Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Manny Pacquiao – Joshua Clottey: A Great Showdown and Steroid Speculation

Steroids & Boxing

The Manny Pacquiao allegations still linger over boxing and the public is divided somewhere around the middle. It will not affect the upcoming pay per view showdown with Joshua Clottey. The show will go on and it will be very successful. Clottey is a great opponent…far better than Paulie Malignaggi or Yuri Foreman, two other considered challengers.

Clottey has a much better chance to upset the “Pacman” then Ricky Hatton or Miguel Cotto did. His tight defense and consistency is something that Pacquiao will have to figure out. What Team Pacquiao is counting on, I’m sure, is the susceptibility of Clottey to straight punches. That straight left hand coming down the pike would do some serious damage to Clottey, or so they hope. Cotto was able to drop Clottey with a jab. Manny punches very hard and is very quick and his straight left is more powerful than any jab. Clottey will have to be extra defensive and use a very disciplined style, which he seems to do naturally anyway.

The steroid allegation has made many other boxers’ misdeeds resurface, proving that this is not an isolated incident and there should possibly be stricter guidelines.

Jameel McCline, the 4-Time Heavyweight Title Challenger, received more than 12,000 worth of steroids (Stanozolol, nandrolone, testosterone, and tamoxifen) in 2005 and 2006. He never tested positive for any substance, which means that he knew how to play the game and avoid positive testing while using.

James Toney, former Middleweight, Super Middleweight, and Cruiserweight Champion won the WBA Heavyweight Title in 2005 with a decision over then champion, John Ruiz, but would test positive for stanozolol and the decision would be turned into a no contest. Toney insisted that he was given the steroid by a doctor and didn’t knowingly cheat. He would test positive again in 2007 for boldenone and stanozolol.

Shane Mosley, multiple division champion, admitted using steroids prior to 2003, although he stated that he did so without knowledge. Many in the Mosley camp during this time beg to differ. Mosley stated to a grand jury in 2003 that he injected himself with EPO prior to his second bout with Oscar De La Hoya.

Former WBO Heavyweight Champion, Tommy Morrison, admitted using steroids to get an edge on his competition.

Recently, another former WBO Heavyweight Champion, Shannon Briggs tested positive for an illegal substance, although he claims that is was his asthma medication. No further details have emerged.

In 2002, former IBF Light Middleweight Champion, Fernando Vargas, tested positive for stanozolol after a bout with Oscar De La Hoya.

In a competitive sport where millions of dollars can be made, there will be steroid abuse and there will be controversies with loaded gloves and crooked judges. It is unfortunate that boxing has this dark cloud and especially as it hangs over the most popular and best fighter in the game, Manny Pacquiao. At this time, we have to believe Manny to be innocent until proven guilty but some would argue that he has not acted like an innocent man. Time should tell us the truth. For now, we can look ahead to the Pacquiao-Clottey showdown and hope for a great fight.

Allan Green in the Super Six

The Showtime super middleweight tournament lost a fighter in Jermain Taylor. He was scheduled to take on Andre Ward for the WBA Super Middleweight Title and for more points in the tournament, but bowed out after a knockout loss to Arthur Abraham in his first appearance. Allan Green has been eager to get into the tournament and felt that he belonged more so than many of the accepted competitors. He has only lost once in 2007 to Edison Miranda, and when you figure in his medical condition, you can forgive it. He has been flawless since.

Now slated is Allan Green, 29-1, 20 KO’s, as he challenges for the WBA Crown against Andre Ward, 21-0, 13 KO’s, on April 17th. Ward was lightly regarded prior to his title winning performance against tournament favorite, Mikkel Kessler. Now he is a big favorite to not only defeat Green but to go all the way.

Make no mistake, Ward looked great in his fight with Kessler. He used cagy tactics and timing to befuddle and subdue the strong champion en route to a technical decision. Ward fights like a veteran and knows many tricks and although he stands in front of his opponent, he proves hard to hit. Green will have to solve that and is quick enough to find him.

Jermain Taylor is a great fighter but he most likely would not have been mentally in the fight with Ward and would have lost a wide decision. Green is not only mentally in this fight, it’s an opportunity he’s been awaiting his entire career. He has a huge punch and great timing. If his timing is great enough to catch Ward, we will have a new champion and even more excitement in this tournament. This is a great turn for the event.

Source: ringsidereport.com

Pacquiao soars, as Mayweather sits on the sideline


"Manny Pacquiao is on a-side meth," was the answer Roger Mayweather provided when I probed him about what exact drugs he believes the pound for pound best boxer has used to allegedly cheat his way to the top.

This was just the first of many personal and professional attacks the Mayweather family has fired at Pacquiao over the course of several months.

If Floyd Mayweather Sr.'s accusations of Pacquiao using performance enhancing drugs without hard evidence were questionable, Roger's comments on the possibility of Manny using a-side - better known as agimat - is the entering into the theatre of the absurd.

But while Uncle Roger and Papa Mayweather run their mouths about Pacquiao, the Filipino continues to fight, build his legacy, and is currently preparing at the Wild Card Gym in Hollywood, California for a fight with welterweight Josuha Clottey.

As for the former pound for pound king, whose crown was slapped off his head by retirement, inactivity, and Pacquiao's incredible surge, he is still looking to lock-down a May bout with Shane Mosley.

Love him, or hate him, you have to respect Manny Pacquiao for the manner in which he has built his popularity; by fighting over and over and over again, while never tearing his opponent verbally.

Manny Pacquiao does the vast majority of his talking inside the ring, with the boxing world glued to the television or the edge of their seats when he performs.

I will admit I have doubted Pacquiao every step of the way. According to my fight gospel, David Diaz was going to give him a tough time, Oscar De La Hoya was decapitating and sending Manny to the hospital, and Cotto would brutalize him.

Yet little by little Pacquiao has turned me into more and more of a believer, with a fair dash of analytical sense still guiding my views.

Time to put a mussel on your family Floyd, and start reminding us why your technical brilliance made you the games best once upon a time.

For more Pacquiao vs Clottey updates, visit http://pacquiao-vs-clottey.cebuspace.com/.

Source: examiner.com

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The will of the billionaire be done, Jerry Jones secures the Pacquiao fight after all

By Scott Heritage - Pulling another maverick move, Bob Arum has secured the Cowboys Stadium as the venue for Manny Pacquiao vs. Joshua Clottey for March 13th.

Although owner Jerry Jones originally wanted to play host to the big fight that never happened between Manny and Floyd Mayweather, this is no doubt a major success for Jones, and for boxing as a whole.

If the venue proves to be a success, Jones is no doubt hoping that this will segway into more bookings for the mega venue, which has so far been an expensive project for the Dallas billionaire.

Seating more than 120,000 people, the Coyboys stadium puts any venue in Vegas to shame in terms of capacity, and may pry some of the bigger fights away from sin city in the future. What the projected profits are for all parties is unknown, much like the behind closed doors deals that the casino's tend to make, but they are sure to satisfy all parties if the arena is sold out.

The best seats in the house are apparently going fairly cheap as well, with prices being under $1000, which is unheard of these days in Vegas for a big fight. Typically you either have to be very rich, very well connected or both to secure a decent seat in most venues, but because of the sheer size of the Dallas venue, the closed club practices of boxing in the past aren't in place and normal fans stand a good chance of getting the seats they want.

A returning Antonio Margarito is also rumored to be on the card, so long as he can become regain his license easily after his loaded gloves incident last year against Shane Mosley. Given the amount of money on the line, as well as the power and influence of the interested parties though, that shouldn't be too much of a problem.

Hosting the fight in Dallas rather than Vegas is also a smart move because of the fact that Floyd Mayweather is fighting on the same night at the MGM grand against a yet to be named opponent. Boy hosting the fight out of Vegas, the loser of the pay per view battle on the night cant blame a lack of advertising on the night given that Floyd will have all of Vegas to sell his fight and Manny will have plenty of extra attention from the fact that the Coyboys stadium is being used.

Source: examiner.com

Exclusive Interview: James Toney says Pacquiao Will Beat Mayweather in 2010

By Lorne Scoggins - I just had the pleasure of interviewing James “Lights Out” Toney concerning his thoughts on Pacquiao vs. Mayweather.

Toney boasts an impressive professional record of 72 wins, 6 losses, 3 draws, with 44 knockouts.

He is the current NABO and IBA Heavyweight World Champion following his second round TKO of Matthew Greer in September of 2009.

Toney is also a former Middleweight, Super Middleweight, and Cruiserweight world champion.

One of his defining moments was his 9th round stoppage of Evander Holyfield in his first fight in the Heavyweight division.

I spoke with James about the possibility of his entry into the UFC, his thoughts on Pacquiao vs. Mayweather, and Teddy Atlas’s expose of the alleged Team Pacquiao emails.

Here are the highlights of the interview:

Do you have any fights coming up?

Not right now but I’m still negotiating with the UFC.

So you're more interested in UFC than boxing for now?

No, I still love boxing. I just want to show that a boxer can hang around in MMA.

Some can. You're probably one that can, but the same couldn’t be said for all boxers.

(No comment)

Excuse me for my ignorance but I don’t follow UFC as closely as boxing. Have you fought in a UFC fight yet?

No. Right now it’s just talks. After UFC 108, I went and saw Dana.

That's cool. You'll bring a lot of publicity to the sport. I'm sure Dana was psyched.

He is, but we'll see. He talked a lot of (#%@*) about boxing.

Yeah. There's a lot of competition between UFC and boxing right now.

(No comment)

So do you think the Pacquiao/Mayweather fight will happen this year?

Yeah. Fall 2010 I think is likely.

So what’s your prediction on the fight?

Pacquiao by 11th round TKO. (Mayweather) will make the same mistake that Leonard did when he fought Duran the first time.

What do you mean by that?

Floyd will mix it up and try to impose his will, but Pacquiao will use his awkward angles to make Floyd look awkward. Leonard wanted to shed that image of being a pretty boy so he fought tooth and nail with Duran. I think Floyd will do the same thing.

Aha! Gotcha.

I think when Pac's off balanced, Floyd should jump on him.

But even when Pac’s off balance he can still land ferocious, weird punches that hurt.

He can, but Floyd is a master of the ring. He knows the small twitches and tendencies of the fighters he faces. To me he's a boxing scientist that will not be seen in the next decade.

I agree with that. His defensive skills are beyond compare but I think Pac will take his punches and keep pressuring him.

Time will tell.

What about the blood tests?

Who is Mayweather to ask for the tests? Why didn’t he ask Marquez? Manny’s not on 'roids.

Last question. I have to bounce.

Okay. What do you think about Teddy Atlas’s expose of the alleged emails from the Pacquiao camp?

There are lots of websites that show how to forge emails.

Till next time…

Thanks for the interview, James. Good luck to you.

Source: bleacherreport.com

The Mayweather vs Pacquiao Debacle Debate

By Frank Gonzalez, Jr. - What kind of businessman boxer lets a 30 million dollar fight go down the drain?

In lieu of a boxing version of the Super Bowl or World Series, the best we could hope for would be a big fight between two of the most hyped up fighters in the sport. And obviously that would mean Floyd vs. Manny. But now, we can’t even have that. I wanted to see if Floyd could counter punch the aggressive Manny with the kind of success he enjoyed over Ricky Hatton. But you had to figure this fight somehow wouldn’t happen, something would kill it. Businessmen fighters want low risks and high rewards. This fight may have been too dangerous for Floyd to risk. So here’s to the big media hype job followed by an equally big let down. Thanks Floyd.

Like Floyd and Roy before him, Manny Pacquiao has been groomed into the promotional status of “Best Pound for Pound Fighter” in boxing, which means all his fights are on Pay-Per-View from now on. Of the three, Manny has clearly been the most exciting to watch and most willing to fight tough fights that fans want to see. Roy fought a lot of duds and Floyd picks his own fruits once they’ve long fallen from the tree. Plus, it’s not a real title if you didn’t even fight the best fighters in your own weight class.

How did Manny just jump right past Tim Bradley, Nate Campbell, Kendall Holt or even Juan Diaz at 135, then hop over the top dogs at 147 and hit the lottery sweepstakes for richest purse in boxing; a PPV fight against an aged and faded Oscar De La Hoya? His performance against Ricky Hatton was impeccable but Hatton did not possess a major title and was coming off a devastating loss to Mayweather Jr. so he was clearly not the best either. Don’t you have to beat the best to be the best?

Manny is a great fighter, he’s humble, likable and well deserving of praise but in fighting the trio of expiring marquee name fighters, he managed to duck a bunch of prime, top level fighters with title belts in his own weight class while becoming the “best P4P fighter in boxing.” How can there even BE a best p4p in boxing? How is that structured and is he going to fight one of Klitschko brothers next? If there were a legit ranking system and Manny or Floyd beat everyone on that ladder of contention to get to the top, that would be valid but that’s not how anyone gets there these days. It’s clear that Manny’s been groomed so certain people can cash in big on his marketability. Unlike his two predecessors at P4P, Manny has not ducked anybody except avoiding a third fight with J.M. Marquez, who on the books, he has beaten twice.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. was the “best P4P fighter” but he retired at the start of 2008, right when his 147 pound division was really starting to heat up. Guys like Antonio Margarito, Paul Williams, Shane Mosley and Miguel Cotto were the inevitable opponents, none of whom Floyd appeared interested in facing. Two years later, when the waters calmed, Floyd bravely returned and decided to take on one of the best fighters in boxing. Too bad it was a guy from a division 15 pounds south of Floyd’s division of Welterweight (147). That was 126, 130 and 135 pound titlist Juan Manual Marquez, who had to move up to the 147 pounds to accommodate Floyd’s conditions to make the fight.

Aside from the obvious advantages Floyd afforded himself, on fight night Floyd showed up a few pounds over the contracted limit, for which he paid a $600,000 penalty to the Marquez camp. Floyd won every round of that boring, one sided Pay-Per-View event. He was too big, too fast and too slick for the smaller man with the big heart.

Floyd is very talented but his heart came into question after the Marquez fight when Shane Mosley jumped into the ring and challenged Floyd in front of the whole damn world - to fight him next. Floyd looked about to wet his trunks and things in the ring got weird for a minute, then settled down as Floyd told Mosley not to disrespect him, cause he don’t jump into the ring after Mosley fights to disrespect him. It was a fair point and Mosley was respectful to it but in a standoffish way. It was like watching a business deal fall dead on arrival.

Max Kellerman insisted on talking about a fight with Pacquiao but Floyd ignored it. Max ended the interview when Floyd decided to disregard questions about Manny Pacquiao and talk about what he wanted to talk about. Venue security kept things civil in the tense, crowded ring. But the damage had been done. Floyd gave the distinct impression that he’s afraid of Shane Mosley. There’s only one way to cure that.

The official line is that Floyd’s not interested because it’s not a marketable fight, since Mosley isn’t a good enough draw for PPV. What does it require to believe that?

Mosley has a few losses on his record but he’s shown that he’s still a great fighter. If Floyd’s so confident, why wouldn’t he jump on the chance to fight the very famous “Sugar” Shane Mosley? Could it be because of the way Mosley threw that wicked beating on another guy Floyd didn’t want to fight, named Antonio Margarito? A win over Mosley would be HUGE for Floyd. It would automatically give Floyd wins over Margarito and everyone else on Mosley’s résumé that Mayweather fans thought Floyd shouldn’t have to fight because Mosley already beat them, and Floyd beat Mosley. That’s how it works, isn’t it?

And yet, who knows what Shane’s straw has been stirring? He looked better against “dirty gloved” Margarito than I’ve ever seen him. That was strange, considering how drained and aged Shane looked after his twelve round last second knockout win over a clearly past his prime Ricardo Mayorga. Mosley was a year younger then and there was talk about whether he was closing out his career. But all the BALCO stuff aside, we all know Mosley’s clean. So why won’t Floyd fight him? He fits Floyd’s criteria perfectly, he’s a big name at the twilight of his career, what’s the problem? My guess is he’ll fight Andre Berto… after Mosley beats Berto. And Floyd will remain… the best P4P fighter in boxing. What will we be?

Aside from his hard to like personality, Floyd is an amazing talent on defense and offense. I’d love to see him take on someone like Mosley or get really bold and call out Paul Williams to show the world that yes, he is the best in boxing and has the rocks to prove it. Whatever anyone thinks of him, he has great reflexes and defensive boxing skills. I’ve only seen him lose once, and that was in a close fight with Jose Luis Castillo, who used pressure to check Floyd’s superior agility and boxing prowess by forcing him into continuous defensive postures, where Castillo was able to land to the body often and dictate the terms of engagement. At the end of that one, the Judges had Floyd’s back and Castillo was dealt a Loss by Decision.

There was a lot of buzz afterwards, questioning Floyd’s win, so Floyd agreed to fight a rematch with Castillo, where he easily out boxed him for twelve rounds. It was a strange rematch, since Castillo didn’t look like he was there to win but just collect a big payday. Castillo did that against Ricky Hatton too, so who knows?

Floyd Mayweather Jr. may have a point about drug testing for Manny Pacquiao but the Nevada State Athletic Commission already uses a drug testing method that was okay with Floyd in the past but suddenly, is not good enough to fight Pacman. While watching Friday Night Fights on ESPN, Teddy Atlas weighed in on this issue of Floyd and Manny and how the fight is now officially OFF. He told how Manny’s camp is suing Mayweather’s camp for defamation of his character, as now, fans are talking about Manny being a possible user of performance enhancing drugs. Freddy Roach was on the show too and he said Manny is 100% clean. Teddy also remarked that a source of his said they had seen email exchanges between the Pacquiao and Mayweather camps asking what would happen if Manny did test positive.

Manny has never officially tested positive for steroids or other illegal substances in the past. Manny did not impose any dramatic conditions on Floyd in order to make this fight. Floyd did make unusual demands that did kill the fight. I doubt Floyd ever wanted to fight Manny. After the Marquez fight, Kellerman wanted to talk about Manny but Floyd wanted to change the subject.

Floyd started this whole illegal substance debate by his insistence that Manny undergo Olympic style testing, which is more thorough than the NSAC methods and is spontaneously administered. It does raise questions about Manny’s reluctance and Floyd’s insistence. Mayweather has been known to use hand-injected painkillers in the past, like Xylocaine, which is illegal in some states. Legit arguments will rise about Floyd’s own use of enhancers or illegal substances that, at the least, addressed his hand problems. It’s none of my business what anyone puts into their bodies. I’m against the imposition of forced drug testing but - I’m not a prize fighter putting another man at serious risk with extra human strength. Taking pharmaceutical enhancers in sports is cheating and unacceptable. Boxing must do what it will to enforce rules that at least give the appearance of legitimacy.

So, instead of talking about Manny vs. Floyd, we’ll be talking about Manny vs. Josh Clottey instead. Hey, it’s not a great fight but it’s decent. Clottey has good skills and has hopefully learned from the Cotto fight that appealing to the ref instead of appealing to your opponent's face with your fists will not get it done where you’re the visiting team. Clottey will need a knockout to get a win against Manny in the USA. Many, including Emanuel Stewart of HBO, think Clottey beat Cotto and have good arguments as to why. But Clottey, for all his skills and toughness, is not a good finisher. I’m picking Manny by TKO late.

But I’d much rather see Pacman vs. Tim Bradley at 140 pounds for their titles. But we’re not supposed to think about that. We have to “Unthink” like they say in those stupid, mind numbing KFC commercials on TV. Unthink and accept.

I’m not surprised to hear who Mayweather is considering fighting in place of Pacman - Paul Malignaggi. Wow, that should be exciting. Of course it will be on PPV, just to make it that much more exciting. My prediction; Floyd by decision. Yawn.

Floyd would do much to improve his standing by manning up and accepting Mosley’s challenge. Financially, he only stands to make a fortune fighting Mosley, win or lose. But if it's heart he wants to show, I’m sure Paul Williams would love to fight Floyd on PPV. If Marquez could come up 15 pounds to fight Floyd, Floyd can move up seven pounds to fight Williams at 154. And since money is his primary motivation, think about this, what fight fan on Earth would miss Floyd “Money” Mayweather Jr. vs. Paul “The Punisher” Williams on PPV? That’s a lot of money.

Source: braggingrightscorner.com

Money rules out Hatton clash

By Gavin Glicksman - MATTHEW HATTON'S dream of facing Floyd Mayweather Jnr has been crushed.

Magic Matthew had been touted as a possible opponent for Mayweather following the collapse of the American's scheduled mega fight with Manny Pacquiao.

But while Money will still box on March 13, it will not be against the 28-year-old Mancunian.

Golden Boy chief executive Richard Schaefer said: "There is absolutely no truth to the rumours about Matthew Hatton.

"I can't tell you for sure who Floyd will fight, but I can tell you it won't be Hatton."

The biggest fight in boxing was KO'd last week when Mayweather and Pacquiao failed to agree terms on random blood testing.

Joshua Clottey has since been lined up to face Pacquiao on the original date and Mayweather will also box on the same night.

Schaefer admits it is far from ideal to have two of the sport's biggest names competing on different pay-per-view cards, but insists there is no way round it.

He added: "March 13 a date Golden Boy has had for a long time and nothing has changed.

"We have been talking to Team Mayweather to see who the opponent will be. I hope to have something to announce in the next few days.

"It is unusual to have two pay-per-views on the same night, but what can I do?

"It wasn't Floyd who walked away from the Pacquiao fight. There is nothing I can really say about it.

"It's not good for Pacquiao to go on that date, which we had for a long time.

"It's not good for boxing that Pacquiao and Mayweather are not fighting each other."

Source: thesun.co.uk

Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather in popularity race with bouts on same night

By Gareth A. Davies - Floyd Mayweather Jnr and Manny Pacquiao will compete against each other on March 13, but not in a Las Vegas ring. The pair will go head to head in a commercial battle, and one of popularity, as they vie for pay-per-view buys on the same night in separate venues.

A proposed mega-fight between the world's top two fighters on March 13 collapsed last week after a dispute between the camps over proposed drug-testing protocol. What was expected to be the highest earning fight in history, worth around $200 million (£123.9 million), is off. For now.

Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter at Top Rank, revealed that his man would defend the World Boxing Organisation welterweight title against former holder Joshua Clottey – on March 13, at the NFL Cowboys Stadium, in Arlington, Texas.

That was confirmed by Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones on Monday, the billionaire American welcoming the opportunity to host world championship boxing at the new Stadium.

"I have wanted to bring a major boxing event to north Texas for many years, so why not bring in the biggest and the best?" Jones said. "Manny Pacquiao is boxing's number one pound-for-pound attraction and the world champion.

"Manny defending his title against Joshua Clottey is not just a great fight, it's a great event. We're going to promote this like it was the Super Bowl."

Meanwhile, not to be outdone, Richard Shaefer, chief executive of Golden Boy, Mayweather's promoters, insisted yesterday that their man would fight at the MGM Grand, Las Vegas, on the same night. The MGM Grand had been favourite to host the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight before talks collapsed.

Mayweather is looking at fighting the likes of Paulie Malignaggi, Nate Campbell, or Kermit Cintron. Schaefer ruled out rumours that it could be Matthew Hatton, the younger brother of former light welterweight champion Ricky Hatton.

"There is absolutely no truth to the rumours about Matthew Hatton. I can't tell you for sure who Floyd will fight, but I can tell you for sure it won't be Matthew Hatton," Schaefer said.

Source: telegraph.co.uk

From $2,500, Pacquiao premium tickets to cost just $700 – Arum

By Nick Giongco - Tickets to the March 13 welterweight war between Manny Pacquiao and Joshua Clottey will be priced reasonably, Hall of Fame promoter Bob Arum said on Sunday night after returning to Las Vegas from a weekend visit in Dallas, Texas.

The premium ringside seat will cost $700, while the cheapest at $50, said Arum with the Cowboys Stadium to be reconstructed to sit 50,000, stressing that in case a demand is felt in the days leading to the fight, it would be easy to add more seats.

“Manny will enter a new realm with this fight in Dallas,” said Arum, whose promotional outfit Top Rank is staging the show in close partnership with Texas billionaire and Cowboys team owner Jerry Jones.

Weeks ago, when it appeared that a deal had been made for Pacquiao against Floyd Mayweather at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Arum said the top seat would be sold at an unheard of $2,500, higher than the $2,400 that was retailed when Lennox Lewis faced Mike Tyson in June 2002 in Memphis.

All it took for Arum to make a deal with Jones was pay him a visit as the Cowboys were playing the Philadelphia Eagles Saturday night.

The next morning, Arum and Jones easily dotted the Is and crossed the Ts and Arum hurriedly hopped on a plane bound for Sin City with the frame of mind of a boy who found himself inside a candy store.

“The arena is just magnificent. I’ve been to a lot of venues but the Cowboys Stadium is unbelievable. I have no doubt this show is going to be a huge success,” said Arum.

Arum was compelled to look elsewhere for an opponent for Pacquiao after a falling out with Mayweather and his promotional team last week.

Even though Clottey’s popularity is not as immense as Mayweather, the New York-based Ghana native has a solid reputation of being a tough customer in the ring, something that Pacquiao will have to contend with once they finally get it on.

Source: mb.com.ph

ayweather near deal with mystery opponent

By Michael Rosenthal - Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao are fighting on March 13 after all – just not against each other.

Richard Schaefer, Mayweather’s promoter, reiterated shortly after the Pacquiao-Joshua Clottey fight was formally announced on Sunday that his client will fight on that date at MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Schaefer said he’s close to a deal with a prospective opponent but said he can’t reveal who it is.

Among those rumored to be possible opponents are Paulie Malignaggi, Kermit Cintron, Nate Campbell and Timothy Bradley.

Another issue would be television. HBO Pay Per View can handle one of the fights or choose neither. Another company would have to showcase the other fight if HBO does go either direction.

And the fact that the Nos. 1 and 2 fighters will go head to head both live and on TV is very unusual. It almost guarantees that that both pay-per-view buy rates will suffer.

“Obviously that’s not ideal,” Schaefer said. “I hate to do that. I’d be a fool to say it’s a good thing. Sometimes you have to play the cards you’re dealt with, though.”

Mayweather and Pacquiao were supposed to fight on March 13 but the fight fell apart because the fighters couldn’t agree on a cut-off date for blood testing.

Pacquiao is scheduled to fight Clottey at the new Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

Source: ringtv.com

Pacman is PSA "Athlete of the Decade"

By Eddie Alinea - No less than three-time "Trainer of the Year" awardee Freddie Roach saw this coming when, during the first time Manny Pacquiao worked the mitts with him nine years ago, he foresaw the tiny Filipino fighter to win a world championship someday.

He was not mistaken although the now Filipino ring hero did more than that by bringing home not only a world crown but seven in the next nine years of their partnership.

“I predicted him to become a world champion,” Roach said, recalling his first meeting with the boxing icon early in 2001 at the Wild Card gym in Los Angeles. “I never thought he’ll be this great.”

Indeed, the former bread vendor and construction worker has gone beyond anybody’s expectations, defying odds that came his way to emerge a boxing superstar starting with a stunning sixth-round technical knockout of fearsome South African Lehlo Ledwaba to win the International Boxing Federation super-bantamweight title in addition to the flyweight diadem he won earlier in his career.

That unexpected triumph started the now 31-year-old General Santos City native’s meteoric rise to fame and riches as he later would be recognized as the sweet science’s best pound-for-pound boxer, the only man ever to win seven world titles in as many weight classes (flyweight, super-bantamweight, featherweight, junior lightweight, lightweight, junior welterweight and welterweight), and easily, among the few who made a lasting imprint in a sport teeming with stars and heroes.

Pacquiao, father of four with wife Jinkee, indeed, has come a long way from being a struggling, skinny 17-year old teener who first fought as a pro in the lowliest 109-pound division in the mid-90s, to the electrifying sport icon who has become the face of boxing today.

And the Philippine Sportswriters Association (PSA) is not one to deny Pacquiao of his achievements that brought positive recognition to his embattled country by conferring him the honor ``Athlete of the Decade’’ he will be receiving during its traditional annual Awards Night set February 27.

Pacquiao has been named PSA Athlete of the Year five times this decade – from 2002 to 2004, then in 2006 and 2008.

Already elevated by the country’s oldest media organization to the Hall of Fame last year, Pacquiao is no longer eligible for the coveted Athlete of the Year award, but remains a major part of the year’s top sports achievers’ list on account of his Hall of Fame exploits in the first 10 years of the new century.

Since that upset title-victory over Ledwaba in his first fight on American soil, Pacquiao has gobbled up every opposition that came his way in the last decade – 21 of them under the guidance of Roach.

In that stretch, the Filipino boxing champion won 26 of his 27 fights – 21 of them coming by way of knockout, while the rest of them by decision.

Mexican great Eric Morales was the lone warrior to survive the devastating fists of Pacquiao (50-3, 38 KOs), carving out a close unanimous decision triumph in the first of their classic trilogy in 2005.

Morales is one of six future Hall of Fame fighters Pacquiao has faced during the period that also included Marco Antonio Barrera, Juan Manuel Marquez, Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto.

In 10 fights against all these boxing greats, the Filipino boxing icon won eight – two against Morales and Barrera – drew once (Marquez in 2004) and lost once.

In less than two-years, Pacquiao won all of his bouts in five different weight divisions, beginning with Marquez in the super bantam category, Diaz in lightweight, De La Hoya and Hatton in junior-welterweight and Cotto in welterweight class.

His recent 12th round stoppage of Cotto, one among the long line of great fighters produced by Puerto Rico, to win the World Boxing Organization 147-pound crown, catapulted him further into the annals of boxing as one of its greatest fighters ever.

Source: philboxing.com

PACQUIAO TO BEGIN TRAINING AT WILD CARD ON MONDAY

By Ronnie Nathanielsz - Pound-for-pound hero Manny Pacquiao will begin training at the Wild Card Gym of Freddie Roach for his WBO welterweight title defense against former world champion Joshua Clottey on Monday.

Pacquiao who is currently vacationing with wife Jinkee, their four children and close relatives and friends in picturesque Boracay will leave for Los Angeles on Friday, knowing that he has to train as hard as always because Clottey is a dangerous opponent.

Top Rank promoter Bob Arum told www.insidesports.ph, Standard Today and Viva Sports that the Pacquiao-Clottey fight details have been finalized and the fight will take place at the $1.2 billion Dallas Cowboys stadium of Jerry Jones which Arum described as spectacular.

Arum who watched the Dallas Cowboys game with former President George Bush and Laura Bush in the owner’s box as well as former baseball great, pitcher Nolan Ryan, said “I have never in my life seen anything like this stadium. It's unbelievable.”

He said President Bush told him “Bob you are better off without Mayweather. Everybody just wants to see Manny Pacquiao and this is a great fight and unless I am called away to make a speech I am coming to the fight.”

Arum said the kickoff press conference at the Dallas Stadium will be held on January 19 and would be “the press conference to end all press conferences with the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders performing while some of them will serve as round girls during the fight. This is stupendous.”

At the same time he branded Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer’s announced plan to stage a Mayweather fight against a still unnamed opponent at the MGM Grand on the same date as an act that “shows how malicious he (Schaefer) has become.” He said Pacquiao has to fight in March because he has to campaign for the May elections in which he is seeking the lone congressional seat from the province of Sarangani. Arum said Mayweather could fight in April or May but Schaefer was malicious and wants to stage a fight on the same day. Arum said “who cares” even as he suggested that Schaefer “go back to banking and leave boxing to the real professionals.”

Arum also touched on the alleged email referred to by ESPN boxing commentator Teddy Atlas which he said he was informed about by a source whom he trusted. The source according to Atlas claimed that some unidentified person supposedly from Team Pacquiao had asked that should Pacquiao found to be “dirty” after a blood test as demanded by the Mayweather camp whether it could be kept secret in order not to hurt the planned Pacquiao-Mayweather March 13 fight.

Arum said “there is no email. Period. This is a made-up, malicious story. Trust me, there is no email. Who will send a stupid email like that? Yes you can test but don’t say nothing if it comes back dirty. Then why test? He likened the allegations against Pacquiao without a shred of evidence to the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy who accused many individuals of being communists where “you had to prove your innocence” which was contrary to the accepted principle of being innocent until proven guilty. Arum charged “this is the same type of tactic but everybody is aware of this and public opinion is completely on Manny’s side, so we’ve moved on and don’t wish to discuss this anymore. The publicity battle is over. We’ve kicked their ass.”

Source: philboxing.com

FREDDIE ROACH BREAKS DOWN CLOTTEY FIGHT; SAYS THE GOAL IS A KNOCKOUT

By Ben Thompson - "Manny's going to have to get a little physical in there with him of course and use his strength and speed and use it technically. The thing is when his earmuffs are on, with that passive defense like that, there's not a lot of power punches coming back on the counter end of it. There is some activity, but the thing is if he does that too much, I think we're going to get him out in 12 easily, but he's definitely a tough guy to knockout though. That's our goal, to knock him out and be one of the first ones to do that," stated world-renowned trainer Freddie Roach as he broke down Manny Pacquiao's new opponent, Joshua Clottey, and their upcoming clash on March 13th. A guest of the OnTheGrind Boxing radio show, Roach shared his final thoughts on the failed negotiations for the megafight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. before looking forward to the title defense against Clottey. Check out what he had to say about the change in sparring partners, the possibility of facing Mayweather or the winner of Mosley vs. Berto in the future and much more.

On his selection of Clottey as Pacquiao's next opponent...

"I talked to Bob and Bob started asking about Clottey. I said, 'Give me a day to think about it. Let me think about his style.' It's an action fight. It's a hard fight of course because he's a true welterweight and a big, strong kid, so Pacquiao is going to have to really fight smart with his speed. And it's an action fight. I thought it was better than the Yuri Foreman fight. We could have went after Foreman for the 8th world title, but Foreman's kind of a lackluster guy who can spoil and make you look bad, so I thought this was a better action fight for the fans so this is the one we chose."

"They offered us Paulie Malignaggi, but who wants to see that, you know? I mean, geez, Ricky Hatton crushed him and Manny crushed Ricky Hatton, so people don't want to see that fight. Paulie's a good action fighter, but he's not in that class. Now we're fighting a big, strong guy who a lot of people thought beat Cotto in the last fight and he deserves a shot, so it's going to be a very good fight."

On the Clottey fight itself...

"To be honest with you, it looks like a great venue and it's going to be a huge crowd. Unfortunately, it won't be the pound-for-pound kings going against each other. You know, me and Manny were both looking forward to getting ready for that fight and coming up with a gameplan to beat Mayweather; hopefully that will happen down the line some day, but right now, we'll have Clottey in front of us, so it seems, and again, he's a tough guy and a difficult opponent, strong and a true welterweight. Manny's still a small welterweight, you know, he walks around at 153; we have to put weight on when we get in training camp with protein shakes and five meals a day, but it will be very competitive and it will be all-action. You know, a fight that the fans will love."

"We have to box this guy, in-and-out, side-to-side motion, and really, really be very tactical because he's a very strong and big puncher and has a good chin of course. Again, it's not an easy fight, but it's a fight that we want to fight because it's a fight that the fans will enjoy and that's what we want. We want to put on a good shows and keep doing that and keep Manny Pacquiao's number one ranking alive."

"It will be at 147. There's no catchweight."

"Manny's comfortable at the weight [147 pounds]. Making 135 was a bit of a struggle, making 140, we can make 140 with ease, but he likes the extra strength, he likes eating the day of the weigh-in. When Manny's eating the day of the weigh-in and gets to eat twice before the weigh-in, he's happy and that's when he peforms at his best, when he's smiling and in a good mood. He's not in an angry mood because he's starving himself. Making weight is a little bit overrated I think and Manny Pacquiao is proof. He's fighting at a weight he's comfortable at. He'll come into this fight like 144-145 and he'll go into the ring at 148 or 149 at most and that's his best fighting weight."

On the gameplan for Clottey...

"He has a passive defense, by putting his earmuffs on and so forth. He opens the body up when he does that of course. There's certain ways we can break that defense and break him down of course. Manny's going to have to get a little physical in there with him of course and use his strength and speed and use it technically. The thing is when his earmuffs are on, with that passive defense like that, there's not a lot of power punches coming back on the counter end of it. There is some activity, but the thing is if he does that too much, I think we're going to get him out in 12 easily, but he's definitely a tough guy to knockout though. That's our goal, to knock him out and be one of the first ones to do that. I think if we break him down to the body, we can definitely expose the head if we go to the body early in the fight."

On sparring partners for the Clottey fight...

"Big, strong guys, you know? 154 and 160-pounders. I got a couple guys picked out already. I got Roberto Garcia on hold in the gym right now. Roberto campaigns at 54, but he's at 160 right now; a very strong guy. I also have Amir Khan coming in for speed work, which works for Mayweather, but, you know, speed work is always great for timing and so forth, so he's in with Amir also. There's a 160-pounder who came in, 160-pound world champion from the Ukraine came in yesterday and I'm going to look at him tomorrow and they want me to train him also. And of course Felix Sturm and I just struck a deal. Felix is a 160-pounder who's going to come in. He's not that Clottey type of fighter so much, but he's a very clever boxer and I think when you're sharp with guys like that, you're sharp with anybody so I got some really good guys."

Source: fighthype.com

PACQUIAO, LONE STAR OF BOXING, WILL FIGHT IN THE LONE STAR STATE OF TEXAS MARCH 13

The stars will fight, big and bright, deep in the heart of Texas!

Jerry Jones and Bob Arum, owner of the Dallas Cowboys and chairman of Top Rank, respectively, announced today that Cowboys Stadium would be the site of the MANNY PACQUIAO vs. JOSHUA CLOTTEY World Welterweight Championship fight taking place on Saturday, March 13 and broadcast Live on Pay-Per-View. Formal news conferences at Cowboys Stadium and in New York next week will provide details on tickets and the pay-per-view broadcast. Pacquiao vs. Clottey will be promoted by Top Rank, in association with the Dallas Cowboys and MP Promotions.

Pacquiao and Clottey boast a combine record of 85-6-2 (59 KOs) -- a winning percentage of 91% and a victory by knockout ratio of nearly 70%.

“I have wanted to bring a major boxing event to North Texas for many years, so why not bring in the biggest and the best?” asked Jones. “Manny Pacquiao is boxing’s No. 1 pound for pound attraction and the world champion. Manny defending his title against Joshua Clottey is not just a great fight, it’s a great event, and one we can showcase to the fullest in Cowboys Stadium. We’re going to promote this like it was the Super Bowl.”

Cowboys Stadium will be configured for 40,000 fans for the event.

“Jerry Jones knows exactly how big and important this event is which is why it was so easy to put this deal together,” said Arum. “As a lifelong Giants fan I had to receive special dispensation from Steve Tisch, the Giants’ Chairman and Executive Vice President, to bring this event to Cowboys Stadium and he blessed the deal. If Jerry could sell me on Cowboys Stadium and the North Texas market, you know he is going to have no problems selling out Cowboys Stadium on March 13. We are ready to roll up our sleeves and promote Manny’s debut as World Welterweight Champion. Manny Pacquiao is the lone star of boxing. There isn’t a more appropriate place in the world for him to fight!”

Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs), of General Santos City, Philippines, will be defending the World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title he earned in his last fight, produced by a 12th round knockout of three-time world champion Miguel Cotto. Pacquiao’s victory made him the first man to win seven titles in as many different weight divisions, with his last three world championships coming by way of knockout. The consensus Fighter of the Year for the third time in the past four years, Pacquiao’s resume features victories over future Hall of Famers, including Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Marco Antonio Barrera, Erik Morales, Juan Manuel Lopez and Cotto. His knockout victories over Cotto and Hatton made him the 2009 pay-per-view king, exceeding two million buys combined.

Clottey (35-3, 21 KOs), a native of Accra, Ghana, now fighting out of Bronx, NY, captured the International Boxing Federation (IBF) welterweight title in 2008 by trouncing three-time world champion Zab Judah. His career has been a highlight reel of thrills featuring victories over two-division world champion Diego Corrales and undefeated contender Richard Gutierrez and a close decision losse to world champion Antonio Margarito. In his last fight, Clottey lost a controversial split decision to defending WBO welterweight champion Miguel Cotto at Madison Square Garden. Clottey is currently world-rated No. 1 by the WBO and No. 4 by the World Boxing Association (WBA).

Source: philboxing.com

Manny Pacquiao looking to recapture his Texas magic

By Chris Robinson - The news of the day has been the recent reports that the March 13th Manny Pacquiao-Joshua Clottey WBO Welterweight title bout will be taking place at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Veteran boxing scribe Michael Marley, always one to break a scoop, recently got off the phone with Cowboy’s owner Jerry Jones, who did indeed confirm that he had a deal ironed out with Top Rank boss Bob Arum to stage the event.

Pacquiao vs. Clottey will be distributed as a Pay Per view event with three featured undercard bouts. While many had assumed that the fight would be taking place in Las Vegas, as have 7 of Pacquiao’s last 8 fights, holding the contest in the Cowboys Stadium will add a new element to the mix. Jones has been pushing hard and in constant talks with Arum to have an event in his playground and it looks like he now has his wish.

When thinking of the event further a few things come to mind.

Pacquiao’s breakthrough performance

Pacquiao is no stranger to delivering electrifying performances on Texas soil, as he thoroughly battered Marco Antonio Barrera in November of 2003 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, roughly 280 miles South of Cowboys Stadium. A look back at that fight shows just how shocking Manny’s victory really was.

Despite breaking out on the scene in June of 2001 with a 6th round stoppage over Lehlohonolo Ledwaba, Pacquiao was still relatively new to many observes leading into the Barrera contest. Barrera himself had rejuvenated his career with a pair of battles against rival Erik Morales as well as a thorough schooling of Prince Naseem Hamed and many figured his seasoned attack and championship experience would be too much for Pacquiao to cope with. The Filipino was also moving up in weight to the Featherweight division against a Hall of fame opponent and nobody expected him to control the contest the way he did.

From the immediate outset of the bout Pacquiao shattered those notions by applying patient aggression while landing pinpoint punches. Barrera was confused early on and after suffering a knockdown in the third round the ‘Baby Faced Assassin’ was all out of answers. Pacquiao would end up seizing full control of the fight thereafter, never letting up his attack or letting go of his momentum. Helpless against the ropes in the 11th round, Barrera saw the bout waived off by referee Laurence Cole with just seconds remaining.

When looking back at Pacquiao’s career his first match with Barrera is considered by many to be his breakout performance. After taking the showdown in it became very clear just how deadly and potent Pacquiao’s blend of power and speed could be against a world class opponent. If Manny can produce even half of the performance against Clottey that he did against Barrera it will be a night worth remembering.

The place to be

Completed on May 27, 2009, Cowboys stadium is definitely a sight to see. Through the use of standing areas the stadium is capable of holding up to 110,000 people, the most in the NFL. But what has put the stadium on the map even more has been the recent turnaround of the Dallas Cowboys, who are coming off of a dominant 34-14 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles this past weekend in their NFC wildcard matchup.

In recent years the Cowboys had become the butt of many jokes for not producing the results that their owner Jerry Jones would have expected but a December win over the previously unbeaten New Orleans Saints seemed to be the exact jumpstart that they needed. The Cowboys are seen world round on a weekly basis and the appeal of the stadium itself has been on display for everyone to see.

It was reported in a recent Boxing Scene article that Arum and Top Rank president Todd DuBoef were in attendance in the stadium this weekend during the Cowboys-Eagles game and the promoter came away with a great impression of everything the facility encompassed. Reportedly Arum is planning on setting the arena up to hold 50,000 people for the event. By the time the bell rings for Pacquiao-Clottey, things should be electric.

Margarito returns to the mix

Word has also been spread that former Welterweight champion Antonio Margarito will be making his return to the ring on the evening’s undercard proceedings, against an opponent to be named. Caught with elements of plaster of paris in his gloves before his January 2009 loss to Shane Mosley, Margarito was suspended for a year by the California State Athletic Commission on February 10th.

Following the fallout, Margarito was chastised by many and went from a respected and determined champion to an athlete under extreme scrutiny. Margarito has taken a beating from the media and fans alike and its unknown if he will ever recover from this controversy. His appearance on the Pacquiao-Clottey undercard will surely attract several of Dallas’ Latino fans and perhaps it’s a good start for his comeback since he will be out of the spotlight slightly due to Pacquiao’s recent impact in the sport.

Source: examiner.com

Atlas should be fired by ESPN if he fails to support his allegations

By Dennis "dSource" Guillermo - It's been 48-hours, and I still have not gotten any word regarding Teddy Atlas' source or anything to support his bold claim during ESPN's Friday Night Fights seen by hundreds of thousands, if not millions of viewers worldwide.

Atlas said that through an unnamed "reliable source", someone from Team Pacquiao had sent an e-mail to Mayweather's camp inquiring about the consequences of their blood testing request. Allegedly, a member of Team Pacquiao had asked Team Mayweather if they could keep things secret to save the integrity of boxing in case Pacquiao is found guilty of doping.

However, Boxingtalk.com broke a story recently stating that Atlas' story is false. They quoted Pacquiao's promoter Bob Arum saying that the alleged e-mail "does not exist" and that ESPN should issue an apology soon for not checking their facts.

If this is indeed true, Atlas should be accountable for such irresponsible statements. Whether his intent was to try and get in the middle of the much-debated Pacquiao-Mayweather issue and deliver a "scoop" or he is simply biased against Pacquiao is something only he knows for himself but the fact of the matter is, if Atlas can't produce his source or any proof regarding his implicating statement, then he should definitely be fired from ESPN for spreading bogus information. I'm sure Pacquiao's lawyers are already (if they haven't yet) entertaining thoughts of including him in their defamation lawsuit.

Coincidentally, Atlas' statement is already in the lawsuit and was stated on page 8 and line 21 citing Tim Smith's article in the New York Daily News published on December 25, 2009. As stated in the lawsuit, Team Pacquiao vehemently denied the rumor and wrote that it was a member of Team Mayweather that probably leaked that information.

So what was Atlas trying to do? Further create turmoil in an already murky situation? He kept mentioning the blue-collar guy and casual fans' perception of the matter yet he further indulged the same naive notions he mentioned and submerged the public under more baseless accusations. If he was so sure about his source and his story, then why not reveal all the facts instead of implying and hiding his damaging remarks behind "anonymous sources"?

This is what's wrong with boxing. The politics. The lies. The misinformation. It's just unappetizing. You'd think these old people who have gotten rich off the sport would give back to it and think about it's integrity first before blurting out baseless accusations. What happened to loving the sport and reporting facts? Atlas got some explaining to do. And for the sake of boxing, I hope he does back up his claims. Enough people have been led and misled to a certain belief. Either way, people deserve and need to see facts. Just like what you see inside a real Atlas.

Source: examiner.com

acquiao and Mayweather will fight on March 13th, just not in the ring

By Rick Rockwell - March 13th was supposed to be the “Fight of the Century”, where the top 2 fighters in Boxing were to fight for the pound for pound best title and their legacy. Unfortunately, that fight will no longer happen. Instead, we are left with Pacquiao and Mayweather potentially fighting each other over PPV buys.

It’s been confirmed that Manny Pacquiao will face Joshua Clottey on March 13th in Dallas, Texas at the Cowboys new football stadium in front of an estimated 50,000 fans. Pacquiao’s camp moved quickly to get another fight locked in and picked an opponent that will add to Pac-Man’s impressive resume.

Not to be outdone, reports are coming out that Mayweather will also fight on March 13th. His rumored opponents are Paulie Malignaggi or Matthew Hatton. Neither fighter sparks much interest to the average boxing fan. But the fight is also rumored to take place in Las Vegas. Rumors or not, Mayweather has the ego to schedule a fight on the same day as Pacquiao.

If both of these fights do end up taking place on March 13th, and on PPV, then who will draw the larger number of PPV buys? Mayweather considers himself the king of PPV and Manny’s numbers speak for himself. Manny will also be fighting the more entertaining fight against a respectable opponent in an exciting environment down in Dallas. A win in the potential PPV battle could bolster or confirm their respective drawing powers.

Who do you think gets the higher PPV numbers?

Source: examiner.com

“Fighting Words” – Mayweather vs. Pacquiao: Two Egos Too Big, One Fight Not Too Big To Fail

By David P. Greisman - There are no good excuses. There are no good explanations. There are no winners.

It is no wonder.

It is no wonder that the biggest fight featuring the biggest talents, the biggest stars, became the biggest disappointment, the biggest embarrassment, all as a result of the biggest egos.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao had a mandate – fight each other. Put the two best boxers, pound-for-pound, in the same ring. See who is better.

They could do it for pride. How often do two of the best fighters in a weight class face each other, much less two of the best fighters in the sport?

They could do it for money. Mayweather, in his past three pay-per-view appearances, had buy rates of 2.44 million (Oscar De La Hoya), 920,000 (Ricky Hatton) and 1 million (Juan Manuel Marquez). Pacquiao, in his past three pay-per-view appearances, had buy rates of 1.25 million (De La Hoya), 850,000 (Hatton), and 1.25 million (Miguel Cotto).

At best, Mayweather-Pacquiao could break records and make millions upon millions. At worst, everyone involved would still make millions upon millions.

It was too big to fail.

They found a way.

For once, it wasn’t about money. They had agreed on who would get paid more – it would be a 50-50 split.

It was about pride.

Mayweather wanted Pacquiao to be tested for performance enhancing drugs. He wanted the tests to be more stringent than any done in boxing, beyond the normal urine tests. He wanted blood drawn, and he wanted the testing to be done randomly, unscheduled.

It is possible that Mayweather, unbeaten after 13 years and 40 bouts, wanted to be sure his toughest fight to date would be a fair fight. It is also possible that Mayweather, after 13 years and 40 bouts in which he never asked any of his other opponents to undergo random blood testing, wanted not just to get under Pacquiao’s skin literally, but figuratively, too.

There is no solid reason to believe Pacquiao is on performance enhancing drugs. None. There is only suspicion fueled by Pacquiao’s success, suspicion voiced by former 140-pound beltholder Paulie Malignaggi and Mayweather’s father, Floyd Mayweather Sr.

“I believe he’s on some type of supplements,” Mayweather Sr. said in September in an interview with the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press. “Everybody should be checked a little bit more thoroughly. Sometimes people know what’s going on, but they ain’t saying nothing.”

“I think there is something up with Manny Pacquiao,” Malignaggi said in an interview in November with Ryan Burton of BoxingScene.com, shortly after Pacquiao had beaten Miguel Cotto by technical knockout. “Full blown welterweights don’t take those type of punches from Miguel Cotto the way he took them with total disregard for his power, nor do they hurt him with every punch they hit him with. These are full blown welterweights I am talking about. This guy is coming up in weight and doing all these things.”

It didn’t matter that Pacquiao weighed about the same on fight night when fighting as a welterweight as he did on fight night when fighting as a lightweight.

It didn’t matter that Pacquiao had never failed a drug test, though admittedly the state commission urine testing is not as stringent as the necessarily paranoid blood testing that goes on in the Olympics and in the Tour de France.

It didn’t matter what Pacquiao was beating fighters by using his speed and his style, which made him harder to hit, made his punches harder to see and made his punches harder to take.

It didn’t matter that Pacquiao is similar to Mayweather.

Pacquiao, at 16 years old, was a 106-pound professional boxer. At 31, he is an undersized welterweight who doesn’t need to boil down to make weight, who uses movement, speed and smarts to win and has enough power to keep his opponents honest.

Mayweather, at 15 years old, was a 106-pound amateur boxer. At 32, he is an undersized welterweight who doesn’t need to boil down to make weight, who uses movement, speed and smarts to win and has enough power to keep his opponents honest.

It is about pride.

Pacquiao didn’t want blood testing to be done, potentially, at any time, possibly disrupting his training. He balked at the proposed terms of the fight. It didn’t matter that Mayweather would have to undergo the same testing. Pacquiao was offended.

It is possible that Pacquiao felt that Mayweather was attempting a power play, attempting to force Pacquiao to accept terms he had never had to fight under before, to defend himself against unfounded accusations, to prove a negative when there had never been any proof positive.

It is also possible that Pacquiao has used performance enhancing drugs. But that is only because there is never any certainty anymore. Not when so many professional athletes have been caught by tests. Not when so many other professional athletes have been implicated in investigations, even when they found ways not to be caught by tests.

There is no solid reason to believe Pacquiao is on performance enhancing drugs. Pacquiao could have provided even more proof he is not.

Pride comes in several forms. Pacquiao could stick to his pride and refuse to give in to demands that arose out of allegations, especially allegations that arose without evidence. Or Pacquiao could show his pride and show his doubters just how wrong they are.

This isn’t the first time Pacquiao’s pride has gotten in the way.

Pacquiao’s fight with De La Hoya nearly fell apart because Pacquiao wanted more money. Pacquiao’s fight with Hatton nearly fell apart because Pacquiao wanted more money.

Winning the fight is no longer the only thing the boxer worries about. Now it is just as important to land the first blow during negotiations.

Negotiations between Mayweather and Pacquiao’s promoters failed. Mediation failed to produce a compromise both sides could accept. Mayweather’s team said blood testing could end no sooner than 14 days before the fight. Pacquiao’s team wanted 24 days, which is the same point that Pacquiao had given blood prior to another bout.

Now the fight is off. There are no good excuses. There are no good explanations. There are no winners. There are just two too big egos.

The fight could still happen. The money is still on the table, even if the timetable has changed. The fight would still be huge. But it has diminished from what it could have been.

Mayweather has often found ways to tear down fighters others wanted him to face. They have losses on their record. They haven’t beaten anyone. They turned him down in the past.

Meanwhile, Mayweather’s detractors have found ways to tear down the fighters he has faced instead. They are past their prime. They have no chance of winning. There are better opponents out there.

Through his demands of Pacquiao, Mayweather has given his detractors reason to tear down a fighter they wanted him to face. If Mayweather were to face Pacquiao and defeat him, it would be a victory over a Pacquiao who was no longer the unstoppable force supposedly boosted by performance enhancing drugs.

In 2009, Pacquiao reached the pinnacle of a long, brilliant career. He was in “Time” magazine, on television, in the news, in conversations. Now his name has been tarnished without him even losing in the ring.

The accusations had no proof. But with Pacquiao failing to provide proof otherwise, those accusations linger and fester, maligning his reputation, no matter how unfair the situation.

How often do two of the best fighters in a weight class face each other, much less two of the best fighters in the sport? This should have been a year remembered for such a momentous match. Instead, when it comes time to recall what Mayweather and Pacquiao have done, we will be reminded of what Mayweather and Pacquiao did not.

The 10 Count

1. Media coverage of the Mayweather-Pacquiao imbroglio proved to be a double-edged sword. It gave what seemed like play-by-play coverage of the negotiations and eventual collapse, but it also included the compromising of journalistic principles.

It is one thing for media to quote the boxers and promoters as they tear into each other – at least they are doing so on the record. But it is another thing for media to use unfounded rumors or hearsay, never following the basic tenet of “Trust, but verify.”

One longtime boxing writer, Tim Smith of the New York Daily News, cited “a source familiar with the talks” as saying representatives of Pacquiao’s camp asked how Manny Pacquiao would be penalized if he tested positive for performance enhancing drugs – and asking if a positive test could be kept secret “so that the integrity of the fight wouldn’t be ruined in the public eye.”

(The quoted sections were Smith’s words.)

Was this “source familiar with the talks” with Team Mayweather or Team Pacquiao? Political reporters are often chided when they let a member of one party speak anonymously solely for the purpose of attacking the other party. Boxing writers should be held to the same standard.

This very well could have been a calculated leak put forth to shame Pacquiao, and done so anonymously so the source could keep from being held responsible. But we won’t know. We have no clue as to the veracity of and the motivation behind this information.

2. Teddy Atlas seconded Smith’s report in a segment on last week’s season premiere of ESPN2’s “Friday Night Fights.”

“From sources that told me, they said that people in the Pacquiao camp sent a couple of e-mails to the Mayweather camp a few weeks ago, about two, three weeks ago,” Atlas said. “And the first e-mail was ‘What would the penalty be if our guy tested positive?’ The second e-mail was ‘If he did test positive, could we keep this a secret for the benefit of boxing?’

“Again, I don’t know other than my source, who I trust, told me that he saw those e-mails,” Atlas said. “I also know that Tim Smith, the columnist from the Daily News, reported on the same thing I just said.”

Did Atlas see these e-mails? Or is he just reporting what someone told him without verifying what he was told? Wouldn’t journalists for ESPN.com be held to a higher standard than this?

3. And then there was Michael Marley, repeating on Examiner.com an unfounded rumor that appeared to have gotten its start on a couple of boxing message boards. The rumor claimed that Michael Moorer, the former champion who had worked as an assistant at Freddie Roach’s Wild Card Boxing Club, tipped off Floyd Mayweather’s camp about Pacquiao and performance enhancing drugs.

“I don’t put any credence into this rumor,” Marley wrote. “I simply report to you to underline that the dirty pool games will continue between the opposing sides.”

Marley said the rumor came from “some Mayweather caddy,” but the only place I saw it was through message boards, where it spread like how swine flu was supposed to do.

What was the news value to the story? How many message board rumors get similar treatment?

To Marley’s credit, he did follow up in an article that ran Sunday after he got in touch with Moorer.

“Moorer made it plain that he’s no snitch in the first place and, in the second place, he has nothing illegal to report on concerning Pacman,” Marley wrote.

4. The problem doesn’t stop with Smith, Atlas and Marley. The issue is that each has been around the sport for some time, and as such the words of each carries weight. Their words are parroted on boxing news sites, blogs and message boards, and rumor gets repeated and repeated and repeated until it doesn’t matter whether it is even true.

One quick note: I wasn’t sure whether to name Smith and Marley. I was once blindsided by one boxing writer chiding me for something I wrote, and even though he didn’t name me, I was taken by surprise.

But it would have been silly for me to refer to Atlas’ words without naming him, especially when so many boxing fans saw and heard what he said. And it would have been unfair for me to name Atlas without naming Smith and Marley. This was not meant to disrespect any of the three, but rather to ask questions I felt should have been asked.

5. Boxers Behaving Badly update, part one: A judge last week tossed out a weapons charge that had been filed against Daniel Judah, the light heavyweight brother of Zab Judah, according to the New York Daily News.

Judah, 32, was arrested in July 2008 after police were called to a construction site in Brooklyn for a report of a robbery. He was charged with trespassing and criminal possession of a weapon.

But the judge ruled that the gun police found came as a result of an illegal search, that there was “nothing more suspicious than a person holding their pocket” when officers saw Judah.

A spokesman for the prosecutor’s office said they are considering their options as to whether to continue forward with what remains of the case.

Daniel Judah last fought in February 2009, losing a 10-round decision to Glen Johnson. His record is 23-4-3 with 10 knockouts.

6. Boxers Behaving Badly update, part two: Oh, to have been a reporter in the courtroom last week during the trial of light heavyweight titlist Jurgen Brahmer.

Brahmer, 31, is accused of assaulting a woman last year in a bar in the German city of Schwerin.

According to BoxingScene.com correspondent Per Ake Persson, Brahmer’s defense team decided to play a song: Bob Dylan’s “Hurricane,” which tells the story of how former middleweight contender Rubin Carter was wrongly convicted of murder.

The verdict in Brahmer’s case is expected to come this Tuesday (Jan. 12).

7. The prosecution should’ve responded with Inner Circle’s “Bad Boys.”

And if Brahmer is found guilty? The Clash: “I Fought The Law.”

8. Boxers Behaving Badly, part one: British lightweight Henry Castle has been arrested and charged with sexual assaulting a 17-year-old girl early on New Year’s Day, according to the Southern Daily Echo.

Castle, 30, appeared in court last week and was remanded into police custody until Jan. 15. He is also facing a charge of wounding with intent.

Castle’s record is 20-5 with 11 knockouts. His last fight came in July, a points loss to Gary Buckland in an elimination bout for the British Boxing Board of Control lightweight title.

9. Back, for a moment, to Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao – because isn’t that the only story in boxing these days?

Top Rank, which promotes Pacquiao, wasted little time in finding another opponent for its biggest star. Pacquiao will face Joshua Clottey on March 13 at Cowboys Stadium. The fight will be aired on pay-per-view. And though Clottey is coming off a split decision loss to Miguel Cotto (whom Pacquiao went on to stop), this seems like far from an easy fight for Pacquiao.

As for Mayweather, his next opponent has not yet been chosen, according to Richard Schaefer, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, which represents Mayweather.

Schaefer told Kevin Iole of Yahoo! Sports that they’ve contacted several potential opponents, though he did not name them, and that a deal could be reached soon.

Many names have been floated in the rumor mill, but, well, we know how I feel about rumors. One name, Matthew Hatton, the welterweight younger brother of Ricky Hatton, claims Mayweather’s camp has contacted his team three times.

10. Matthew Hatton? Really?

It could be worse…

It could be Bobby Pacquiao…

Source: boxingscene.com

Mayweather's Return Confirmed: Pacquiao PPV Duel is Set

By Rick Reeno - BoxingScene.com spoke with Golden Boy Promotions CEO Richard Schaefer to shed some light on the return date for Floyd Mayweather. There were conflicting reports over the weekend. Speaking to BoxingScene on Sunday night, Schaefer confirmed Mayweather's return for the date of March 13 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Schaefer was representing Mayweather in the failed negotiations to make a fight with Manny Pacquiao. The two sides were unable to reach an agreement on the cut-off date for random drug tests. Both sides made concessions but in the end they couldn't finalize a deal. Mayweather held firm to a 14 day cut-off on the random tests, while Pacquiao held tight on a final proposal for a 24 day cut-off. After weeks of trying to make Mayweather-Pacquaio a reality, Schaefer was obviously disappointed with the final outcome.

"Life goes on. I know it's not the fight the fans wanted to see, but life goes on and the sport of boxing goes on. I hate that it's not going to happen but we all have to move on. Floyd Mayweather made some real concessions, especially in the last week when agreed to the 14 days. You don't always get everything you want under the Christmas tree," Schaefer said.

"It's a blow for the sport of boxing and a setback but life goes on and the sport of boxing will go on. Nobody is happy about it but life goes on with March 13. I do hope that eventually one day the fight will happen."

Top Rank quickly lined up another opponent in Joshua Clottey. They closed the deal on Sunday to stage Pacquiao-Clottey on March 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Schaefer is exploring several possible candidates for the Mayweather fight.

"Floyd is definitely going to fight on March 13. We are working on a few potential opponents for Floyd Mayweather. Hopefully in the next few days we will have something more concrete. I'm really pleased to see that the MGM Grand in Las Vegas is fully behind us and fully behind Floyd Mayweather," Schaefer said.

Because Shane Mosley is fighting Andre Berto on January 30, he is obviously not an option for March. Schaefer has spoken with Mayweather's advisers Leonard Ellerbe and Al Haymon about the possibility of a Mosley clash for a later point in 2010.

"I started to have conversations with Al Haymon and Leonard. March 13 is one fight and there will be others. Shane is considered by most as the best 147-pounder out there. He has a tough fight on January 30 against an undefeated champion, Andre Berto. I'm very excited about that fight and there is a lot at stake, including a possible fight with Mayweather," Schaefer said.

The aftermath of Mayweather-Pacquiao has created a very interesting scenario where arguably the two biggest stars in boxing will headline competing pay-per-view events on the same night.

The promoters have made their decisions. Which way will HBO go? Nobody knows at the moment.

Both Golden Boy and Top Rank are speaking with HBO. Neither side has received their commitment, yet. Top Rank CEO Bob Arum told BoxingScene that he plans to move forward with or without HBO's support.

"I know Top Rank is talking to HBO. I know we are talking to HBO. We will have to see what their position will be and how things will shape up," Schaefer said.

Arum told BoxingScene on Sunday afternoon that he would be willing to revisit a potential Mayweather-Pacquiao fight in the fall - but only if Mayweather drops his demand for Olympic-style random drug tests. If that's the position that Arum and Pacquaio plan to take, Schaefer doesn't see how a deal can possibly get done. Whether they revisit the deal in the fall, or negotiate in 2011, Mayweather will likely demand a binding clause for random drug tests.

"I don't see anything changing. I've read their statements. I just don't see that happening but I'm not the one lacing up the gloves and getting in the ring. I don't think these issues that are there are suddenly going away in the fall. I just don't see that happening," Schaefer said.

Source: boxingscene.com