Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Manny Pacquiao vs Joshua Clottey in Cowboys Stadium

The stars will fight, big and bright, deep in the heart of Texas! Jerry Jones and Bob Arum, owner of the Dallas Cowboys and chairman of Top Rank, respectively, announced today that Cowboys Stadium would be the site of the MANNY PACQUIAO vs. JOSHUA CLOTTEY World Welterweight Championship fight taking place on Saturday, March 13 and broadcast Live on Pay-Per-View. Formal news conferences at Cowboys Stadium and in New York next week will provide details on tickets and the pay-per-view broadcast. Pacquiao vs. Clottey will be promoted by Top Rank, in association with the Dallas Cowboys and MP Promotions. Pacquiao and Clottey boast a combine record of 85-6-2 (59 KOs) — a winning percentage of 91% and a victory by knockout ratio of nearly 70%.

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

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

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

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

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

Source: boxingnews24.com

Pacquiao vs. Clottey: I'll Believe It Once Tickets Go on Sale

With various reports coming out that the sport's number one pound for pound fighter Manny Pacquiao will not fight the former undefeated American pound for pound fighter Floyd Mayweather Jr on March 13th as planned and hoped by many of the general public, it has also now been reported that Pacquiao will be fighting instead former IBF welter weight champion Joshua Clottey from Ghana at the new Dallas Cowboys football stadium in Arlington, Texas.

There have been articles coming out with statements from Pacquiao's promoter Bob Arum as well as his trainer Freddie Roach stating that the fight with Clottey is a go and all set.

Even if you look up the on and off again trusty site of BoxRec it has the March 13th, 2010 fight all set for Manny Pacquiao vs Joshua Clottey taking place at the Cowboys Stadium with even the return of Antonio Margarito fighting on the under card, as well as Jose Luis Castillo. If you look below that fight card it even shows another fight card happening on the very same night with Floyd Mayweather Jr fighting a "To Be Announced" at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

So what does one make of all this? Well first off as much as we love BoxingRec for looking up our favorite fighter's records it is not the most reliable source when determining upcoming future fights. It had the Pacquiao vs Mayweather fight listed as taking place on March 13th, 2010 at the MGM Grand just a week ago, meaning it has been known to post fights before they were indeed signed sealed and delivered.

So what is the point of this article then you may be asking yourself? The point is Bob Arum has been known to prematurely announce fights to be taking place at new extravagant locations as if he has like some sort of publicity deal to talk about having his next big fight there even though it never actually does end up there.

For example ever since Pacquiao destroyed Erik Morales in their rubber match in 2006 at the Thomas and Mack Center, Arum was talking about having Pacquiao's next fight at the brand new Wynn Macau in China. He kept saying Pacquiao's next fight will be held there after each fight that Pacquiao won for the next several fights. Well Pacquiao went on to fight 7 more times and winning each fight but none of them ever took place at the Wynn Macau. So it made me wonder if he promised to say the next fight would take place at the Wynn Macau he would be getting compensated in some way.

I've personally stayed at Wynn's Bellagio and Encore both comped and they were so nice that even I would mention the Wynn resorts whenever I could possible if I could some how be compensated or even have more future free comped stays at the Wynn resorts wink wink.

So back to Pacquiao's fight with Clottey it has all the making of a great fight. Clottey is a true welter weight who gives hell to all of his opponents. Nobody ever has a easy fight with the Ghanan former champion known as Grand Master.

However it is my personal belief that I am not completely sold that this fight will indeed be happening until I see the tickets go on sale. When the tickets actually officially go on sale then that is when a fight is indeed signed and sealed in my opinion.

If you go to the website of the Dallas Cowboys Stadium site and the event calendar for March you will see the fight is not yet posted and the tickets are not available in their system nor or they available via Ticketmaster. http://stadium.dallascowboys.com/events/index.cfm?action=month&month=3&year=2010

With only 8 more weeks to go until the supposed fight of Pacquiao vs Clottey would they actually be able to successfully pull it off with that small of a time line?

Floyd Mayweather's situation is even worse. He is supposedly headlining the MGM Grand all by himself on March 13th without even an opponent? As great as Mayweather is he had trouble selling out the MGM Grand against the greatest Mexican fighter of our generation on a Mexican holiday.

So what’s the moral of the story my friends? It is simple, wait until the tickets go on sale before you believe the hype.

FIGHTER OF THE DECADE

FIGHTER OF THE DECADE
Purists maintain that the current decade will run until December 31, 2010. Conventional wisdom holds otherwise. The Roaring Twenties encompassed the years 1920 through 1929. Popular culture dictates that The Sixties were over when 1970 began. The new millennium was celebrated as 1999 came to an end.

December 11, 2009 - by Thomas Hauser

As the '00s draw to a close, it's time to determine who deserves recognition as "Fighter of the Decade." Four men merit consideration.

Bernard Hopkins was an unlikely candidate as the decade began. On January 15, 2000, he turned 35 years old. He was the IBF middleweight champion with a record of 36 wins, 2 losses and 1 draw. How much longer could he go on?

A lot longer.

In the decade that followed, Hopkins fought 17 times. On 14 of those occasions, he emerged victorious. His biggest victories were against Felix Trinidad, Oscar De La Hoya, Antonio Tarver, Winky Wright and Kelly Pavlik. Those aren't just names. They're challenges. He lost close decisions to Jermain Taylor on two occasions and was beaten by Joe Calzaghe.

"Bernard Hopkins," Donald Turner says, "does everything the way it should be done, in and out of the ring. Outside of his age, the only problem he has is that he's not the bravest fighter in the world. Being too brave is foolish. Not being brave enough can cost you, like it did with Hopkins against Taylor."

Meanwhile, Hopkins proclaims, "Did you ever notice, when guys fight Bernard Hopkins, they always say afterward, 'I wasn't myself in the ring tonight.' Like I don't have anything to do with it. It's like a baseball player who goes 0-for-4 and strikes out four times. Do you think maybe the pitcher had something to do with that?"

Hopkins will turn 45 on January 15, 2010. He's the best over-40 fighter ever. "It's not about what you did yesterday," Bernard says. "You got to go into every fight with the attitude, 'My legacy starts tonight.'"

Joe Calzaghe entered the decade with a 27-0 mark and the WBO super-middleweight belt firmly in hand. In late 2008, at age 36, he retired as an active fighter with an unblemished record of 46 wins and 32 knockouts in 46 fights.
"Floyd don't run from nobody. I've seen Floyd counterpunch; I've seen Floyd move; I've seen Floyd use his speed, use his quickness. But I've never seen Floyd run." - Bernard Hopkins

Joe Calzaghe entered the decade with a 27-0 mark and the WBO super-middleweight belt firmly in hand. In late 2008, at age 36, he retired as an active fighter with an unblemished record of 46 wins and 32 knockouts in 46 fights.

Throughout his career, Calzaghe showed physical skills, heart and the ability to make all necessary adjustments during a fight. He beat some good fighters (e.g. Chris Eubank, Jeff Lacy, Sakio Bika and Mikkel Kessler) who weren't great. And he beat a once-great fighter (Roy Jones), who was well past his prime. His most impressive victory came against Hopkins.

After Calzaghe defeated Jones, Hugn McIlvanney wrote, "How can we do suitable honor to the wonderful boxing career of Joe Calzaghe while paying a decent minimum of respect to that battered old punchbag historical perspective? We could start by admitting that what was feverishly hailed as a triumph over a legend in Madison Square Garden looked rather more like the vandalizing of a relic. Roy Jones Jr. went to the ring in New York with his once-beautiful talent blatantly burnt out. Calzaghe's only two assignments in America have confronted him with men whose aggregate age is eighty-two. The years have piled up for him too, but his undamaged looks and physical freshness testify to the benefits of having spared himself the frequent commitment to wars that has been the norm for Jones, Hopkins, and their kind."

Calzaghe doesn't pay much attention to pound-for-pound rankings and the like. He calls them "a mythical load of crap." Still, in gauging his greatness, one must question whether Joe had the inquisitors that a fighter needs to be regarded as "Fighter of the Decade."Floyd Mayweather Jr. started the millennium with 22 wins in 22 fights and the WBC 130-pound championship belt around his waist. Over the next 10 years, he had 18 fights and won all of them. In the process, he captured titles at weights as high as 147 pounds and scored notable victories over Diego Corrales, Jose Luis Castillo (twice), Zab Judah, Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Juan Manuel Marquez.

Mayweather's public persona ("Money Mayweather") is a self-creation. Give him credit for good marketing on that. And he has the respect of his peers. Zab Judah once remarked, "Floyd comes into every fight physically and mentally at 100 percent."

Some observers of the boxing scene complain that Floyd runs more than he fights. But Bernard Hopkins rebuts that notion, saying, "Floyd don't run from nobody. I've seen Floyd counterpunch; I've seen Floyd move; I've seen Floyd use his speed, use his quickness. But I've never seen Floyd run."

And Mayweather himself notes, "Boxing is a beautiful sport. Boxing is art. The last time I looked, the sport was called 'boxing,' not '"toe-to-toe.'"

Still, there's a chink in Floyd's armor. There's a school of thought that, for much of the decade, he ducked the tough fights, managing to avoid Shane Mosley, Paul Williams, Antonio Margarito, and Miguel Cotto.

That brings us to Manny Pacquiao.

On January 1, 2000, Manny Pacquiao was 21 years old and virtually unknown outside of his native Philippines. During the course of the past decade, he has fought 26 times and become the most famous fighter in the world. His opponents in that 10-year span included Erik Morales (three times), Marco Antonio Barrera (twice), Juan Manuel Marquez (twice), Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto. In 10 fights against these six Hall-of-Fame-caliber opponents, Pacquiao amassed 8 wins against 1 loss and a draw.

Moreover, unlike Hopkins and Mayweather (both of whom fought many of their biggest fights against smaller men), Pacquiao has consistently challenged naturally bigger fighters. He has hurdled every major obstacle in his weight class and then some.

Unlike Mayweather and Calzaghe, Pacquiao has a less-than-perfect record for the decade. But when a fighter fights the best again and again, sometimes he loses. When Sugar Ray Robinson was young and great, he lost to Jake LaMotta. Muhammad Ali lost to Joe Frazier and Ken Norton before he got old.

History judges elite fighters in large measure by their record against other elite fighters and how they perform in their most difficult challenges.

Mayweather has talked the talk. Pacquiao has walked the walk. And Manny has out-of-the-ring intangibles as well. In that regard, he's similar to Muhammad Ali: a great fighter, a good person and an important symbol for his people.

"I'm just doing my job to be a good fighter," Pacquiao said after beating Miguel Cotto earlier this year.

He's doing more than that. Manny Pacquiao deserves recognition as "Fighter of the Decade."

Team Pacquiao to push for catchweight vs Clottey

MANILA, Philippines – A member of Team Pacquiao revealed their plan to propose a catchweight for the March 13 fight between Manny Pacquiao and Joshua Clottey, after it was earlier reported that trainer Freddie Roach said there will be no catchweight.

“We will push for the 145 [lbs.] catchweight,” Pacquiao’s lawyer, Jeng Gacal, told ABS-CBN’s “Umagang Kay Ganda.”

According to Gacal, the fight deal is sealed, save for the possible catchweight. Pacquiao and Clottey are slated to fight at 147 lbs.

“Ilalakad po natin tulad po sa nangyari sa [Miguel] Cotto fight na 145. Talagang mas malaki ang mga taong ito,” said Gacal, referring to Clottey and Cotto who were naturally bigger fighters than Pacquiao.

Roach, on the other hand, earlier said that the Filipino boxing superstar was comfortable with fighting at 147 lbs.

“It will be at 147. There’s no catchweight,” Roach told FightHype.com. A catchweight describes the weight limit for a fight that does not fall in traditional limits for weight classes.

Pacquiao will put his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title at stake when he faces Ghana’s Clottey, the former International Boxing Federation (IBF) welterweight champion, at the Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

Feather in cap

Gacal went on to disclose Pacquiao’s plans for his training camp.

“Sa America po [ang training] ang plano ni Manny. Ngayong Linggo, maaaring lumipad kami patungong America.”

As for the purse split, Gacal stated: “Maganda po ang hatian sapagkat ito’y natural na mas pabor ito kay Manny Pacquiao sapagkat alam naman po natin na ang alas dito ay si Manny Pacquiao.”

The lawyer also commented on Pacquiao’s upcoming debut at the Cowboys Stadium.

“Sa sitwasyon pong ito, talagang yung may-ari ng stadium na si Mr. Jerry Jones, talagang gusto niyang makuha si Manny Pacquiao na mapanood sa kaniyang lugar. Ito po ay ika nga, feather in his cap."

“At maganda naman po ang naging offer ni Mr. Jerry Jones so ito po ay makakabuti rin sa dalawang boxer at para mabago rin ang venue. Medyo lagi nalang sa Vegas,” noted Gacal.

Post-Clottey

The seven-division champion was supposed to fight Floyd Mayweather, Jr. at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

The much-anticipated bout, however, was called off because the boxers’ camps disagreed on the drug testing protocol.

“Hindi ko alam kung mangyayari pa,” Gacal said of the Pacquiao vs Mayweather fight. “Siguro kung magbabago ang takbo ng pag-iisip ni Floyd ay maaring mangyayari.”

He also mentioned that there are other plans lined up for Pacquiao if ever he wins over his Ghanaian foe.

Meanwhile, Gacal said the Clottey fight will not get in the way of Pacquiao’s political plans of running for the Saragani Province congressional seat in May.

He believes that Pacquiao’s two-month absence from the local scene, as he will be training and fighting in the US, will not affect his political campaign.

“Hindi pa naman puwede mangampanya sapagkat ang pangangampanya ng local officials ay magsisimula sa March 26. Mahaba-haba na rin yung preparasyon ni Manny sa kaniyang pagtakbo. He started almost a year ago.”


Source: news.yahoo.com

EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: TEDDY ATLAS

GL: Since the telecast last week, Bob Arum has been on the record saying that Teddy Atlas needs to issue an apology. He doesn't care who your sources are that email does not exist. He basically denied everything that you alleged. "Tell him to go get an apology from Tim Smith at the Daily News. As soon as he gets that apology then he'll get my apology. I'm really not going to talk too much about this because again, the internet to me is like a graffiti board and it justs gets more and more, I mean you got people like Mike Marley out there who are just low-life people. To me, I feel dirty every time I go near the internet. I feel like I got to take a shower or something."

GL: The reason I reached out to you Teddy is to be responsible. Opinions are like assholes, everybody got one, and I'm trying to see what you have to say, but as an outsider looking in...

Teddy Atlas: (cutting in) "That's all I have to say. Let him call Tim Smith at the Daily News. Christmas day he had the same thing in his column. Let him go call him and tell the Daily News to issue an apology. As soon as he gets that apology then he can come to me."

GL: I don't imagine you're going to give up your source, because I wouldn't. But my theory on the situation, and I hope you correct me because I'm wrong, but I think Michael Moorer might be your source because he has...

TA: (cutting in) "I can tell you right now that he's not my source. Michael Moorer goes around and talks and he's worried about somebody said this, and he's worried about clearing the record and I don't know why he's worried about any of that. He called me up, oh they put a little thing out there. He said people were accusing him of being the source. If you know you're not then don't worry about it."

GL: Why would the Pacquiao people be so stupid to send out such an email?

TA: "I don't think he has any rocket scientists around his group. You ever watch 24/7? (laughs) I mean none of these guys have rocket scientists around them. That's all I can say. It seems on the surface like a very stupid thing to do, to obviously have a record of something that can be incriminating or potentially look as though there's something that leads towards something inappropriate by even asking such a question? Yeah, I agree. And that was the first thing I asked. Why would somebody be so stupid to leave a paper trail on that? But yeah, these people that are around boxing, both as writers, both on the internet, both as people who get to hang around the camp and wind up becoming people that are involved in their careers, they're not rocket scientists and it just makes me sick.

"This is the reason I want to get out of boxing, I don't want to be around it no more. Everybody wants to get in for some reason. I don't know why. They think it's glorious or something, but I wish I could get out of this sport."

GL: As somebody with a keen eye for boxing and sees boxing in a way the normal person does not, based on what you've seen in Pacquiao, do you suspect he could be on anything?

TA: "I'm not suspecting anything, because if I say that then it's going to be..

GL: (cutting in) Do you have an opinion on his recent performances?

TA: "No. I don't have any opinion. All I know is what I said and what was told to me and that he's refusing to take a blood test and there's $30M on the table. If you're going to do this thing right you have to do where there's no set up dates. If you don't do it with the Olympic style testing then with all of the advancements, just like advancements of all the different performance enhancing drugs, obviously there's all kinds of sophisticated masking agents to hide from the test. Unless those tests are not taken on predetermined dates, on dates that are random where don't have a chance to evade with these masking agents, then it's almost impossible to really verify if somebody is on it. It almost has to be taken in a random way and that's why they do it that way with Olympic testing, because if a person knows when it's going to be done they can avail themself to some of these masking agents out there.

"If one person is willing to take it, it makes you scratch your head a little bit that the other person isn't willing to take it with $30M on the table if there's nothing to hide. If somebody wants to say why even put them through that? First of all if the other person is willing to do it too, and second of all if you do, and again it's no me in any way having an opinion, I don't have an opinion on this, but I'm just saying if you want to make a case to say where the Genesis start, if you want to take that, you could point in a reasonable manner, well look in today's day and age with all of these athletes taking these things and enhancing themselves from baseball, football, basketball, everybody. Obviously there is a history and there is a precedent you can point to, whether it was Mosley, whether it was Vargas, whether it was, somebody just told me Shannon Briggs tested positive, whether it was James Toney.

"James Toney in the Ruiz fight. And you know a lot of people forget about that, but Freddie Roach was his trainer. Freddie Roach is a clean guy and is a guy I wouldn't suspect anything bad of, but how do you know what a guy is doing? You're not with him 24/7. The question that should have been asked to Freddie during his interview, because they asked him do you know he's clean and he said yes, he knows he's clean. The fair question, but not in any way saying that Freddie is part of something or partnered with something improper, but the responsible follow up question would have been, and the same holds true if Mayweather were on that side, it would be a hard question to Mayweather, but it would have been the proper question.

"Freddie you say you know he's clean, but you probably said the same thing or would have said the same thing if you were asked that question going into the Ruiz fight. We're sure that you know he wasn't on something, but it turned out he was. He turned out that he took a test after the fight and the the title was stripped from him and it was given back to Ruiz because he was dirty. It's impossible for Freddie or any trainer for sure to say that they know because they're not with the guy when he leaves the gym and goes with his strength coach or whoever the hell he goes with. It's reasonable to say that with this behavior being commonplace in sports and it has been shown to show itself in boxing. Not as much as the other sports, but it's been there, then you would say that a guy who has moved up so many weight classes, retained his speed, retained his strength and you never saw him in a fight where anybody said he looked a lot smaller.

"And again, I'm not pointing any fingers, but I think it's reasonable to say that in today's day and age with these things being out there and guy moving up that many weight classes and has had success becuase he's a good fighter and he's got a good trainer. But he's retained his speed and strength without any kind of speed bump at all or loss of anything, you could say okay, in today's day and age you want to be sure. Maybe they got a report that tipped them off or whatever, again that's where you could see it coming from and that's within a reasonable realm. If you consider yourself an honest reasonable person you could understand somebody saying that, it doesn't mean it's true. But if Floyd is willing and he's made some concessions because he's no prince, but at some point if you are going to test for it, you have to do it in a realm where the test can be relied on.

GL: I understand that, but playing devil's advocate, isn't his request to Pacquiao insulting and doesn't it insinuate that he believes Pacquiao is on something for simply asking for additional testing not required by the Nevada Commission?

TA: "Just because it's not normal procedure on Nevada's freaking rules doesn't mean it shouldn't be normal procedure. It's a case where they can't afford to do the test and the state hasn't put that into law, because, for whatever reason, but that doesn't mean it shouldn't be there.

GL: Mayweather making such a request is unheard of.

TA: "It's not unheard of if it's out there and fighters are turning up positive just like other athletes. When you have a guy who when he turned pro he was 106 pound, he moved up to 112, he moved up to 118.

GL: That's kind of unfair, because he was a teenager.

TA: "But then he gets to a point where he's in his twenties and he's moving up four or five weight classes...

GL: (trying to cut in)

TA: "Listen if you're going to call me I'm going to talk. Maybe he's completely honest and everything is fine. But you can't line Mayweather up and want to shoot him in the firing squad because he asked for a test. Maybe it's a test that in today's day and age that should be there. Maybe it's irresponsible that the test is not there. He's a guy who puts himself on the line in that ring. Doesn't he have the right to make sure that the guy is on something that could give him an unfair edge and could hurt him? He's not out of line to ask for that if he has a real concern that that's a possibility.

GL: Based on what. When Pacquiao broke through against Barrera, he beat the hell out of Barrera until the corner threw in the towel...

TA: "Floyd is willing to take the same test. When you say based on what, based on the times, based on what we just talked about. Based on the fact that the guy has stepped up a lot of weight classes.

GL: So has Floyd.

TA: "Not quite to the extent that this guy has, to where you could say that his body in some way looks, for a guy who has such a small structure to almost look like he belongs in that weight class. He's grown in size in maybe a disappropriate way, and I'm not saying that's the case. You can make an arguement on both sides, Manny could be insulted and you could also make the arguement that the other guy has the right to ask."

Source: boxingtalk.com
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