The key lies in the strengths and weaknesses of the pair of world class operators. Nobody could question Manny’s unique talent and historic boxing achievements. However, I fear that this is the wrong fighter for Manny to face.
Shane has good power and is naturally a strong athlete but his real strength lies in his excellent body punching. This aligns perfectly with Pacquiao’s most obvious weakness. That being his vulnerability to body attacks. In the Antonio Margarito fight we saw Manny buckle from a body punch and he has been stopped before by them.
Talk of Mosley being a spent force may be premature. I question his motivation in the Mora fight. Shane is not invincible. His performances against the late Vernon Forrest were poor but he then went onto wipe out Ricardo Mayorga who gave Forrest more trouble than he could handle. In this fight Shane is fighting someone slightly shorter than himself, this could well negate Manny’s slight advantage in speed.
This fight is being seen as a marking time fight whilst the Mayweather bout comes to fruition. This is a shame because defeat for Manny will de value and possibly de rail the fight all boxing fans want to see.
On paper Manny’s relative youth, power and speed should see him through. I am predicting a shock. Shane Mosley to win utilizing his body attack.
Former champion Winky Wright, wһο һаѕ two victories over Shane Mosley, brοkе down һοw WBO welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao саח beat tһе ” Sugar” man οח Mау 7 аt tһе MGM Grand іח Las Vegas. Wright ѕаіԁ tһаt һе used һіѕ jab, advantage іח power аחԁ plenty οf pressure tο shut Mosley down. Tһаt сουƖԁ spell bаԁ news fοr Mosley, ѕіחсе Pacquiao’s bread аחԁ butter іѕ a non-ѕtοр assault οf power punching frοm аƖƖ angles.
” I took tһе speed away bесаυѕе һе’s real fаѕt. I һаԁ tο take tһе speed away. Wіtһ tһаt jab wе took tһаt speed away. Once wе took tһаt speed away аחԁ slowed іt down, wе јυѕt used ουr size. Wе wеrе stronger tһаח һіm аחԁ wе stayed οח һіm. Wе constantly beat һіm down. Beat һіm, beat һіm, beat һіm,” Wright tοƖԁ BoxingScene.com’s Chris Robinson.
Wright agrees wіtһ tһе common opinion tһаt Mosley іѕ a bіɡ underdog, bυt һе disagrees wіtһ people wһο don’t consider tһе former champion a ” live opponent.” Hе gives Mosley a shot аt pulling οff tһе upset аחԁ providing a tough fight. Wright ѕауѕ tһаt іt аƖƖ comes down tο һοw bаԁƖу Mosley wаחtѕ tһе victory.
“Pacquiao іѕ destroying everybody rіɡһt now. Bυt Shane іѕ a live fighter. Shane һаѕ speed, һе һаѕ power, bυt tһе thing іѕ, ԁοеѕ һе want іt? Dοеѕ һе һаνе heart tο ɡο іח tһеrе аחԁ fight аחԁ try tο win? Bесаυѕе һе’s going tο һаνе tο dig down аחԁ fight bесаυѕе tһіѕ guy іѕ going tο bе coming аt һіm. Wе’ll see,” Wright ѕаіԁ.
Said Francisco Espinoza, co-manager of former world champion Antonio Margarito, Mosley's age because, many doubt the ability of 39-year-old boxer.
If he said the prophecy brings Mosley-Pacquiao fight, it would be 50-50 chance of two boxers.
He said one of Mosley's best boxer of his generation, while Pacquiao is also a champion.
The Mosley-Pacquiao fight will be made in the coming May 8 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
That show is no other than the May 7 welterweight war between Manny Pacquiao and Shane Mosley at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and Arum is more than optimistic of putting on an unforgettable show, “something that’s never been done before in the sport of boxing.”
Asked about his target figures for pay-per-view (PPV) sales, Arum skirted the question but said the event is going to be so huge that the revenue to be generated in PPV would be very remarkable as well.
A tour of key US cities is being laid out in the first week of February with New York, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and San Francisco being eyed to play host to Pacquiao and Mosley.
“I would love to go back to work immediately because there’s a lot to be done,” said Arum, whose calendar in the first four months of the new year also includes an all-important February 19 bantamweight showdown between Filipino Nonito Donaire against Mexican Fernando Montiel at the Mandalay Bay also in Las Vegas.
Since 1966, the 79-year-old Arum has promoted many of the most memorable fights starring Muhammad Ali, George Foreman, Evander Holyfield, Marvin Hagler, Sugar Ray Leonard, Thomas Hearns, Roberto Duran, Oscar De La Hoya, Julio Cesar Chavez and Erik Morales.
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Pacquiao beat out Oscar De La Hoya and a few other marquee names for the coveted award.
Although Pacquiao held numerous titles in other sanctioning bodies during the last 10 years, the 32-year old Filipino pound-for-pound king also won several championships under the WBC banner.
Pacquiao briefly held the WBC super-featherweight and lightweight titles and just recently annexed the super-welterweight title to his growing collection after also winning titles at flyweight (WBC), super-bantam (International Boxing Federation), feather (The Ring magazine), super-lightweight (International Boxing Organization) and welter (World Boxing Organization).
The WBC Fighter of the Decade award will only add more luster to Pacquiao’s already proud name, having been given the same accolade by the Boxing Writers Association of America and The Ring magazine for the same feat.
Pacquiao is currently out of the country with his family and is slated to return to the ring on May 7 against Shane Mosley at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
A huge favorite against Mosley, Pacquiao plans to embark on an eight-week training camp for what he has described as “a very tough fight” considering Mosley’s durability and vast experience.
Trainer Freddie Roach said he is willing to camp out in Baguio City once again for four weeks and spend the next four at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood.
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Pacquiao, Flag, Pray
An ESPN Sports Nation poll, in fact, revealed that Juan Manuel Marquez, whom the Filipino eight-division champion fought twice, would be the most desirable opponent for the reigning world welterweight and super-welterweight kingpin on May 7 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Outside of undefeated American Floyd Mayweather Jr., of course.
This is understandable because both Mayweather and Marquez, fans believe, stand a chance to beat the now Congressman from the Province of Sarangani and, perhaps, end his 15-year career.
Many critics of Pacquiao have been saying that all he does is fight Mayweather’s left overs. Meaning, he fights opponents that Mayweather has already fought and defeated. True, but one must be reminded that Manny has been beating the hell these same opponents more impressively than Mayweather did.
For instance, boxing legend Oscar De La Hoya bowed to Pacquiao by not getting off his stool for the ninth round, while Mayweather could only earn a split decision triumph over the same guy.
Mayweather stopped Ricky Hatton only after 10 rounds. Pacquiao had an easier time sending the Brit to dreamland in only two rounds.
Still others argue that Mayweather completely dominated and taught Marquez a neat boxing lesson when the met while the Filipino struggled to a draw the first time they faced each other and a controversial split decision the next time. That is why a third and final fight with Marquez would make the most sense right now.
What Arum, Roach and Pacquiao want to remind critics in finalizing the fight against Mosley is that in their super-mega fight everyone was on his or her feet, shocked that Mosley was able to land such a big clean power shot to the face of Mayweather causing his knees to buckle and forcing him to hold on for life.
Although just like any other Mayweather fight, Floyd did what he knows how to do best and that is danced his way the rest of the way to salvage a victory although just like all 49 of Mosley’s opponents, was not able to knock Sugar Shane out.
Mosley has never been stopped, the closest someone came to succeeding was the much taller, longer and heftier Vernon Forrest who had him in the most trouble in his whole career.
Does Mosley have a chance to cut short Pacquiao’s 13 straight winning run? Yes, of course, he still is dangerous for the first couple of rounds but if Pacquiao takes his training camp seriously, even an 80 percent Pacquiao he will prevail.
The bigger question, however, is will Manny be able to do what no other fighter was ever able to do and stop and knock out the Sugar Man? That is the only way, therefore, that those who do not believe in the wisdom of the match up can be justified.
Even if Manny overwhelms Mosley by a one sided decision, then many will say that he took Mosley at a time when his career is already on the downswing. And that victory would be an empty one.
Can Manny be the first to knock Mosley out? That remains to be seen.
Manny Pacquiao’s next fight with Shane Mosley.
Reminded about what he told to a handful of Manila-based writers the day after Pacquiao mauled Antonio Margarito in Texas that he fears that the Filipino will take Mosley lightly, Ariza has come to realize that he had spoken too soon.
Still awe-struck with Pacquiao’s masterful beating of the gigantic Margarito, Ariza had said that “Manny might not even train for Mosley.”
But he changed his mind, saying that even at 39 years old, Mosley cannot be taken for granted owing to his “experience.”
“It’s not right to count him out even if his last fight was not that impressive,” said Ariza, pointing to Mosley’s lackluster draw with Sergio Mora last September.
Top Rank big boss Bob Arum has scheduled Pacquiao-Mosley on May 7 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas and Ariza has no choice but to lead a hand in getting the pound-for-pound king ready for the very experienced California-bred banger.
Ariza said certain fighters tend to come out with brilliant performance “when the stakes are high” and that type of fighter suits somebody like Mosley, who has a lot of pride and an almost impeccable track record against big-name opponents.
Mosley’s two biggest wins were against Oscar De La Hoya and Margarito, who Mosley knocked out in nine rounds in January 2009, something Pacquiao couldn’t pull off last month.
Ariza had wanted Pacquiao to face Mexican master counter-puncher Juan Manuel Marquez for the third time “so Manny could shut him up” but Top Rank’s differences with Marquez’s promotional outfit, Golden Boy Promotions, turned out to be a major obstacle in getting the fight done.
As to the site of training camp for the Mosley battle, Ariza said he would love to return to Baguio.
“The atmosphere is great and very convenient for Manny’s training,” said Ariza.
Pacquiao is still on vacation overseas and he is expected to shed light on his plans for training camp as soon as he returns to the country early next year.
Just as Bob Arum announced the other day that the fight is on, the oddsmakers started punching the numbers for the May 7 fight between Manny Pacquiao and Shane Mosley.
To no surprise, the 32-year-old superstar, who flew to Boracay yesterday with his family, came out as the early, heavy favorite.
An online betting station, Sportbet.com, yesterday painted Pacquiao as a -750 favorite, meaning you need to place $750 on him just to win a hundred bucks.
Mosley, the 39-year-old fighter from Pomona, California, stood at +450, meaning every $100 on him wins $450.
Unless he has a time machine, Mosley won’t be able to pull the odds to his favor. It could even get taller in the days leading to the fight.
Arum’s announcement of the Pacquiao-Mosley fight, set at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, should also close the book on those for a Pacquiao fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Yesterday, the odds for the superfight between the two pound-for-pound champions were still on.
Mayweather, playing hide-and-seek the past couple of months, was at -145 and Pacquiao at +115 if the fight, twice close to happening, were held today.
But it’s not going to happen. Instead, the world will see Pacquiao vs Mosley.
Pacquiao arrived in Boracay on a private plane from General Santos City. They will spend Christmas at the high-end West Cove Resort owned by his bosom buddy Cris Aquino.
Pacquiao will go scuba-diving, as he had brought his diving instructor along. He and his family will fly back to Manila on Dec. 27, and the following day will leave for another vacation in Japan and Australia until Jan. 8.
Even blindfolded, the oddsmakers can point to Pacquiao as the heavy favorite.
For one, the fighting congressman from Sarangani is the reigning pound-for-pound champion, and is being hailed as the greatest of his era, if not of all time.
He has won his last 13 fights, most of them against taller, bigger, heavier and stronger opponents. His 12-round destruction of Antonio Margarito gave him his eighth world title in as many divisions.
Pacquiao will fight Mosley at 147 lb, and that should be a problem for Mosley because it’s the best fighting weight for the heavy-handed boxer who began his pro career at 106 lb in 1995.
Over his last five fights, Pacquiao crushed Oscar dela Hoya, Ricky Hatton, Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey and Margarito, and averaged 1.02 million in pay-per-view sales.
Mosley, on the other hand, will turn 40 in September, old enough he could get tired blowing the candles on his birthday cake.
He has two wins, two losses and a draw in his last five fights, the losses including one against Mayweather last May, and a bad draw against Sergio Mora last September.
Manny Pacquiao will be looking to get back to his knockout ways when he faces Shane Mosley on May 7, 2011 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
Deprived of a stoppage win in his last two outings, Pacquiao, who went the distance with Joshua Clottey and Antonio Margarito this year, is expected to go for a demolition job against Mosley.
The last time Pacquiao scored an abbreviated win was in November 2009 at the MGM Grand against Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto, a fight that was even preceded by knockout wins over Americans David Diaz and Oscar De La Hoya and Briton Ricky Hatton.
And Pacquiao’s quest to regain his knockout moves would make his 12-round welterweight match with Mosley a slambang affair, assured the flashy American fighter.
“I am pretty sure Manny will try to knock me out and I will try to do the same thing,” said the 39-year-old Mosley. “(And) this is why (our fight will) be a great fight…two fighters who are willing to fight.”
What’s going to work in favor of Mosley against an ultra-aggressive puncher like Pacquiao is the Filipino’s supposed average defense, claimed Mosley.
“Pacquiao’s defense is not as good as the defense of Floyd Mayweather,” added Mosley, who has never tasted a knockout loss in a stellar 17-year professional career.
Against Mayweather last May, Mosley wobbled Mayweather early but failed to follow his solid connection en route to being beaten lopsidedly on points.
The Mosley fight will be Pacquiao’s 20th ring appearance on US soil after the pound-for-pound king made his debut in June 2001 as a last minute substitute.
One day, Shane Mosley is not a viable opponent for Manny Pacquiao. The next, he is the best possible challenger for the eight-time world champion. Suddenly, all the machinery is in motion, and we’re moved along with it like a heavy flood of lahar through Central Luzon. We want to see Pacquiao fight, and because he’s wiped everybody out in so many weight classes, we care increasingly less who the opponent is. We’re hungry for the next cliffhanger in the telenovela.
Mosley, who will turn 40 this September, has been vocal about his desire to face Pacquiao. And considering that Floyd Mayweather has his own external problems to deal with and may face incarceration, the only other reasonable name out there, whether they will acknowledge it or not, is Juan Manuel Marquez. Bob Arum has done a great job of making it appear that it won’t be a good fight, and many of us are prone to believe him. But Marquez is the closest thing to a tough match-up there is, based on records after his last fight with Pacquiao.
Mosley has an impressive record of 46 wins, 6 losses and a draw, but has only fought four times in the last three years: once in 2008, once in 2009, and twice in 2010. In 2008, it took Sugar Shane twelve rounds to knock out Ricardo Mayorga for the vacant WBA inter-continental light middleweight belt. Prior to that, he lost a close 12-round unanimous decision to Miguel Cotto.
After the Mayorga bout, Mosley went down in weight to challenge Antonio Margarito for the WBA welterweight diadem, winning by TKO in the ninth round against the tall and skinny Mexican. Mosley led all the way on the scorecards. Then there was that lackluster performance against Mayweather, wherein Mosley lost by a lopsided unanimous decision. Mosley was ahead in the first three rounds, then went downhill from there. Mayweather was actually criticized for taking the fight, when he could have had Pacquiao, Cotto or Margarito, among others.
Mosley followed that defeat up with a sloppy split draw over an overweight and undefeated Sergio Mora. Mora came into the weigh-in at 157 pounds, and was ordered to give one-fifth of his purse to Mosley. By all accounts, it was a dull fight unworthy of a champion with the crowd actually booing by the third round. Granted Mosley should have won that fight if not for the disagreement among the judges, but it was far from entertaining.
The fact of the matter is, Mosley has won as much as he has lost since 2007. Does all this make him an appetizing fight for a Manny Pacquiao, or does it really matter? Do we just want to see Pacquiao in the ring again, regardless? I wouldn’t mind seeing Pacquiao fight Mosley. But would it excite me? Not really.
Now let’s look at Marquez.
After the split decision loss to Pacquiao (owing to a greatly-timed knockdown by Pacman in the third round), the Mexican has won four of his last five fights against quality opposition. First, he moved up in weight, and in his debut as a lightweight, carved up the intimidating Joel Casamayor. The Cuban was dreaded in lightweight circles, having compiled a record of 36 wins, only two losses and one draw at that point. Covering the fight for The Filipino Channel, this writer saw Marquez hardly hurt throughout, and hitting Casamayor with uncanny precision. Casamayor’s face was a bloody mess at the end of the match. Take note that “El Cepillo” had won his last five fights right before meeting Marquez, three of those wins coming by way of knockout, including a 10th-round demolition of Michael Katsidis.
Lastly, Katsidis came knocking in November, hoping to annex the WBA, WBO and The Ring Magazine belts Dinamita owned. The Greek-Australian brawler, who fought in Cebu two years ago, did his Ricky Hatton rampaging bull routine, but this didn’t faze the champion, who also fought furiously in the opening rounds. For a while, it looked like Katsidis’ plan would work, as he knocked Marquez down in the third. But Marquez also turned up the heat, and the fight was marked by many staggering exchanges, until ultimatey, Katsidis could take no more. Referee Kanny Bayless stepped in to stop the carnage.
Comparing what Mosley and Marquez have accomplished the past few years, it’s clear that a third Marquez fight would be a more exciting option for Pacquiao. There is no way it would be boring at all, as what has been presumed. But then again, fight fans aren’t in control of the negotiations. On another note, I wouldn’t be surprised if they keep Pacquiao fighting until the next elections in 2013, just to make sure he gets a higher office. Everybody’s got to make a living, I suppose.
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