Friday, May 06, 2011

Pacquiao-Mosley final presser is calm before the storm

source: gma


There was no trash talk at the final press conference on Wednesday (Thursday in Manila) for the Manny Pacquiao-Shane Mosley bout this weekend at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

In fact, both fighters promised a fan-friendly clash that would provide a storm to follow the comforting tranquility of their pre-fight media engagements.

The 39-year-old Mosley is challenging Pacquiao for the eight-division world champion's World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title on Saturday in Las Vegas.

While the media digs for new angles to a story that boasts no animosity, the 32-year-old Pacquiao (52-3-2, 38 knockouts) and the three-division champ Mosley (46-6-1, 39 KO) of Pomona, Calif. are content to remind fight fans that boxing is just a sport.

"I'm happy for this fight because there's no trash talking," said the pound-for-pound champion Pacquiao. "It's a good example to the children who idolize the fighters. The best promotion of my boxing career is the Mosley fight because everybody here are friends."

The only contention came from Top Rank Promotions CEO Bob Arum., who took a dig at HBO by saying that the Showtime/CBS aired promotional series Fight Camp 360 will have been seen by four million individual people, while HBO's 24/7 only reaches a third of that.

Still, as Saturday's clash (Showtime PPV, 9PM ET, at $54.95) nears, Pacquiao and his trainer Freddie Roach are just as ready to bring the pain as they are to extol Mosley's pleasant manner.

"I think we'll dominate him if we fight the right fight and win by knockout," said Roach, who will be receiving his fifth Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA) Trainer of the Year award on Friday at their annual award dinner.

"I'm really proud of Manny for this training camp. From day one, he told me this is not an easy fight. We respect Shane and his camp. I think it's the best training camp we've ever had. We're fighting one of the most crafty guys out there, he's intelligent and experienced."

"I never underestimate Mosley because he's a good fighter," said Pacquiao, who also serves as a congressman in Sarangani province in the Philippines

"If you think he's old, he's not old. He moves like he's 32 years old. He has hand speed, foot speed and he's strong. He knocked [Antonio] Margarito out and I fought Margarito and we finished 12 rounds, so he has the advantage there."

Against other common opponents, Pacquiao holds a 12th round TKO win over Miguel Cotto, who had beaten Mosley by decision. Both hold wins over Oscar de la Hoya, though Mosley's two wins came when "The Golden Boy" was closer to his prime.

Indeed Mosley, who turns 40 in September, is in the twilight of his Hall of Fame career that has rarely seen him in a dull fight. Those exciting match ups have kept Mosley in demand even though his career has slowed down (just eight wins in his last sixteen matches dating back to 2002).

Roach believes you can't underestimate a great boxer like Mosley and he sees the future Hall of Famer as a different kind of fighter than what Pacquiao had faced recently.

"Manny's fought punchers before, but I will say that this is the fastest puncher we've fought and I think speed is more of a factor than power in a boxer. This makes Shane a little more dangerous."

Pacquiao too has seen his share of wars and is in the last leg of his fighting career, though his stately manner on the podium suggests that he is gradually becoming more of a politician than a knockout artist.

Pacquiao said he will wear yellow gloves, which will indicate his support of the anti-poverty campaign of Gawad Kalinga.

Yellow is also closely associated with Cory Aquino, the Philippines' former President and democracy icon. She is also the mother of current President Noynoy Aquino.

"All my life, I've had to fight," said Pacquiao. "As a child I had to fight just to eat. Now when I fight, Filipinos call me 'bayani,' or a hero. I believe this world needs more heroes. The biggest fight in my life is not in boxing, the biggest fight in my life is how to end poverty in my country."

Mosley is also someone fighting for a cause, this one his own. As Hall of Fame trainer Emmanuel Steward once said on air during an HBO telecast, "money becomes a greater motivator each year that passes in a fighter's career."

And a desperate man is a dangerous one.

"Maybe [Pacquiao and Roach] saw my last fight [a draw against Sergio Mora]. If I fight that way, I see a knockout for Manny. But if Manny fights the way he did against Margarito, I see a knockout for me."

source: gma

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