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I used to think of Manny Pacquiao as a dullard.

In the sense, that is, of producing quotable quotes. I had thought that Pacman was one of the least quotable boxing superstars of my lifetime.

I should qualify this and say a dullard in speaking English.

I thought it was always Cliche City when Pacman's lips were moving.

I thought wrong.

Pacquiao, without any public relations person tugging at his sleeve or anyone scripting his speech, can be eloquent.

Simply eloquent or eloquent simply, take your pick.

But Pacquiao has perfectly handled some recent shockwaves in boxing. His reaction to them has been honest and pitch perfect.

As to Floyd Mayweather's racist/ethnic/homophobic UStream rant, Pacman dismissed it abruptly, labeling it what it was "an uneducated message."

I'm not saying Pacman bit his tongue but most targets of such derision would have responded in kind or should I say responded in unkind?

When news spread of former foe Ricky Hatton on the booze/cocaine skids and recorded on video doing his impression of a top of the line vacuum cleaner, Pacquiao expressed hope, one human being for another, that the Englishman get his priorities in order.

"He shouldn't tell God he has a great problem," Pacquiao said. "He should tell his problem he has a great God."

Let's compare and contrast that to the unread and ill-prepared Mayweather asking, "Is you ready?"

Let's compare and contrast to Mayweather "stacking paper," to his 'making it rain" in strip joints and to his constant shows of and vulgar boasting about his material wealth.

Pacquiao's eloquence is simple and unadorned.

The stroy tells of Pacquiao initals steps, of his finding his place as the Congressman from poverty stricken Sarangani Province.

The real gems from the well-written story are, again, examples of the simple eloquence of this Pinoy legend who never forgets being born in such a humble bed.

"When I'm old, I want my name, Manny Pacquiao, to be known not only as a good boxer but a good public servant."

Wait, there's more.

Pacman on how he is turning all his "pork barrel" money (estimated at $1.6 million for each Congressman), his discretionary funds, over to health and educational projects in the province.

"I don't need it, anyway."

When's the last you heard a pol or a trapo say that?


Pacquiao has one foot in boxing, one in public service.

Pacquiao speaks out on human trafficking, Mayweather speaks X-rated gibberish.

Given their recent past history and Mayweather's plethora of problems going forward, Pacquaio needs to put Floyd in his rear view mirror.

Manny agreed to fully random drug testing, the supposed final hurdle, and still Mayweather demurred.
Hopsitals, schools, battling poverty in Sarangani on all fronts.

You might know that his hometown, General Santos City, and neighboring Sarangani are known for excellent fishing areas.

Floyd Mayweather?

Pacquiao has bigger fish to fry now.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)


Source: http://www.examiner.com

Boxing historian Bert Sugar is picking World Boxing Organization welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao over former welterweight champion Antonio Margarito in their November 13 fight at the Dallas Cowboys Stadium.

Sugar, 73, and former publisher-editor of Boxing Illustrated and Ring magazine, told FanHouse.com’s Elie Seckbach in a brief video interview that Pacquiao is “too fast” for the bigger Margarito, a former three-time world welterweight titlist.

Sugar also thinks that Marga-rito “throws a lot of wild pun-ches,” which would create openings for Pacquiao to deliver his power punches.

But boxing commentator and trainer Teddy Atlas thinks Margarito would pose serious problems for Pacquiao because of his size advantage and power.

“As far as the fight goes with Margarito, I think that’s a dangerous fight for [Pacquiao],” told Percy Crawford of FightHype.com.

“I personally think Pacquiao could lose this fight. I think that you’ve got a naturally bigger guy. He is really the bigger guy because Margarito is a big welterweight. He’s a horse,” Atlas said in breaking Pacquiao-Margarito.

He said the 5’11” Margarito throws a lot of punches and is capable of hitting and hurting Pacquiao.

“[Margarito] presents a lot of areas of danger and real potential problems for Pacquiao that he hasn’t faced for awhile . . . The opportunity is there to hit this guy [Pacquiao],” Atlas said.

Atlas said that although Pacquiao has fought bigger foes before—Oscar De La Hoya, Miguel Cotto and Joshua Clottey—none of them is as big as Margarito, who enjoys a five-inch height advantage and seven-inch reach edge over Pacquiao.

Atlas—a trainer who has worked with the likes of world heavyweight champion Michael Moorer, light heavyweight titlist Danny Lalonde and featherweight champion Barry McGuigan—said he finds the
Margarito fight too risky at this point in Pacquiao’s career, adding that there were less dangerous opponents available for him to fight and still make as much money.

“I’m not sure that if I was managing Pacquiao, that I would be saying, ‘You know what, at this point in his career, he needs to fight Margarito,’” Atlas said.

The HBO pay-per-view televised Pacquiao-Margarito will be for the vacant World Boxing Council junior middleweight title (154 pounds) at an agreed catch weight of 151.


Source: http://www.manilatimes.net

MANILA, Philippines – Former boxing champion “Sugar” Shane Mosley said Floyd Mayweather Jr. should have signed on to fight Filipino champion Manny Pacquiao.

Mosley, who will be fighting Sergio Mora on Saturday (Sunday in Manila), believes that it was Mayweather's boxing inactivity that caused his recent trouble with the law.

"When you're not fighting or getting ready to fight you start to lose focus and you start getting into trouble," Mosley said in a report by NY Daily News.com.

Mayweather is now facing charges of allegedly beating up his former girlfriend Josie Harris. He could face more than 30 years in jail if convicted.

Mosley, who lost to Mayweather last May, said the unbeaten boxer would have been busy training if he had accepted the offer to face Pacquiao.

The Filipino ended up with a November 13 super welterweight bout against Mexican Antonio Margarito.

"He should have stayed in boxing and taken that fight with Manny Pacquiao," said Mosley.

Mosley could turn out to be the next opponent of Pacquiao if both he and the Filipino win against their foes this year.

Mosley is returning to the super welterweight category in his fight against Mora, while Pacquiao is entering the same division in his match against Margarito.


Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com

Act, look and box like Antonio Margarito.

These were the requirements trainer Freddie Roach had in mind while selecting the core of sparring partners he will be bringing in when he arrives in Manila on Sunday for the start of Manny Pacquiao’s training camp for the November 13 title fight with Margarito.

So far, all four fighters – from Vanes Martirosyan to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. – appeared to be in the mold of the controversial 32-year-old Mexican who is a two-time world champion.

Martirosyan, Rashard Holloway and Glen Tapia are flying over with Roach. They will immediately proceed to Baguio City, where Pacquiao is going to hold fort for the first four weeks of his two-month-long training camp.

Chavez Jr. is expected to follow two weeks later.

Already in the country as early as Tuesday was conditioning coach Alex Ariza.

Holloway, Martirosyan, Chavez Jr. and Tapia were carefully scrutinized by Roach, primarily for having the same built and height of Margarito, who at 5-foot-11 is the tallest opponent the 31-year-old Pacquiao will be facing in the ring.

With a 73-inch reach, Margarito also holds a six-inch advantage over the Filipino.

The 24-year-old Martirosyan is a Roach protégé from Armenia who carries a perfect 28-0 record, with 17 KOs. He stands 6-feet and like Margarito, also has a 73-inch reach.

At 5-foot-10, Tapia is the youngest of the four at 20 and is just beginning to embark on a boxing career with a 7-0 record (5 KOs).

A native of New Jersey, Tapia sparred with Joshua Clottey at the time the Ghanaian was training for his 2009 World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight duel with Miguel Cotto.

"Freddie was looking to give Manny a different look in this training camp," said Top Rank vice president of operations Carl Moretti.

"He was looking for a young, aggressive kid to give Manny something to think about, so that it’s not the same old thing. Glenn was the first kid that came to my mind. He’s built a little like Margarito. He’s right-handed, he throws a lot of punches and he’ll give it his all."

Holloway has sparred with Pacquiao several times and even served as the world pound-for-pound champion’s chief sparring partner during his 2008 showdown with the great Oscar De La Hoya.

The 29-year- old American is 11-1 (5 KOs) and stands 5-feet-10.

'Junior’, the son of legendary warrior Julio Cesar Chavez, who is regarded as one of the greatest boxers Mexico ever produced, was originally dropped as one of Pacquiao’s sparmates since Top Rank chairman Bob Arum was arranging a December 4 fight for him against Cotto.

But after negotiations broke down, Chavez Jr. was given the green light to follow the group in the country’s Summer Capital.

Chavez will still see action on the same date in December but opposite a lesser-known opponent. Now being trained by Roach, the Mexican stands 6-feet and boasts of a record 41-0, with 30 KOs. – JVP/KY, GMANews.TV


Source: http://www.gmanews.tv

MANILA, Philippines — The past couple of weeks, Antonio Margarito has been giving his trainer Robert Garcia a wide grin.

“His weight and his conditioning is remarkable,” Garcia told the Bulletin from Los Angeles on Saturday where they have been holed up at the South El Monte Boxing Gym.

Garcia is helping Margarito rev up for a Nov. 13 showdown with Manny Pacquiao and he is more than optimistic of pulling off a surprise come fight night at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

Margarito starts the day jogging in the mountains and by next week, he will also do roadwork at the beach as the training camp shifts to high gear in Oxnard, which is about 40 miles north of Los Angeles.

Even the choices for sparring partners have been finalized and one of them would be Sergio Martinez, the Argentine world champion, said Garcia.

Pacquiao, whose last fight was a lopsided win over Joshua Clottey of Ghana last March, is a huge favorite going into the scheduled 12-round bout for the vacant World Boxing Council super-welterweight crown.

Meanwhile, Freddie Roach is arriving this morning from Los Angeles in preparation for training camp in wwBaguio City sometime in this coming week.

Roach will have two sparring partners with him.

Pacquiao’s adviser Mike Koncz said Pacquiao, who is in General Santos City and should be back in Manila on Monday, plans to travel to the City of Pines either Wednesday or Thursday.


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

Enroute from Los Angeles (Friday) is Freddie Roach---armed with his choice sparring partners ready to take on Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao.

Destination: City of Pines, Baguio City.

Mission: 6-week simulation of Nov 13th MP dance partner Antonio “Manos de Cemento” Margarito.

“Our preparation is like a final exam. It ain’t easy, but good things happen when you work hard,” Roach stressed.

Heading Coach Freddie’s cadre is Michael “Murder Man” Medina, a junior-middleweight who has worked with the likes of Floyd Mayweather, Jr. and Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr.

Medina’s past gym performances with juniors Floyd and JSC impressed Roach, who didn’t hesitate when approached by boxing man Hermie Rivera, and booked him a spot in the crowded team.

Here's the line-up in full:

Michael “Murder Man” Medina , light-middle, (24W, 2L, Draw 2, KO19)
-Aching for a rematch against John Duddy (loss SD 10)
-Possible rematch with Vince Matirosyan ( loss UD 10))

Rashad Holloway, welterweight (11W, 1L, KO 0)
MP “Suki” and Wildcard Gym regular
Slick boxer-puncher according to Examiner.com’s Dennis D’Source Guillermo

Vince “Nightmare” Matirosyan, light middle (28W, 0L, KO17)
Armenian boxer who has a win over current WBC welterweight champion Andre Berto (during the 1st AIBA 2004 American Olympic Qualifying tournament in Tijuana , Mexico)
Has Victories over Joe Greene and Kassim Ouma at light-middle

Glen Tapia, welterweight, (7W, 0L)
A first-timer from Passaic , New Jersey


Source: http://philboxing.com

ALABEL, the Philippines MANNY PACQUIAO’S black Hummer was nowhere in sight. The parade that he was supposed to lead had already wound down in front of the town hall here. His seat, the seat of honor, stood vacant on a stage on which singers, three beauty queens and the province’s ruling political class sat waiting.

Mr. Pacquiao, possibly the best boxer in the world and a new congressman in the Philippines, had awakened at home a little earlier, still jet-lagged from a trip to the United States, where he had been promoting his next fight. He was the main financial sponsor of the annual “foundation day” festival here in Alabel, the capital of Sarangani, the southern province that was carved out of another in 1992 and that he now represents in the House of Representatives.

Perhaps more than anywhere else in the Philippines, feudal-like dynasties dominate here on the impoverished, violence-ridden island of Mindanao. But by brandishing his vast wealth, Mr. Pacquiao — who came out of one of this area’s poorest slums, finished only elementary school and often appears uncomfortable speaking English — defeated a member of the clan that founded Sarangani and that had held the congressional seat for three decades.

Outwardly, the establishment has welcomed Mr. Pacquiao, 31, since he was sworn in as Sarangani’s only congressman less than three months ago.

“It was the public’s choice,” Steve Solon, 39, the vice governor and nephew of the man Mr. Pacquiao beat in a landslide, said at the festival here. “We need to support each other.”

A FEW DAYS earlier, Mr. Pacquiao was getting ready to attend a plenary session in Congress in Manila, the capital, having flown back from the United States the night before. Since taking office, he has given a couple of well-received speeches, including one on human trafficking, and has become a visible presence on the committee to carry out the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, which is led by Imelda Marcos, the former first lady and a newly minted congresswoman.

“So far, so good,” Mr. Pacquiao said in an interview in his office in Congress. With “time management,” he said he would be able to train for his next fight, in November, and fulfill his legislative duties.

Boxing and politics, he said, had been his twin dreams growing up.

“I want to help people, especially in my province,” he said. “There are a lot of poor people. When I’m old, I want my name, Manny Pacquiao, to be known not only as a good boxer but a good public servant.”

He may have become one of the world’s wealthiest athletes — Forbes magazine said he earned $40 million in 2009 — and he may now socialize with Hollywood celebrities, but in the Philippines, his pledge to help the poor resonates because of his now familiar personal history.

He grew up in General Santos City, in a neighborhood that even today is a warren of narrow, dirt roads and ramshackle houses — though now adorned, incongruously, by two mansions belonging to Mr. Pacquiao’s mother and brother. Amateur boxing rings are fixtures of festivals in the countryside, a legacy of the United States’ colonial history in the Philippines. So, like many American boxers, Mr. Pacquiao sought his way out of his old neighborhood through boxing. At 14 years old, he ran away from home, stowing away aboard a ship bound for Manila, where he turned pro a couple of years later.

In the assembly hall, most congressmen sat waiting for the plenary to start. But Mr. Pacquiao moved relentlessly, bantering with colleagues, posing for photos, scanning, in the split seconds he found himself alone, the entire room.

“He can easily become a senator,” said Antonio Tinio, 40, another new congressman, explaining that Senate seats were nationwide offices favoring popular candidates like Mr. Pacquiao. But becoming president or even provincial governor requires the kind of political machine established by dynasties, he added.

Mr. Pacquiao, though, has proven himself a fast learner. He ran for the first time in 2007, naïvely believing that his popularity alone would win him a congressional seat in General Santos City.

“This time, I started forming my machinery two years before the election,” Mr. Pacquiao said.

Choosing to run in Sarangani, his wife’s home province, Mr. Pacquiao wooed local power brokers, showering them and their districts with money.

Reynaldo Constantino, 51, the mayor of one of Sarangani’s seven municipalities, said that since 2007 he has received more than $1.6 million from Mr. Pacquiao to deploy on projects in his district. Whenever the mayor himself needed money for his “image-building,” he turned to Mr. Pacquiao.

“Money in the Philippines is the No. 1 factor in winning elections,” Mr. Constantino, who is known as Bong, said. “Even though he is very popular, he would not have won without his money.”

Like many of Mr. Pacquiao’s constituents, Mr. Constantino said he hoped that the new congressman would now use his personal wealth to develop all of Sarangani, a province dominated by fishing and agriculture. “All of Sarangani will develop now because of Manny and because of Manny’s money,” he said.

MR. PACQUIAO’S black Hummer was finally spotted barreling down the one road from General Santos City, west of here. If there was any doubt that the Hummer was his, the absence of any license plates — a privilege often granted to the powerful here in Mindanao — confirmed it.

Dark clouds had been moving toward Alabel from the other direction and, as if on cue, rain began falling as Mr. Pacquiao took the microphone, nearly two hours late.

Speaking in Visayan, the region’s main language, he said he had been working hard to attract investors to Sarangani. He pledged to build a new hospital here and start other projects to improve people’s lives.

“I will not be an embarrassment to you,” he said.

Later, inside the mayor’s office, Mr. Pacquiao sat at a large desk behind a lechon, a roast suckling pig. People drifted in and out of the office to pick from a buffet. The governor, Miguel Rene Dominguez — the 33-year-old scion of two of the southern Philippines’ oldest and richest families — sat to his left.

The congressman and the governor spoke easily with each other. A conversation about Mr. Pacquiao’s knockout of Ricky Hatton, a British boxer, led to an exchange on the histories of England and Scotland. They talked of the importance of promoting a provincial tourist spot. The governor asked him what he was doing in Manila. Mr. Pacquiao talked about serving on the Millennium Development Goals committee.

Mr. Pacquiao said that he would dedicate all his discretionary pork-barrel budget to Sarangani. Each congressman receives almost $1.6 million a year for pet projects at home, but much of the amount is typically funneled into private accounts.

“I don’t need it anyway,” he said.

Mr. Pacquiao, who was picking at the lechon and chewing on lanzones, a tropical fruit, abruptly stopped eating when the governor stood up and Mr. Pacquiao spotted a switchblade knife in the governor’s right pants pocket. Plucking it out before the governor had noticed, Mr. Pacquiao repeatedly folded and unfolded the switchblade, testing its sharpness with his index finger.

“This is dangerous for children,” he said.

Taking back the knife, the governor showed him how to whip it out of his pocket so that the blade unfolded in a single motion.

“Even if my opponent has this,” Mr. Pacquiao said, “I can beat him as long as he’s physically close to me.”

The governor gave him the switchblade to keep.

“You can thrust it into somebody,” the governor told the new congressman, “and just leave it in there.”


Source: http://www.nytimes.com

Before Muhammad Ali’s third fight with Joe Frazier, Ali called Frazier an Uncle Tom and gorilla. The media thought it was funny and put it all in the context of Ali being a great promoter. Now we have Floyd Mayweather demeaning Manny Pacquiao, whom he will likely fight in the not too distant future to determine which of the two is the best pound for pound fighter in the world, by calling him a yellow midget. But 35 years after the Thrilla in Manila, the media is bashing Mayweather, calling him a racist.

Obviously, Ali and Mayweather were both wrong. But I find it fascinating that Ali was considered a great showman for his actions and Mayweather is called a racist. Is this because Ali had Howard Cosell as his media pimp, because the times have changed, or because Ali was more endearing to the press?


Source: http://blogs.forbes.com

LAS VEGAS - Undefeated boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr has been hit with three more felony charges in a domestic violence case that already had him facing a theft charge.

Clark County District Attorney David Roger significantly raised the ante in the case on Thursday (Friday, Singapore time) alleging that Mayweather hit and threatened the life of his former girlfriend, Josie Harris, and threatened to beat two of their children during a pre-dawn argument at the woman's home a week ago.

Mayweather, 33, is one of boxing's most recognisable figures, with a record of 41-0 and 25 knockouts.

The welterweight earned more than US$20 million ($26.7 million) in May for his fight against "Sugar" Shane Mosley in Las Vegas.

The boxing world are desperate to see him go up against Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines, widely recognised as the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world, but latest developments suggests the mega-fight will never happen.

Mayweather remained free on US$3,000 bail pending arraignment on Nov 9 following his arrest last Friday on a felony grand larceny charge.

The authorities alleged he took mobile phones belonging to Harris and two of their children following the altercation. That felony charge carries a possible sentence of five years.

The new criminal complaint filed on Thursday added two felony coercion and one felony robbery charge along with one misdemeanour domestic battery and three harassment charges.

Convictions on all eight charges would increase the possible penalty Mayweather could face to 34 years in prison.

Mayweather's lawyer, Mr Richard Wright, who previously denied wrongdoing on Mayweather's behalf, claimed he had not seen the new complaint and declined to comment.


Source: http://www.todayonline.com

Manny Pacquiao will attempt to win a title in an eighth weight division when he meets Antonio Margarito for the vacant WBC junior middleweight championship on November 13th at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas, Texas. The first portion of Pacquiao’s training camp will take place in the Philippines and on Friday some key members to the camp left the United States and made their way overseas.

Welterweight hopeful Rashad Holloway, junior middleweight contender Vanes Martirosyan, 20-year old New Jersey prospect Glen Tapia and trainer Freddie Roach will all be joining Pacquiao and strength and conditioning coach Alex Ariza in Baguio City after their flight touches down. From that point forward camp will commence and six individuals from different walks of life will see their world become intertwined with one another.

For a closer look at each man and what they bring to the table please continue on to the pictures below for a picture by picture look at some key members from Team Pacquiao and what to expect from the camp..






On November 13th Manny Pacquiao faces off with rugged Antonio Margarito at Dallas Cowboys stadium. At stake will be the vacant WBC junior middleweight championship of the world (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Pacquiao will train the first portion of his camp in Baguio City in the Philippines, as it is the local that trainer Freddie Roach prefers. The tandem trained their for last November's bout with Miguel Cotto. (Photo: GMANews)



Undefeated junior middlweight Vanes Martirosyan is a long time staple to Roach's Wild Card Gym and will be a key sparring partner to Pacquiao. Martirosyan is originally from Armenia and possesses tremendous length and range (Photo: Chris Cozzone)



Earlier this year in Las Vegas Martirosyan fought a nip and tuck battle with Uganda's Kassim 'The Dream' Ouma, winning a close decision (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



He followed that up with a lackluster ten round nod over Brookyln's Joe Greene on the June 5th Miguel Cotto-Yuri Foreman undercard. Martirosyan is in need of a big win and could be returning to the ring in December. (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Welterweight Rashad Holloway is another key member in the camp (Photo: Facebook picture)



Holloway recently relocated back to Los Angeles from Las Vegas and is now trained full-time by Freddie Roach (Photo: Chris Robinson)



Earlier this year while dining at the Palms Buffet Holloway told me his history with Pacquiao, as he first sparred with the Filipino fighter before his December 2008 bout with Oscar De La Hoya. Holloway and Pacquiao formed a friendship and he says that he hasn't seen Manny for nearly six months (Photo: Chris Robinson)



New Jersey prospect Glen Tapia is a new face on the scene and the 7-0 fighter has generated some buzz by sparring the likes of Yuri Foreman, Joshua Clottey, Paulie Malignaggi, Kendall Holt and others. Top Rank vice president Carl Moretti figured that his speed and youth would be a welcome addition in camp (Photo: Facebook picture)



I spoke to Tapia earlier this week and he expressed how grateful he is for the opportunity. He went on to state that he has always admired Pacquiao and is looking forward to everything (Photo: Facebook picture)



Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. was supposed to also be in camp but now the whole situation is up in the air (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



At last weekend's HBO doubleheader Freddie Roach revealed that promoter Bob Arum told him Chavez would not be making the trip to the Philippines although in recent days Ronnie Nathanielz has reported the Sinaloa fighter will be coming, but just a few weeks later (Photo: Chris Robinson)



Chavez was eyeing a December 4th clash with WBA junior middleweight champion Miguel Cotto but that bout now appears to be off. Cotto may be facing Kermit Cintron on that same date in Atlantic City instead (AP Photo: Mary Altaffer)



We spoke with strength and conditioning coach Alex Ariza earlier in the week, as he touched down in the Philippines before everyone else. Ariza stated that he arrived early to get the groundwork done for all of his work (Photo: AFP-Getty Images)



Source: http://www.examiner.com

PHOTO: Floyd Mayweather Sr., Mike Tyson with young Floyd after 1999 Tyson workout in Las Vegas (Exclusive photo by Michael Brennan)

Embattled Floyd Joy Mayweather Jr. is not going to get the maximum 34 years in prison.

Mayweather will not be bunking in medium security lockup at Lovelock and hanging out with OJ Simpson, either.

In fact, despite the scary headlines, I would not be surprised if Mayweather does not spend any more than another 48 hours in jail...if that.

His lawyers, Karen Winckler and Richard Wright, have represented the fighter before. And they've been faced with the same complainant, Baby Mama Josie Harris.

One such misconception many people have is that Harris can summarily "drop" the charges.

That's not correct.

What Ms. Harris can do, and what she did in a 2003 case that went to trial in 2005 involving Mayweather, is to flip her script.

Butter wouldn't melt in Harris' mouth, much to the chagrin of the Clark County DA's office, when she testified in 2005. From the stand, under oath, she likened Mayweather to a cuddly "teddy bear" and said she knew he would "never lay a hand" on her.

There's no much that can be done to Harris if she recants or becames "a hostile witness" insofar as the prosecution is concerned. No judge is going to hold a purportedly battered women in contempt for not testifying.

It's not like the movies when the "Mob rat" refuses to sing for his supper.

Mayweather has the option at his Nov. 9 arraignment or anytime pretrial to plead guilty or nolo contendere (no contest) to some or all of the charges. To garner such a plea, the DA might opt to drop some other charges.

On the misdemeanor domestic battery charge, where no weapon other than Floyd's hands were used and where Harris suffered no permanent injury, Floyd can only get between two and 180 days in the local hoosegow, a fine of a measly $1,000, 48 hours of community service and six months of counseling on how to keep from battering other people who are not wearing boxing gloves.

There are reasons both the 33 year old Floyd and Harris, age 30, might not want to push this to trial.
Besides any private financial considerations the fighter might make for her and their three children, I doubt either one wants to see nine year old Zion or 10 year old Koraun going through the trauma of testifying against their father.

I went out on the wrong limb in first backing Mayweather due to Harris' 2005 fliflop.

Now I think I am shimmying my way onto the right limb in predicting this case gets settled quickly and quietly.

I predict that Mayweather will enter a domestic batterer's diversion program.

I predict that Mayweather will accept some community service.

I can even see him recording an anti domestic violence TV spot and holding himself up to the community as Mr. Bad Example.

But jail time?

I bet Mayweather won't be in the slammer even for 30 days let alone six months.

Two days? Come on, Floyd can do that standing on his head.

(mlcmarley@aol.com)


Source: http://www.examiner.com

PAUL WILLIAMS and his long-time trainer George Peterson have already started preparing for the South Carolina man’s November 20 rematch with Sergio Martinez who pushed “The Punisher” incredibly close back in December, before going on to take Kelly Pavlik’s world middleweight title. But Williams has already begun to think about the future, post-Martinez and Manny Pacquiao is on the weight-jumper’s radar.

“I like going up and down,” said the former WBO welterweight champion. “Once I get Martinez out the way – and I’m not looking past Martinez – I’d love to get Floyd [Mayweather] but he’s out for a year and I’d love to get [Manny] Pacquiao. If he gets past [Antonio] Margarito, why not give me a shot?”

Williams is not as convinced as most people that the Filipino marvel will have things all his own way against the disgraced Mexican but emphasised the fact he beat a better Margarito in 2007.

“It depends what Margarito has left,” Williams judged regarding the Pacquiao fight. “Because Margarito has had a little shine taken. When I fought him in 2007 that’s when Margarito was at his peak. Now he’s going down a little bit. He’s been taking a lot of punishment and we don’t know how much he got left after that ‘Sugar’ Shane [Mosley] fight, that was a pretty nasty beating he took. It depends on how much he’s recovered and how much he’s got left in him. I definitely think it will be a good fight to see though.”

For now, Williams’ main focus is on old foe Martinez. The Argentine came in as a substitute for Kelly Pavlik, at three weeks’ notice, when the pair first fought. Williams had been preparing for a completely different style of boxer but now knows exactly what to expect.

“Martinez shows his slick stuff, makes you make mistakes and then he’ll counter on you,” Williams explained. “It will definitely be an incredible fight to watch again. It’ll certainly be something to see, but the way I’m feeling now, I don’t think this fight’s going to go the distance.”

Paul was able to combat the late-notice change in opposition due to his incredible fitness and work ethic. He and Peterson realise just how important Williams’ conditioning has been throughout his career.

“Nowadays when we go into camp we work on our conditioning first,” Peterson, who has worked with Williams since the fighter was 15, revealed. “After that we start training for the particular fighter – we train for each fighter differently.

“We get him in top condition. Other guys get lazy but we have to conserve his stamina. We make sure he’s on top of his stamina and then we know he can go out there and execute. In the 12th round – and that’s in every fight he’s fought – he threw more punches than he did in the first. That’s stamina.

We place little emphasis on sparring. We may spar 45-60 rounds for a fight then that’s it. Guys beat themselves to death in the gym, there a lot of wear and tear, we don’t do that.”

Williams is not a fan of every aspect of his brutal regime but understands the purpose of the things Peterson tells him to do.

“I hate sprints, I love the long distance [runs],” Williams stated. “After a while, I got used to the sprints and now it ain’t nothin’, it’s like the faster I do it, the faster I get done.”

And his favourite part of training?

“Yes, when it’s over,” he laughed, “that’s the best part. When he says we’re finished for the day, I’m like, ‘Yes I get to go back to the house, lay down and go to sleep’.”


Source: http://www.boxingnewsonline.net

When news first broke of the domestic dispute involving Floyd Mayweather and the mother of three of his children, it was widely expected that he would probably get away with a slap on the wrist. Perhaps a minor jail term if he was unlucky, but more likely nothing that would keep him out of the ring for any substantial amount of time.

When it was announced by the Clark County district attorney's office yesterday that he was being charged with 4 felonies and 4 misdemeanors though, that widely held belief changed instantly.

At this stage it's anyone's guess what kind of time Mayweather will actually get, or whether perhaps his former girlfriend will drop the charges the same as she did after a similar incident several years ago.

Of all the people to weigh in on the issue so far, Manny Pacquiao, who takes on Antonio Margarito for the vacant WBC junior middleweight title in November, has so far remained characteristically reserved.

For Mayweather's long time rival though, the news will be something of a mixed blessing. With Floyd probably out of the picture, or at least out of the ring for the foreseeable future, Pacquiao will become the sole major pay per view draw in the sport today. Meaning that even more opponents will be lining up to take him on and that he should be able to hold onto the top spot on most pound for pound lists until he chooses to retire.

Not to mention the constant accusations of supposed steroid use that Mayweather et al directed towards him should abate to some degree. While Floyd's father and uncle will remain, with the intrigue over the possibility of bout between Floyd and Manny removed they will have less cause to come out with anything controversial, and probably won't be asked for comment as often either.

The downside to Pacquiao though is that unable to face his greatest rival it isn't clear whether his star will be able to rise much higher than it already has. His pay per view sales might be given a slight boost now that, for the time being, he is the only regular pay per view fighter. But without a steady stream of interesting opponents he will probably struggle to consistently put up the kind of numbers he has in the past. Even Floyd Mayweather needed to beat Oscar De La Hoya to truly become a huge draw, and Pacquiao now perhaps lacks that true rival that Mayweather provided him with.

Greg Evans, Pittsburgh: "Margarito, Marquez then the best of the light welters then retirement, all Pacquiao needs to do. Floyd just needs to concentrate on not dropping the soap or bragging about how much money he has in the yard"

Stevie Saunders, Philly: "I think Manny would see it as a shame in a way, part of the reason he got so popular was because Floyd was always talking s**t about him and now he won't have that"



Source: http://www.examiner.com

"As far as the fight goes with Margarito, I think that's a dangerous fight for him. I personally think Pacquiao could lose this fight. I think that you've got a naturally bigger guy. He is really the bigger guy because Margarito is a big welterweight. He's a horse. He has the stuff that happened in the past, but as far as physicality, this is a big welterweight. He is a guy that throws a lot of punches, he's a guy that is physically strong and, up until the Mosley fight, as you touched on, he was very confident. I think that with this fight with Pacquiao, it presents a lot of areas of danger and real potential problems for Pacquiao that he hasn't faced for awhile...The opportunity is there to hit this guy. And that opportunity will be there for Margarito. And the only way I can look at it, and again, if you can't say what you believe, then you shouldn't say anything. To me, it's the right fight for his promoter, Bob Arum. Arum can't lose; he's got both guys. I'm not sure that it's the right fight for Pacquiao because to me, Pacquiao can make money with a lot of guys. He ain't making extra money because it's Margarito," stated ESPN commentator and world-class trainer Teddy Atlas, who shared his thoughts on the November 13 showdown between Manny Pacquiao and Antonio Margarito. You don't want to miss what else he had to say about Pacquiao, Margarito, Hatton, De La Hoya and much more.

PC: You have already stated on Friday Night Fights how you felt about the Texas Commission granting Antonio Margarito his license. Now we are past that, because the fight is happening, so how do you see it playing out? Does Margarito have a chance or will he be another Pacquiao victim? Will Pacquiao capture his 8th title in 8 divisions?

TA: You know, I don't think these guys have 8 titles or 10 titles and stuff like that. I don't think they are real titles. You know, some of these titles are ridiculous; junior middleweight this and the in-between that. There are so many titles and so many weight divisions that, after awhile, if you wanted to and you aspired to, you could have 15 titles if that was your goal. They would create one for you if you needed them to, so I don't think about 8 titles. When I think about the greatest guy who has fought and had multiple titles, I don't think about these guys. I think about Henry Armstrong. That's a man. And it's not that these guys aren't, and they are all great in their places in time and place where they fit in right now, and I give them all of the credit for that, but come on? I mean, 8 titles? Henry Armstrong won the featherweight title, the lightweight title, welterweight title and full titles when there were so many good fighters around. And then he won the middleweight title against Ceferino Garcia, but they robbed him and made it a draw. So really, he won the featherweight, lightweight, welterweight and middleweight title. He should have had the middleweight title and he defended all of those titles. When I think about multiple titles, I think about that guy. I think of guys like that, where there were 4 titles and the best guys were around. There weren't spots to where you could pick a spot and just walk into a spot if you had a broken hand, and you could walk into that spot because you knew it was a very soft spot. That's what I think of. I'm not taking nothing away from Pacquiao, but I don't think of his greatness because you attach 8 titles. I'm just thinking of his talents, his speed, his confidence level, his punch output and his improvements over the last couple of years. He comes at you from different angles now. He offers different problems for you now, where before, you used to look for the big punch and now, you have to worry about the right hand and not just the left hand. I look at that and give him credit for those things, but I'm not going to go overboard with the 8 titles.

As far as the fight goes with Margarito, I think that's a dangerous fight for him. I personally think Pacquiao could lose this fight. I think that you've got a naturally bigger guy. He is really the bigger guy because Margarito is a big welterweight. He's a horse. He has the stuff that happened in the past, but as far as physicality, this is a big welterweight. He is a guy that throws a lot of punches, he's a guy that is physically strong and, up until the Mosley fight, as you touched on, he was very confident. I think that with this fight with Pacquiao, it presents a lot of areas of danger and real potential problems for Pacquiao that he hasn't faced for awhile. If you go back, and take nothing away from him, but if you go back to the fights that were really the marquee fights that made his career...put aside the Marquez fights, which were great fights that some people thought he didn't win both of those fights, so that's one thing, you can make an argument that he might not have won (laughing).

Put that aside and you look at De La Hoya and you can make the argument that De La Hoya was dead at the weight, you can make the argument that he is a shot fighter and you can also make the argument that De La Hoya never won a big fight. He never won a big fight. There was just something really wrong with De La Hoya where he would find a way to lose in big fights. Some people will say he beat Quartey. That wasn't considered a big fight. In fact, I think that was De La Hoya's last HBO appearance before he became a pay-per-view star. But if you look at the big fights in his [De La Hoya's] career, he lost them, so you look at that fight and the Ricky Hatton fight, and Hatton may have been a bigger guy, but he wasn't a puncher. I know it's easy to say after the fact, but going in there, you can say he was made to order for Pacquiao. He throws wide punches, he's not a big puncher, he's right in front of you and if you close your eyes, he's right in front of you. And he's going to start a punch from too far away. I remember when I watched the 24/7 and he was training with this guy that had a big body protector on. And he was punching at that body thing and I thought to myself, "Wait a minute, that body suit sits out about 6 or 7 inches from his body. That means he has to bring his hands back to throw a punch 6 inches before he normally would." Normally you would get a little closer to a guy to throw a punch, but now he's throwing the punch from further away because the piece actually comes out and protrudes from his body 6 or 7 inches. So if you're starting to throw those punches 6 or 7 inches out from where you are supposed to throw it, you're exposing yourself to a counter punch when you're starting from that far out, and he was actually practicing it in the gym. I remember watching that and making the comment on it on ESPN and everyone thought I was crazy. We love stuff that's illustrative, so everyone was saying, "That's great and that looks great." But we're not looking close and I'm thinking, every time he throws a punch, it's from further and further away then he's supposed to. That means he's making a space that's available to throw in between. He's exposing himself, and sure enough, he goes into the fight, he goes to throw a punch and bang! Pacquiao hits him with a punch right inside of those shots. Mayweather did it to him too; same thing, right inside of his shot. You can also say, "Well, Cotto was a bigger guy." You can also say Cotto was a damaged guy. You can say Cotto never recovered from the Margarito fight. He took a terrible punishment in that fight mentally, emotionally and physically, so you can say that he was a guy that was made to order. So you take all of those, again, you don't want to take nothing away from Pacquiao, but you want to be honest about it. He had guys that were set up perfectly for him.

Now, you got a guy in Margarito, who really, truly is a bigger guy. I can't really say none of those other guys were guys who were going to have a big, physical advantage because of all of the things I just mentioned. But this guy, we can make that case. I can say, "Margarito is going to be a bigger and more physical guy." Then you say, "Pacquiao is going to be faster and more clever and trickier." And then you look at the Clottey fight, and Clottey threw punches like he was paying for them and he was the cheapest guy in the world. He was throwing punches like they were charging him $10,000 a punch and he had a budget of $5,000. He didn't throw any punches. But I watch that fight, and he threw maybe 7 punches the whole night. Of course I'm exaggerating, but he threw a small amount of punches the entire night, and 4 of them were uppercuts and I think all 4 uppercuts landed. I remember watching it and saying, "Oh my God, look at this. He threw 4 uppercuts in the whole night of boxing and all 4 landed." I thought to myself, wow, you know what? If he was to fight a guy that was more willing, more confident, more disciplined, more prepared, more professional, or whatever you want to call it, but a guy that let his hands go, guess what? The opportunity is there to hit this guy. And that opportunity will be there for Margarito. And the only way I can look at it, and again, if you can't say what you believe, then you shouldn't say anything. To me, it's the right fight for his promoter, Bob Arum. Arum can't lose; he's got both guys. I'm not sure that it's the right fight for Pacquiao because to me, Pacquiao can make money with a lot of guys. He ain't making extra money because it's Margarito. Please don't try to sell me that because I ain't buying. He can make money, comparable money, with a lot of guys. We know the real big one is Mayweather. We understand that, but he can make money with a lot of guys. He doesn't have to fight Margarito, but for Arum, it makes a lot of sense because he can't lose because he's got both guys. I'm not sure that if I was managing Pacquiao that I would be saying, "You know what? At this point in his career, he needs to fight Margarito."

PC: I remember you speaking on air about the telling damage to Pacquiao's face after the Clottey fight. You feel Margarito will actually be more effective than that because he's busier?

TA: We get caught up sometimes in seeing what we want to see. We see the blur of Pacquiao because he's very fast, he's throwing a million punches to the other guy's handful, and we're walking away saying, "wow," because that's all a lot of us saw. It's not all we saw. We did see the other guy throw a very small amount of punches, but they landed and they did damage.

CHECK OUT PART 1 OF THIS EXCLUSIVE IN-DEPTH INTERVIEW WITH TEDDY ATLAS

CHECK OUT PART 2 OF THIS EXCLUSIVE IN-DEPTH INTERVIEW WITH TEDDY ATLAS


Source: http://www.fighthype.com

Floyd Mayweather’s September of discontent continues. It started with a racist video rant targeting his chief rival Manny Pacquiao. Next up a domestic battery complaint filed by Josie Harris, the mother of three of his children. The latest criminal complaint adds felony theft and coercion charges relating to the battery incident. Convictions on all eight charges carry a penalty of up to 34 years in jail.

This is hardly Mayweather’s first run-in with the law (details here). He was acquitted by a Las Vegas jury of assaulting Harris in 2005. If Mayweather can escape jail time once again, his earnings potential shouldn’t take a hit at all. Mayweather made $65 million between June 2009 and June 2010 which ranked second on our list of the world’s 50 highest paid athletes. He made $25 million for his bout with Juan Manuel Marquez and netted $40 million for his fight against Shane Mosley after the fight did 1.4 million pay-per-view buys (Mayweather served as promoter of the bout which boosted his take).

Mayweather has raised his profile in recent years with a stint on ABC’s Dancing with the Stars and as HBO’s biggest star in its 24/7 reality series. His outrageous behavior on 24/7 has helped make him boxing’s biggest draw because crazy sells in boxing. If you are a great fighter and act crazy even better when it comes to the promotion for a fight. Look at the poster child for great fighters acting crazy: Mike Tyson. His 12 PPV boxing matches garnered 12.4 million PPV buys worth $545 million, both records on a per event basis (let’s hope “Money” Mayweather does a better job with his money than Iron Mike who declared bankruptcy in 2003).

While Mayweather should be very worried about the Nevada courts with this case, he doesn’t have to worry about his behavior making personal sponsors skittish and bailing out on him because he doesn’t have any. He has had small deals with Reebok and AT&T in the past, but doesn’t have any endorsement deals currently. Everything Mayweather does is about promoting the next fight and driving PPV buys which is how he makes his money. If Mayweather can stay out of prison he will continue to be among the world’s highest-paid athletes.


Source: http://blogs.forbes.com

In his regular column on Philboxing.com written in the local dialect, popular Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao says boxing is his passion, his life and his first love.

Pacquiao says he feels differently whenever he steps into the ring. He recalls when he watches his brother Bobby Pacquiao fights, he feels nervous and uneasy. But once he steps into the squared ring, he feels unusually different.

"Once I am up in the ring, my fears are transformed into excitement and joy because this is really the sport where I started my career and eventually built my fortune", Pacquiao said in his column.

"Boxing changes me", Pacquiao said. "Being a congressman and being able to help and inspire other people around me, completes me", he added.

In his regular column, Pacquiao talked about his forthcoming fight with giant Antonio Margarto in the junior middleweight division.

Pacquiao is aiming for his 8th title in eight different divisions, a feat that no other boxer in history has achieved in his professional career. Pacquiao is determined to be the first to break into this prestigious title.

Margarito is much superior than Pacquiao in terms of height, reach and general body built. The Mexican boxer enjoys five inches advantage in height and four inches in reach over the Filipino boxer.

Pacquiao's weapon against the giant boxer from Mexico is his speed and power. Pacquiao is currently a 4-1 favorite to win over Margarito despite his superior built and equally superior punching power.

In his message to boxing fans, Pacquiao said, he needs to take nutritious food and to maintain a balanced diet. because he needs to gain more weight for the junior middleweight division fight.

"My plate should always be full otherwise, my weight will fall and Margarito's edge will even get bigger on top of his reach and height advantages.

In boxing, taking care of my health is very important and a good foundation for my victory in the sport," he said.

As he touches on the health issue of boxers, he shifted to his friend and former opponent Ricky Hatton of England who is currently having problems with drug addiction.
"When I learned about Ricky Hatton's addiction to illegal drugs, I felt sad because I considered him a friend. I know he is a kind friend and a joyful person outside the ring.
I wish Ricky can sort out his own life", Pacquao said. Don’t tell God that you have a big problem, but tell your problem that you have a great God".Pacquiao advises his friend Ricky. If we put God at the center of our lives, there's nothing impossible.

"Like in every training that I go through and whenever I put God at the center of whatever I do, I feel happy and I eventually get over the hardship even if I have to face a giant opponent," Pacquiao added.

Pacquiao is scheduled to face Antonio Margarito on November 13 at the Dallas Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

The popular Filipino boxer has started training in Manila ahead of the arrival of his trainer, Freddie Roach who is scheduled to arrive over the weekend to start formal training in Baguio, a mountain city located around 300 kilometers north of Metro Manila.


Source: http://www.digitaljournal.com

-Miguel Cotto vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Second Most Popular-

ProBoxing-Fans.com has been running a poll to see which fight fans are most excited about for the fall. The results will come as surprising to many hardcore boxing fans, particularly those based in the United States. In overwhelming numbers, the results show that fans are most excited to see the Manny Pacquiao vs. Antonio Margarito bout. Could this really be true? According to our very unscientific survey, yes.

Here are the full results of the poll as of September 17th:
Pacquiao vs. Margarito: 248 votes - 64%
Miguel Cotto vs. Julio Cesar Chavez Jr.: 51 votes - 13%
Juan Manuel Lopez vs. Rafael Marquez: 31 votes - 8%
Juan Manuel Marquez vs. Michael Katsidis: 20 votes - 5%
Arthur Abraham vs. Carl Froch: 19 votes - 5%
Andre Ward vs. Andre Dirrell: 10 votes - 3%
Bernard Hopkins vs. Jean Pascal: 9 votes - 2%


Of course, the Abraham vs. Froch bout is now postponed, and the Dirrell vs. Ward bout is in jeopardy, but nonetheless, the results are very surprising. Two thirds of boxing fans chose Manny Pacquiao vs. Antonio Margarito as the fight they want to see most!

However, the numbers probably don't represent what most American boxing fans are interested in. In full disclosure of the poll, over the past 10 days, ProBoxing-Fans.com has received a very good share of its website traffic from users in the Philippines, who of course are all diehard Pacquiao fans. As boxing enthusiasts know, Pacquiao fans around the Internet certainly seem more likely to make their voice heard as well, posting comments, expressing ideas, and yes, voting in polls.

They are one of the most faithful and loyal fan bases there is. So while Pacquiao vs. Margarito gets the most fan support in our poll, there are still doubts as to whether this really represents the pulse of the boxing community elsewhere around the world, including in the United States, the UK and so on. This is just a fun, unscientific poll, but the fans' voices have been heard loud and clear.

Another surprise with the poll results was that Cotto vs. Chavez Jr. came in second place. For many American fight fans, the number 1 and 2 winners are more likely to be the number 1 and 2 fights in the "least looking forward to" category. However, the results are what they are, and the numbers don't lie. Those numbers overwhelmingly show that Pacquiao vs. Margarito is what fans are waiting to see.

So if you disagree with the results of this poll, then make your voice heard and vote, available on the right sidebar of this website. If you agree with the poll results, then go ahead and vote anyway and increase the huge lead that Pacquiao vs. Margarito holds on the other bouts. Thanks for participating in the poll, and we'll have another one up shortly.


Source: http://www.proboxing-fans.com

Elie Seckbach, the Embedded Correspondent, brings his exclusive video reporting to FanHouse. Check back regularly for more videos.

FanHouse caught up to boxing exper, Bert Sugar, who picks WBO welterweight (147 pounds) titlist Manny Pacquiao over ex-champ Antonio Margarito in their HBO pay per view televised Nov. 13 WBC junior middleweight (154 pounds) clash, and weighs in on Saturday's junior middleweight battle between ex-titlists Shane Mosley and Sergio Mora, as well as the Dec. 11 bout between junior welterweights (140 pounds) Amir Khan and Marcos Rene Maidana, respectively, the WBA king and the WBA interim champ.

Pacquiao-Margarito is being promoted by Top Rank Promotions, and both Mosley-Mora, and, Khan-Maidana, by Golden Boy Promotions.






Source: http://boxing.fanhouse.com

-Mayweather Facing 8 Felony & Misdemeanor Charges Combined-

More charges were added to the list that Floyd Mayweather will be facing, stemming from a domestic violence incident with Mayweather's former girlfriend, and mother to three of his children, Josie Harris. Mayweather now faces four felony and four misdemeanor charges altogether. If convicted, Mayweather could face up to 34 years in prison.

The charges include two counts of felony coercion with his children, in attempting to get them to not say anything to the police, a felony robbery charge and felony grand larceny charge for the taking of the iPhone from Harris, one misdemeanor domestic battery and three misdemeanor harassment charges.

Mayweather was released following his arrest on $3,000 bail. The new charges that have been added though make this a much more serious situation for Mayweather, his career and his life. The potential to face 34 years in prison is certainly not something that should be looked at lightly.

On November 9th Mayweather will go back to court to face his arraignment, when more will be learned about the charges he faces, what the prosecutors intend to do, and what Mayweather has to say about everything. Mayweather has not made any public comments, but his lawyer Richard Wright has said that Mayweather will be found innocent, and that the truth will come out in court.

This adds to the stream of negative publicity that Mayweather has received already over the past few weeks, stemming for his racist diatribe about Manny Pacquiao that he posted with a video online. That video, childish and provoking as it was, pales in comparison though to the charges he can face here.


Source: http://www.proboxing-fans.com

Elie Seckbach, the Embedded Correspondent, brings his exclusive video reporting to FanHouse. Check back regularly for more videos.

On Sept. 18 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, super featherweight (130 pounds) David Rodela (15-3-2, six knockouts) will take on Juan Montiel (4-3, one KO) on an under card that also features his former sparring partner, junior welterweight (140 pounds) Victor Ortiz (27-2, 22 KOs) against ex-champion Vivian Harris (29-4-1, 19 KOs).

The HBO pay per view televised main event has Shane Mosley (46-6, 39 KOs) facing Sergio Mora (22-1-1, six KOs) in a junior middleweight (154 pounds) battle of former world champions.

Rodela weighs in on Ortiz as well as the general event, which is being promoted by Golden Boy Promotions, as well as the Top Rank Promotions, Nov. 13 WBC junior middleweight match up between WBO welterweight (147 pounds) king Manny Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs) and ex-champion Antonio Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs).






Source: http://boxing.fanhouse.com

The self-proclaimed face of boxing was captured last week in a booking photo. Floyd Mayweather Jr. looks as if he has a chance to go to the senior prom instead of prison. He’s smiling.

Or is that a sneer? Whatever it is, it’s no joke.

It turned deadly serious Thursday with news that the Clark County Attorney’s office in Las Vegas has charged Mayweather with four felony counts of coercion, robbery and grand larceny in addition to four misdemeanor counts on battery and harassment for an alleged incident involving former girlfriend Josie Harris on Sept. 9.

Just a couple of months ago, it looked as if Mayweather, who faces 34 years behind bars if convicted on all charges, would be busy in early November. He will be, but not against Manny Pacquiao. Mayweather is scheduled for arraignment in Las Vegas on Nov. 9, four days before he was supposed to have Pacquiao on his schedule.

Instead, Pacquiao faces Antonio Margarito on Nov. 13 at Cowboys Stadium in Dallas.

Instead of a record-setting payday against Pacquiao, Mayweather has a chance at being O.J. Simpson’s roommate. Why-oh-why is he smiling? There’s a theory that none of this would have happened if Mayweather had agreed to the fight. He would have been in training. The regimen would have keep him busy and out of trouble.

It’s a good argument, but not convincing, at least not from this corner. He is always training. It’s routine, Mayweather’s lifestyle. So, too, is trouble, which has always lurked like a bad rumor. Yet, Mayweather has been able to elude serious consequences, including assault complaint in 2003 from Harris, who backed off the allegation at a trial in 2005. Oscar De La Hoya, a regular target of Mayweather’s trash-talk, has taken the high road, expressing sympathy for his former rival and current promotional client.

Maybe, Mayweather’s troubles are a cry for help, De La Hoya said while promoting the Shane Mosley-Sergio Mora fight Saturday night at Los Angeles’ Staples Center in a week-long celebration of the 200-year anniversary of the Mexican Revolution.

Maybe, but Mayweather’s self-destructive spiral might be a symptom of something predicted a couple of years ago by Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum, Mayweather’s former promoter. Months before two rounds of failed negotiations, Arum said Mayweather wouldn’t fight Pacquiao because the welterweight didn’t want to take a chance at jeopardizing his unbeaten record.

Late last year, Mayweather suddenly shattered an apparent agreement for a bout in March by parroting unconfirmed gossip that Pacquiao used performance-enhancers. The deal fell apart with Mayweather’s demand for random, Olympic-style drug-testing.

A couple of months ago, there was a flurry of speculation, including a midnight media call with Arum. Again, there was no deal, yet many denials from the Mayweather camp about whether there were any talks at all.

A couple of weeks ago, Mayweather unleashed a racist, homophobic video directed at Pacquiao. The alleged incident at the Harris’ residence in Las Vegas quickly followed.

If there is a parallel, maybe it is Mike Tyson. During his days of rage, commentator Teddy Atlas, who also trained the retired heavyweight, theorized that Tyson’s behavior was the expression of a fighter doing everything he could not to fight.

Sound familiar? It’s beginning to.

Mayweather acts as if he is doing all he can not to fight Pacquiao.

Maybe that explains the smile.


Source: http://www.15rounds.com

ARLINGTON, TX - Tickets for the Manny Pacquiao vs. Antonio Margarito fight November 13th go on sale officially Saturday September 18th at the ticket office of Cowboys Stadium in Arlington.

Tickets range from: $700, $500, $300, $200, $100 and $50.

Tickets can also be purchased by phone at 800-745-3000 or on line at
WWW.ticketmaster.com.

About 50,000 tickets were sold for the last Pacquiao card at the stadium March 13th and a bigger crowd is anticipated for this one because of the large Hispanic following of Margarito in North Texas.

In a 10 round fight, Kelly Pavlik will face Haitian Daniel Edouard. Pavlik, 36-2 (32 KO's) is a former middleweight champion while Edouard is 23-2-3 (14 KO's).

Dallas' own Roberto Marroquin, 15-0 (12 KO's) featherweight will face TBA.
Other fights are to be announced.


Source: http://www.examiner.com

The drama surrounding Floyd Mayweather Jr. continues to build as it was revealed late last night that the superstar fighter is facing even more charges in relation to his September 10th altercation with the mother of three of his children, Josie Harris at one of her homes in Las Vegas, Nevada. Mayweather reportedly assaulted Harris in front of his own children while also offering up death threats to the 31-year old and her companion which resulted in charges of assault and larceny after he also reportedly took off with her iPhone.

Now it looks like Floyd is facing eight charges in total, including three felony counts of grand larceny, robbery and coercion. Floyd also has four misdemeanors which include battery and three counts of harassment, says the local DA. If found guilty Mayweather’s career would likely be over as he could be looking at up to 28 years in Nevada prison.

One man who has seemed to be visibly saddened by the news is the fighter’s father Floyd Mayweather Sr. who has had his share of separation from the 33-year old over the past ten years. While Floyd Sr. has always been one in the past to talk with extreme vigor, his candor changed completely when discussing the bumpy road that awaits his boy.

“I’m not telling any stories about my son,” Floyd Sr. stated candidly. “What he did was bad but I’m pretty sure that he is sorry for whatever he did though. But that doesn’t make it right that he did it. I would have to believe that there is more to it than we have heard.”

While one could be forgiven for taking the elder Mayweather’s words with a grain of salt due to his obvious attachment to his son, Floyd Sr. went on to state that he saw first hand where Lil’ Floyd’s frustration may have came from. Father and son crossed paths this past Sunday at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino during an amateur show and Senior revealed that Floyd opened up to him more so than in years past.

“There was a lot of things that he showed me that could have ticked him off and it would have ticked me off too,” Mayweather said. “Most people think it was just about another guy but it was a lot of text messages that she was texting him saying that she wanted money, money, money. My understanding was that she has spent quite a bit of money. I really can’t say exactly what it is but I would have to say it was more than just a guy. I’m just saying from what was on his screen on the telephone that there was definitely more than meets the eye.”

Just a few months prior I spoke to Floyd Sr. about his estranged relationship with Lil’ Floyd and he didn’t hold back any feelings in a raw and uncut thirty-five minute tirade, calling into question Floyd’s lifestyle and choices he has made in life. But with such a serious issue now hovering over his head the 57-year old’s true feelings have come to the surface.

“I don’t wish him bad,” Senior claimed. “That’s my son. At the end of the day whether he does right or wrong that’s still my son. Of course I don’t want to see him in this kind of trouble. It doesn’t look good. I hope he gets out of it and pulls himself together and walks the straight path and do the right thing. I definitely don't believe all that was said but I can’t really say because I don’t really know. He showed me enough things to let me know that if I were him I would be mad as hell myself.”

In recent times Floyd Sr. only made headlines if he was boasting of his own abilities or verbally chastising Filipino icon Manny Pacquiao, who is the one man people have wanted to see Mayweather fight most. All of that talk is now in the background as something far more serious has risen to the surface and you can tell from the tone in his voice that Mayweather Sr. is concerned.

“I don’t care who you are. When things ould this come into play it humbles you. It makes you think. It makes you realize a whole lot of things. I’m just saying that I’ve been through that road he is going on and I’ve been in prison. Going to prison is not a good thing. Even though you are who you are in the world, they don’t give a damn about you up in there. Because when you go there you are just a prisoner. They used to call me champ up in prison but you know what? I was just a prisoner like they were.”

For a picture by picture look at Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Sr. together please continue on to the images below…


Floyd Sr. and Jr. during training camp for the May 1st Shane Mosley bout (Hoganphotos-GBP)



The Mayweathers following one of Floyd's biggest wins, his January 2001 TKO over Diego Corrales (Photo: Nasser Khan-UPI)



The Mayweathers again (Getty Images)



The Mayweathers (Photo: Hoganphotos-GBP)



Floyd Sr. in Las Vegas earlier this year (Photo: Chris Robinson)



Junior hitting the pads with Uncle Roger (AP Photo: Jae C. Hong)



Floyd Jr. speaking to the media before his fight with Zab Judah in April of 2006 (Photo: Chris Farina-Top Rank)



Floyd entering the ring (Photo:HBO)



Senior with Ricky Hatton before their bout against Manny Pacquiao (AFP-Getty ImageS)



Source: http://www.examiner.com

Four felonies and four misdemeanors had me scrambling for the back of an envelope and finally a calculator and all I could figure was the November 9th court date in Las Vegas will be more significant than the date of any past or future fight date Floyd Mayweather, Jr. may ever have.

The moment of insanity last week may curse Mayweather and his family for the rest of his life.

While many were down on Mayweather for not having signed to fight Manny Pacquiao, you must admit 10 days ago he was on top of the world.

He was at the absolute peak of his earning power and popularity.

His only hope is if his former girlfriend, Josie Harris, recants her charges as she did in 2005 over an alleged 2003 assault. She is the mother of three of the Mayweather children.

Mayweather's uncle and trainer, Roger, faces an October 25 trial also for assault and battery involving a female boxer and tenant.

Gifted Grand Rapids (MI) Reporter David Mayo wrote Thursday that those Mayweather called his "haters" may have their day to gloat after all. That he may end up broke or in prison.

Not knowing Josie, I don't know if she has matured since she changed her tune back in 2005. I don't know if she has the conviction to say the truth, whatever it is, in court and see her financial meal ticket and father to her children go to federal prison for a stretch.

Just like we don't know how an even fight will turn out. We don't know about this trial but it's sure happening swiftly, just 60 days after the alleged offense.

Mayweather could walk with a slap on the wrist, a year's time or upwards of 30 years if they really throw the proverbial book at him.

I don't think the media circus we should expect has even begun yet with so much else happening in the world. Oh, but it certainly will before too long.


Source: http://www.examiner.com

FILIPINOS in the Rio Grande area of Texas were very disappointed over the last-minute cancellation of a fund-raising dinner which was supposed to be graced by boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao.

The $250-a-plate dinner on Saturday at the McAllen Convention Center was cancelled after the congressman from Saranggani advised organizers that he would not be able to make it.

“No reason was given, we were left to guess,” said former sportswriter Chito Sagana of nearby Edinburgh, Texas, in an overseas phone call. He had bought tickets for him and his nurse-wife Janice to the Sept. 18 affair.

“We are all wondering if he had work to do in Congress, if the $250,000 appearance fee was not adequate, or if there was a loophole somewhere because it was not him who signed the contract with the Filipinos here,” Chito said.

“Pacquiao said the dinner with him will be moved to November, most likely after his fight with Antonio Margarito in Dallas, Texas.”


Source: http://www.inquirer.net

"Don’t tell God that you have a big problem, but tell your problem that you have a great God"-- Manny Pacquiao

Sometimes, some people get so far that they forget how they got to where they are. Manny Pacquiao is perhaps the most revered sports figure in Philippine Sports history thanks to his ring exploits, pugilistic brilliance and crowd-pleasing aggressive fighting style. As much as he is an exceptional athlete however, Pacquiao is also beloved for the manner in which he conducts himself outside the ring. Before he ever conceived of even donning the label of a seven division world boxing champion, Pacquiao was being hailed as The People's Champion for his gregarious personality and humble demeanor. But the one thing that truly stands out about Pacquiao is his faith. From day one, Pacquiao has attributed his success to his faith and has made it a point to humble himself and whatever achievements he may have accomplished to THE MAN upstairs.

Perhaps that is why even despite the astronomical rise Pacquiao has had, and even during times when he is hit with controversy, the Pac Man has remained steady. During times when big-named sports figures like Floyd Mayweather Jr. make headlines for the wrong reasons, it's refreshing to know that there are still truly admirable role models we can look up to in sports. When Mayweather was hurling racial slurs and baseless allegations about him being on steroids, Pacquio remained silent and handled himself with class. So it's only fitting that months after the same incriminating allegations that Pacquiao continues making good news as a boxer and lawmaker while Mayweather has been hurling hate comments and making tabloids as a lawbreaker.

Earlier this week, Pacquiao expressed his concern over former opponent Ricky Hatton's recent battles with drugs. Pacquiao described Hatton as 'a friend' in his column at Philboxing.com.

"Kaya naman nang nalaman kong nagpabaya na at nagpakalulong sa bawal na droga ang aking nakalabang si Ricky Hatton ng England, lubos ang aking kalungkutan sa sinapit ng aking kaibigan. Opo, kaibigan ang turing ko kay Ginoong Hatton dahil sa labas ng ring, alam kong mabait at masayahing tao si Ricky."

Translation:
"When I found out about my former opponent Ricky Hatton of England losing his way and his addiction to illegal drugs, I was deeply saddened by the fate of my friend. Yes, I consider Mr. Hatton a friend because outside the ring, I know Ricky is a good and fun-loving person," Pacquiao wrote.

According to Hatton's dad, the Mancunian boxing hero "had struggled to come to terms with his crushing defeat by Manny Pacquiao, 31, in just two rounds in Las Vegas last year." The Daily Star also wrote that Hatton checked into the exclusive 47-bed Priory clinic in Cheshire after he was filmed taking drugs in a Manchester hotel two weeks ago.

Pacquiao also had these words of wisdom for Hatton: "Don’t tell God that you have a big problem, but tell your problem that you have a great God."

Pacquiao's gesture drew praise from his promoter Bob Arum, who's son John was found dead at the Washington Mountains a couple of weeks ago. "That is the kind of guy that Manny is," Arum told Michael Marley. Pacquiao is dedicating his next fight against Antonio Margarito on November 13 to Arum's son.

Whether you're one of his millions of fans or detractors, and whether you buy into his image and actions, Pacquiao is deserves to be praised and commended for conducting himself in a highly respectable manner. He is truly a role model any country can be proud of. And it's only fitting they call him the Philippines' "National Treasure".


Source: http://www.examiner.com

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