MannyPacquiaovs.com


BUY PACQUIAO vs.CLOTTEY PPV

Drawing power of ‘24/7′ lives up to its name

Besides having television’s best theme music and perfect narration from Liev Schreiber (I could listen to him read the phone book), on no other show could you possibly see these priceless moments portrayed in such entertaining fashion — and have them relate to a huge upcoming fight: Oscar De La Hoya passing gas, Floyd Mayweather Sr. making Kool-Aid and eating a taco in his car while driving, Ricky Hatton showing off his butt in a thong, Freddie Roach getting a haircut, Enzo Calzaghe borrowing a New York street musician’s guitar and playing for him, Roy Jones Jr. emotionally watching the election night announcement in Times Square that Barack Obama had won the presidency, rap star 50 Cent riding a Segway through Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s mansion, and Roger Mayweather shopping for Thanksgiving groceries.

Katsidis hopeful of taking on Hatton

Australian Michael Katsidis hopes a mouth-watering matchup against Ricky Hatton will still go ahead despite the British boxer’s crushing loss to Filipino superstar Manny Pacquiao in Las Vegas last weekend.

The Englishman has yet to decide whether he will continue his career after being knocked out in two rounds by the man regarded as the world’s best pound-for-pound fighter.

Katsidis’s trainer and manager Brendon Smith revealed he had already been talking with the Hatton camp prior to last weekend’s bout.

Ricky Hatton talks of “Happy Slapping” abuse since returning to Manchester

By Collins_and_Dutton
In an emotional interview, the boxer Ricky Hatton has described the turmoil and abuse that he has faced since returning to his family home in Manchester after losing the fight to Manny Pacquiao.
“Ever since I developed this glass jaw in Vegas, I’ve had a bit of …

Pacquiao becoming all-time great

Then Pacquiao, a southpaw, landed a right. Then another. Then another. Then another. Then a final right hook slammed into Hatton’s chin and down he went to all fours. At that moment, eyes grew wide and you could hear a collective “Ohhhhhhhhh!” before the crowd erupted.

Hatton, wobbly but game, got up and took more punishment. With seconds to go in the round, he collapsed under a barrage of punches, the final one being a left. Suddenly, he was prey, not an opponent.

Pacquiao took his time in the second round, outworking a still-shaken Hatton but giving no indication of what was to come. Then, with seconds to go in the round, an overhand left for the ages crashed into Hatton’s chin and he was knocked out cold instantly, sending him to his back and prompting deafening cheers from the thousands of Filipino fans in the arena.

A lot to like about the new king of boxing

“He has the opportunity to become the best I’ve ever promoted,” said Arum, who promoted Muhammad Ali and Marvelous Marvin Hagler among others. “Other fights reach a certain level and they think they know everything and never get better. Not Manny. He’s always learning.”

Pacquiao brought his mother over from the Philippines for her first trip to the United States, but she couldn’t bear to watch her son fight. Instead, she stayed in a hotel suite praying for his success and health.

Ricky Hatton unsure of future

Hatton’s reign as light-welterweight world champion came to a bitter end at the MGM Grand Garden Arena as Pacquiao floored his opponent twice in the first round before ending the contest with left hook late in the second.

But Hatton has so far refused to confirm whether the loss, the second of his career following defeat to Floyd Mayweather Jnr in 2007, will spell the end of his time in the ring.

Hatton: I’m sorry

“I apologise for letting my heart rule my head and I apologise to the fans who feel that I may have let them down.”

Hatton, 30, who was comforted by his fiancée Jennifer Dooley, will have a family holiday later this month and, after the ‘dust has settled’, make up his mind about whether to end his fabulous career.

Acknowledging the views of controversial coach Floyd Mayweather Snr, and worried fans that Hatton should now quit the fight game, the fallen champ’s father and manager Ray said: “Fans need not be worried. It is normal procedure and state law for anyone knocked out to go the hospital for a brain scan, spinal checks and other tests.

Mayweather boasts that boxing’s best is back

“I left on top, I came back on top,” said an excited Mayweather, who is slated to fight against Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez on July 18 at the MGM Grand.

“Nobody has taken my throne, so how am I not the king if nobody has taken my throne? You’ve got all these fighters out here who are claiming that they’re the best. I’m coming back to fight and reclaim what’s mine.”

Speculation has surrounded Mayweather’s ranks recently, as the 32-year-old has been uncharacteristically private in the months leading up to his comeback announcement.

Among the rumors were that Mayweather (39-0, 25 KO) had been in talks with promoter Don King, had trouble in negotiations with Marquez about what weight the fight would take place at and had gone broke after not paying taxes.

Boxing’s Khan targets best pound-for-pound tag

Khan enhanced his glowing credentials by beating veteran Mexican Marco Antonio Barrera in March and will have his first crack at a world title when he takes on Andreas Kotelnik of Ukraine for the WBA world light-welterweight belt in June.

“I think I have improved by a big 20 percent probably over the last 12 months,” Khan, 22, told Reuters.

“I have especially improved my defence and my patience. Now I am staying nice and cool in fights, watching everything that is going on and following the right shots at the right time.”

Mexican breakfasts come back to haunt Ricky Hatton

He chooses Number 8, which I should have counselled against. It appeared to be three crisp taco shells filled with something pretending to be meat, lots of that gloop that makes cheap Mexican food the bowel-opening crime against humanity that it is, with a cheese-style substance melted on top of the whole disaster. Not only did the trainer make this ill-advised choice – filled taco shells remain Mexico’s most toxic export despite anything you might read elsewhere in this newspaper – but he spent rather too long discussing what exactly might be in his meal.

“Has it got, like, tomatoes in it?” Mayweather mumbled into that voice-distorting microphone these places always have, wasting valuable time that might have been better spent explaining to Ricky that Pacquiao was a southpaw. I mean, any man who can live 57 years in the United States and still has to ask what is about to go into his crisp taco shells has clearly not been paying attention.

With one ferocious blow by Manny Pacquiao, Ricky Hatton’s amazing career is laid to rest

Manny Pacquiao’s powerful left hook has ended any sensible prospect of Ricky Hatton fighting again
Mayweather’s punch did not have the concussive finality of Pacquiao’s wicked left, but the two blows will forever be linked. Pacquiao’s arrived in the final second of round two, the third knockdown blow the Filipino had to throw to claim Hatton’s IBO and Ring Magazine light-welterweight titles, and if Hatton heeds the wishes of family and friends the last one he will ever take.

Pacquiao put Hatton down in the first round with a right hook he admitted to his corner he never saw, and again with a short left before the bell. From that point on, it was clear we were in for a short night. Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, told later how they had worked on that right hook for weeks. “Ricky cocks his punches before he throws ‘em. Every time he left an opening, Pacquiao’s so quick, I knew the inside hook would work every time.”

This was an echo of the strategic naivety Hatton showed against Mayweather, when he was out-thought and knocked down by a punch devised by the American’s uncle and trainer, Roger.

Ricky Hatton says he will take time to consider future

“At the moment I find it hard to make a decision about my future because my head’s in my backside,” Hatton told Sky Sports News. “I don’t know at the moment because I never thought it was going to happen. People are still going to see plenty of me [whatever the decision]. I’m going into promoting now. They’re going to be fulfilling my dreams from now on … As far as physically boxing myself I don’t know what I will decide.”

There are suggestions that he will opt for a farewell fight in his home city of Manchester but he said he felt it was important to take his time before making a final decision. He is due to return to England on Thursday before going on holiday with his fiancée, Jennifer Dooley, and his young son, Campbell. He may confirm whether he will fight on in just under a fortnight, when his new boxing gym and health club opens in Manchester.

There’s still only one Ricky Hatton

Ricky Hatton, though, played a huge role in this fight being the success it appears to have been. People may debate his credentials, his record, and his skills, but if you tell me there’s no part of you that just likes Ricky Hatton, I have to wonder how that’s possible. His image was never manufactured; he is who he is. He’s as real as they come, flaws and all.

Hatton, now 30, will likely think retirement, though I still don’t believe he will actually retire straight off. The days of the “Hitman,” the fighting pride of Manchester, England, coming to Las Vegas and headlining mega cards are now over barring some amazing career rejuvenation. But he will remain a star so long as he fights on with his usual level of class, humor and pride.

Ricky Hatton is not among the greatest fighters of his generation. He’s a little bit under that mark. But tell me this: Who takes his place? Who’s going to bring 25,000 fans, most of whom can’t even get a ticket to the fight, from England to Vegas? Whose fans are going to pound drums and sing their guts out, creating the most electric atmosphere I’ve yet seen for any fight (Mayweather-Hatton)?

Hatton Says a Few More Rounds Would Have Helped

“>"If we’d have gone a few rounds it could have been different. But he caught me with practically the first punch he threw. I’d rather have been knocked out in two rounds than have somebody that has outclassed me for the full duration. Maybe it could have been different, but that’s boxing. I’ve lost twice and I’ve lost to the best pound-for-pound fighters in the world," Hatton told The Sun.

All-Time Pacquiao

From the very onset he was simply outclassed. While he tried to charge Pacquiao with his customary aggression, he was met early on by a right hook that visibly shook him. Halfway through the opening stanza, you could see that Hatton’s supposed advantages in strength and size were going to be easily negated by the Filipino’s speed and precision. As his face got reddened from the slicing shots of Pacquiao, you got the sense this was David Diaz all over again. Only Hatton - whose chin showed signs of faltering last year versus Juan Lazcano - wouldn’t be nearly as durable. He was knocked down twice late in the first and what took place in the second was just a mere formality.

“I believe that it’s a hard punch,” said Pacquiao of his finishing kick, “and I believe he could not get up.” He’s obviously as good at understatement as he is at boxing. That punch - which might end up being the Knockout of the Decade - was an exclamation point to a bold statement that Pacquiao has been making since his close shave versus Marquez last March. And the statement is very simple - I’m truly a great prizefighter, one of the best of this past generation, and any other era before it.

Pacquiao’s quick and powerful punch makes jaws drop

Even Hatton’s trainer, Floyd Mayweather Sr., who demeaned Roach as a “joke” and laughed off Pacquiao as too small to compete, was blown away by the Filipino.

“I don’t know where the hell he gets it from,” he said of Pacquiao, who began his career at 106 pounds. “It seems like some incredible power, though.”

Boxing historian Bert Sugar was equally in awe. “I hesitate to judge people in the middle of a career, but this is one of the most phenomenal stories of recent boxing history,” he said.

Ricky Hatton has a serious decision to make after Manny Pacquiao defeat

Floyd Mayweather Snr, Hatton’s trainer, against whom the whispers of recrimination are beginning to emerge, was adamant that any decision about ending a 45-2 career should be made by the British fighter. “I can’t tell nobody when to retire, and I wouldn’t suggest he retire,” Mayweather said. “He should do that on his own. It is the best way, and it up to him.

“Some people may want to try it again or one more time, and only the individual can make that decision. He tried twice [against Pacquiao and Mayweather Jnr] and he failed twice. It’s his choice at the end of the day.”

Mayweather’s assessment of Hatton’s performance clearly indicated that Hatton had strayed from the game plan. “Ricky made an error and Pacquiao capitalised on it. He should have kept his hands up better, if you want to talk about mistakes.

Pacquiao Demolishes Hatton in the Second Round and Finally Shuts Up Mayweather

Round 1: The round started off pretty slowly, but that was rectified about a minute later. PacMan was already proving to be way too quick for Hatton and started landing brutal body shots. He then came over the top and put Hatton down as he caught him square on the chin with a right hook. Hatton managed to get up, but he was already bloody and obviously hurt. He survived for all of 40 seconds before Pacquiao caught him again with a left and put him down for the second time in the round. Hatton once again got to his feet and managed to survive the last few seconds of the round.

Round 2: I’m not sure what was in Hatton’s water in his corner, but he came out on fire in the second round. He landed a shot early that rocked Pacquiao, but PacMan immediately shook it off and then let Hatton know that was the last time that he was going to be hit like that. With about 1:30 left in the round, they stood toe to toe in the middle of the ring and Pacquiao began to land shot after shot. They were obviously taking their toll and it seemed as though it was only a matter of time before Hatton would succumb to the beating that Pacquiao was delivering.

Pacquiao: “Just lucky!”

On the same day that Floyd Mayweather, Jr. came out of retirement to reclaim his retired crown of pound-for-pound king, Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao slipped it safely out of reach by doing in two rounds, what had taken Mayweather ten.

Last night, before a sold-out crowd at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Pacquiao (48-3-2, 37 KOs) secured his right to call himself the boxing’s pound-for-pound champion by knocking out Ricky Hatton (45-2, 32 KOs) at 2:59 of round two.

“He’s still a good fighter,” a humble Pacquiao said of Hatton at the post-fight press conference.

“I’m just lucky tonight I hit first. A right hook.”

Pacman packs punch at any weight

In the first round Hatton moved in aggressively against Pacquiao and immediately worked the inside. Both traded punches, with the Englishman landing frequently in the first 40 seconds until Pacquiao countered with a left hand. Suddenly, as Hatton lunged in, a Pacquiao right hook to the chin dropped him to his knees.

Hatton got up shakily but beat the count. With less than 30 seconds left in the round, a left hand dropped Hatton again near his own corner. He beat the count and the round ended.

There is only ONE Manny Pacquiao

His next fight, he did the impossible, ruined my birthday and knocked out the then seemingly untouchable featherweight kingpin (and my favorite boxer, of the time) Marco Antonio Barrera. Now title changed hands, but he was the best featherweight in the world.

Immediately after testing Barrera, he jumped in with an unsung Mexican pugilist by the name of Juan Manuel Marquez and quickly dumped the master boxer three times in the first round en route to a memorable draw.

The following year, Tijuana toughman Erik Morales took a spirited decision from him. Some who thought he was over-rated, felt the end was near for the rising star.

Manny Pacquiao KOs Ricky Hatton

“You know, Mayweather, he could’ve fought Manny Pacquiao. He just had to wait one day. I think he’s scared of Pacquiao,” Roach said during the postfight news conference. “He chose Marquez. We’re not going to wait around. I like to keep Manny busy. A busy fighter is a good fighter.”

Pacquiao took a more diplomatic approach when asked about Mayweather by ESPN’s Jaime Motta.

“For me, I can fight anybody at 147 (pounds), or I can fight at 140, but he’s got an upcoming fight with Marquez, and we’ll see after the fight,” Pacquiao said.

Manny Pacquiao vs Ricky Hatton HBO 24/7 Final Episode 4

Exclusive behind-the-scenes access to this pre boxing fight, along with in-depth interviews, as these determined warriors, both making their second “24/7″ appearance, prepare for the first mega-fight of 2009.

Ricky Hatton and Manny Pacquiao break camp and head to Las Vegas for their final fight week activities as the May 2 Jr. welterweight showdown approaches. The finale comes for the four-episode series “Pacquiao vs Hatton 24/7″ (9:30-10:00 p.m.) in anticipation of Saturday’s bout.


Pacquiao Hatton 24/7 Episode 4 HBO Part 1 of 2

Pacquiao Hatton 24/7 Episode 4 HBO Part 2 of 2

Manny Pacquiao’s Preparation: Roach, Moorer and 4,000 Sit-Ups a Day

Triumph, and Hatton, the lad from Hyde, will be carried out on the shoulders of his adoring fans. But it remains a long shot, even though this fistic meeting has clear imponderables on either side, involving both style and substance. Strategy will be key in this fight, in a great match of styles between two men who leave everything they have in the ring.

The backdrop to this contest - for the IBO and ’The Ring’ light-welterweight titles - is that Pacquiao is being adopted as the home fighter in the United States, and has been installed as a huge favourite. Even Bill Clinton visited Pacquiao in the desert city this week, alongside other dignitaries.

 Page 1 of 10  1  2  3  4  5 » ...  Last »