Mendoza: Unmasking the other side of Pacquiao

I CAUGHT Manny Pacquiao on TV on Sunday. And what a guy, indeed, this boxer known from GenSan to Afghanistan as the world pound-for-pound king.

He said a mouthful while he was the sole guest of Chino Trinidad and Christine Jacob in a new TV program at GMA-7 aptly called “Game!”

Trinidad was the former commissioner of the defunct Philippine Basketball League while Christine is a retired, bemedalled swimmer.
 
Not to brag but I had strongly endorsed Trinidad for that PBL post after it was offered to me.
It’d kill my column-writing, so I turned it down--politely, of course.

“You are a very gentle person when not atop the ring fighting,” Christine told Pacquiao in Tagalog. “But when in a fight, you appear like almost a beast. Why?”

“It depends on who my opponent is,” Pacquiao said in Tagalog. “If, before a fight, my opponent appears bad, I’ll never think twice about trying to beat him to a pulp. But if he has shown respect for me, if he has shown some good virtues towards mankind, I’ll not be inclined to hurt him that badly.”

As to his fight against Oscar De La Hoya in 2008, Pacquiao made quite a stunning revelation.

“De La Hoya has been my idol,” said Pacquiao. “He remains my idol today.”

“But how come you battered him in 2008?” Chino asked.

“He did something to me before the fight that I will never forget,” said Pacquiao. 

“He sent me a pair of gloves before we met, and he wrote on the gloves, ‘I will knock you out!’ That got my goat!”

Hearing that, Chino nearly fell off his chair.

“I didn’t know that!” he said.

Pacquiao hit De La Hoya at will in that fight en route to scoring a one-sided eighth-round TKO when Oscar, his face almost rearranged grisly, surrendered before the bell rang for Round 9.
Then Pacquiao was asked why he knocked out Ricky Hatton so soon--in the second round.
“Because he boasted I couldn’t knock him out at 140 pounds,” said Pacquiao.

Against Antonio Margarito, Pacquiao said he took pity in the latter rounds “as he had no more fight in him.”

After his 12-round win, Pacquiao said the classic, “Boxing is not about killing.”

Here’s to a living legend.

Pacquiao should agree to Mayweather's demand and take the random blood testing

Pound for Pound King Manny Pacquiao should agree to random blood testing up until the day of the fight. Why do I think he should agree? Well it's not because I think the man is doing steroids, because I don't. I think Manny is clean, and he earned his victories fair and square. So why should Manny have to take the blood test?

Taking the random blood test up until the day of the fight will do a few things. Firstly, it forces Floyd's hand. If Manny agrees to take random blood tests up until the day of the fight, Floyd will be forced into a corner. Floyd will either have to agree to fight Manny, or he will choose to not fight. If Pacquiao agrees to the random blood testing up until the day of the fight, Floyd has no more cards to play.

As of right now, by Pacquiao not agreeing to random blood testing up until the day of the fight, Floyd still has a card to play. Floyd and his fans still have a card to play, they will continue to say that Manny is hiding something. By agreeing to the terms, Manny takes that card off of the table and away from Floyd Mayweather. If Manny went all in and agreed to everything, even Floyd's fans would have to jump ship if he still didn't agree to fight.

The biggest card that Floyd and his fans have right now is the fact that Manny won't take the blood test up until the day before the fight. They keep trumping that card telling the world that Manny must be hiding something. Manny would take that card and make them all eat it just by agreeing to the blood tests up until the day of the fight.

Agreeing to the random blood test up until the day of the fight is the best thing that Manny could do right now. He would finally get Mayweather into the ring and have his opportunity to silence Floyd and his fans.

Which Pound for Pound Star Will Have the Best End to 2011?

The top 4 fighters in the world all face questions about their future. Which fighter will be able to end the year in 2011 with a bang and which fighters will have 2011 finish with a dud? With the summer fight schedule heating up, and big fights looming on the horizon for Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather and more, who will shine the most before the year is out?

Manny Pacquiao

Pacquiao did what everybody expected him to do when he beat Shane Mosley in their love fest/sparring session. Pacquiao has now turned his attention to his obligations as a Congressman, plus his other endeavors. We will see him again at the end of the year in the anticipated third fight with Juan Manuel Marquez.


Something tells me that there aren’t going to be a lot of friendly gestures in this fight. This is clearly personal for Marquez, who believes he has Pacquiao’s number and who has been seeking this match for several years.


Pacquiao probably won’t admit it, but deep down this has to be personal for him too. He probably hoped that Juan Diaz or Michael Katsidis would have knocked Marquez off, so that he wouldn’t have to face him again. I know Bob Arum did. For this fight you will probably see Pacquiao turn back the clock to the featherweight-super featherweight version of himself.


He will have one goal in mind, and that will be to end Marquez’s career with a brutal knockout and finally gain some closure. Whether or not it ends up being a Fight of the Year quality match, it's definitely one of the big events of the year. This will be the one fight that real boxing fans know can’t be missed for any reasons. For the sake of debate though, what would happen if Marquez magically lost his tune up fight? Does Pacquiao go idle for the rest of the year, or face someone like the winner of the Zab Judah-Amir Khan showdown, or Timothy Bradley?

Sergio Martinez

The worst thing that happened to him was when Nobuhiro Ishida upset James Kirkland. Kirkland was probably going to be Martinez’s next opponent. Kirkland’s punching power made the fight attractive to fans. Once that fight was no longer an option, you just wondered who’s out there.


Well, Martinez’s next fight will be against unheralded Darren Barker of England. After he wins that fight, where does he go?

The Pacquiao and Mayweather fights won’t happen, while Miguel Cotto and Antonio Margarito are going to fight one another. While Martinez really wants Cotto, that fight is questionable as a legit challenge. Also,if Margarito wins, would Martinez want revenge at this point.


Paul Williams probably still has nightmares, so the third fight won’t happen for a while. The German champions don’t want to fight in America. Lou Dibella already said Dimitry Pirog isn’t an option. At 154 lbs, Alfredo Angulo and Saul Canelo Alvarez won't be moving up to get beat no matter how big a pay day it is. Perhaps Kermit Cintron is next in a rematch? I would like to see Arthur Abraham go back down to 160. Yes, he looked awful in the Super Six, but it wasn’t that long ago that this guy was making pound for pound lists at 160. He still has power, and could be a force.


Floyd Mayweather

Mayweather grabbed the boxing world’s attention when he announced that he would face Victor Ortiz in September. Alas, the positive press for him didn’t last long as he skipped his ordered deposition in the defamation lawsuit filed by Manny Pacquiao against Mayweather, his father, and his uncle. Nobody knows what will happen next involving Mayweather, but hopefully he will get to fight Ortiz. On paper this is the kind of fight that has been made in boxing since the start of the sport, and it's a great one on a lot of levels.


In one corner, you have a young, strong fighter who has seemingly come of age and is looking for that major victory to send him to the highest level of the sport. In the other corner, you have the established star who is probably a little past his prime, but not over the hill by any means, who is looking to fend off the young lion and stay on top


Ortiz has a chance to win the fight, especially because of Mayweather’s inactivity and the chance that he may not react well to a really hard shot from Ortiz. The Pacquiao questions will come again, but his next fight may well be against Amir Khan, if Khan gets past Zab Judah.


Nonito Donaire

The start of 2011 belonged to Donaire, who became a huge name to regular fans by destroying Fernando Montiel. People were already calling him a future Hall of Famer after that spectacular win, but he found a way to stunt his progress by becoming the center of a contractual fight between Top Rank and Golden Boy. Top Rank won the legal battle to stop Donaire from going to Golden Boy, but now they are going to deal with a disgruntled fighter.


Obviously, Golden Boy looked to cash in on a potential Donaire vs Abner Mares fight. There was also talk of Golden Boy trying to sign Anselmo Moreno, another top fighter at Bantamweight. Long term, maybe it’s best if Donaire stays with Top Rank. They have the elite fighters in Yuriorkis Gamboa and Juan Manuel Lopez that Golden Boy don't have, although those guys reside at featherweight and will be rising higher in the future.


Lopez is damaged, and a Donaire-Lopez fight won’t mean as much if it ever happens. However, if Gamboa keeps terminating guys, he will loom as Donaire’s Mayweather. Golden Boy can make some exciting fights for Donaire, as Daniel Ponce De Leon and Jorge Linares immediately come to mind, but they don’t have anyone that could meet Donaire in a superfight the way Gamboa could potentially.


The Verdict

There are a lot of questions about each fighter, but Pacquiao will have the best year if he beats Marquez and closes out that trilogy in exciting, dominant fashion. Mayweather beating Ortiz would be a very high quality win, however the Pacquiao-Marquez rivalry has more juice after all those years. Martinez is in a tough spot as no one of significance wants to fight him, while Donaire is in an even tougher spot, as he could be idle for the whole year.


DESPITE THE HATE, SHOULD MAYWEATHER'S RETURN CONCERN PACQUIAO?

This week kicks off the press tour for the Mayweather vs. Ortiz welterweight showdown as the boxing world prepares to celebrate the return of Floyd Mayweather Jr. to the sport's landscape this September.  And yes, make no mistake, we are celebrating because love him or hate him, you can't deny the fact that Floyd Mayweather makes boxing far more interesting.  In fact, to the general American public, Floyd is one half of their entire interest in the sport. 

Boxing is not dead, mind you; far from it.  The Klitchkos can regularly sell out stadiums in Germany.  Tomaz Adamek sells out arenas on his Polish fanbase alone.  Mikkel Kessler can do the same in Denmark.  David Haye and Carl Froch are just as popular in England.  Even an up-and-comer like Saul "Canelo" Alvarez can sell just as well in Mexico, his last fight bringing in 36 million viewers.  Boxing is dead? I don't think so. Boxing simply appears to be dead in America because the marquee division - the heavyweights - no longer draw the most talented big athletes in the world, who instead choose other sports with more lucrative potential for men of their size.  We may never see the heavyweight division as popular as it was decades ago for that very reason, but in the meantime, we at least have two superstars in Floyd Maweather and Manny Pacquiao who regularly bring in more viewers than the last star of the sport, Oscar de la Hoya, did in his prime.  For as rare as these stars are, we have to be thankful that a personality like Floyd Mayweather exists. 

It truly is personality and charisma that makes Floyd the star that he is.  Over the course of his career, Floyd has brilliantly managed to craft an image that is a bigger-than-life characature of himself so as to become the ultimate villain in boxing, one we haven't seen since Muhamud Ali.  When he broke into the mainstream on HBO's 24/7, the world got a look at an athlete who, despite being an absolute genius in the ring, often came off in the real world as an obnoxious, childish, foul-mouthed braggart, flaunting his earnings, mocking his opponents, and repeatedly reminding us of his flawless record in each new episode.

It's because of that behavior that such a large proportion of the sport's public both can't stand him and can't stand not to watch him fight.

Will this be the one where he finally gets knocked out?  Will this be the one where he finally eats his humble pie?

The general consensus from his haters is that so long as they tune in to watch him fight, there will  always be that small chance that they will get to witness, live, that special moment where his walls all come crashing down and the enormous ego is shattered. Regardless, this entire time, he has entertained you.  He's given you someone to root against.  The Floyd Mayweather Show has brought us the Mayweather-Pacquiao narrative, which has been among the most compelling in sports the past few years; right up there with "The Decision" and Tiger Woods' numerous affairs.  With Floyd and 24/7, we were also introduced to the Mayweather family.  The "Manny fights for his country/Freddie Roach has Parkinson's" story, as compelling as it is, got old by the second time through, but the Mayweather family seems to never cease to amuse me.  Whether it's Roger pushing a cart through the supermarket, Floyd Sr. ordering food at a Taco Bell drive-through, or Floyd's #1 guy, 50 Cent, riding a segway through the Big Boy Mansion, the Mayweathers seem to be the gift that keeps on giving.

I know this is not the usual negative commentary you're used to reading on Floyd.  I try to view things for what they actually are, and when I see Floyd Mayweather Jr., I see a man whose tremendous talents in his sport are only matched by his charisma outside it in a world mostly full of boring athletes with vapid personalities.  I "get" Floyd.  I can see why so many people absolutely dislike him, but I can also see a guy trying to earn the other half of prizefighting by presenting himself as something out of a comic book. It's a shame that more people can't see it that way.  But it's an even bigger shame that his haters seem to stop at nothing in distorting his record or discounting his success so as to project their loathing.

To the haters, Floyd's undefeated record means nothing because he ducked anyone who was ever any good, and everyone else was either too small or old and washed up.  To the haters, he can make all the money in the world, but that won't matter because "I can see the finish line with this guy and surely he'll end up broke like the rest of them."  And to the haters, of course it's all his fault that the big fight with Pacquiao hasn't come off yet.

So let's first look at that undefeated record Floyd is so proud of, and deservedly so.  This isn't Rocky Marciano padding his record with over forty bums before winning the title and defending it just six times.  This is a champion who won his first title over twelve years ago and has had over twenty world title fights since, without a single loss.  How did he do it?  According to the haters, largely in part by ducking fighters left and right.

Even though he fought Corales and Castillo, not getting around to Casamayor was a blatant duck job, according to his haters.

He allegedly also ducked Kostya Tszyu, even though the same month Floyd was fighting in his first PPV against the far more popular (at least in America) Arturo Gatti, Tsyzu was knocked out by Ricky Hatton, who Floyd eventually did face.

Upon his foray into the welterweight division, he supposedly ducked Cotto and Margarito, even though Cotto was new to the division and he and his handlers wanted no part of Floyd, and the opponent Floyd opted to fight instead of Margarito, but for the same price - Carlos Baldomir - was the lineal champion, while Margarito just held a paper belt.  And for as unknown as Baldomir was to the general public, Margarito, at the time, was even more anonymous.

The following fight was against Zab Judah, a long-awaited grudge match against the previous lineal champion and once again against a legitimate threat who brought far more money to the table than Margarito.

Floyd then allegedly performed the "cowardly act" of pursuing every fighter's dream of making a huge payday against Oscar de la Hoya for a title in a higher weight class he'd never fought in previously.  He then extended his cowardice by following that fight up against the undefeated Ricky Hatton, whose swarming, high-pressure style was supposed to pose a nightmare to Floyd, and also brought with him a legion of fans, media attention, and of course money.  He was also ranked #4 pound-for-pound in the world at the time he fought Floyd.

In fact, let's observe some of the pound-for-pound rankings of Floyd's most recent opponents.  At the time he fought Mosely, Marquez, Hatton, and De la Hoya, each was ranked #3, #2, #4, and #9 on the pound-for-pound rankings, respectively.  Does that sound like a guy who ducks fighters and "hasn't fought anybody"?  The irony, of course, is that Floyd's selection of his latest opponent, Victor Ortiz, ranked #2 at welterweight and a young fighter in his prime, seems to have drawn the least amount of criticism I've heard in years, despite Ortiz probably not even being considered a top 20 pound-for-pound fighter.  Go figure.  But so is the logic and revisionist history of Floyd's haters.

The counter argument from them, or course, is that most of these guys were either "old and past their prime" or "small and blown up."  But Mosley didn't look so old against the last guy he fought before Mayweather when he starched Antonio Margarito, and De la Hoya didn't look so old when he did the same to Ricardo Mayorga six months prior to fighting Floyd. And was Ricky Hatton really at such a severe weight disadvantage?  Whereas most great fighters progressively move up in weight throughout their careers, Hatton stayed at 140 from the start.  In fact, at the same time Hatton started his career in the late 90's at 140 pounds, Floyd was winning his first title at 130 pounds.  But I guess ten years into his career, having to finally move up that one whole weight class must have made all the difference in Hatton's performance, right?

Yes, Marquez was absolutely at a weight disadvantage, but after seeing him lose every second of every round of their fight, I don't need to wonder how things would have turned out had they met at lightweight.  But the haters still crticize, how dare Floyd choose the #2 pound-for-pound fighter in the world as his tune-up after a 21-month long layoff.

The reality is that if you scrutinize any great fighter's career who has been around the block, you'll find many viable opponents he never got around to fighting, and many of whom were not in their absolute prime age or weight class.  The difference though is that while it's simply a breaks-of-the-game for the sport and the rest of its fighters, with Floyd, it's allegedly evidence of his undefeated record being bogus.  At least, to the haters it is.

Why do fighters sometimes never get around to fighting the best opposition at the best possible times?  It's because boxing is a form of prizefighting, in which all fighters and their handlers measure the next move in acquiring the greatest reward against the least amount of risk.  This doesn't apply to Floyd, however.  To his critics, Floyd must fight the biggest threats every time, all the time, consequences-be-damned and regardless of the purse being offered.  Anything else and he's ducking someone.

The double standard is remarkable.  Manny Pacquiao has won titles in eight divisions, but only four of them were against lineal champions.  Am I to assume that he ducked the lineal champions from the other four weight divisions? 

Sugar Ray Leonard didn't duck Aaron Pryor or wait for Marvin Hagler to get old, but Floyd?  He ducked Kostya Tszyu and is waiting for Manny Pacquiao to get old.

Ah yes, the preemptive excuses as to why the other guy lost or why Floyd's victory means nothing.  The haters prepare it before every fight, and mark my words, when Floyd mows down Victor Ortiz - an overly aggressive puncher with average skills and no defense to speak of, a.k.a. perfect for Floyd - if it's anything less than when Maidana made him quit in six rounds a few years ago, we'll be sure to hear it.  And if he ever does get around to fighting Pacquiao and beats him, we all know why.  Pacquiao was past his prime, of course.  Floyd waited for him to get old.  Had they met two years earlier, things would have been totally different.  The victory means nothing.

As for the potential outcome of that fight, ask any casual sports fan who hates Floyd with a passion and you'll hear some forced answer as to how if Mosley could get to his chin, then surely Manny could and he'd finish the job.  But ask any true boxing fan with knowledge of the sport as to how to predict fights and they'll all tell you the same thing - styles make fights.  For as amazing a puncher as he is, Manny is there to be hit.  If his two wars with Juan Manuel Marquez have told us anything, it's that counter-punchers are Manny's kryptonite.  Guess who is probably the best counter-puncher in the history of the sport?

I spoke to Freddie Roach one time about that very issue and asked him how his fighter beats Floyd.  He told me, "Well...we beat him on activity...and Floyd hates southpaws. Zab Judah almost knocked him out." 

Does that sound like an immaculate battle plan, or simply wishful thinking?  We all know that Floyd has faced many high-pressure, high-activity fighters, but his defense and counter-punching have shut them down every time.  Floyd apparently doesn't seem to "hate southpaws" enough to not want to fight Victor Ortiz in September.  And winning three rounds and one clean blow to the face does not constitute Zab Judah almost knocking Floyd out.  The haters love to point to that punch, and the two Shane Mosley landed against Floyd in the second round of their fight, as evidence that he can be knocked out, but if anything, it speaks to how impeccable Floyd's career has been that after 41 fights, we can all remember the few times he was ever caught flush on the chin.

If the roles were reversed, we all know that not only would Floyd still be the one accused of ducking Manny, but Floyd would also be accused of being a roiding cheat by the entire sports media without the word "defamation" being uttered by anyone.  The entire situation itself speaks to how biased and distorted the view towards Floyd Mayweather really is by so much of the supposedly objective sports press.  Does it really sound that unreasonable for enhanced drug testing to be required of athletes in an event of this magnitude, in this day and age?

What does sound unreasonable is that while there are many athletes from other sports, who will place dead last in their competitions that will never be aired on television, will be subjected to the random blood testing without any qualms. However, one of the two players in not just the biggest fight of all time, but one of the biggest sporting events of all time, has come up with every excuse in the book as to why he should have to avoid it.  He's superstitious about having his blood drawn.  He was afraid of needles, at least until someone pointed out the numerous tattoos on his body.  My personal favorite was his explanation on Jimmy Kimmel Live, that because Floyd is naturally bigger, when that small vial of blood is drawn from their bodies, Floyd would be have a disproportional size advantage in terms of what their bodies were left with after the blood was drawn.  Ummmm...yeah...okay.

If the lack of consistency in that story isn't laughable, then the general public's acceptance of it should be.  We live in an era where the best PEDs out there, like HGH and blood doping, simply cannot be detected unless blood is drawn within the 24-48 hour window from when the drugs entered the body, and don't let anyone tell you otherwise.  Famous boxers like James Toney and Fernando Vargas have all tested positive for steroids.  Shane Mosley and Tommy Morrison have confessed their past use as well.  And in that combat sport just down the street, mixed martial arts, probably a quarter of the named fighters in the sport have tested positive for PEDs at some point.  You still don't think that enhanced drug testing ought to be implemented in the biggest fight of all time?

Truth be told, I don't believe Manny Pacquiao uses or has ever used anabolic steroids.  I believe that he is simply one of the greatest fighters we have ever seen, and certainly the greatest puncher.  I say that with no hyperbole either.  And to be even more frank, as sacrileges as this might be to some - I'm far more impressed with the sheer number of champions and Hall of Famers he's run through than I am with Sugar Ray Robinson racking up over 170 wins from fighting mostly tomato cans off the turd circuit every other weekend.

That's probably a shock to many because, for whatever reason, to most of Floyd's haters, the idea of being both a fan of Floyd and also a fan of Manny is inconceivable.  They simply can't comphrehend the idea that someone could be a fan of Floyd's without instictively hating Manny as well.  It truly speaks to how much of Manny's popularity stems from his fan's hatred of Floyd.  And for that, Manny should be grateful.  Yes, Manny is an amazing athlete and his style is exciting to watch, but let's not act like a significant portion of his fanbase, while cheering for Manny, are also cheering against Floyd.

But none of my high opinion of Manny can prevent him from looking that much worse every time the next Floyd opponent agrees to the random blood testing up to the day of the fight.  Mosley did it.  Ortiz will do it.  Why can't Manny?

Yes, we know that egos play a huge role in this and conceding to the drug testing would, to some degree, be like Floyd winning the first round, but I think we all know what's really in play here.  Manny has made it no secret that there's not much more for him to prove beyond a fight with Floyd, and following that would likely be retirement.  Can you imagine how much money from potential fights would be forfeited if he fought Floyd and then rode off into the sunset?  How many pockets wouldn't be half as lined had Manny fought Floyd over a year ago and never entered the ring again?  It's no secret that a lot of his handlers make a huge portion of their living off Manny Pacquiao's activity in the sport, so would it be a stretch to assume that so long as they can keep the Floyd card dangling just out of reach in front of Manny, they can keep the party going that much longer?

"Don't submit to to him, Manny.  How dare he.  You're Manny Pacquiao.  Who is he to make demands of you?  He's just trying to gain an unfair advantage.  Don't do it.  There are plenty of other fighters we can pursue."

But if Manny is going to be naive about his hander's intentions with him, he should at least open his eyes to how much he's missing out on the business side.

Boxing's latest bombshell is the not-so-well-kept secret that Floyd is getting a record $40 million guarantee for fighting Victor Ortiz.  The implications of this are huge.  It marks the biggest purse gaurantee of any fight on record.  It will surely be one of the greatest overall purses a fighter has ever received.  And it's also a heck of a lot more than Manny Pacquiao is making in his fights.

Should Manny be concerned?

In 2010 Floyd Mayweather was ranked the second highest paid athlete in history by Forbes behind only Tiger Woods with $65 million on almost fight purses alone.  That same year Manny Pacquaio was #8 with just $42 million.  How did Floyd make 50% more in salary than Manny during that same period of time, when Manny is supposed to be the most popular fighter?  They both had two big PPV fights that drew in tons of buys.  And how is Floyd making $40 million against Victor Ortiz, while Manny will probably only make just over half that in a third fight against Juan Manuel Marquez?

The obvious conclusion is two-fold: Floyd is an extraodinary businessman as an athlete and Manny's trust in his handlers should seriously be questioned.  Floyd's partnership with Al Haymon should go down as one of the most business savvy in sports history, while Manny's seemingly blind faith in Bob Arum and Mike Koncz should be met with serious scrutiny.  Floyd Mayweather will make in one fight almost what the (arguably) best basketball player in the sport, LeBron James, makes in an entire year in salary and endorsements.  Suppose Floyd made that same purse in a big Cinco de Mayo fight against the popular Mexican sensation Saul "Canelo" Alvarez, which is highly conceivable.  Canelo's star power is fast rising, the fight would be an in-house with Golden Boy Promotions, and Floyd's fight against Oscar de la Hoya on a Cinco de Mayo was the biggest PPV event of all time.  If the fight and another $40 million purse were to come off, it would earn him more for the year than what the top earning athlete of 2011, Tiger Woods, brought in last year.  Do you really think Manny Pacquiao will make $40 million against Mike Jones, the latest Top Rank fighter being pushed by Bob Arum as Manny's next opponent after Marquez?

All of this of course goes unmentioned by the vast majority of the sports press, who instead often choose to cross those boundaries of objective journalism, some of the most respected even going so far as to harass Floyd on Twitter.  The latest atrocity was the trend a few months ago by some in the boxing press to rank Sergio Martinez over Floyd in the pound-for-pound rankings.  Sergio Martinez is a phenomenal fighter and every bit deserving of his #3 slot, but to suggest that a fighter who only became champion three years ago and had a loss since then can somehow be ranked higher than a fighter who has been champion since 1998, won titles over five weight classes against world-class opposition, and never experienced a loss to blemish that record is absurd.

Say what you want of his personality, but give the man credit where it's due.  Since entering the sport, Floyd has made himself one of the wealthiest boxers of all time outside of the ring, and inside it, perhaps the most flawless.  And no, it's not because he never fought anyone good or only fought them when they were at a severe disadvantage.  It's because with Floyd, there is always a method to his madness.  I can't cast judgment on his pending legal issues outside the ring, but I can say that if you hate the Floyd you've seen on TV, he's probably fine with that.  It's made him a fortune and as  we all know, no matter what you do, haters gon' hate.  Perhaps you don't see the charismatic genius of his image, but you can't deny the tremendous success he's had as a prizefighter.  Don't diminish his record as though his talents are a farce when you know that the 41-0 is legit, and stop acting like TMZ reporting that Floyd missing a car payment on one among his fleet of cars is a sign that the $40 million paycheck isn't real and destitution is just around the corner.  In a sport that many have claimed to be dying, Floyd has certainly given it life.

PACQUIAO NOMINATED FOR 2011 BEST FIGHTER ESPY AWARD, BUT FACES STIFF COMPETITION

Once again, eight-division world champion Manny Pacquiao has been nominated for the Best Fighter ESPY Award. The ESPY Awards, created by cable television network ESPN, is an annual ceremony that celebrates athletic performances throughout the year. Nominees for each category are chosen and the winners are then selected exclusively via online fan balloting. This marks the third year in a row that Pacquiao has been nominated for the coveted award. 


Although officially he's been nominated a total of four times, Pacquiao has only won it once, in 2009, having been beaten out by rival Floyd Mayweather every other time.

This year, Pacquiao will have some stiff competition from his fellow nominees. He'S joined by future Hall of Famer Bernard Hopkins, who became the oldest boxer to win a major world title, and middleweight king Sergio Martinez, who successfully defended his crown twice with impressive knockout victories. Pacquiao will also be pitted against UFC light heavyweight champion Jon Jones, the youngest UFC champion ever, as well as UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre, who also had two successful title defenses, bringing his streak to six. ESPN lists the following achievements as the reason for Pacquiao's nomination:

  • Scored a unanimous decision victory against Antonio Margarito to win the WBC's 154-pound title, becoming boxing's first eight-division champion.
  • Also scored a unanimous decision over Shane Mosley in May 2011.
Source: http://www.fighthype.com

Pacman keeping an eye on Mayweather

MANILA, Philippines - Manny Pacquiao is taking Floyd Mayweather’s scheduled fight with Victor Ortiz as a sign of good things to come.


“Maybe he wants to fight me now,” said Pacquiao in a recent interview with ABS-CBN before he took off for a quiet vacation with his family in Boracay.


The pound-for-pound champion has been in the island paradise for almost a week now, staying in a place owned by his close friend Luis “Chavit” Singson.


Pacquiao was supposed to leave for the United States last Sunday for a previous commitment. But there was a change of plan, and instead the entire family flew to Boracay.


Pacquiao said Mayweather choosing Ortiz, a 24-year-old southpaw, as his opponent on Sept. 17 could be taken as a sign that the American is gearing up for the Filipino congressman.


Mayweather hasn’t fought since May of 2010, when he outpointed Shane Mosley, and coming out of his shell to fight Ortiz is something that left a lot of people guessing on his immediate plans.


“Maybe that’s why he chose to fight a southpaw,” said Pacquiao.


Twice over the last couple of years, a superfight between Pacquiao and Mayweather came close to happening. But for various reasons it never happened, and others have given up on it.


But there’s too much money on the table that sooner or later, perhaps by the first quarter of 2012, it might happen.


Both fighters stand to earn no less than $40 million each for the fight, even as recent stories said Mayweather is asking for $100 million or the fight won’t happen at all.


Pacquiao has been busy through the years beating up bigger foes like Miguel Cotto, Joshua Clottey, Antonio Margarito and Mosley. He said he’s ready to fight Mayweather anytime, anywhere.


It’s just a matter of the promoters agreeing to do the fight, according to Pacquiao, and both fighters agreeing on the drug-testing procedure.


Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, felt the same way when it was announced that the undefeated American, now 34, had chosen Ortiz (29-2-2 with 22 knockouts) as his next foe.


“Of course, that’s the first thing I thought,” Roach was quoted as saying of Mayweather’s fight with the reigning WBC welterweight champion and fellow American.


Pacquiao said he can only wait and see what the future holds, what Mayweather wants.


For the meantime, he’s enjoying Boracay with his wife and kids, and looking forward to his November clash with Juan Manuel Marquez.


“Good luck sa kanya (Mayweather),” said Pacquiao.


Source: http://www.philstar.com

Zab Judah hints that Freddie Roach will try to steer Pacquiao away from him


We are now less than a month away from the Amir Khan-Zab Judah junior welterweight unification tilt, set to go down at the Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas, Nevada. As each day passes the tension in the air continues to build, as evidenced by the extreme amount of trash talk coming from both sides. 
Judah has never been one to shy away from a challenge but it's pretty admirable to simply see him back on such a stage, gracing HBO's airwaves against a man regarded as one of the sport's most promising champions at the moment. In the past five years Judah has lost some hard fights to the likes of Floyd Mayweather, Miguel Cotto, and Joshua Clottey yet a move back down to 140 pounds has served as somewhat of a renaissance for his career.

Now into his sixteenth year as a professional, Judah doesn't seem to mind the path he has traveled one bit.

"I'm from Brooklyn, I don't have a problem taking the long, hard, grinding road. I wasn't the golden boy. I wasn't the guy always in the light, the guy always first picked, but somehow I made my way back to the top," stated Judah in a recent statement to the press.

His outstanding skills always evident, Judah has had notable moments in his fights, even in his losses, yet has seemed to fall short when facing boxing's elite. But while Khan has an abundance of upside, there are those who still aren't completely sold on the British star, pointing to his first round meltdown against Columbian puncher Breidis Prescott in the fall of 2008 as proof.

Those with logic will concede that Khan has grown tremendously as a fighter since that debacle yet Judah still has several questions that he would like to ask the 24-year old.

"July 23rd is about this; what can you bring as far as your skills? What can you bring as far as your brains? What can you bring as far as your knowledge of boxing? What can you do inside that square ring? What do you do when you look across that ring and there's a hungry lion named Zab 'Super' Judah looking you dead in the eye, anxious for the bell to go bing? You either fold or you play cards. I'm going to play to win," Zab stated with confidence.

Interestingly enough, when I spoke to Judah last month before the Khan signing he didn't seem too interested in the bout at the time, instead turning his attention to Amir's stable mate Manny Pacquiao. The Filipino star is getting ready for a November 12th date of his own against Juan Manuel Marquez and Judah fully believes that when the dust will have settled that trainer Freddie Roach, who works with both Khan and Pacquiao, will simply want nothing more to do with him.

"I plan to be [Khan's] worst nightmare. After this fight I plan on Team Khan having a 62-hour watch on Amir Khan. I plan on being the Freddie Kreuger of his dreams. I'm pretty sure after this fight Freddie Roach would never put his golden boy and marquee fighter, which is Manny Pacquiao, against me in the ring." 
Source: http://www.examiner.com

Does Canelo Have the Chops to Take on Pac-Man?

Though the Canelo Alvarez hype machine was already in full gear before Saturday night, his domination of Ryan Rhodes, a respected fighter who was expected to give Alvarez major problems, only served to heighten expectations for the budding star.  Even if the fight was far from a barn burner, Alvarez showed improvements on his already mature game, causing even more stir about how far he can go.
Alvarez had little time to celebrate his twelfth-round stoppage of Rhodes before names were hurled at him regarding potential future opponents.  Among the most frequently mentioned were Julio Cesar Chavez, Jr., whose superstar status in Mexico could create major money with Alvarez' popularity within the Mexican market.  Also, other pundits have suggested a possible bout with undisputed middleweight champion Sergio Martinez as an interesting option.  While it's fun to consider how Canelo would fare against Chavez and Martinez, it's hard to imagine Golden Boy cashing in on Alvarez, who is clearly their crown jewel, right now.  Alvarez-Chavez would mean both Golden Boy and Top Rank putting their two biggest investments at risk, and doing so before it could develop into a true superfight.  And Alvarez-Martinez?  Don't believe for a second that Golden Boy is interested in making that fight happen.  And who can blame them?  Alvarez is only twenty-years old, is a natural 154 pounder, and still has much to learn before taking on the likes of a Sergio Martinez.

But, nevertheless, it is still fun to play the part of matchmaker, even if the likelihood of things becoming reality are beyond slim.  It's interesting that in all the talk of potential big fights for Alvarez, perhaps the most entertaining fight to be made has received little mention.

Let's suspend our disbelief for a moment and consider a matchup that would be a guaranteed face-melter:  Canelo Alvarez vs. Manny Pacquiao.  How could this not end up being a classic throwdown?  It would pit two aggressive, skilled fighters against each other, neither of whom would be willing to take a step back.  Both men are totally offensive-minded, and neither of them conjure any memories of Pernell Whitaker, making a high-contact affair a certainty.

And, unlike Pacquiao's last few fights, this one would have a great chance for competitive suspense.

Granted, Alvarez has never faced anything from the same realm of existence as Manny Pacquiao, so there would always be the possibility that Alvarez could fall victim to Pacquiao's killer bee swarm and be added to the ever-growing pile of bodies Pacquiao continues to leave in his wake.  Still, there are some intriguing elements that Alvarez possesses that could feasibly give Pacquiao some trouble.  First, Alvarez is a big 154-pound fighter, and even at a catch-weight, Alvarez would still own a functional size advantage over Pacquiao.  To this point, none of Pacquiao's bigger opponents have really been able to translate their naturally greater bulk into any type of edge over Pac-man.  Alvarez, though, could make his size and strength more of a factor than Pacquiao's previous victims.  Alvarez is not as plodding, methodical, or predictable as Antonio Margarito, and it's hard to envision him being as tentative and gunshy as Shane Mosley or Joshua Clottey.  And if Alvarez could get to Pacquiao's body, a place where Pacquiao admitted Margarito hurt him badly, Canelo's bigger frame and strength could become an increasingly telling factor.

The reality from this fightwriter's perspective?  A fight between the two at this point would probably resemble Pacquiao's matchup with Miguel Cotto, a fight where Pac-man had to eat some hard punches before he could fully assert his pronounced advantages.  Canelo's inexperience against truly elite competition would ultimately lead to his ruin, as would hundreds of lightning-fast punches coming from angles he never knew existed.  Bottom line:  it would be very fun while it lasts.

Admittedly, though, a matchup between Alvarez and Pacquiao at this point would need some mediation even  to be considered a pipe dream.  It just doesn't make sense for either side financially to risk things now.  If ever the stars would align for this fight, it wouldn't be for at least a couple of more years, when Canelo's commercial appeal would be in the neighborhood that would have Pacquiao's braintrust consider him as a viable candidate as a dance partner for Pac-man.  Also, a couple of years might be what it would take for boxing's Cold War between Golden Boy and Top Rank to thaw to the point where each would be willing to risk its meal ticket.

While the business sense isn't there just yet, the fighting sense just might be.  So, weigh in TSS Universe.  How would a fight between Canelo and Pac-man shape up?

Nearly 3% of Pinoys think Pacquiao is nat'l hero: Pulse

MANILA, Philippines - A total of 2.8% of Filipinos believe Sarangani congressman and world boxing champ Manny Pacquiao is the country's national hero, results of the latest Pulse Asia survey said Friday.

The Pulse Asia survey showed that 81.9% of Filipinos correctly identified Dr. Jose Rizal as the national hero of the Philippines, while Pacquiao ranked a distant second with 2.8%.

At least 6% of respondents from the Visayas chose Pacquiao as the national hero, followed by 3.8% of Mindanao, 1.5% of Balance Luzon and 0.7% of Metro Manila.

Other personalities named as national heroes are Andres Bonifacio (1.9%), the late Sen. Benigno "Ninoy" Aquino Jr. (1.7%), President Benigno "Noynoy" Aquino III (1.7%), the late President Cory Aquino (1%) and Emilio Aguinaldo (1%).
At least 3.6% of respondents did not identify any national hero while 2.1% said they do not know.


Ninoy, Marcos compared to Rizal

The survey showed that 51.1% of Filipino believe no individual - living or deceased - comes close to Dr. Jose Rizal. 

However, 10.8% of respondents said the late Sen. Ninoy Aquino is comparable to Rizal. Other individuals compared to the national hero are former President Ferdinand Marcos (5.4%), Manny Pacquiao (4.8%), former President Cory Aquino (4.0%), Andres Bonifacio (3.1%) and President Benigno Aquino III (3%).

The survey was conducted May 21 to June 4, 2011 based on a sample of 1,200 representative adults. It has a ± 3% error margin at the 95% confidence level.

Source: http://www.abs-cbnnews.com

Has Manny lost killer's instinct?

WBO welterweight champion Rep. Manny Pacquiao went the full route in his last three fights against Joshua Clottey, Antonio Margarito and Sugar Shane Mosley in that order.

Clottey was never in danger of going down, electing to fight defensively to stay on his feet for 12 rounds. Margarito was severely battered and referee Laurence Cole should’ve stopped the carnage. Pacquiao could’ve bludgeoned Margarito into submission but held back in the final round, displaying compassion if not pity for the Mexican warrior. Margarito wound up with a fractured orbital bone and may never fight again. Mosley was floored in the third round and refused to mix it up the rest of the way.

Pacquiao shouldn’t be blamed for letting Clottey, Margarito and Mosley off the hook even as critics wondered if he had lost his once-frightening killer’s instinct – the gladiator’s mentality that demolished Lehlo Ledwaba, Marco Antonio Barrera and Ricky Hatton.

No less than Top Rank chairman Bob Arum said when Pacquiao is up against a decisively beaten opponent, he lets up.

“Manny looks for the referee to stop the fight,” said Arum in a STAR interview yesterday. “He doesn’t want to rain more punishment on an opponent who has no chance of winning. That’s just how he is. I think it’s a good thing to be compassionate.”

Arum said Pacquiao’s reluctance to finish off Clottey.

Margarito and Mosley isn’t an indication that he’s lost his killer’s instinct. It’s just that those three fighters were so badly mauled that there was no sense to rub salt on their wounds. As Pacquiao once said, boxing isn’t killing or maiming – it’s a sport, after all, where fighters should show respect for each other.

* * *

The danger of Pacquiao easing up on an opponent unwilling to engage is he courts the fans’ displeasure. That was the case in the Mosley fight which was booed by a sell-out crowd at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas last May.

“Manny Pacquiao is the world’s best fighter but he consistently refuses to go all-out for victory – as was the case against Mosley,” wrote Graham Houston in Boxing Monthly magazine. “Hardly surprising, then, that for the first time in his career, Pacman heard the booing of the crowd. Once again, Pacquiao eased up on an outclassed opponent just as he did in his fights with Clottey and Margarito. He is a powerful, outstandingly good fighter but Pacquiao no longer seems to have the drive or the hunger to go after an opponent in a relentless manner. If Pacquiao is winning and the other man isn’t any kind of a threat to him, then he seems quite content to treat the fight like a sparring session.”

Houston had an interesting theory as to why Pacquiao is no longer as unforgiving as before.

“Maybe, with a high-powered political career in the Philippines in his future, Pacquiao doesn’t want to risk sullying his image by appearing to be a merciless aggressor in the ring,” continued Houston. “Unfortunately, though, fans want to see, in the context of a boxing match, a cruel Pacquiao and not a kindly one.”

But Arum said if Pacquiao is confronted by an unintimidated opponent who will not retreat, the Filipino icon will be back in furious form. Arum said Juan Manuel Marquez is an opponent who won’t run away from Pacquiao and that’s why their third meeting on Nov. 12 is expected to be a humdinger.

* * *

In contrast to Pacquiao’s humane attitude, newly crowned WBC/IBO lightheavyweight titlist Bernard Hopkins, an ageless battler at 46, said there’s no room for compassion in the ring.

“I’m in the fight business,” said Hopkins in the book “Box: The Face of Boxing,” “While the fight’s going on, the fight business is not about, ‘Are you OK? Are you all right? Did I hit you too hard? Oh, I’m sorry I hit you in the ribs.’ It’s legal to hit a guy in the Adam’s apple. A shoulder can be hit. Trust me, whatever limb you give me, I’m punching it. I’m going to fight you for 12 rounds. If you beat me, it won’t be by luck. I’ll do anything to win.”

Pacquiao probably wouldn’t argue Hopkins’ point – if the fight is competitive. As Arum and Houston mentioned, Pacquiao holds his punches only if his opponent is decisively beaten because it makes no human sense to inflict more punishment on a battered fighter.

Boxing legend Roberto Duran also had something to say about unabated violence in the ring. “A fighter needs a mean streak to be successful,” said the Hands of Stone from Panama. “If you’re good, that’s good. But if you’re good and mean, that’s better. In the ring, you need cruelty to be great.”

Pacquiao has proved Duran wrong. He has shown that you can also be compassionate in greatness.

Mike Jones' Trainer Talks Pacquiao Fight, Munoz, More

Unbeaten Mike Jones (24-0, 18K0s), of Philadelphia, PA, is ranked the #1 welterweight in the world behind WBO champion Manny Pacquiao.  Jones prepares to meet Raul Munoz (21-13-1, 16 K0s) from Leon, Mexico, on Saturday, June 25, at South Philly Arena.  Trainer Vaughn Jackson, who has been with Jones for his entire pro career, talks candidly about all things Jones:

• How have you prepared Mike for this fight:  “Mike’s in tremendous shape.   He looks fast, strong and focused.  He’s been doing a lot of running for this fight.  We’ve been working on a lot of leg work for this fight and he’s definitely stronger than he was last fight.  He’s just going to continue working on his strength, working on his speed and his defense.  His defense is the key.  Defense wins games and championships; that’s what we’re trying to win -- a championship -- so I think defense is going to play a big part of it.  We’ve also been working on a  lot of short shots since I noticed his opponent (Raul Munoz) likes to go into a peek-a-boo and then tries to come out with a huge hook, so we’ve been working on countering that.”

• What will Raul Munoz see when entering the ring on June 25:  “He’s going to be really shocked how amazing the Philadelphia fans are going to be rooting for Mike.  Also, he’s going to be very surprised about Mike’s size and how fast he is, his speed.  We love that the fight is here (in Philly), but we just want to do what we have to do and then enjoy ourselves after the fight.”

• What did he learn from the two fights with Jesus Soto-Karass:  “He learned a lot of things from Soto-Karass.  Experience is the key.  He learned a valuable lesson that even if you have somebody hurt, you just can’t blast away.  You just gotta touch him a few times, see how hurt he is and if he’s not ready (to go), he’s not ready.  We’ll get him the next round.  The stage and significance of everything for those two fights was great and I know that he gained a lot of experience from those two fights, in the ring and out.”

• Do you think Mike could’ve taken out Soto-Karass in the second fight:  “I think he was just being smart.  He’s not going to fall into that trap (of exhausting himself as in the first fight).  He was beating him so bad from the outside, why go in there and fight his fight.  And that’s what I mean about learning from each fight; he’s getting smarter.  He fought a smart fight and he stuck to the game plan.  And the game plan was to just box, box, box.  Use your speed, pick him apart.”

• What is your game plan for Munoz:  “The game plan for this fight is to just do a lot of short shots, use our speed, just like I said, the guy goes into a peek-a-boo style, he likes to put his hands up and play possum a little bit so we’re gonna work his sides, come around his sides and go to the body a lot.  I saw a couple of tapes; his body looks soft so that’s where we’re going to and we’re going to try to split the gloves, come in between the gloves.”

• What is your prediction for the fight:  “I definitely don’t expect this fight to go 10 rounds.  Not at all!  We’re not looking for a knockout, but how we’ve been training and how Mike’s been punching and the caliber fighter that he’s fighting, I don’t expect him (Munoz) to last.  I’ll be surprised if the guy can get out of the fourth round.”

• Do you feel Mike is ready for Manny Pacquiao:  “Absolutely I think Mike’s ready for it.  I’d love for Manny Pacquiao to give Mike a shot .  I’d love it.  I would also like to see Manny Pacquiao get tested.  You just have to be real smart.  Pacman is short and I’ve been studying all those top guys and I think Mike has the tools to beat Pacman or any of the other top welterweights.  Mike has the right style for Pacman.  He’s tall, he’s strong and he can box.  Mike’s not scared like most of Pacman’s opponents have been.  Because of their fear, those guys lost the fight before it began.  That’s the affect Tyson used to have on his opponents.  By the end of Mike’s fight with Pacman, Pacquiao would start to have that fear of Mike.”

• Final thoughts on Mike:  “Mike’s getting better every day.  You never catch him out of shape and he’s never had any bad habits. Mike is a thinker; he’s very intelligent in the ring.  He’s learning how to control the ring and how to stay behind his reach. I really believe that one day Mike’s going to be the undisputed welterweight champion of the world and he may be the first guy (since 1999) to knock Pacman out.”



Source: http://www.boxingscene.com

Mike Jones added to Arum's growing list of possible opponents for Manny Pacquiao


The last time Top Rank boss Bob Arum talked about several possible opponents for his star attraction Manny Pacquiao to fight, the names mentioned were Shane Mosley, Juan Manuel Marquez and Andre Berto.
By the end of this year, Pacquiao will have fought two of the three, with Berto instead losing to Victor Ortiz.
Mosley he beat easily, and may even have retired. Marquez he is expected to beat easily given his improvements and the lightweight king's decline since they last fought.
If that happens Pacquiao's detractors will no doubt say that he took two easy fights this year, both against much older opponents.
If he doesn't blow through Marquez, he will receive criticism for not beating the Mexican as easily as main rival Floyd Mayweather did.
Pacquiao may essentially find himself under fire regardless of how his fight with Marquez goes.
Looking forward to 2012 though, and Arum's list of possible opponents on paper at least looks a lot more challenging, and yesterday got longer.
Breaking in his brand new twitter account, Arum wrote that undefeated Mike Jones is being added to the list of possibly Pacquiao opponents for next year.
Probably at the top of the list is soon to be free agent Tim Bradley, who is being tipped to sign with Top Rank as soon as his contract with Gary Shaw expires.
Bradley has shown in the past that he isn't adverse to moving up in weight and with a unification bout with Amir Khan possibly off the table if he signs with Top Rank, a big money fight with Pacquiao would make sense as it would also allow him to retain his titles at light welterweight.
Mike Jones, despite being the least well known name on the list, may, with a few more fights under his belt, become the most dangerous.
The Philly native is enormous for a welterweight, and that's enormous by the standards of natural welterweights, not fighters who have moved up several times as largely populate the upper echelons today. He boxes well, doesn't come forward as most of Pacquiao's recent opponents have, and obviously has height, reach and strength advantages that coupled with his power and ability to box could see him give Pacquiao a much harder time than most of his recent conquests.
Dependent on how they each do in their upcoming bouts, Zab Judah, Victor Ortiz and Kermit Cintron are all possibilities also, with Cintron being the most likely due to he and Pacquiao's shared promotional allegiance.
Of course the name most fans are eager to see but who is probably the least likely option is Floyd Mayweather, who faces Victor Ortiz in September. Since the second round of failed negotiations both sides have talked...and talked...and talked some more about the fight. Neither appears to have taken any real steps towards making it happen.
Clive Brent, Pitt: "Jones still needs a couple of big wins before he takes the next step, maybe Arum will have him fight a big name on the undercard of Pac-Marquez"
Source: http://www.examiner.com

From 'you know' to 'I dead': Pacquiao's new HP tablet ad tells you 'he did'


It's not surprising news anymore when 8-division World Champion Manny Pacquiao breaks new barriers for Filipinos in the world of sports; But that doesn't mean it's any less noteworthy.
Pacquiao is now an established North American product endorser, the first ever Filipino to break into America's mainstream in such manner. If his HP Veer commercial shown throughout the course of the NBA Finals on national TV a couple of weeks ago isn't proof enough, HP recently launched their ad campaign for their new powerful HP TouchPad with WebOS tablet starring Pacquiao.
Also last weekend, Pacquiao and his family were invited and flown in by Nike's co-founder and Chairman Phil Knight in Portland, to discuss further endorsement deals with the multi-billion dollar company. Pacquiao is already a Nike endorsed athlete, but rumors have it that the new deal being discussed would put Pacquiao in the same stratosphere as some of Nike's signature athletes like Tiger Woods, Roger Federer and Kobe Bryant.
It's quite fitting that in Pacquiao's new commercial with HP, he talks about overcoming the odds despite what doubters have constantly said about him. "They said I couldn't win a fight, but I did; They said I couldn't fight above my weight class, but I did; They said I couldn't get elected to Congress, but I did. Now I'm trying to make it in music. Haha, millions of hits," a smiling Pacquiao said in the commercial. 
Pacquiao is not only an inspiration for Filipinos worldwide. His story is a classic case of "The American Dream". There are those even in the Philippines who have their hang-ups with 'colonial mentality' that criticize and make fun of Pacquiao's english. Even funnier is the fact that, no matter how Pacquiao speaks, or whatever criticism is thrown at him, nothing, none of those criticisms, ever stopped him from trying new things and excelling at it. 


Source: http://www.examiner.com