Sunday, December 21, 2008

If Pacquiao won't come to England for Ricky Hatton, De La Hoya Will....

Recent reports have surfaced about brewing controversies between the Ricky Hatton camp and Team Pacquiao.

With both Hatton and Pacquiao successfully completing their last assignments over Paulie Malignaggi and Oscar De La Hoya respectively, it appeared that the stage was set for Manny Pacquiao and Ricky Hatton to lock horns in a battle of the 'little big men'.

Well, not so fast....

According to Boxingscene.com, Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum wants a fight between Pacquiao and Hatton to take place in Las Vegas, while Team Hatton wants the two to meet in a sold out Wembley Stadium overseas in Hatton's neck of the woods.

According to interview transcripts between boxingscene.com and Ray Hatton (Father of Ricky Hatton), it was made very clear by Ray Hatton that his son "has done his traveling in the past and done his part", meaning that their days of packing bags to take their show on the road are over.

He would later go on to state that he and his son are more than ready to pull the ultimate trump card by not facing Pacquiao at all, instead choosing to face Oscar De La Hoya who - despite his recent humbling loss to Pacquiao - is still open to facing the British phenom over in England.

I think it's totally bizarre that the possibility of yet another fight (particularly of this proportion) is being discussed with Oscar De La Hoya at the center of discussions.

Who in their right mind wants to see this guy fight again? Then again, don't answer that question, because as crazy as it sounds, Hatton is no Pacquiao and oddly enough, Oscar may very well have what it takes to stop Hatton which would mean we'd be forced to see more of him in the very place he no longer belongs....the ring!

For now, nothing is etched in stone either way so hopefully Pacquiao and Hatton can agree to terms so that Oscar can stick to doing what he does best now days, which is promote fights.

New developments are expected early next week....Stay tuned. - Vivek Wallace, Examiner.com


Pacquiao is king of the ring

The Philippines failed in its bid for an Olympic gold medal in boxing, but ring icon Manny Pacquiao more than made up for the disappointing performance of Harry Tañamor by beating to a pulp one of the most popular American boxers ever to win an Olympic gold.

The December 6 showdown between Pacquiao and Oscar de la Hoya, dubbed the “Dream Match,” ended with the Filipino slugger scoring an emphatic technical knockout victory over boxing’s Golden Boy. De la Hoya, a 1992 gold medalist in the Barcelona Olympics and a six-division world champion as a professional, entered the fight as the smart money bet owing to his decisive height and reach advantages.

The mismatch boxing fans were expecting did take place, only it was the smaller Pacquiao who administered the one-sided beating. Moving up to the welterweight division (147 lbs.), Pacquiao displayed uncanny speed and power in handing de la Hoya the worst beating of his 16-year career. His left eye swollen shut and his cheeks puffy from all the stinging blows he had absorbed from Pacquiao, the 35-year-old de la Hoya quit on his stool at the conclusion of the eighth round.

Post-fight punch statistics underlined Pacquiao’s dominating performance. The Filipino landed 2 to 4 of 585 total punches thrown for a 38 percent accuracy rate compared to de la Hoya’s woeful 21 percentage (83 punches landed out of 402 thrown).

Pacquiao’s victory over de la Hoya capped a sterling year that saw Pacman win all three fights in as many weight classifications.

On March 15, Pacquiao captured the World Boxing Council (WBC) super featherweight (130 lbs.) championship with a hard-earned split-decision over Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez. On June 28, Pacquiao moved up in weight and easily won the WBC lightweight crown (135 lbs.) with a nine-round stoppage of David Diaz. The victory over Diaz made Pacquiao the first Asian fighter to win four world titles in as many weight classifications. The Pacman had previously held titles in the flyweight (112 lbs.) and junior featherweight (122 lbs.) divisions.

While no world title was at stake in the de la Hoya fight, Pacquiao’s resounding over the Golden Boy made for the biggest victory of his career. The “Dream Match” attracted 1.25 million pay-per-view buys, generating revenues in excess of $70 million. The MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas was packed, with an announced attendance of over 15,000. In terms of revenue generated, Pacquiao-de la Hoya topped all other fights for the year.

Pacquiao was never beaten as WBC lightweight champion, but he is likely to give up the belt following the win over de la Hoya. As the year ends, the country has four world champions—Pacquiao, International Boxing Federation (IBF) flyweight champion (112 lbs.) Nonito Donaire, World Boxing Organization (WBO) bantamweight champion (118 lbs.) Gerry Peñalosa and WBO minimumweight titleholder (105 lbs.) Donnie Nietes.

Peñalosa, Donaire and Nietes made only cameo appearances in the ring. Donaire (20-1 with 13 knockouts), who won the IBF title in July 2007 with a stunning knockout win over Vic Darchinyan, did not see action until November 1, when he scored a lukewarm sixth round technical knockout win over Moruti Mthalane. Nietes, who was crowned WBO champ in September 2007, made only one successful defense—a second round knockout of a grossly overmatched Eddy Castro. Peñalosa (53-6, 36 knockouts) was just as scarce, posting an eighth round knockout win over Ratanachai Sor Vorapin on April 6 at the Araneta Coliseum.

Five other Filipinos figured in world titles, but all went home empty-handed. On June 14, a rusty Florante Condes (22-4-1, 20 knockouts) lost his IBF minimumweight championship via split decision to Raul “Rayito” Garcia. On July 12, Nonito’s brother Glenn (17-4-1, 9 knockouts) dropped a decision to IBF light flyweight (108 lbs.) champion Ulises Solis while Sonny Boy Jaro was outclassed in 12 rounds by WBC light flyweight titlist Edgar Sosa on September 27.

On October 30, hard-hitter Rolly Lunas (25-7-1, 14 knockouts) was outgunned in 12 rounds by World Boxing Association (WBA) bantamweight king Anselmo Moreno. Two months la­ter, it was the turn of veteran Juanito Rubillar (46-11, 22 knockouts) to bow to Sosa by way of a seventh round technical knockout.

World-title prospects Z “The Dream” Gorres, AJ “Bazooka” Banal and Rey “Boom Boom” Bautista also turned in disappointing performances. Junior bantamweight Gorres (28-2, 15 knockouts) was held to a stalemate on February 2 by Darchinyan while Banal (17-1-1, 14 knockouts) kissed his unbeaten record goodbye on July 26 when he was ambushed in 10 rounds by Rafael “El Torito” Concepcion in a battle for the interim WBA junior bantamweight (115 lbs.) title. On November 22, junior featherweight Bautista (26-2, 19 knockouts) was whipped in eight rounds by Heriberto Ruiz.

The country’s luck in boxing took a nosedive in August, when Tañamor, the lone Filipino qualifier in the boxing tournament of the Beijing Olympics, was eliminated in his first very first match. Picked by the prestigious Sports Illustrated to medal in the light flyweight division (48 kg.), Tañamor lost via a score of 6-to-3 to Ghana’s Manyo Plange. The Zamboanga City native was a mere shadow of the fighter who bagged a silver medal in the 2007 World Amateur Boxing Championships held in Chicago.

Tañamor salvaged a measure of respect in December, when he won a gold medal in the Boxing World Cup in Moscow by out boxing Cuban Yampier Hernandez.

Pacquiao literally served as a beacon of light for Filipino fighters. In May, Pacman was recognized by The Ring magazine as the new “pound-for-pound” king of the sport after American Floyd Mayweather Jr. inexplicably retired. Pacquiao proved himself worthy of the accolade by winning two world titles and demolishing the most bankable name in the punch-for-pay business. - Ed C. Tolentino, www.manilatimes.net

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Filipino boxing icon Pacquiao punishes De la Hoya for technical knockout triumph

LAS VEGAS, Nevada – Manny Pacquiao punished Oscar de la Hoya for eight rounds Saturday, his technical knockout triumph over the US superstar underscoring the Filipino icon's status as best pound-for-pound fighter in the world.

Pacquiao's speed and precision were too much for De la Hoya, whose left eye was swelling shut as he declined to come out for the ninth round.

He sat quietly on his stool as his corner decided he had taken enough punishment and referee Tony Weeks officially stopped the fight.

With the technical knockout, Pacquiao improved to 48-3 with two drawn and 36 wins inside the distance.

Pacquiao, the reigning World Boxing Council lightweight champion, moved up two weight classes to take the lucrative bout with De la Hoya, a 10-time world champion in six different weight classes who fell to 39-6 with 30 knockouts.

The disparity in size, most obvious in De la Hoya's four-inch height advantage, proved no handicap for the 29-year-old Pacquiao, who was ahead on all three judges' scorecards when the fight was halted.

Two of the judges gave every round to Pacquiao, while a third gave De la Hoya one round.

Pacquiao was all eagerness from the opening bell, when he raced to the center of the ring buoyed by chants of "Manny! Manny!" from a sizeable contingent of Filipino fans at the MGM Grand.

But the famously aggressive Pacquiao also showed shrewd judgment, darting in to land blows while eluding the sluggish-looking De la Hoya.

"That's what we were working on every day in the gym - speed," Pacquiao said. "Speed was going to be the key to this fight."

"I'm not surprised by the result, because I prepared well to control the fight from the beginning," he said. "I'm happy that I could give this victory to my country."

De la Hoya, who was at his lightest fighting weight since 2001, may have been adversely affected by the drop in weight.

"I felt empty, without power," he said. "I tried to go forward but Pacquiao's leg speed and movement didn't allow me to connect with anything."

The seventh round was all Pacquiao, as De la Hoya seemed unable to launch a punch and merely tried to cover up.

The eighth was more of the same as Pacquiao handed De la Hoya one of the worst defeats of his career.

"Manny Pacquiao is a great fighter," De la Hoya said. "He deserves all the credit.

"He fought a great fight. He was he better man," added De la Hoya, who at 35 was left pondering his future.

"My heart still wants to fight that's for sure," De la Hoya said in a television interview from the ring. "But when your physical doesn't respond, what can you do?" - AFP

Pacquiao era begins with De La Hoya demolition

LAS VEGAS – Manny Pacquiao unequivocally established himself as the finest fighter in the world Saturday.

But he accomplished an even more stunning feat when he not only defeated Oscar De La Hoya but battered him into retirement with a shockingly one-sided victory in their welterweight bout before 15,001 at the MGM Grand Garden.

De La Hoya, the 1992 Olympic gold-medal winner and a professional world champion in six weight classes, was hammered as he never was in 44 previous bouts before trainer Nacho Beristain mercifully asked referee Tony Weeks to halt the carnage after eight one-sided rounds.

The fight ended any debate whether Pacquiao or light heavyweight Joe Calzaghe deserves the top spot in the mythical pound-for-pound race, but it also sent a one-time legend into retirement.

De La Hoya, who was taken to a local hospital for a precautionary examination, never in his illustrious career had absorbed such a beating. Pacquiao’s hands were far too quick and, despite the fact that he was moving up from lightweight, his punches were much too hard for the Golden Boy to handle.

It was clear by the third round that De La Hoya was going to need a miracle to reverse the pummeling he was taking.

Pacquiao displayed every punch in the arsenal, raking the Golden Boy with straight lefts that nearly closed De La Hoya’s left eye and stunning him with hooks, jabs and uppercuts.

It was so savage of a beating that it was hard not to feel sorry for De La Hoya. At the end of the bout, a thoroughly beaten De La Hoya trudged across the ring and met his one-time trainer, Freddie Roach.

“You’re right,” De La Hoya said to Roach, who had prepared Pacquiao brilliantly. “I don’t have it any more.”

Pacquiao was a 2-1 underdog, largely because he was challenging a man who had fought at super welterweight or middleweight exclusively for the last seven-and-a-half years. Pacquiao had only fought once as high as lightweight and had fought 75 percent of his bouts before Saturday at super bantamweight or lower.

But Pacquiao unofficially weighed a pound-and-a-half more than De La Hoya – 148½ to 147 – and was clearly stronger and better Saturday.

“The media, the press is never wrong,” Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said. “You all said it was a mismatch and it was a mismatch.”

De La Hoya didn’t officially announce his retirement, but his business partners, Bernard Hopkins and Shane Mosley, spoke of his career in the past tense. In his brilliant career, De La Hoya took on most of the greatest fighters of his generation, but never before was he beaten as cleanly and decisively as he was by Pacquiao.

Not when he was knocked out by a brutal shot to the liver by Hopkins in 2004, not when he dropped a split decision to then-pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather Jr. last year and not when a tactical mistake cost him a victory against Felix Trinidad.

“Pacquiao was phenomenal,” Hopkins said.

Pacquiao was never threatened by De La Hoya’s vaunted left hook, negating De La Hoya’s best chance of winning the fight.

It was something Roach had worked tirelessly on in the gym and something he unwaveringly told the world that Pacquiao would do.

“Taking the left hand away was a key,” Roach said. “We took Oscar’s left hand away from him and once we did that, the fight was over.”

Pacquiao called De La Hoya his idol and said he was honored to have had the opportunity to face him. But he didn’t spare his idol any pain, working his plan like a hired gun.

“It was nothing personal,” Pacquiao said. “I just came to do my job.”

He was far more impressive against De La Hoya than Mayweather, who retired in June as the widely acknowledged best fighter in the world. Pacquiao declined to say whether he’d

be willing to fight Mayweather, saying it was up to Arum to decide.

Arum said he wouldn’t discuss a potential opponent for Pacquiao until after the holidays, but it’s clear he’s sitting on a gold mine. With De La Hoya expected to wander into retirement, Pacquiao will take his mantle as the game’s biggest draw.

Fights against Mayweather, if he comes out of retirement, and Ricky Hatton are going to be massive events that would likely guarantee each men eight-figure paydays.

Arum wanted none of that talk, preferring to revel in one of the most satisfying victories of his nearly 50-year promotional career.

“Next to the night when George Foreman won the heavyweight championship of the world by knocking out Michael Moorer, this is it,” Arum said. “These are my two most memorable fights as a promoter.”

This was the boxing rite of passage that has become all too familiar over the years. It happened to Joe Louis against Rocky Marciano, to Muhammad Ali against Larry Holmes and to Julio Cesar Chavez against De La Hoya.

A younger, faster and better man snuffed out the star of one of the game’s all-time greats.

“Hats off to Manny Pacquiao, because he was incredible,” said Mosley, who has two wins over De La Hoya. “Remember what Oscar has done, though. He made this sport a great sport, and created this so that all of you people could come to see a great event.”

But De La Hoya didn’t have that one last great fight left and was forced to accept a beating as the final act of a Hall of Fame career.

“It happens to everyone,” said legendary trainer Angelo Dundee, who assisted De La Hoya in camp.

Dundee had trained Ali, Foreman and Sugar Ray Leonard, among many of the game’s greats, and had seen this scene before.

“I thought Oscar had what it takes to beat Pacquiao, but this happens when you let the guys fight the fight,” Dundee said. “You just have to give the other guy credit.”

Yes you do.

Oscar De La Hoya is the past.

It’s Pacquiao’s time now. - Yahoo! sports

Saturday, December 6, 2008

De La Hoya- Pacquiao, Why?

Tonight the “Golden Boy” Oscar De La Hoya (39-5, 30 KOs) will face Manny “Pac Man” Pacquiao (47-3-2, 35 KOs) in what the fight promotion is calling a “Dream fight” at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. This is an intriguing fight because Pacquiao, the WBC lightweight champion, fights at the weight limit of 135lbs and De La Hoya who has won world titles in six different weight classes recently fought at the 147lbs weight limit. Both are hugely popular, great fighters, and are destined for the boxing hall of fame.

Those of us who follow boxing know De La Hoya’s resume. This is a fighter who gained international attention as an amateur back in 1992 when he was able to capture a gold medal for his cancer stricken mother. He used the gold medal to launch what has thus far been a very profitable professional boxing career as a fighter and Promoter. Many of his critics believed he would be more hype than a true fighter when he came into the professional ranks. He debut in the 130lbs division where he won, at the time, the lightly regarded WBO Jr. Lightweight title. It wasn’t until he defeated the tough Rafael Ruelas for the IBF lightweight title that he demonstrated he was capable of being a force in the boxing world. As his body grew he continued to move into higher weight classes. Along the way he fought great fighters such as Julio Cesar Chavez, Pernell Whitaker, Felix Trinidad, Bernard Hopkins, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. In all these fights something was missing. He beat a faded Chavez twice, but Chavez had seen better days. With Whitaker, he didn’t take the title from him, but rather it was a very close controversial decision win. Some believe Whitaker defeated De La Hoya. When he fought Trinidad, he outboxed him for nine rounds, then ran from him for the final three rounds and lost by decision. When he fought Hopkins he quit after receiving a body punch even though he was leading on the scorecards. His best performance was against Mayweather who he lost to by a split decision. So its safe to say some of De La Hoya’s fans are still looking for that great “signature fight” before he finally retires from boxing. After negotiations for a rematch against Floyd Mayweather Jr. imploded, he choose newly recognized “pound for pound” best fighter in the world Manny Pacquiao. Who is Pacquiao?

Manny Pacquiao started his boxing career in the obscurity of the Philippines. He became world champion in the flyweight division (112lbs). He gained world wide attention when he unexpectedly destroyed Marco Antonio Barrera on HBO’s “Boxing After Dark” series in 2003. This is a fighter who truly brings “it” and leaves nothing home when he steps in the ring. He is not concerned with protecting his record like some fighters. He fights the “best of the best” and is truly a gift to the fans who spend their hard earn money on the fights. He has beaten, lost, and had a draw to great fighters such as Marquez (draw and win), Barrera (defeated twice), and Morales (lost and won). For about a year and a half before Mayweather retired, this boxing critics and writer boldly placed Pacquiao ahead of Mayweather on his “pound for pound” list. Is this why De La Hoya choose Pacquiao, a fighter from a lower weight class? What does Oscar stand to gain from this fight as a fighter?

Pacquiao is in his prime and is very popular. De La Hoya may no longer be in his prime, but he can still fight. He is still a top ten world rated fighter, who has not been through many boxing wars. This fight may break previous pay per view records set by Oscar. So when the question is asked De La Hoya-Pacquiao, Why? There are 100-150 million reasons why the fight should take place. Also for the De La Hoya camp, a Pacquiao fight is not perceived as being as tough as a Margarito or Williams fight. This match up has caused a buzz in the boxing world simply because of the size difference between the two fighters. First realize Oscar has a size, reach, and (probably) punching power advantage over Pacquiao. Oscar will likely be the favorite going into this fight. Pacquiao will bring speed, excellent conditioning, and punching power, throw multiple punch combinations, and try to dictate the pace. Make no mistake about it; Pacquiao has a good chance of winning this fight though this writer believes Oscar losing by knockout is unlikely. Pacquiao would have the boxing world at his finger tips if he defeated the bigger De La Hoya. There is a rumor if Pacquiao wins tonight another mega fight awaits him against Floyd Mayweather Jr. If Pacquiao should lose by a decision or stoppage he would likely keep his “pound for pound” status because of the size difference between both fighters. Pacquiao could go back to lightweight and have a big fight against fellow champion Nate Campbell or have another mega fight at junior welterweight against Ricky Hatton. Out of all the talent in boxing’s 147lb division (Margarito, Williams, Cotto, Mayweather), De La Hoya chooses boxing “pound for pound” best fighter Manny Pacquiao who is not in his weight class. If he defeats Pacquiao and really hurts him in the process, critics will say this fight should have never taken place. This will do nothing to enhance De La Hoya’s legacy, but rather add more zeros to his bank account. If he loses to Pacquiao he will be severely embarrassed and probably retire. Look for Oscar to score a split decision victory or late round stoppage. Maybe after this fight he will finally fight Margarito or Williams. Don’t hold your breath.
- PhilBoxing.com

Weigh-in final hurdle before Pacquiao-De la Hoya collision

MANILA, Philippines - One more thing before the welterweights collide. Get them to stand on the scales first, and see how heavy they are.

Or for that matter, how heavy Manny Pacquiao is. And for Oscar de la Hoya, how lighter he has become.

There will be no problems, however, during the weigh-in on Saturday (2 p.m. Friday, US time) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, a formality really between two boxing superstars who expect something more earth-shaking to derail them than just ... failing to make the weight?

Weigh-ins, furthermore, really have an obscure purpose. They're being done 24 hours before a match. But in between that time the two fighters are expected to gain weight that, in some cases, are way over their weigh-in rate.

Pacquiao was at 146lbs on Friday (Thursday, US time). That's par for the course, trainer Freddie Roach said. That's at least where he wants his boy to be a day before The Dream Match.

"There's nothing to worry about in my mind," Roach said. "I'm very satisfied."

In the 24-hour weight-gain period, Pacquiao was advised to add only at least three more pounds (or not go over 150lbs) on fight night to preserve his speed, his most important weapon versus de la Hoya.

Pacquiao, who began as a 106lb professional fighter 13 years ago, has never been this heavy inside the ring. His heaviest was against David Diaz just last June where he bloated to 147lbs or 12lbs bigger than the prescribed lightweight limit.

"We'll have breakfast (the day of the weigh-in) and walk after," Roach said. "But we won't go outside if he doesn't want to. We'll just make sure the weight's okay and we're fine."

With former undisputed heavyweight champion Mike Tyson watching at ringside on the final day of training, Pacquiao sweated it out for almost two hours at the IBA Gym, going four rounds with the mitts and later on, getting on the double end and the speed ball.

In a relatively light mood, Pacquiao was seen winking and smiling at Tyson as he punched mitts with Roach in a corner. At one time, he even landed an unintentional left on Roach's cheek.

In all, Pacquiao logged in a total of 163 sparring rounds squeezed within a two-month period, the most number of rounds and the longest training period Pacquiao has ever had.

"We're good, we're happy," Roach said. "There's nothing more we can do. Now Manny knows he's going there to do his job."

What mismatch?

Meanwhile, the winning odds of Pacquiao and de la Hoya were narrowed down further, betting spreads on Friday (late Thursday, US time) showed.

De la Hoya's line fell to minus-155, while Pacquiao's increased to plus-125.

That means a $1.55 bet on de la Hoya will gain $1.00, while a $1.00 wager on Pacquiao will earn $1.25.

Betting insiders said they are expecting odds to be near even. - GMANews.TV

Monday, December 1, 2008

Sponsors in HBO's Corner: Net lands Tecate, Coke for De La Hoya-Pacquiao bout

HBO believes the Dec. 6 Oscar De La Hoya-Manny Pacquiao pay-per-view event still has all the makings of a “megafight,” KO’d economy be damned.

The pay channel will charge $54.95 for the welterweight bout, a not-insignificant fee given the state of consumer confidence. With that in mind, HBO is hedging its bets, joining forces with two sponsors who will effectively underwrite the event, offering $20 rebates that can be applied to a subscriber’s cable bill.

First into the ring is Heineken USA import Cerveza Tecate, which has a relationship with De La Hoya’s Golden Boy Promotions. Consumers who purchase a 12-pack of Tecate in one of 4,500 participating retail outlets are eligible for the rebate. “This fight creates a great opportunity for us to reinforce our prominence within the sport,” said Carlos Boughton, Tecate’s brand director.

Also lacing up the gloves is Coca-Cola’s Full Throttle energy drink, popular among Hispanic males. As with the Tecate promotion, Coke will foot the bill for the rebates. “This was done because Golden Boy is keenly aware of the state of the economy right now, and they wanted to provide an incentive to younger fans,” said Mark Taffet, HBO senior vp, sports operations and PPV. As De La Hoya put it during a Nov. 17 conference call, “If you buy every single product, you’re going to watch the fight for free.”

Taffet predicted the fight will be the biggest PPV event of 2008. “In 18 PPV fights, Oscar has brought in $626 million, on 12.8 million buys,” Taffet said. “This could be up there with the Mayweather fight.” If so, HBO could get an early Christmas present. The De La Hoya-Mayweather tilt last May notched a record 2.4 million buys and $134.4 million.- mediaweek.com

De la Hoya winning odds make steep drop, spreads show

MANILA, Philippines - Oscar de la Hoya continued to lose his grip on the betting line, with his winning odds now significantly nearer Manny Pacquiao's.

The most recent spread made available by MGM Sportsbook in Las Vegas has de la Hoya still favored at minus-185, according to a news report on Philboxing.com.

That means a bet of $1.85 on de la Hoya would net a $1.00 payoff. Pacquiao came in at plus-155 ($1.00 to win $1.55).

While Pacquiao's lines have been steady, there has been a noticeable drop on de la Hoya's winning odds since the Dream Match was formally announced in early September.

In mid-September, bookmakers installed de la Hoya as a minus-240 favorite ($2.40 to win $1.00). In late October, the line went down to minus-204 ($2.04 to win $1.00).

In the same periods, Pacquiao was at plus-190 ($1.00 to win $1.90) in mid-September and between plus-155 and plus-185 in late October.

Pacquiao's and de la Hoya's recent lines mirrored estimates that were made before their fight was officially sealed.

Before the Pacquiao-de la Hoya tiff was formalized, Las Vegas oddsmakers put Pacquiao's value at plus-165 ($1.00 to win $1.65) and de la Hoya at minus-185.

Based on the trend, the welterweight bout between Pacquiao, who is going up in weight for a second consecutive match, and the naturally bigger de la Hoya appears to be a lot more even that some of the recent major boxing cards.

According to the Las Vegas Sun, Juan Manuel Marquez was a 3-1 favorite versus Joel Casamayor, Ricky Hatton a 5-2 favorite versus Paulie Malignaggi, Kelly Pavlik a 4-1 favorite against Bernard Hopkins and Shane Mosley a staggering 8-1 favorite against Ricardo Mayorga.

Among the four bouts, only Hopkins came away with a win as an underdog. - GMANews.TV

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Pacquiao: I pay no mind to Roach-de la Hoya trash talk

Less than a week before the megabuck welterweight super fight between him and Oscar de la Hoya, Manny Pacquiao distanced himself from the ongoing word war that his coach and chief trainer, Freddie Roach, has been having against the "Golden Boy."

"There has been a lot of talk in the media between Oscar and Freddie, that this is personal between them, but I don't talk about that. I just focus on my training," the Filipino boxing icon said in an article written for ESPN.com.

Pacquiao said that Roach will not be blamed should he lose after 12 rounds on the evening of December 6.

"All I know is that I would never blame my trainer for a loss," the WBC lightweight champ said.

Pacquiao reiterated his dislike for issuing harsh statements and predictions for the epic battle, which he described as the "biggest" of his life and career.

"People tell me Oscar has said things like he is going to knock me out, and that he sees this fight as personal. But I don't make predictions," he said.

He added that the multi-million dollar fight, albeit non-title, is purely business for him, nothing more.

"And it is never personal. It is never personal for me. I am doing my job. And I'm going to do it well, and I'm going to win the fight," he said.

Hatton fight possible


Meanwhile, Pacquiao said he is looking forward for a clash against Britain's Ricky "Hitman" Hatton, who defeated Paulie Malignaggi last weekend, also in Las Vegas.

"I was really inspired by watching Ricky Hatton win his fight against Paulie Malignaggi on Saturday. It was a good fight and I would like to fight Ricky Hatton. After my fight with Oscar, I will go back down to 140, which is Hatton's weight, so maybe that fight can happen," he said.

However, he clarified that the possibility of a clash with Hatton will have to wait since he wouldn't want to disturb his concentration for de la Hoya.

Pacquiao also downplayed the fact about de la Hoya's advantage (the former Olympian is four inches taller than the Filipino) in terms of height and build.

"I'm not that small. I'm 149, 150 right now and I have some time to come down to 147," he said.

Roach fires again


Pacquiao's statements about the word war between the Hall of Fame trainer and de la Hoya came after Roach took a verbal swipe againb at the Golden Boy earlier this week.

"He's going to find out that it's going to take more than dieting down to a Twiggy-like 145 pounds to beat Manny," Freddoe Roach said in a report on Philboxing.com.

Roach said that his ward, up two weight divisions from the 135-lb class, is "no cream puff".

"He (Pacquiao) is looking forward to serving Oscar his just desserts at the MGM Grand on December 6," Roach added.

The trainer's statements were in reaction to reports that said de la Hoya beat up a "Carnegie Deli cheesecake" sent by Pacquiao for Thanksgiving Day.

"I'm not too surprised Oscar was able to whip the cheesecake, look at what he did to that French pastry Patrick Charpentier back in 1998. That's his specialty," said Roach.

The coach was referring to the battle between de la Hoya and the Frenchman who had an 11-win streak tucked in his belt prior to the match with the Golden Boy. - abs-cbnNEWS.com

Saturday, November 29, 2008

De La Hoya Vs. Pacquiao in Las Vegas

The wait is over and the fight is on, Olympic gold medalist and 10-time world champion “The Golden Boy” Oscar De La Hoya will face current Ring Magazine No. 1-ranked pound for pound champion Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao on Saturday, December 6 at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada in a bout that will be produced and distributed live by HBO Pay-Per-View.

The MGM Grand in Las Vegas will be absolutely buzzing on December 6th. Already, some fans are asking themselves, 'will Manny be too quick for Oscar?' And, 'is there a chance "Pac-Man" will pull it off?' Pacquiao himself has said he is very confident he will win. A fearless warrior if ever there was one, the reigning lightweight champ has apparently stated he feels he will do to De La Hoya what he did to David Diaz last time out. A bold prediction to be sure, but in successfully getting Oscar to agree to get down to a 147 pound weight limit, "Pac-Man" may have gotten himself a big slice of help.

Remember, De La Hoya has not weighed as low as welterweight for some years now - 2001 to be exact. Will the effort of boiling down weaken "The Golden Boy" sufficiently enough to give the Filipino superstar a real chance? Though we are talking about a guy who stands at 5' 10.5" taking on an opponent who is four full inches shorter, the weight issue cannot be ruled out completely. Manny walks around at around 150 pounds or so, therefore welterweight MIGHT not be such a stretch for him. The problem is, he is fighting one helluva big welterweight in De La Hoya.

As for Pacquiao, he has fought once in lightweight and is now moving up to welterweight. Pacquiao is already in his prime and is known for his speed and power but going up the weight class will definitely lessen the power of his blows against bigger opponents.

For De La Hoya, his motivation to win the fight will be fighting for his countrymen since Pacquiao is known to demolish most, if not all, of the Mexican boxers he has fought in the past. For Pacquiao, he will again carry the Philippine country on his shoulders because he is the best athlete the Philippines has to offer in the international sports. Nonetheless, this bout will definitely draw a lot of spectators regardless of the mismatch because both boxers have become legends in this sport.

Despite Oscar's current age, if Manny can beat him it will have to go down as one quite incredible upset.

Presented by Golden Boy Promotions and Top Rank, Inc., the bout will be a 12-round, non-title fight contested at the 147-pound welterweight limit. This exciting and intriguing match-up pits two of the most recognizable and popular talents in the sport today in what will surely be the grand finale of the 2008 boxing calendar year.


source:cappersmall.com

Pacquiao polishing up Hoya game plan

LOS ANGELES, California—Manny Pacquiao ducked under a simulated left jab and went for trainer Freddie Roach’s body with a spear-like punch. He stopped, pushed his coach away and said “sometimes…”

He then sidestepped and went for the head.

“Because sometimes, he jabs very slow, like this,” he told Roach, acting out De La Hoya's tendencies.

Things are slowly shifting to wrap-up mode at the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, where Pacquiao and Roach worked the mitts again Friday to polish up a game plan the Filipino ring icon will use against Oscar De La Hoya for their Dec. 6 “Dream Match” at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

A day after De La Hoya told Ring Magazine that he can’t lose that match, Team Pacquiao went through the motion of making sure no stone is left unturned once it makes its traditional road trip to the Nevada desert gambling haven on Monday.

The Filipino champ went through another rigorous day of training, where he again pushed hard and beyond the limits set by his trainers.

Aside from working the mitts, Pacquiao shadow-boxed, hit the double-end and speed ball, skipped rope, did crunches and also had his arms and abdomen whipped with a Thai stick by trainer Eric Brown.

Other Team Pacquiao personnel also did their jobs.

Reports had it that Team Pacquiao and the World Boxing Council, whose lightweight crown the Filipino holds, have already struck a compromise regarding unpaid sanction fees.

Roach, on the other hand, said he will continue to push the issue on hand-taping to make sure De La Hoya doesn’t have an advantage with the bandages he will be wearing underneath his gloves.
And Pacquiao may push through with testing his weight a week before the fight, even if the WBC is not sanctioning this bout.

Boxingscene.com reported that Pacquiao’s camp already paid the $30,000 it owed the WBC for sanctioning his fight against Juan Manuel Marquez last March, where the Pacman grabbed the Mexican’s super featherweight title.

The report also said the WBC and Pacquiao have already reached an agreement regarding the $100,000 fee the boxing body requested for the fight against De La Hoya.

Roach, meanwhile, said he is going to make sure the Nevada State Athletic Commission monitors the taping of De La Hoya’s hands to make sure the former six-division champion gets no undue advantage from them.

“(De La Hoya cutman) Joe (Chavez) uses strapping tape, which is not supposed to be used,” Roach said. “Between the knuckles, they use what Joe calls fake ligaments. They make it like a rope and then put it between the fingers and it’s actually in the rules, it says one strip per tape only.”

Boxers’ hands are often taped before wearing gloves to prevent them from getting injured and cushioning the impact of hard punches. Roach may sound like he’s nitpicking, but he may have a valid point.

Bandages used for hand-wrapping often get stiff once soaked in sweat. That means the thicker the bandages used for the wrapping, the stiffer they will be in the late rounds, adding zing to a boxer’s punches.

“I want it fair,” he said. “The rules are rules and that’s what we’re going by. I want them to be upheld.

Roach said he will try to monitor the taping. He will bring the issue up with the Nevada commission once Team Pacquiao hits Las Vegas.

Meanwhile, De La Hoya said he will try to finish off Pacquiao early in the match.


source: inquirer sports

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Freddie Roach: Manny Pacquiao's Sparring Partners Get $1,000 if They Knock Him Down


As the great boxing trainer Freddie Roach gets Manny Pacquiao prepared for his fight on December 6 against Oscar De La Hoya, he has an interesting incentive for Pacquiao's sparring partners: Knock him down and get some cold, hard cash.

"I don't hire sparring partners, I hire real fighters -- contenders who can really push Manny," Roach said on HBO's 24/7 show. "Sparring in my gym is not play. ... It's pretty much a fight, the only rule is if you hurt somebody you don't finish them. ... Sparring partners have a job to do, and the thing is, if they knock Manny down, they get a $1,000 bonus."

Roach says his biggest concern heading into the fight is De La Hoya's jab, so that's what the sparring partners are working. So far, none of Pacquiao's sparring partners (including Amir Khan) have been able to collect that $1,000 bonus. But with cash on the line, you can bet they're trying. - AOL sports

Analyzing De La Hoya in the wake of Pacquiao's afternoon press conference

My fellow boxing scribes are writing about Manny Pacquiao today because he held a telephone press conference, so I’m dodging the pack by thinking about Oscar De La Hoya instead.

With Top Rank poobah Bob Arum standing over him Monday, Pacquiao did his best not to make any revelations of the sort that led to admonition for trainer Freddie Roach last week from the promoter. And, although he obviously isn’t looking past his Dec. 6 welterweight match with De La Hoya, Pacquiao said he figures his next fight will be at 140 pounds. That more or less confirms rumors that Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton is a coming attraction for 2009.

Pacquiao is under far less pressure to win Dec. 6 than De La Hoya, who last week said anything short of a knockout of Pacquiao will be substandard. Although I’m rooting for Pacquiao and his fans dominate my readership, I have rooted against De La Hoya only three times (Pernell Whitaker once and Shane Mosley twice) since Oscar moved up from lightweight, after fighting Jesse James Leija in 1995, and finally started fighting people his own size.

De La Hoya was a monster at 130 and 135, with too much length and power and underrated speed. Even at 147, De La Hoya looks too big to be a welterweight, and that’s part of the reason the Pacquiao fight is perceived as a mismatch.

De La Hoya is all-American to a fault. The Golden Boy still seems a bit artificially packaged, but his public persona is extremely likeable and attractive. He’s got to be one of the biggest babe magnets in the history of boxing, if not No. 1, and despite the aspersions of some people concerning his machismo, he hasn’t ducked any challenges and even took on Bernard Hopkins and took his lumps from the bigger man.

That’s the only bout he ever lost decisively, although a couple of wins were also too close to call.

So there’s reason to care about him, even if you’re rooting against him Dec. 6.

Manny has no chance - ex-champ Mayweather

This Mayweather is certainly no Pacquiao admirer.

In fact, Roger Mayweather, a former champion and member of the flamboyant boxing clan, is belittling Manny Pacquiao’s skills, saying the Filipino champion doesn’t stand a chance against Oscar dela Hoya.

He said the Pacquiao-Dela Hoya “Dream Match” on Dec. 6 at the shining MGM Grand in Las Vegas is nothing but a mismatch.

“Do I think it’s a mismatch? No. I don’t think it’s a mismatch. I know it’s a mismatch,” the 47-year-old champion of the ‘80s, also known as the “Black Mamba,” told fightfan.com in a video interview.

The brother of top-notch trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. and uncle of former pound for pound king Floyd Jr. said Dela Hoya, older at 35 but taller at 5’10, is too much for the Filipino southpaw.

“Dela Hoya has fought everybody. And Pacquiao? What’s he gonna do with Dela Hoya?” said Mayweather.

“He doesn’t have the skills like Dela Hoya. And he’s a guy coming from 115 pounds? What’s he gonna do with Dela Hoya?” he said.

Pacquiao, younger and faster at 29, will give away four inches in height and six inches in reach when he climbs the ring against Dela Hoya.

“Size don’t mean a difference when you have tremendous skills. But when you have average skills and average speed… He (Pacquiao) can fight guys his size but Dela Hoya is too big for him,” he added.

Meanwhile, Ricky Hatton continued to make noise the day after he retained his IBO light-welterweight crown with a stoppage of Paul Malignaggi at the MGM.

The British cyclone is seeking a fight with either Pacquiao or Dela Hoya next year.

“Let’s hope it’s the winner of Pacquiao-De La Hoya. Who am I to say who will win that? In fact, the winner or the loser will be a good fight to be honest. I’ll be in Vegas for that and watching it with interest,” he said.

The 30-year-old brawler wants to stage his next fight at home.

Notes: Businessman Cris Aquino, the bubbly flag-bearer in every Pacquiao fight, is making sure that he doesn’t have another run-in with US Customs as he prepares his give-aways for the coming fight. This time, he’s having “Yes He Can!” ala-Obama sweatshirts, 12 dozens of them, made in the US so there’ll be no need to bring them in, learning from experience when he was charged $800 in taxes for bringing boxes of Pacquiao t-shirts and bandanas. He also ordered 5,000 pieces of cardboard fans bearing Pacquiao’s picture. “We’ll have it made there this time,” said Aquino, who can’t wait for the fight to happen…A high-roller from the South, a very reliable source said, has placed a $200,000 bet on Pacquiao beating Dela Hoya, and with the odds at plus 180 (at the time he placed the bet), his money grows to $360,000 if Pacquiao wins. As of yesterday, the odds for Pacquiao are down to plus 155, and Dela Hoya at minus 180 (you need $180 to win a hundred bucks).


source: philstar.com

Oscar De La Hoya eager for Manny Pacquiao fight

"You've never seen me like this," Oscar De La Hoya says loudly, lying on his back on the boxing ring canvas of a Big Bear Lake training gym. "You'll never see me like this."

If the strategy De La Hoya refined in the San Bernardino Mountains works as planned, the person he expects to be flat on his back on Dec. 6 is his opponent, Manny Pacquiao.

De La Hoya, 35, hasn't knocked down a fighter in more than two years, and he hasn't won by a true knockout since 2000, when he belted the forgotten Derrell Coley. In 11 fights since, De La Hoya suffered four losses and the most impressive of his four technical knockouts came against Fernando Vargas in 2002.

But now, De La Hoya, who has fought at or above 150 pounds in nine consecutive bouts, has a date with current lightweight (135-pound) champion Pacquiao in a bout set at 147 pounds. It was a match made mostly because of the can't-miss marketing appeal that pits the world's most popular fighter against the sport's top pound-for-pound champion.

source: Los Angeles Times

Monday, November 24, 2008

Pacquiao will beat De la Hoya

IF you’re thinking of where to put your money in the coming blockbuster bout between Manny Pacquiao and Oscar de la Hoya, let me give you a piece of advice. Put it on Pacquiao, who will beat De la Hoya decisively in their fight in December.

No ifs and/or buts about it. Pacman will chew up and then spit out the Golden Boy. Manny is younger, faster and stronger. About the only advantage of De la Hoya is his reach and weight, which won’t be enough to keep the human buzz saw that is Pacquiao at bay.

Most boxing experts think that the weight will make that much difference. It won’t. It would matter if we were talking about an ordinary fighter. And Pacquiao is far from an ordinary fighter.

In the end it will be skill, speed and heart. And in all categories, our “Pambansang Kamao” has got De la Hoya beat.

When I see Pacquiao, I think of another great boxer of another era: Henry Armstrong, who held the world featherweight, the lightweight and the welterweight titles all at the same time.

Armstrong was the 126-pound division (featherweight) world champion when he beat world welter champion Barney Ross, 147 pounds, by unanimous decision to add the world welterweight title to his featherweight belt.

Armstrong then went down in weight and beat world lightweight champion Lou Ambers on points.

Armstrong was so versatile, he even battled for the middleweight title, but was frustrated when he was held to a draw by then welterweight champion Filipino Ceferino Garcia. Armstrong had beaten the same Garcia in an earlier fight for the welterweight crown.

If the difference in weight was not an insurmountable obstacle for Armstrong, I don’t see how it could be for Pacquiao.

Even the man considered as the greatest boxer of all time, Sugar Ray Robinson fought the much larger and heavier Jake LaMotta numerous times despite being outweighed by LaMotta by as much 16 pounds in one of their many bouts.

Boxers moving up in weight to capture titles in heavier divisions was not that unusual during the glory days of boxing. As far as I’m concerned in the Pacquiao-De la Hoya bout, weight is just a number and Pacquiao will beat De la Hoya decisively.

source:Reuel Vidal, manilastandardtoday.com

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Boxing legend De la Hoya confident despite weight loss to face Pacquiao


LAS VEGAS, Nevada (AFP) — US boxing legend Oscar de la Hoya said Monday he has dropped pounds but no punching power ahead of his December 6 welterweight showdown here with Philippines star Manny Pacquiao.

De la Hoya, training at the Big Bear retreat in the California mountains, has had to lose weight but has already reached the 147-pound limit to meet Pacquiao, who will have to gain weight to set up the "Dream Match."

"Training camp is going well. Being up here has once again ignited that fire in my belly that hasn't been ignited in many years," de la Hoya said.

"Now that many weeks have passed by, I feel very comfortable with welterweight. I don't think we're sacrificing any power. We're punching harder than ever."

De La Hoya said that when he first reached the welterweight limit, "I did feel a little light headed and weak" and noted that stamina "can be a big problem."

"I don't know how my body is going to react come fight night," he said. "Conditioning is my primary concern."

Pacquiao will enter the ring 47-3 with two drawn and 35 knockouts while de la Hoya, in his first welterweight fight since a 2000 knockout of Arturo Gatti, is 39-5 with 30 knockouts.

The contest is set for 12 rounds but don't expect it to go the distance, de la Hoya said.

"I will be extremely disappointed if this fight does not end in a knockout," de la Hoya said. "It would be a total disaster for me."

De la Hoya wanted to push the idea that Pacquiao might be larger than him on fight night, although it would be a shock.

"It actually doesn't shock me one bit. I've made 145 already. I feel very strong," de la Hoya said. "It has been no problem. My way of training and eating has been very disciplined."


De la Hoya shrugged off criticism from Freddie Roach, Pacquiao's trainer. "It's his way of pumping up his fighter. Me and Manny Pacquiao, we don't have to say anything bad about each other," de la Hoya said.

"We will put boxing back on the worldwide stage. I beat a young lion like Manny Pacquiao to be the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, it helps me prove I can do this and move on and still be successful.

"I'm oozing with motivation, that's for sure."

That stems from a seven-fight deal worth at last 35 million dollars that Pacquiao signed with de la Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions in September of 2006, only to return bonus money two months later and stay with promoter Bob Arum.

The broken deal led to a legal fight that inspires de la Hoya still.

"Never in my wildest dreams did I think I would fight Manny Pacquiao," said de la Hoya. "That's one of the reasons this fight is so personal to me."

"We signed the deal and he turned his back on me and he's going to have to pay on December 6," de la Hoya said. "That moment is what makes it personal. I don't want him to talk about how he honors honor. He didn't honor me. I'm not going to honor him."

De la Hoya lost to Floyd Mayweather last year in the richest fight in boxing history but this one is unlikely to approach those record numbers despite loyal backers for both fighters, with the struggling economy a likely culprit.

"Obviously it's a big concern for us because of the economy when you have a big fight like this one," de la Hoya said. "People are picking and choosing what fights they want to buy and see and I think they're waiting for this one."-AFP

Oscar De La Hoya – Manny Pacquiao: What to Expect from a Dream Fight

When this fight was first mentioned, I assumed like most that it was not going to happen. Manny Pacquiao is far too small to go to battle with a skilled powerhouse like Oscar De La Hoya. But this is boxing and money talks, and here we are with less than a month to go before this “Dream Fight” takes place. I have watched HBO’s great documentary series 24/7 and they are really doing a great job to present this fight as a competitive bout between the arguably best pound for pound fighter in the game, Pacquiao and the most marketable boxer in the world, De La Hoya. What should be expected as these two warriors get into the ring, and make no mistake, they are both warriors. De La Hoya has been unfairly treated at times by the media as well as the fans when he elected to not fight like Julio Cesar Chavez in every fight, but what cannot be taken away from him is the fact that he faces anyone, anywhere, any time. He has fought men in their prime that were great fighters like Felix Trinidad, Ike Quartey, Fernando Vargas, Shane Mosley, Miguel Angel Gonzalez, and Rafael Ruelas. He looks at the sport as a business, but he also understands legacy and that is why he has faced so many tough customers. With his marketing potential, he could face nobodies and the fans would lay down the money, but he has opted to take on the challenges that the fans wanted to see him face, and he has won most of them.

Manny Pacquiao is another boxer that fights the best available opposition, facing Erik Morales (3 times), Marco Antonio Barrera (2 times), Juan Manuel Marquez (2 times), Oscar Larios, and David Diaz. He has been labeled the “Mexican Assassin” because most of his victories have been over great Mexican fighters. The blood and guts style that Barrera and Morales have used were custom made for the Filipino superstar. He eats up aggressive fighters and that is why he has done well against the group mentioned above. When his opponent elected to box instead of slug, they had a much easier time. Morales actually picked up a victory while Marquez got a draw and lost a disputed decision in the rematch.

The Facts:

Oscar De La Hoya, 39-5, 30 KO’s
Career: 1992-Present
Age: 35
Former Super Featherweight, Lightweight, Light Welterweight, Welterweight, Light Middleweight, and Middleweight Champion.


In 1992, the professional career of De La Hoya began at the very low weight of 133 pounds, an unnaturally low weight for a man his size and build. The intention was to win titles at many different weight classes and to come in stronger than his opposition to make him look more devastating. This weight did both, and when he came in at 128 to vie for the WBO Super Featherweight Title, he overwhelmed Jimmy Bredahl. The first defeat on his record would be a highly disputed one to Puerto Rican superstar, Felix “Tito” Trinidad. To most, Oscar won handily but by giving up the later rounds, he gave up the fight. Two fights later, he would lose to Shane Mosley in a thrilling fight. He would rematch Mosley and lose in another disputed decision. There was no disputing his failed attempt to capture all of the middleweight gold when a body shot put him on the floor against Bernard Hopkins. That is the only knockout loss of his career. He has since come back with a record of 2-1, 1 KO, since that defeat, with the only loss being a decision to Floyd Mayweather, JR.

Manny “The Pacman” Pacquiao, 47-3-2, 35 KO’s
Career: 1995-Present
Age: 29
Former Flyweight, Super Bantamweight, Super Featherweight, and Lightweight Champion.


In 1995, Pacquiao began his career at 106 pounds. He would win his first title with an eighth round stoppage of Chatchai Sasakul, taking home the WBC Flyweight Title. He wouldn’t really make his name in the United States until November 15, 2003, when he stepped up to face one of the toughest fighters in the world, Marco Antonio Barrera on HBO. Barrera had just signed with Golden Boy Promotions and planned to showcase his skills against Pacquiao, who was moving up in weight, meeting at 125 pounds. It was a slaughter, with Barrera not only losing poorly, but behaving worse, intentionally head butting the Filipino superstar on several occasions. It didn’t matter, and Barrera was beaten into submission in the eleventh round. The next fight was easily fight of the year when Manny and Juan Manuel Marquez fought to an exciting draw. Erik Morales was next, but showed the blueprint to beat Pacquiao, out-boxing him over the course of 12 rounds, but in the three times that they met, Manny would win two of them, both by spectacular knockout. Pacquiao has won eight in a row, five of them by knockout, and is rated by most as the best fighter in the game.

The Breakdown

Freddie Roach


There has been a big deal made about Freddie Roach being in the corner of Manny because in De La Hoya’s last high profile bout against Floyd Mayweather, JR., he was his trainer and now some believe that he has an inside track and has the key for his man to defeat the Golden Boy. Had Roach been there from day one in his corner, perhaps he would have some sort of psychological advantage or may have even noticed a trend over the course of time to take advantage of, but realistically, the one fight that Roach trained him for means very little going into this one. De La Hoya is a professional, has been boxing professionally since 1992, and in all honesty, did not perform well under the tutelage of Roach. Expect a different De La Hoya come fight night. This concept that Roach being a former trainer of Oscars working against him is just smoke.

Size versus Speed

This is where most people put their stock into. Those siding with Oscar, point to the size advantage, while the ones that are betting on Manny to pull the upset, state that the speed will be far too much for the older fighter to handle. Both arguments are sound, but speed can be nullified where size really cannot. There was a time when Cassius Clay (later becoming Muhammad Ali) was discussing boxing with Cus D’Amato, the trainer of many world champions but mostly associate with Mike Tyson. At the time, Clay was in his prime, and he was known for his lightning speed and reflexes, while Cus was just an older guy that had been around the block. Well, Cus was able to land on the young heavyweight, startling him. How could an old man land a shot on somebody so young and quick? Timing. Timing beats speed and that is how Oscar plans to nullify it and most likely will. The size will be a much tougher nut to crack for the smaller Pacquiao.

Down the Stretch

Stopping Oscar “down the stretch,” is something that I have heard several times leading up to this fight. There is the thought that De La Hoya is weaker as the rounds go on and that the pressure of Manny will make him wilt in the later rounds, leading to a TKO victory for the Pacman. As far as I’ve seen there has been little to no evidence that De La Hoya fizzles incredibly “down the stretch.” Against Vargas, he was pressured as much as any fighter can be pressured and used his superior conditioning to comeback and stop him in the eleventh round. In his last two bouts against Floyd Mayweather, JR., and Steve Forbes, he showed no indications that he was dead tired in the later rounds. The fact of the matter is that he has gone twelve hard rounds on many occasions and I don’t think the pressure of a natural 130 pounder is going to get him “down the stretch.” It should also be noted that De La Hoya was only stopped once and that was by a 160 pound Hopkins. He actually takes a very good punch and has very good endurance.

Shane Mosley Proved it

In two encounters with Shane Mosley, De La Hoya came up short. In the first fight, it was the speed of Sugar Shane that was the deciding factor. Also, Shane was a naturally much smaller man and was able to stay out of harm’s way and take the decision, out-hustling the bigger man along the way. This is true, but Manny Pacquiao is no Shane Mosley in the sense that Mosley is a much more natural boxer and brought a different style to the ring then Pacquiao does. Although the standard has been set that speed and the right style could give Oscar some problems, there doesn’t seem to be much relevancy comparing Shane to Manny at this point. It’s not really accurate to say that Oscar has trouble with speed and speed alone.

Business Man or Boxer?

Now here is an argument that the Pacman fans can sink their teeth into. Steve Forbes noted that Oscar wasn’t going to be hungry anymore because it’s hard to be when you go to be in silk pajamas or something to that effect. Oscar is rich. He is filthy rich, and he had noted to Larry Merchant that he wanted to be a billionaire, which isn’t necessarily a boxer’s goal. The choice of Pacquiao was a business decision, nothing more. He could have faced off against Antonio Margarito in a true test, but opted to face the smaller boxer because he typically eats the smaller guys alive and will also be able to say that he beat the pound for pound best fighter in the world. But because this is solely a business decision and because Manny resembles many of the fighters that he had beaten with ease in the past, there is the possibility that he is not taking this fight that seriously mentally. He may be focusing on the cash and underestimating the challenge of his opponent. That right there is where Manny has a chance in this fight. If the business man shows up and Manny fights the fight of his life, we may see a memorable upset in the world of boxing. Oscar could go to sleep thinking about those billions.

December 6th, 2008: Dream Fight

It’s closing in quickly and HBO has that hype machine running in overdrive for this upcoming “Dream Fight.” Pacquiao being a god in the Philippines will do all he can to win this fight for the fans and has shown the heart of a lion in the past to win fights, but how does he knock De La Hoya out? He had trouble with the strength of Juan Manuel Marquez and Oscar is a world stronger and hits a world harder. This fight is rightfully called “The Dream Fight” because from all indications, Manny will be put into dreamland early. Size matters but it’s not only a size issue. Oscar is very skilled and intelligent and it should be very interesting to see what happens when that left hook lands. Also, for those of you that are die hard Manny supporters, let me throw something out there before the hate mail comes in. Years ago there were two fights thrown out there for Manny that the masses came out to protest against. Pacquiao was considered too small to face either one and there was concern about his health should he go ahead with the bouts. One was Diego Corrales and the other was Ricky Hatton. Why is Oscar De La Hoya beatable and safe, when those two were far too dangerous to fight? It’s the hype of the event. It has been sold. HBO is great at hyping fights and they could do it for just about anyone, and they are going to give the impression that this is a competitive match when it is unfortunately not. Manny is a very big underdog going into this one, and there have also been persistent rumors that he is not handling the bigger guys in the gym all that well.

This event is more of a circus than an actual super fight. The curiosity factor will sell this more than anything else, outside of the blind support on both sides of the fence for these fighters. Look for Oscar De La Hoya to get his big victory and ride off into the sunset until something else comes along. Remember he is a business man and this is smart business. All signs point to an early KO for the Golden Boy.

source: Geno McGahee, www.ringsidereport.com

Hatton eyes Pacquiao-De la Hoya winner after triumph


LAS VEGAS, Nevada (AFP) — England's Ricky Hatton is ready to face the winner of next month's Manny Pacquiao-Oscar de la Hoya showdown after dispatching American Paulie Malignaggi with ease.

Hatton stopped Malignaggi in the 11th round of their junior welterweight fight here Saturday, improving to 45-1 with 32 knockouts and serving notice that whichever lightweight star wins in two weeks, the "Hitman" is waiting.

"What sort of a champion would I be if I didn't take on (Pacquaio or de la Hoya) next? That's what Ricky Hatton is all about," Hatton said.

The only blemish on Hatton's record came at welterweight when he was stopped in the 10th round here a year ago by Floyd Mayweather Jnr in the same ring where Malignaggi's trainer Buddy McGirt threw in the towel.

"I've had 46 fights and only lost one and he was the best pound-for-pound in the world," Hatton said. "No one will ever beat me at junior welterweight. No one."

With Pacquiao and de la Hoya meeting one weight class below Hatton, he might not have to risk supremacy at his specialty for what would surely be a big-money battle against Hispanic legend de la Hoya or Filipino hero Pacquiao.

"I would love to fight the winner," Hatton said. "I would like to think I'd be in the shop window."

Hatton's loyal British supporters have been moneyspinners for his Vegas fights and would likely push the possibilities for a matchup with US "Golden Boy" de la Hoya or Asian superstar Pacquiao.

Pacquiao is 47-3 with two drawn and 35 knockouts while de la Hoya is 39-5 with 30 knockouts.-AFP

Friday, November 21, 2008

Dream showdown will open door to rematch - Arum



Ricky Hatton facing the winner between Manny Pacquiao and Oscar dela Hoya is not a sure thing.

While there’s nothing in the Pacquiao-Dela Hoya contract that calls for an immediate rematch between the two, Top Rank big boss Bob Arum said you just couldn’t discount that possibility.

“There is none,” Arum told The STAR recently when the ageless promoter was asked if there’s any clause calling for a rematch between Pacquiao and Dela Hoya.

However, Arum said it doesn’t mean that there shouldn’t be one.

“If both fighters want a rematch then nothing can prevent them from staging a rematch,” said Arum heading into the most anticipated fight of the year in Dec. 6.

The “Dream Match” sold $17 million worth of tickets in just two to three hours, and is tipped to break the 2.4 million pay-per-view buys of last year’s Dela Hoya-Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight.

The coming fight is also expected to generate $100 million in total revenue, and Pacquiao, fighting in his biggest and heaviest fight at 147 pounds, is guaranteed $10 million. Dela Hoya will get much more.

Arum said the possibility of a rematch between the pound-for-pound king and the pay-per-view king would depend on how the fight, set at the 16,000-seat MGM Grand Arena, would end.

“Absolutely it would depend on how the fight ends,” he said.

Pacquiao and Dela Hoya slugging it out, trading blows, and both men standing at the final bell of their 12-round, and a close decision afterwards could raise calls for an immediate rematch.

“If it’s that exciting,” said Arum

“And then if it involves a lot of money. You know money talks,” he said over the phone.

Pacquiao and Dela Hoya may find themselves fighting each another until they retire.

Hatton, the British superstar, takes on Paul Maliganaggi on Nov. 22 at the MGM Grand for the IBO light-welterweight crown.

He said he “absolutely” loves to fight the winner between Pacquiao and Dela Hoya, saying, “I would like to think I’m in line to fight the winner.”

But he better get past Malignaggi first, and then sit back and relax, and hope for the best as he catches the “Dream Match.”

source:Abac Cordero, Philstar.com

Pacquiao to spend P27.5M for tickets

Manny Pacquiao is giving away $550,000 worth of tickets for the “Dream Match” and 500 turkeys for Thanksgiving.

Yes, the Filipino superstar has admitted to philboxing.com that he has spent around $550,000 or roughly P27.5 million on tickets to be given away to his friends coming over to watch him fight Oscar dela Hoya on December 6.

Pacquiao normally spends a fortune in fight tickets and even plane tickets given away to friends. Only this time, the amount has gone twice or thrice as much simply because the prices have gone up.

Tickets to previous Pacquiao fights were highest at $600 per ringside seat, but this time the same seat costs $1,500. The problem is they’re all gone, and the only way to get them is through the black market.

Or Pacquiao himself.

“Yan ang current expenses ko sa ticket lang. Kasali na dyan mga politicians, artista at sila lahat. Mga kaibigan ko lahat (That goes for the politicians, actors, everyone. They’re all my friends),” Pacquiao told philboxing.com.

He said the amount can even increase as the fight nears.

And on Sunday, as Americans prepare for Thanksgiving on the last Thursday of this month, Pacquiao will be at the Community Center in Los Angeles’ Lake Street Park in the historic Filipino town to give away the 500 turkeys.

Top Rank publicist Fred Sternburg said yesterday through e-mail that Top Rank big boss Bob Arum is spending for the turkeys worth $11,000.

Lance Pugmire of the LA Times wrote, “certainly, hundreds, if not thousands of people will be showing up” and that those who organized it may have “underestimated Pac-Man’s appeal.”

Handing out goodies isn’t something new for Pacquiao.

Normally, during his birthdays, which fall on Dec. 17, Pacquiao spends a hefty sum giving away bags of goodies to thousands of his provincemates. And on ordinary days, poor people line up before the gates to his mansion.

Pacquiao has a very soft heart for the poor, having come from an impoverished family. It was written once that the only time he failed to give money to the poor outside his home was “when he forgot to bring his wallet.”


source: abs-cbnnews.com

Hatton wants winner of Pacman-Hoya bout


Ricky Hatton, all primed up for his clash against Pauli Malignaggi on Saturday, said he wants to fight the winner of the Manny Pacquiao-Oscar dela Hoya dream showdown on Dec. 6 in what could be the sport’s biggest fight next year.

“I would absolutely love to fight the winner of that,” said Hatton, the Ring Magazine’s junior welterweight champion, in an interview with AOL Sports. (Related story on A-25)

Hatton sounded particularly interested in fighting the Filipino boxing champion, whose size and style would make a fight against him particularly interesting.

“Manny Pacquiao is one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world,” Hatton said. “I would like to think I’m in line to fight the winner.”

Hatton acknowledged that in his last fight, a unanimous decision win over Juan Lazcano, he looked lackluster. But he said he’ll prove against Malignaggi that he deserves to fight one of the biggest names in the sport – Pacquiao or Dela Hoya.

“Judging by my performance against Lazcano, I’m not worthy of that fight,” Hatton said. “But after I beat Paulie Malignaggi I will be really, truly worthy of a fight against the Oscar dela Hoya-Manny Pacquiao winner.”

Meanwhile, Dela Hoya, in deep training in Big Bear, California, is now down to 145 lbs, making Pacquiao, who is around 147 the last few weeks, a little heavier than the 10-time world champion in six different weight categories.

The Pacquiao-Dela Hoya fight, set at a catchweight of 147 lbs, is set Dec. 6 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

In his latest conference call, Dela Hoya said the training camp with Nacho Beristain has been going on well, insisting he is ready to take on Pacquiao two weeks before the big fight.

“I’m ready to go. I’ve been weighing 145 pounds now for the last three weeks. The weight is no problem. I feel strong. I do have to admit that I – in the first couple of days that I did make the weight or I tried making weight, about a month ago, I did feel a little lightheaded and weak,” said Dela Hoya.

“But now that I have gotten used to it and now that weeks have passed by, I feel strong and fast and very comfortable with welterweight. And I’m even thinking of going back down to 140 after this fight, so we’ll see,” he added.

Dela Hoya said that Pacquiao’s power and speed have driven him to train and work hard to ensure his victory.

“My motivation for this fight is Manny Pacquiao’s explosiveness, punching power, speed and youth,” Dela Hoya said.

Dela Hoya had earlier vowed to go for a knockout in five. Pacquiao’s trainer and coach Freddie Roach also believed the fight would not last the distance, only it would be in favor of the Filipino WBC lightweight champion.

“Tell Oscar not to worry, the fight will end in a knockout,” said Roach in a report on 411mania.com. “On Dec. 6, Oscar’s going to think he’s back in the 1930’s when Manny airmails him into The Great Depression.”

The outspoken Roach reiterated the joke that Dela Hoya “can’t pull the trigger anymore.”


“Oscar can’t pull the trigger anymore. Losing all that weight doesn’t impress me,” said Roach.

The 35-year-old Dela Hoya, however, took Roach comment in stride, saying he would rather take Pacquiao’s trainer’s words as motivation.

“Obviously, he has to try to get under my skin. I don’t know how much of it is real, I don’t know how much is hype,” De la Hoya wrote in his Ring blog.

He even commended his rival camp’s buildup for the keenly-awaited fight.

“From the looks of Manny and who he has behind him, they’re doing the right thing. They’re gaining the weight properly. He’s looking fast. He’s looking strong. I think it’s going to be an advantage for Manny to come up in weight. I think he’s going to be the same Manny as we saw in the lower weight class,” said De la Hoya.


source:Philstar.com

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

De La Hoya Wants a Knockout and Freddie Roach Promises One

During a conference call yesterday as we reported, Oscar De La Hoya talked about the need to win by knockout, claiming it would be a disaster if he didn't. In light of those comments, Freddie Roach today had some things to say to his former pupil.

"Tell Oscar not to worry, the fight WILL end in a knockout. On December 6, Oscar's going to think he's back in the 1930's when Manny airmails him into The Great Depression," responded Roach. "I can see when the paperback version of Oscar's autobiography comes out. It will begin by paraphrasing the opening line of Moby Dick. Only instead of starting with ‘Call me Ishmael,' it will be 'Call me Ishtar,' one of the biggest box office flops in motion picture history. Mark my words he will flop too. Oscar can't pull the trigger anymore. Losing all that weight doesn't impress me. Twiggy is going to find out that looking the part is not equivalent to acting the part, a lesson Muhammad Ali learned when he fought Larry Holmes."

On another note, in Roach's blog this week for The Ring Magazine, Freddie talked about a sparring session that Oscar De La Hoya reportedly had with junior flyweight champion, Ivan Calderon.

"Calderon slapped Oscar around like it was unbelievable. I said between rounds one time, "Oscar, I want you to hit him one shot to show him who's boss." He couldn't do it. I got mad at him. I told him the same thing another time; we used Calderon for a couple of days. I said, "Go ahead and hit that little mother." Again, he couldn't do it. Calderon was too quick and had a southpaw stance, like Manny does. That's when I thought of Manny. I knew then it was a winnable fight."

With only a few weeks left to go, the personal jabs continue to mount.

source:
Ramon Aranda, 411mania.com

Manny’s style fits Oscar just right

Manny Pacquiao’s devil-may-care attitude on top of the ring is tailor-made for six-division world champion Oscar De La Hoya.

The Golden Boy said in a teleconference call held Monday from his high-altitude training camp in Big Bear, California, that he welcomes Pacquiao’s sometimes reckless fighting style.

Admitting that he has had problems dealing with scientific fighters like Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Steve Forbes, the 35-year-old De La Hoya is looking forward to see what Pacquiao will come up with on Dec. 6 in Las Vegas.

"But if you’ll have a fighter who’s gonna come at me, a fighter who’s going to throw strong punches with full energy, with full speed and stay in front of me and have the heart to fight as hard as he can, then I’ll welcome it and I will open the door," said De La Hoya, who is the heavy favorite in the scheduled 12-round welterweight tiff at the MGM Grand.

De La Hoya has been working behind closed doors under the tutelage of the esteemed Mexican strategist Ignacio ‘Nacho" Beristain the past five weeks and views the fight as the perfect opportunity for him to make the 29-year-old Pacquiao pay for his alleged misdeeds.

"He turned his back on me," said De La Hoya, referring to Pacquiao’s decision to sign up with Top Rank’s Bob Arum even if he had earlier forged a seven-fight deal with De La Hoya in Sept. 2006.

"I don’t want him talking about honor and this is one reason (why this fight) is very personal. He didn’t honor me and I am not giving him honor on Dec. 6," De La Hoya said.

"It’s strictly Manny Pacquiao up here. I think, sleep and breathe Manny Pacquiao. My motivation here is Manny Pacquiao’s explosiveness, Manny Pacquiao’s punching power, Manny Pacquiao speed and Manny Pacquiao’s (advantage in) youth."


source: Nick Giongco, Manila Bulletin Online

ROACH, DE LA HOYA UP THE RHETORIC



Manny Pacquiao was his usual decent self at his media workout at the Wild Card gym of trainer Freddie Roach as part of the buildup for his “Dream Match” with Oscar De La Hoya at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on December 6 but Roach played the bad guy by continuing to needle De La Hoya with his comments.

The two-time “Trainer of the Year” who trained De La Hoya for his megabuck fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr two-timed De La Hoya by calling his former student "weak minded" while at the same time praising Pacquiao for being "strong minded."

Pacquiao who has often been admired for his refusal to bad-mouth his opponents declined to comment on the statements of Roach who insists that Pacquiao will knock De La Hoya out in nine rounds just like he did to WBC lightweight champion David Diaz last June.

Pacquiao for his part once again said he has trained harder than ever before for what he termed the hardest fight of his career and said if a knockout comes “it will be a bonus.”

Roach who previously claimed that De La Hoya “cant pull the trigger” took another dig at “The Golden Boy” saying he is a “a part-time fighter” who had only figured in four fights over the past four years while Pacquiao had, on the other hand, fought four times in the last year."

Pointing to the differences in their ages as Pacquiao will turn 30 this December 17 while De La Hoya is 35, Pacquiao 29 Roach said that De La Hoya will learn just as Muhammad Ali learned when he was badly beaten by his former sparring partner Larry Holmes and as Julio Cesar Chavez did against De La Hoya, what happens when old boxers go up against young guns.

"Oscar will find out how Chavez felt 10 years ago," Roach said. "The younger fighters take over. It's Manny's time now."

Pacquiao conceded that in his 52 pro fights in a storied career that saw him win four world titles in different divisions De La Hoya will be the most best-skilled boxer he will face.

Roach and Pacquiao have worked on a fight-plan that Roach says will spell major trouble for De La Hoya.

De La Hoya said in a recent interview on ESPN Sportscenter that he lost the fight with Mayweather when he suddenly stopped using his left jab and had no explanation on why he did. But Roach claimed "I know why the jab stopped working and that's part of our plan."

De La Hoya in an international conference call Tuesday, Manila Time, backed up an earlier statement that he would knock Pacquiao out in five rounds said he would be “extremely disappointed if the fight doesn’t end in a knockout. It will be a total disaster for me.”

De La Hoya reiterated what he told www.insidesports.ph, Standard Today and Viva Sports in an exclusive interview right after news of the Pacquiao fight broke saying “this is personal” because of Pacquiao’s decision to sign with Top Rank some 24 hours after signing a deal with Golden Boy Promotions and receiving a cash advance of $250,000.

While he refuses to publicly state that he wishes to give Pacquiao a bad beating De La Hoya admits that what Pacquiao did to him was “one of the reasons why the fight is personal to me.” Saying that Pacquiao turned his back on him after signing a deal, De La Hoya made it clear that Pacquiao “is gonna pay come December 6.”

Showing his bitterness De La Hoya said “I don’t want him to be talking about honor and this and that. He didn’t honor me that night and I’m not gonna honor him on December 6.”

source:, PhilBoxing.com