MANNY PACQUIAO vs RICKY HATTON – MANNY PACQUIAO vs. RICKY HATTON, Battle of East and West: PACMAN vs. HITMAN

Icon

Just another WordPress.com weblog

Pride of Pomona Shane Mosley Gunning for Cotto, Hatton, or Pacquiao Next

By Ricardo Lois

Shane Mosley (the best welterweight in the World) and Ricardo Lois (the biggest mouth in the boxing radio World) meet up for a serving of humble pie.

You might remember that the always out-spoken Lois recommended fight fans to bet heavy on Antonio Margarito to destroy the Fighting Pride of Pomona.

After Lois bows down to Mosley, Sugar lets it be known that he is hunting down Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto, and Manny Pacquiao. read more

Filed under: Antonio Margarito, Manny Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto, Oscar de la Hoya, Pacman vs. Hitman, Pacquiao vs. Hatton, Ricky Hatton, Sugar Shane Mosley

Hatton warns Pacman: “I’m too big for you!”

By FightFan

The British press tour to promote Manny Pacquiao’s May 2 fight against Ricky Hatton continued today with ‘The Hitman’ issuing a stern warning to ‘The Pacman’.
At their Monday press conference, Ricky Hatton warned Manny Pacquiao “…..Manny, I want that pound-for-pound title from you. I have never been beaten at 10 stones (140 pounds) which is my best weight when I go into the ring. You know I’m just too big for you.”

Pacquiao told reporters afterwards “…I’m not fighting ‘big.’ I’m in a fight against a fighter who believes in himself. Now it is a matter of who trains harder and who has more speed. I plan to train harder than I did for the De La Hoya fight and I believe I have more speed.” read more

Filed under: Battle of East and West, Floyd Mayweather, Freddie Roach, Golden Boy, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Manny Pacquiao, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky “The Hitman” Hatton, Ricky Hatton, top rank promotions

Juan Manuel Marquez looks past Pacquiao for Mayweather

By Robert Cassidy

Juan Manuel Marquez has essentially said, “Who needs Manny Pacquiao?’

While Marquez and Pacquiao have waged a pair of compelling fights, Pac Man has moved on to bigger and better things. And while pundits try to line up Pacquiao’s fight schedule, few have been calling for a third match with Marquez.

That may change now.

On Saturday night, Marquez gave away 10 years to Juan Diaz and still flattened him in his hometown of Houston. It was an exciting fight, one that it seemed the 25-year-old Diaz would win. He carried the early rounds with pressure and combination punching. But Marquez, 35 and now a three-division champ, weathered the early attack to score a dramatic ninth-round knockout. It was a thrilling finish to a fight with “Fight of the Year,” potential.

Marquez has fought Pac Man twice, losing a split decision in March of 2008 and holding the Filippino to a draw in May of 2004. He called for an immediate rematch after their bout last year, but Pac Man moved up and shocked Oscar De La Hoya. Pac Man is next scheduled to fight Ricky Hatton in May and many experts are calling for him to fight Miguel Cotto in November. Both are high-profile names — which translates into big money — but they may not be as deservering a date with Manny.

Marquez was clearly frustrated with his inability to get a third fight with Pacquiao. And though a third JMM-Pac Man fight may come in time, immediately after he disposed of Diaz, Marquez looked in another direction. He called for Floyd Mayweather Jr. to come out of retirement and fight. read more

Filed under: David Diaz, joel casamayor, juan diaz, Juan Manuel Marquez, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Manny Pacquiao, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton

Top Rank Goes It Alone

By Thomas Hauser

Don’t get carried away by the title of this article. It would be a stretch to liken Bob Arum to Gary Cooper in High Noon. But in recent weeks, there has been talk of a new economic model in boxing. And Arum, in tandem with Todd DuBoef (his stepson and the president of Top Rank) might be charting a path out of the wilderness that the sweet science has wandered through in recent years.

Arum is an old-time promoter who is adapting to today’s economic and technological realities. “I don’t look back,” he says. “I’m seventy-eight years old. If I look back, I’d stumble and fall, so I just look forward.” Then he adds, “Boxing needs to move into a new era. We have to face realistically what’s going on in the world and present our product in different ways.” read more

Filed under: Bob Arum, Erik "El Terrible" Morales, Erik Morales, Floyd Mayweather, Freddie Roach, Kelly Pavlik, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto, Oscar de la Hoya, top rank promotions

Why boxing desperately needs Manny Pacquiao

By Robert Cassidy

I will tell you why.

Oscar De La Hoya is done. Even if he is not ready to admit it.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is still retired. Joe Calzaghe has retired. Roy Jones Jr. should retire.

Bernard Hopkins is 44. Evander Holyfield is 46.

The heavyweight division is, well, a division no one cares much about.

And we can’t really be sure if Kelly Pavlik and Miguel Cotto are actually back, given the opposition they faced in their comeback fights. And we can’t really be sure if Antonio Margarito will ever fight from under the A-Rod-type cloud of suspicion that now hovers over him.

So, yeah, boxing desperately needs Manny Pacquiao. But to what degree can he deliver?

We asked several experts in the industry if they thought it were possible for Pac Man to replace the Golden Boy as boxing’s true superstar. Here’s what they had to say:

Doug Fischer, co-editor of RingTV.com: “I don’t think Pacquiao can replace De La Hoya as boxing’s star in the United States. He doesn’t speak English well enough, he doesn’t have the look of a soap opera actor, and he doesn’t have the Mexican heritage, which helped Oscar’s popularity. However, I believe he can at least equal De La Hoya’s presence internationally. Obviously, Pacquiao’s huge in the Philippines, but also throughout Asia, and he’s known to hardcore fight fans around the world. If he adds Ricky Hatton’s scalp to his list of victims, his stature will rise in the UK the same way it did in the U.S. after he beat De La Hoya, perhaps more so, because boxing is more of a major sport in Britain. His willingness to take on quality fighters, his all-action style, and his relationship with HBO coulp help him become the best known Asian pro athlete in the U.S. this side of Yao Ming – as long as he keeps winning. A showdown with Floyd Mayweather would boost his popularity tremendously.

Brian Doogan, Sunday Times of London: “Manny Pacquiao is an exciting, accomplished fighter with clear crossover appeal in his native Philippines. His victory over Oscar De La Hoya will have made him much better known internationally, too, but a win over Oscar does not automatically make that fighter the next Oscar. Felix Trinidad did not transcend the sport when he beat Oscar, nor did Shane Mosley. Bernard Hopkins has done so to a degree in America and Floyd Mayweather is a different personality. If Pacquiao beats Ricky Hatton and follows up with a win over Mayweather I think then he will have become a boxing star recognized more by the general public.”

John Scully, former light heavyweight contender: “I would think it would be very hard. Oscar was such a media a star, loved by the women, very good looking, etc. etc. etc. Other than the fact that he can fight very well, what does Manny have to bring to the table that could make him a superstar? Sometimes I think people confuse what a superstar actually is. Manny could be a boxing star, an idol to his country, but a superstar in my opinion is a main stream star. Ali, Leonard, Oscar. It’s a limited pool to draw from. To be a true superstar you’d have to be able to do commercials, hawk products, conduct great and revealing interviews, have a back story that average people can either relate to or want to get behind. I wouldn’t think Manny could be included in that category no matter who he beats.”

Steve Farhood, Showtime analyst: “Pacquiao is already a superstar, but to even BEGIN to venture into Oscar territory, he’ll have to beat Floyd Mayweather. I believe that if Pacquiao convincingly defeats Hatton, Mayweather will reappear because a fight with Manny would mean “manny, manny” millions. I’d also like to see Pacquiao fight the winner of the title unification bout between Kendall Holt and Timothy Bradley, which will be on Showtime on April 4.

Nigel Collins, editor-in-chief, The Ring: “It would be both unrealistic and unfair to expect Pacquiao to be the ‘new De La Hoya.’ The pertinent question is how much of the void can Pacquiao fill. In many ways, we are fortunate to have Manny as the sport’s new standard-bearer. He is already a superstar within the insular world of boxing and now has an opportunity to soar higher than any of his contemporaries due to his unique qualifications. He is an extremely fan-friendly package of mayhem that practically guarantees a bit of the old ultra violence every time he fights. This is no small thing in an era populated by so many hesitant performers. Most of whom lack the passion to reached beyond themselves in search of glory. Pacquiao, on the other hand, happily pours everything he has into every fight.”

Ron Ross, boxing author: “Even being a superstar is relative. If you hang your hat on a rack in Manila the question of whether Manny Pacuiao can replace Oscar De La Hoya as boxing’s superstar, the response can very possibly be, “Oscar who?” Superstardom was achieved for the Pacman on this Pacific island nation long before he pounded the Golden Boy en route to a one-sided TKO drubbing, but his being accorded such status in North America or much of Europe depends on a lot more than talent, ability and defeating all comers. Generally speaking, greatness is in the eyes of the beholders and the beholders view along ethic and nationalistic lines. These lines do become less rigid in time. Manny Pacquiao has all the equipment – a Henry Armstrong-like arsenal of non-stop punches, electrifying power, speed and boxing skills – to qualify him as a true superstar of the boxing world. He’s already achieved that status in parts of the world. Just like the time zone difference, it may take a little longer but that bright spotlight is going to shine on Manny Pacquiao here too.”

source:
http://weblogs.newsday.com/sports/boxing/blog/2009/02/why_boxing_desperately_needs_m.html

Filed under: Bernard Hopkins, Erik "El Terrible" Morales, Floyd Mayweather, Henry Armstrong, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Marco Antonio "The Baby-Faced Assassin" Barrera, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton

LIGHTWEIGHT’S NOW UP FOR GRABS

By Iain Axon

It seems in the last three months that the lightweight division has gone from being one of the best weight classes in boxing to one that is in upheaval and up for grabs.

It started when Manny Pacquiao, the WBC lightweight champion, moved up to fight Oscar De La Hoya at welterweight back in December. Pacquiao decided he was going to move down, but not back to lightweight. He decided to go to 140 where he will fight Ricky Hatton on May 2.

Pacquiao officially relinquished the WBC lightweight title – without ever defending it – this week.

He sent a letter to the WBC this week saying what we already knew that he was giving up the title. read more

Filed under: Amir Khan, Antonio Margarito, Battle of East and West, juan diaz, Juan Manuel Marquez, Marco Antonio Barrera, Miguel Cotto, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton, shane mosley

Will the Golden Boy call it a career?

By Dan Rafael

Pardon Oscar De La Hoya if he just doesn’t know what to do. The 10-time titleholder across six weight divisions is really struggling right now.

Should he stay?

Or should he go?

It has been three months since he took the beating of his life, an eighth-round TKO loss to Manny Pacquiao in which the favored De La Hoya was not at all competitive against a smaller man. After the eighth round, his face swollen and his spirit broken, De La Hoya retired on his stool, and many wondered whether it would be the last time they saw him box.

Since a postfight interview with HBO’s Larry Merchant in the ring following the bout, De La Hoya has kept a low profile. He didn’t attend the news conference after the fight because he was at the hospital, and he came out of his cocoon only briefly in January to help promote a mixed martial arts event with which his company, Golden Boy Promotions, was involved. read more

Filed under: Bernard Hopkins, Dream Match, Golden Boy, Larry Merchant, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Manny Pacquiao, Oscar de la Hoya, Sugar Shane Mosley

Bring on Manny Pacquiao, Ricky Hatton, and Floyd Mayweather JR: The Options of Shane Mosley

By Gene Ramirez

Everything seemed to be working against him. Shane Mosley was in the middle of a divorce with his wife and manager Jin Mosley. Everyone was talking about him and the BALCO situation where he either knowingly or not took steroids before a big fight with Oscar. When you add the fact that Mosley did not look his best taking every second of twelve rounds to drop Ricardo Mayorga last September and Antonio Margarito was coming off the performance of his career against Miguel Cotto and it all added up to one likely ending. read more

Filed under: Antonio Margarito, Floyd Mayweather, Freddie Roach, Golden Boy, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Miguel Cotto, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky “The Hitman” Hatton, shane mosley, top rank promotions

Oscar De La Hoya disses Manny Pacquiao

By John Benz

In a recent interview conducted by Michael Rosenthal,Oscar De La Hoya admits he was too embarrassed to show his face in public after his stunning defeat at the hands of Manny Pacquiao.

De La Hoya states to Rosenthal that he knew he was in trouble from the opening bell. In the seventh round, De La Hoya frustrated with the fight was actually hoping Pacquiao would knock him out. read more

Filed under: Floyd Mayweather, Freddie Roach, Golden Boy, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Manny Pacquiao, Oscar de la Hoya

Pacquiao does not hit hard, DL Hoya says

By NICK GIONGCO

Oscar De La Hoya is not awed by Manny Pacquiao’s punching power.

Almost three months after being beaten to a pulp by the Filipino puncher, De La Hoya remains in a quandary over his future in the sport, telling The Ring magazine in an article that appeared online and the Los Angeles Times as well that there’s still that possibility that the Golden Boy would return to the ring.

While De La Hoya admitted that Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach was right in telling him that he can no longer pull the trigger, he is also inclined to believe that his high-protein diet may have something to do with his defeat. read more

Filed under: Battle of East and West, Floyd Mayweather, Freddie Roach, Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao, Manny Pacquiao, Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton