Thứ Bảy, 12 tháng 11, 2016

Call him senator Pacquiao now

Senator Manny Pacquiao. Photo from Senate's Facebook account

HOLLYWOOD—The celebration can wait.

Honoring his covenant with the Filipino people, Manny Pacquiao, just hours after his masterful triumph over Jessie Vargas,  took a private plane ride out of Las Vegas Sunday afternoon to catch the last flight bound for Manila and be able to attend the Senate session on Tuesday.

“My next fight is out of my mind,” said Pacquiao, who added another chapter to his boxing legacy by clinching the WBO welterweight crown, the first senator—in the Philippines or elsewhere—to do so.

Pacquiao’s concentration has shifted to politics.

“What is in my mind is to go back and work,” said Pacquiao, who shelved his traditional return to Los Angeles to be able to participate in the Senate budget deliberations.

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Thứ Tư, 21 tháng 9, 2016

Though 'depressed' about Mayweather-Pacquiao fight, Merchant thinks rematch is coming

MANILA, Philippines – Veteran boxing commentator Larry Merchant thinks Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao are bound to do it again.
Mayweather and Pacquiao figured in boxing’s richest fight ever, and the bout’s financial success alone is enough reason to stage a rematch.
“I believe it's a possibility,” the 85-year-old Merchant recently said in a boxingscene.com report by David P. Greisman.
While the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight was a commercial success, it failed to live up to the hype due to lack of action. The undefeated Mayweather cruised to a unanimous decision win over Pacquiao, who was then revealed to have fought on an injured shoulder.
The bout drew record pay-per-view revenue and netted both boxers career-high paydays, leading some in the boxing community to speculate that a rematch could be in the offing.
Count Merchant among those who think Mayweather and Pacquiao will have another go at it.
Sportshub ( Article MRec ), pagematch: 1, sectionmatch: 1
“That fight was such an amazing event and just as amazing a bust in the ring, that you know that the businesspeople will try to bring it back, because if it does a third of the business, it will still be a big event,” he said.
The commentator, however, said he isn’t ecstatic about it.
“I'm depressed about it. Because it was the anticlimax of the century, and it's not likely to be any better,” said Merchant.
“I think people in boxing knew that Mayweather, in his calculation of risk and reward, does not tend to go toward risk, and that he was going to try to outbox Manny,” he added.
Pacquiao will challenge WBO welterweight champion Jessie Vargas on November 5, and has expressed desire for another crack at Mayweather.
Mayweather, for his part, has so far stayed retired. – Dino Maragay

Chủ Nhật, 31 tháng 7, 2016

Manny Pacquiao to fight in the UAE? Bob Arum to attend ‘meeting’ over Middle East event

Manny Pacquiao to fight in the UAE? Bob Arum to attend ‘meeting’ over Middle East event
The prospect of Manny Pacquiao staging a fight in the UAE has been given new hope after the boxing superstar’s promoter, Bob Arum, revealed he will hold talks about an event in the Middle East.
Pacquiao, 37, officially retired from boxing following his last fight, a points victory against American Timothy Bradley in April.
Although it seems the eight division world champion is plotting his return to the ring, with trainer Freddie Roach expecting Pacquiao to fight again in November.

    Pacquiao’s retirement U-turn also opens the door for an event to finally take place in the UAE after several failed attempts for host a fight in the Emirates.
    • Exclusive interview – Bob Arum reflects on Pacquiao: ‘My job was to present Manny as he really is, people just fell in love with him’
    There had been talk of a showdown between Pacquiao and Briton Amir Khan in Dubai, but that failed to materialise, while the UAE was considered an outside option for the Filipino’s mega-bout with Floyd Mayweather Jr, although the American refused to fight outside of Las Vegas.

      Pacquiao is no stranger to taking his fights around the world with two of his last five bouts taking place in Macau.
      Promoter Arum, writing on his Twitter account, said he is set to have discussions regarding a Pacquiao event on Sunday, which at the very least suggests interest from Pacquiao to fight in the region.


        While the UAE, with its prominent Filipino population, would be the ideal location for a Pacquiao fight in the Middle East, there has also been suggestions that Qatar would be interested in hosting an event.
        Pacquiao has accumulated a professional fight record of 58 wins with 38 knockouts, six defeats and two draws.
        His comeback to boxing is expected to be made more complicated by his recent appointment to the Congress of the Philippines in June when he was elected senator and will serve a six-year term until 2022.

        Thứ Sáu, 24 tháng 6, 2016

        Boxing News: Manny Pacquiao could return for fight in October, says Bob Arum

        Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao hung his gloves after defeating Timothy Bradley in April 2016, but well-known promoter Bob Arum feels he could make a return in October. After quitting the sport, Pacquiao has been actively involved in the politics, so the million dollar question remains if he has the time to come out of retirement, get in shape, and fight later in the year.
        Arum, who played an important hand in making the "fight of the century" take shape, is trying to finalise on an opponent for Pacquiao. After doing so, he will head over to Philippines, and see if his tight schedule as a senator will make the fight doable.
        "We are thinking about him fighting in October if he wants to fight. Once I get the opponent that I am working on - we are working on opponents and once I get that, I will fly over to the Philippines and he will see if his schedule in the senate allows him to train for a fight and participate in a fight,"boxingscene.com quoted Arum as saying.
        "I know he wants to continue fighting but the impediment is how labor intensive his work as a Filipino senator is and he is not going to really know that for another week or so. He was just sworn in as a senator yesterday."
        For such things to happen, he needs to come out of retirement, and if he does, Arum has some major plans for Pacquiao for next year as well. Boxer Vasyl Lomachenko has been coming up with incredible performances of late, and the WBO super featherweight champion wants to fight only the best.
        Arum believes if the 28-year-old shows such form with consistency; he can line up a major fight with Pacquiao in 2017. Now, that fight, if it takes place, will be a treat to the fans, and Lomachenko will surely be tested to the core.
        "Let me tell you, by the way he is going, if Manny continues to fight, sometime next year I wouldn't hesitate to match Lomachenko against Pacquiao. That would be a hell of a fight," Arum said.

        Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 5, 2016

        Philippines: Manny Pacquiao wins seat in Senate, taking him one step closer to presidency

        Pacquiao is widely seen as a potential future president
        BOXING great Manny Pacquiao has won a seat in the Philippine Senate, bringing him closer to a possible shot at the presidency.
        At the proclamation ceremony, an election official introduced Pacquiao as the "people's champion" and called out his name in the same way he is introduced in the boxing ring.
        The 37-year-old Filipino received more than 16 million votes for seventh place among 12 winning senators in the recent elections. Earlier this year, he said he planned to retire from boxing to become a full-time politician.
        Pacquiao is considered a hero in his country which grinds to a halt during his televised fights so Filipinos can support him. He has indicated in the past he would consider running for the presidency but he has tried to ditch the topic, saying he was too young.
        He told reporters he was still thinking about whether to participate in the Olympic Games in August because he might be criticised for being absent from the Senate shortly after the start of legislative work.
        "I need to ask if the Filipino people will allow me to participate in the Olympics," he added.
        Pacquiao also said he will support re-imposing the death penalty but opposes any proposed divorce bill. He said the first bill he will file would provide free elementary-to-college education for children from impoverished families.
        Pacquiao ran for the Senate under the ticket of losing presidential candidate Jejomar Binay, but was also endorsed by southern Davao City Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, the winner of the presidential race according to unofficial results. Mr Duterte has said he would ask Congress to restore the death penalty, which has been suspended since 2006.
        During his senatorial campaign, Pacquiao bounced back impressively after a huge drop in support from his remarks in February that people in same-sex relations are "worse than animals". The Bible-quoting candidate apologised to people hurt by his comments but made clear he opposed same-sex marriage.
        President Benigno Aquino III revealed in April that the brutal Abu Sayyaf militant group considered abducting Pacquiao, along with the president's sister, who is a wealthy and popular actress. Despite the warning, Pacquiao continued to openly campaign with few visible escorts in the south region where the militants are based.
        Pacquiao came from an impoverished family and had worked odd jobs before lacing up the gloves at the age of 12. He rose steadily and became a champion in eight boxing divisions then one of the world's most celebrated and wealthiest athletes.
        He has represented southern Sarangani province in the House of Representatives since May 2010, though he has been criticised for rarely showing up for legislative duties due to his commitments with boxing and training. ends
        The Philippine constitution requires presidential candidates to be at least 40 years old. The 37-year-old boxer would be eligible to run in the next presidential election in 2022.
        In a populist stance, Pacquiao said the first bill he would introduce would grant free elementary-to-college education for children from poor families, a proposal that has not been achieved in the past due to the extensive costs it would entail. More than a fourth of the more than 100 million Filipinos are considered poor.

        Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 4, 2016

        Trump doesn’t have a wall big enough to separate the American from the Mexican in Oscar Valdez

        Oscar Valdez
        Bob Arum ripped Donald Trump. Mocked him, too, from a bully pulpit on a stage for what the promoter called the No Trump Undercard. It was clever advertising and might have generated as many pay-per-view sales as Manny Pacquiao’s decision over Timothy Bradley in the main event.
        Part show and part substance, part satire and part serious, it was mostly words, another political debate during a political season as silly and tiresome as any boxing news conference ever could be.
        But it had a face, too.
        Oscar Valdez’ face.
        In one promising featherweight, Valdez personifies two cultures that Trump wants to divide with a wall. Valdez’ roots are on both sides of the border between Arizona and Mexico. He went to grade school in Tucson. He began to box there. Then, he moved to Nogales on the Mexican side of the border where he became a two-time Mexican Olympian. He speaks like an American kid. He speaks like a Mexican kid. There’s no wall big enough to separate the American from the Mexican in Valdez.
        “I’m not really into political end of things in the USA,’’ Valdez said before delivering the card’s best performance, a fourth-round stoppage of Evgeny Gradovich, the self-proclaimed Mexican-Russian and the IBF’s former 126-pound champion, at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand. “But what I do know is that I that I wouldn’t want Trump to be president of the United States. It would affect other countries.
        “Mostly, I’m just focused on this fight. But I’m also excited to be on this card. Knowing that we have Bob Arum’s support on what he’s calling the No Trump Card, it just brings a little more flavor to it.’’
        More edge to it, too.
        In addition to Valdez, the April 9 card included Gilberto Ramirez, who won a WBO title became the first Mexican to win a major super-middleweight belt with a decision over Arthur Abraham, a German of Armenian descent. There was also junior-welterweight Jose Ramirez, a 2012 U.S. Olympian, faces Manny Perez of Denver in a bout scheduled for 10 rounds. Ramirez, the son of farm workers in central California, is an activist in water conservation.
        Valdez, Gilberto Ramirez and Jose Ramirez were the collective face of what Trump’s proposed wall opposes, Arum said. Trump loves to talk about winners. On Arum’s card, however, he was the loser. Mexico 3, Trump 0.
        “Without a wall, they just show that, back and forth, great things happen across the border between the two countries,’’ Arum said.
        There is already a wall along much of the border between Mexico and Arizona, where there was a heated immigration controversy about six years ago with the state legislature’s passage of SB 1070.
        Valdez, who fought in Tucson in December, has traveled through that wall’s checkpoints often, visiting his mom and grandmother in Tucson and his family in Nogales.
        “I’m blessed to have grown up on both sides,’’ said Valdez, who now lives in Hermosillo when he’s not training in Southern California. “Having grown up in Mexico means so much to me. My culture, my family, is everything. Having grown up in the United States means so much. It’s so important to know English. It’s meant so much to have gone to school in Tucson and still have friends and family there. It will always be my second home.’’
        In part, Valdez’ emergence as a featherweight contender is a symbol of Arizona’s resilience as a boxing market. It’s always been a good one, yet it all but disappeared for a couple of years in the wake of SB 1070.
        Mexican advertisers stayed away, forcing Arum to move a Jose Benavidez Jr.-featured card in 2010 out of the state and to Chicago early in his career. The controversy even prompted Jose Sulaiman, the late president of the World Boxing Council, to issue an edict, asking Mexican fighters to boycott the state. Some did, some didn’t. But the impact knocked Arizona out of the ring of viable markets long enough to wonder if it would ever come back.
        It has, it is, because of the gyms that dot the state’s Sonoran desert like cactus. From Phoenix to Tucson, from Michael Carbajal to Oscar Valdez, there’s always another one. Good fighters are part of the landscape. Part of the culture.
        At some point, Valdez, who stopped Gradovich with the best left hand from a fighter with Arizona roots since Carbajal, hopes to fight again in Tucson, although his rapid ascent might keep him in bigger markets. In the immediate aftermath of his victory over Gradovich, there was talk he would wind up on the Terence Crawford-Viktor Postol card on July 23, also in Vegas at the MGM Crawford.
        “I do know people – cousins, friends, family — who have been deported, especially in the state of Arizona. There was a time there when it got really crazy. You know, it was sad. Just sad. I know my friends. They’re not terrorists. They just come to work, come to make a better life.’’
        Fight for one, too.

        Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 3, 2016

        On This Day: Manny Pacquiao slips past bogeyman Juan Manuel Marquez

        Bob Arum explains his 'NoTrump' Manny Pacquiao-Tim Bradley undercard

        It’s part of a boxing promotion and it grabs eyeballs, so you start with the idea that veteran boxing promoter Bob Arum’s "NoTrump" undercard for the April 9 Manny Pacquiao-Timothy Bradley fight in Las Vegas is a cute gimmick.
        Wrong, says Arum, a proud liberal who wants to use the stage of an HBO pay-per-view forum to expose what Arum says is Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s wrong-sighted build-a-wall, anti-immigration platform.
        Arum and Trump were formerly work associates, with Arum staging “numerous” ESPN fights at Trump properties. But the fight promoter, who during 50 years in the business has helped guide the paths of many greats from Muhammad Ali to Floyd Mayweather Jr.and Pacquiao, said he’s repulsed by Trump’s philosophy.
        “My position on immigration and Hispanics is diametrically opposed to his,” Arum said. “What he is doing is preaching hate. So I’m standing up for my Hispanic neighbors and all the Hispanic kids who fight for me. I mean, somebody has to stand up to this crap.”
        Before Coachella Valley’s Bradley defends his World Boxing Organization welterweight belt against former eight-division champion Pacquiao at MGM Grand in Las Vegas, unbeaten Gilberto Ramirez (33-0, 24 knockouts) of Mazatlan will fight for the WBO super-middleweight belt of German champion Arthur Abraham.
        Then, former Mexico Olympian Oscar Valdez (19-0, 16 KOs), the top-ranked WBO featherweight contender who resides in Lake Elsinore and trains each weekday in Carson, will fight Russia’s Evgeny Gradovich. And super-lightweight Jose Ramirez of Avenal, Calif., will meet Manny Perez.
        Arum said he views fighters such as Gilberto Ramirez, Valdez and Jose Ramirez as shining lights of what immigration means to the U.S. – people coming here, driven to create a better life through strong work ethic.
        Jose Ramirez is a huge draw to the working-class crowds in Fresno, which earned him the promotion to Las Vegas on HBO.
        Manny Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach slams Teddy Atlas, says Timothy Bradley's no Floyd Mayweather
        “They’re good, hard-working, dedicated people,” Arum said of his fighters.
        Although Trump is a big boxing fan – he sat ringside at Madison Square Garden in October to watch unbeaten middleweight champion Gennady Golovkin stop Canada’s David Lemieux – Arum said the Republican front-runner is not invited to the April 9 card.
        “These people deserve legalization and they can’t be demonized as rapists when they’re not,” Arum said.
        Arum, who previously worked in the U.S. Justice Department when Robert F. Kennedy was Attorney General, supports Hillary Clinton for president. He previously was helped by Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) to coordinate a personal meeting between Pacquiao and President Obama.
        “[Trump’s] a salesman and an opportunist,” Arum said. “He may be preaching hate because it’s what he believes, or he may be doing it – even worse – because it’ll get him the votes of bigoted people who scorn Hispanics.”