Posts Tagged ‘Bob Arum’

Mayweather Won’t Be Rushed Into Fight

Floyd Mayweather Jr

Floyd Mayweather Jr

The long-anticipated showdown between Floyd Mayweather Jr and Manny Pacquiao appears unlikely to take place this year as negotiations between the two camps are at an apparent standstill.

Pacquiao’s promoter, Top Rank, had set a July 17 deadline for exclusive talks and, with nothing agreed, can now explore other potential opponents – namely Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito - for the Filipino’s next fight on November 13.

The rivals, widely regarded as the two best pound-for-pound fighters in the world, almost came to an agreement earlier this year but the deal collapsed because Pacquiao was reticent about blood testing close to the fight.

Instead, Pacquiao routed Joshua Clotteybefore about 50,000 fans at Cowboys Stadium in March, while Mayweather Jr easily defeated Shane Mosley in May to remain unbeaten in 41 contests.

“I’m not interested in rushing to do anything,

Mayweather Jr told the Associated Press on July 18 in Miami, where he was coaching a charity basketball game.

He added: “I’m not really thinking about boxing right now.

“I’m just relaxing. I fought about 60 days ago, so I’m just enjoying myself, enjoying life, enjoying my family and enjoying my vacation.”

Top Rank’s Bob Arum, although not having spoken directly to the fighter, believes Mayweather Jr might be reluctant to take on Pacquiao this year because of the legal woes of Roger Mayweather, his uncle and long-time trainer.

Roger Mayweather will go on trial in Las Vegas in August on assault charges stemming from an altercation with a female boxer last year.

Courtesy of Skysports


Manny Pacquiao Electioneering For Congress

Manny Pacquiano

Manny Pacquiao

Behind every great fighter is an even greater leading lady.

So it is proving even on the exhausting electioneering trail the Filipino boxer is waging in The Philippines, as he attempts to win the sole congressional seat for the province of Sarangani, in the southern Philippines.

It is here where Pacquiao the would-be politician, at his most humble, most needs his wife of ten years. Sarangani is her birthplace, where he family still resides, and it is here where she was raised.That is serious capital for the campaign.

That fact alone may have put her husband, an improbable winner, but for now, ahead on the polls.

According to Jinkee, her husband leads in poll surveys as the election approaches 20 days away. The Filipino boxer, who has earned world title belts across seven weight divisions, champ is running for the second time as a congressman, this time for a different province.

The million dollar question is whether Pacquiao can transfer his phenomenonal popularity as a personality into political capital. Many of his fans believe the dichotomy is that once elected his aura of invincibility, the manner in which he beautifully reflects the filipino nation abroad could be emasculated if he becomes embroiled in the sometime murky world of filipino politics.

Jinkee has been actively participating in the campaign, often separately from her husband. “We are actually ahead in the surveys but now we really have to maximize our efforts and time,” Jinkee, a former beauty consultant, revealed last weekend.

This is the second time the world’s No 1 pound for pound boxer Pacquiao has run for congress. He lost the race in his first attempt in 2007 in General Santos City against incumbent Rep.

Darlene Antonino-Custodio, who said at the time, “more than anything, I think, people weren’t prepared to lose him as their boxing icon”.

Jinkee says she is confident her husband can make a difference—especially in the life of poor residents.

“We talked about it and I believe in his good intentions to serve the people of Sarangani,” said Jinkee. “Manny and I can’t let our supporters down. The people need help.”

Pacquiao, boxer turned politico, is convinced by a quasi-messianic belief that he can make a difference to the lives of poor people in his country.

His own life, he says, serves as the example. He was raised in poverty, with dignity, and slept on wooden boards on the ring canvas at night in a tumbledown gym in Manila as he was making his way into boxing as a teenager, first of all fighting for a couple of dollars per bout.

For him, and in his mind, anything is possible. Hope springs from him…I have witnessed that in the huge queues of hundreds of filipinos who gather outside Freddie Roach’s Wild Card Gym, in Hollywood, often waiting four or five hours to spend a few seconds up close with him to exchange a few words. He is the Midas man, a talisman for them all. And they all believe he is blessed…

“I’ll show you how to make a big difference. I want you all to idolize me not just in the ring but above all, in public service.” Where he has departed from the norm, is in not criticising his rivals.

While many of his boxing fans have urged him to bow out of the election race, those close to him suggest his zeal for daily campaigning knows no bounds, his relentlessness mirroring his training camps, in Los Angeles, ahead of championship  fights.

Pacquiao’s adviser, the Canadian Michael Koncz, also suggested this week that the latest polls show Pacquiao has edged ahead against his rival Roy Chiongbian, a member of the powerful Chiongbians, a dynastic and politically dominant family within Sarangani for decades.

Yet Pacquiao, unusually, remains the underdog in this contest.

Should he win – and it appears it will go to the wire and could be a split decision from voters – he will go on to fight for the welfare of his constituents in the House of Representatives.

In his home town, General Santos City, Pacquiao has already donated funds for ambulances, hospital beds, and has even set up a school in his name, with grants for children and families. Those close to him fear that he will end up with no money, as his messianic zeal as a do-gooder knows no bounds.

Bob Arum, Pacquiao’s American boxing promoter, told The Telegraph that he is convinced he will be inviting his man up to the dais for his next championship as “The Honourable Congressman Manny Pacquiao”.

Courtesy of The Telegraph


Pacquiao’s New Opponent

 

Manny Pacquiao

Manny Pacquiao

Manny Pacquiao will fight March 13 at Cowboys Stadium, but not against Floyd Mayweather.

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said he has finalized a deal to match Pacquiao against Joshua Clottey in a welterweight bout at the new US$1.2 billion stadium.

Arum moved swiftly to land a lucrative fight for his Filipino star after his contentious negotiations for a megafight with Mayweather fell apart in a prolonged dispute over blood testing.

Arum was in Texas over the weekend to wrap up details for the pay-per-view fight, which will be the first boxing match in the stadium. Top Rank spokesman Lee Samuels said the arena will be configured to seat 50,000 fans for the fight, but the capacity could be raised or lowered.

“This stadium has blown me away,” Arum said. “It is the most magnificent facility I’ve ever seen.”

Arum took in the Dallas Cowboys’ playoff victory over the Philadelphia Eagles on Saturday night, sitting just two seats from former President George W. Bush. Arum said Bush had the same reaction he’s heard repeatedly since negotiations with Mayweather bogged down

“Too bad you didn’t get Mayweather, but what difference does it make?” Arum said Bush told him. “Everybody just wants see Pacquiao anyway.”

Cowboys owner Jerry Jones reportedly offered a US$25 million site fee for the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight, which fell apart over Mayweather’s insistence on stringent drug testing and Pacquiao’s reluctance to agree. The sides went into mediation to resolve the dispute, but a compromise couldn’t be reached.

And though Arum is a longtime New York Giants season ticket-holder, he found common ground with Jones for another major event in the opulent new stadium.

“This is a competitive fight, as competitive as the Cotto fight going in,” Arum said. “We got a tremendous deal at the site. It’s a big event, and I think we’ll do unbelievable.”

Although Mayweather’s representatives still were holding out hope the Pacquiao fight could be salvaged, Mayweather also is expected to fight March 13 at the MGM Grand Garden in Las Vegas, which would have been the site of his bout with Pacquiao. Paulie Malignaggi has been the most popular contender for that fight.

Although Clottey has no fraction of Mayweather’s fame, he’s a worthy welterweight opponent for Pacquiao, widely considered the top pound-for-pound fighter in the world. The hard-hitting Clottey (35-3, 20 KOs), a native of Ghana who lives in New York, is coming off a split-decision loss to Miguel Cotto last June, a fight that some felt Clottey won.

Cotto went on to take a thrashing from Pacquiao in November, losing when the fight was stopped in the final round.

Courtest of CBCsport

HAVE YOUR SAY: Is Arum being arrogant or do you think the audience really only wanted to see Pacquiao?


Fights Outside the Ring

Manny Pacquiano

Manny Pacquiano

The case of Floyd Mayweather versus Manny Pacquiao: A fight to decide the best boxer in the world.

For week Floyd Mayweather Jr’s father has been claiming that Manny Pacquiao’s astronomical rise through the weight divisions has been fuelled by steroids.

Mayweather’s camp have brought negotiations grinding to a halt by insisting Philippine legend Pacquiao be subjected to random drug testing in the lead-up to the fight, which had been scheduled for 13 March.

Pacquiao, a five-division world champion (or seven, depending on your point of view) who started out as a light-flyweight, had agreed to have blood taken for testing before the initial media conference and after the fight but would not agree to having blood drawn within 30 days of the bout.

His trainer Freddie Roach said: “When Manny gives blood it takes him three or four days to recover from it. I am not going to have my fighter going into a fight feeling weak and not sure of himself.

“We have passed every test ever given to us. We go by the commission rules, since when does the fighter make up the rules?”

For the record, the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which has overseen 10 of his last 14 fights, insists Pacquiao is as clean as the tears of a saint.

Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum, who announced the fight’s cancellation on Wednesday, has accused Mayweather of “sabotage”, while Roach says the unbeaten American, himself a world champion at five different weights, “is afraid of getting his ass kicked”.

Many see Mayweather as the villain while others will no doubt be wondering how a tough guy like Pacquiao can be scared of needles. After all, he’s done a fair bit of blood-letting in the ring in his time.

But while Pacquiao’s refusal certainly suggests he has something to hide – which, and I can’t stress this enough, isn’t the same as saying he’s hiding something – Mayweather knows boxing’s doping laws, however out of step they may be with the rest of modern sport, and you can understand why Pacquiao would not wish to jump through hoops of the American’s making.

HAVE YOUR SAY: Do you think Pacquiao has something to hide?

Courtesy of the BBC’s Ben Dirs

 


Videos, Slideshows and Podcasts by Cincopa Wordpress Plugin