fighter of the two champions and he has what it takes to get that elusive win over his arch-enemy. Despite what Nazeem Richardson or anyone says in terms of how great of a fighter he is, Juan Marquez will come face to face with thunderous lightning on November 12 and he will have to prove to the world that he has the explosive “Dinamita” in his arsenal to combat it. 

Pacquiao-Marquez III is a Pinoy action flick

They don’t make them anymore but a Filipino action picture with a hero, guns, fistfights, a love interest, a comic sidekick and a catchy title always had its loyal followers. Whether it be FPJ, Joseph Estrada, Lito Lapid, Ronnie Ricketts, Philip Salvador or Robin Padilla starring, Pinoy movie fans would watch to escape the ennui of life or to imagine, even for an hour and a half, what it would be like to be a hero.

There was always that moment, the “trailer scene” if you will, where the star would blurt out the title of the film just before the final gun battle (won of course by the hero). Pinned down under a hail of gunfire, the hero snarls at the antagonist to surrender or to come out fighting.

The lines isang bala ka lang (all it takes is one bullet), puno na ang salop (the bag is full) and di pa gawa ang balang papatay sa akin (the bullet with my name on it hasn’t been made) are staples. 

To cast Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez in the same vein, the line tapusin na natin ito (Let’s finish this!) is most fitting. A fourth battle is not being imagined even if it may be stipulated in the contract because a trilogy is the most compelling way to enter boxing’s history books.

The third fight in November is it and both fighters have more than enough reason to want to finish this rivalry.

Marquez will buck age and talk about the current superiority of Pacquiao in a heavier weight class. If there is one fighter of this era who can absorb Pacquiao’s blows, it is Marquez and he has proven this in the first two fights. He has never been intimidated by Pacquiao and knows what to do each time he fights the Filipino champion.

As always, Pacquiao will not trash talk in the fight build-up. Like your Pinoy action hero, he will let his fists do the talking, refusing to predict the round he will end the battle and avoiding any opportunity to taunt Marquez. 

If FPJ had that stare when he was being harassed by longtime film nemesis Paquito Diaz, Pacquiao has that disarming smile. Now that he is a congressman as well, expect Pacquiao to be more politically correct than ever and answer every question with a smile.

But Pacquiao wants to end this Marquez business and all doubt about his mastery of the Mexican. Intelligent and passionate Filipino boxing fans, many of whom have approached me in coffee shops to even discuss their personal scorecards, felt that Pacquiao lost the second fight.

They idolize Pacquiao no end but relish their ability to break down a fight to its minute details. I disagree with their conclusion but our discussions have always been lively and informative.

But it should be quite a battle. The three months of waiting will kill us no doubt because we will tire of speculating and trying to spot any wrinkle in the Pacquiao camp. We will even tire of Marquez saying how ready he is for this fight of his life.

But such is the way of the blockbuster: The hero has to go on a journey to go through a few trials so that his eventual triumph will be worth the wait. 

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