Modesty and greatness seldom go hand in hand, but in Manny Pacquiao they do.

The brilliant and engaging Filipino mastered Miguel Cotto, stopping the Puerto Rican in the twelfth round to become WBO welterweight champion at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in the early hours of yesterday, then batted off all the plaudits being thrown at him with a shy smile.

“I always tell myself that I am just an ordinary fighter, but I have to beat the best fighters and sometimes I can,” he said.

Pacquiao, 30, is far from ordinary. When he beat Oscar De La Hoya in the same ring 11 months ago, comparisons were made to Henry Armstrong — a three-weight world champion when there were only eight titles. But as his reputation has grown, so have the comparisons. Pacquiao is now grouped with Muhammad Ali, for his impact outside the ring as much as his achievements in it.


“He’s the best fighter I have ever seen and that includes Ali, Marvin Hagler and Sugar Ray Leonard,” Bob Arum, his promoter, said. “Who would have believed that when he was fighting the likes of [Marco Antonio] Barrera and [Érik] Morales that he would be fighting all these big guys and destroying them?”

“Manny doesn’t know what he has achieved, he’s not a historian of the sport,” Freddie Roach, his trainer, said. “He is the greatest fighter of his era.”

It could be that we are living in an age of two all-time greats, a view that would certainly be heartening to Ricky Hatton, who was knocked out by both. The easy-going grace and ever-present smile of Pacquiao contrast heavily with the bling and big talk of Floyd Mayweather Jr, but with both now occupying the same weight division, a match — which would most likely be the biggest of all time — could be too big to avoid.

“That’s the fight the world wants to see,” Roach said. But things are never that easy. Arum used to promote Mayweather and there is little love lost between them. Discussions will not be as easy as both taking a 50-50 split. Sometimes reputations mean more on the negotiating table than in the ring.

“If Mayweather wants to fight Manny, let him call me,” Arum said, although that is unlikely to be an approach that is ever made. Instead, Richard Schaefer, the chief executive of Golden Boy, which has promoted Mayweather’s recent bouts, is likely to act an a middleman in talks.

Things are complicated further because Pacquiao intends to run for Congress in the Philippines in May next year. Arum has spoken about wanting him to box on March 13, possibly in Dallas, but that could be too soon for a promotion the size of Pacquiao-Mayweather.

The bottom line comes down to whether Mayweather, who has been regularly accused of taking few risks, fancies the job. There is no doubt that Pacquiao is willing.

Few who witnessed Pacquiao’s latest step towards sporting immortality would be backing Mayweather with any confidence.

In the absence of Mayweather, his father, Floyd Sr, was on hand to show the sort of family loyalty that sometimes seems to have been missing. “I think Li’l Floyd whups his ass,” Floyd Sr said, before adding: “If he asks me, I’d say don’t take the fight. I have my reasons.”

Counting Pacquiao’s world titles depends on whether one includes his win over Ricky Hatton in May — for the IBO and Ring magazine light- welterweight titles — and his 2003 victory over Barrera for the Ring magazine featherweight title. If you do, his tally now stands at a remarkable seven at seven different weights, one more than the record of De La Hoya.

That Pacquiao began his career as a light-flyweight, nine divisions below welterweight, makes his achievements all the more extraordinary. Had he started out as a protected prospect, rather than fighting his way off the streets in a faraway land, he would probably be approaching double figures for world titles.

In the past 20 months alone, Pacquiao has boxed in four divisions, from super-featherweight to welterweight. His career has been one big challenge after another and he has met each one in thrilling style.

Conventional wisdom was that Pacquiao would have the speed, but that Cotto would be bigger and stronger; a genuine welterweight, a brilliant boxer and a fierce puncher. For five rounds it was one of the most exciting bouts of recent times. Then Pacquiao took control. He had the edge in speed and power.

In the first round, Cotto’s jab found Pacquiao with surprising ease, but, in a memorable second round, Pacquiao’s speed began to baffle Cotto as he doubled up hooks and whipped over his mesmerising, powerful lefts. Cotto, though, responded well, hammering back hooks as Pacquiao fired off combinations.

The pace kept up in the third as Pacquiao jumped in with a right-left to the body, followed by a right hook to the side of the head that dropped Cotto to his knees. Cotto was straight back on the offensive, landing a peach of a left uppercut.

The fourth was another classic as Pacquiao landed a six-punch combination, only for Cotto to force the Filipino back on to the ropes and unload.

Then came the decisive moment of the bout as Pacquiao worked his way off the ropes and landed a huge left cross that staggered Cotto across the ring and back to the floor.

From then there was only one winner, with Pacquiao’s speed and accuracy always having the upper hand over Cotto’s effort and desire. By the ninth, Cotto looked badly battered and went into survival mode, boxing entirely on the back foot.

Cotto, though, was always firing back and it took until 55 seconds into the final round, when two hard lefts landed, for Kenny Bayless, the referee, to find sufficient excuse to stop it.

“I’m still proud. I’ve fought everyone, but Manny’s one of the best boxers of all time,” Cotto said. And the lumps on the brilliant Puerto Rican’s face were testament to just how great Pacquiao is.

Weighty matters

Some are claiming that the win over Miguel Cotto for the WBO welterweight title makes Manny Pacquiao a seven-weight world champion. But that only stands if one counts the IBO and Ring magazine titles, rather than just the main four bodies.

Flyweight, December 4, 1998: beat Chatchai Sasakul, ko 8th, to win WBC title in Phuttamonthon, Thailand (8st)
Super-bantamweight, June 23, 2001: beat Lehlohonolo Ledwaba, rsc 6th, to win IBF title in Las Vegas (8st 9lb)
Featherweight, November 15, 2003: beat Marco Antonio Barrera, rsc 11th, for Ring magazine title in San Antonio, Texas (8st 13lb)
Super-featherweight, March 15, 2008: beat Juan Manuel Márquez, split points decision, for WBC title in Las Vegas (9st 3lb)
Lightweight, June 28, 2008: beat David Díaz, rsc 9th, for WBC title in Las Vegas (9st 8Klb)
Light-welterweight, May 2, 2009: beat Ricky Hatton, ko 2nd, for IBO and Ring magazine titles in Las Vegas (9st 12lb)
Welterweight, November 14, 2009: beat Miguel Cotto, rsc 12th, for WBO title in Las Vegas (10st 4lb)

Undefeated super-welterweight Shawn Porter, the main sparring partner of Manny Pacquiao, asserted on Wednesday that he wasn’t bothered by the Filipino’s vaunted power but admitted he was awed by the pound-for-pound king’s other inimitable trait.

“Its’ not much about his power, it’s his speed,” Porter told the Bulletin.

The Ohio-bred Porter is said to be a clone of Miguel Cotto, who Pacquiao faces on November 14 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

Porter, 21, the 2007 US Golden Gloves middleweight champion and alternate on the 2008 Olympic team, battled Pacquiao for three intense rounds at the Shape Up Gym inside the Cooyeesan Hotel in Baguio City.

In Thursday’s media day, Porter is going to be sent up again to bang with Pacquiao although their session will last for only two rounds since Pacquiao has also to contend with another sparmate, lightweight Urbano Antillon, for two rounds.

“I am looking forward to my second sparring with Manny, who is a great person outside the ring,” said Porter, who flew in last Sunday but only got to Baguio the following day owing to the inclement weather.

Taking center stage as well during Thursday’s open workout for the media is Hall of Fame promoter Bob Arum, who is arriving this morning from the US. Arum, who heads Top Rank Inc. will be in Baguio until Sunday morning.

In the coming weeks, Pacquiao will have to deal with Porter and Antillon and possibly another one to be flown over if ever Pacquiao decides to extend his training camp in the City of Pines.

Meanwhile, Cotto’s own training camp is doing very well, Bryan Perez, the Puerto Rican’s aide-de-camp revealed on Thursday.

Cotto has been working out at the Fight Factory in Tampa, Florida, the past two weeks.

“Everything is running up pretty well right now,” said Perez, who is also joined there by chief trainer Joe Santiago and conditioning coach Phil Landman.


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

Freddie Roach is concocting a strict gameplan for Manny Pacquiao to follow against Miguel Cotto, the Puerto Rican whom the Filipino faces in an American ring in Las Vegas in 6 and a half weeks’ time.


Ten days into training camp in the Shape Up Gym in Baguio City, in The Philippines, a departure from his previous dozen camps, there are positive noises emerging. That said, Roach is concerned by local distractions, while in the same breath remains amazed once again by Pacquiao’s conditioning and appetite for training.

Roach, Pacquiao’s celebrated trainer always talks of ‘letting his fighter go’, letting his charge off the leash, at a certain point in a championship contest. Is it unlikely that Pacquiao will be released from a clear game plan in this one.

It has to be a tight, masterful performance. It will have to be, in order to defeat Cotto and capture his WBA welterweight gong. The fistic silhouettes of the dance between these two fighters suggests Pacquiao will be outgunned if he stands toe to toe with a fighter who has to be considered if not the most skilled, then certainly one of the most durable fighters on the planet.

The fairytale is for Pacquiao to win. Then, only then, will the boxing world be able to ready itself for the superfight the sport needs between Floyd Mayweather and Pacquiao, likely to be in the early spring of next year. In spite of Pacquiao insisting this week that he “wishes to campaign in the elections” and that he has “nothing left to prove”, let us forget the idea of Pacquiao running in the elections for a moment.

A clear battle plan is developing, and it involves a 12-round strategy in which Pacquiao will have to win on points. As ever, Roach has pinpointed the fact that Pacquiao must box against Cotto, use his speed, move in and out, win the early rounds and outbox this teak tough champion who has lost only once in 35 professional fights and has campaigned at welterweight since 2006.

There are those in the UK, like former world champion Barry McGuigan, who cannot see Pacquiao dethroning Mayweather. Indeed, McGuigan, who has been around in the game long enough to see many a great in action, believes even Cotto may be a step too far for Pacquiao, again giving away size and weight.

McGuigan said in his weekend column in The Daily Mirror. “Roach was not impressed with Mayweather’s victory over Juan Manuel Marquez. The fight was there for the taking, he said. Mayweather just did not have the balls to finish him off.

I like and respect Roach but I think he is whistling in the dark here. I am the first to agree that Mayweather could take more risks, that he could be more exciting.

That does not detract from the fact that he is an awesome fighter. At welterweight there is not a boxer alive who can take him in my view.

There is a danger in Roach and Pacquiao looking too far over the fence into the future. They have enough on their plate in November with Miguel Cotto.”

I disagree. Pacquiao could defeat Cotto on points. He could also get caught in the late rounds. Cotto is now a systematic campaigner at 147lbs, and has knocked out 27 of his 35 opponents.

But a step too far ? I don’t think so. Having seen Pacquiao up close in training, how he goes 5 hours without a break, how he possesses an almost fixated instinct in the ring, his special qualities could see him to another remarkable victory. If so, he really then does have to weigh-up his options. Election campaign or Mayweather ?


http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk