Sunday, November 13, 2011

Manny Pacquiao Fight

LAS VEGAS -- After 36 rounds of fierce combat, Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez are basically even up, although history will record that it was Pacquiao who had the edge in their fabulous and historical trilogy.

Pacquiao, on what clearly was not his best night, escaped with a majority decision to retain his welterweight title on Saturday night before an electric, sold-out crowd of 16,368 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

But the crowd, filled with Mexicans rooting for Marquez, booed the decision and threw drink bottles at ringside to show their outrage after an excellent fight. Pacquiao now holds a 2-0-1 edge over Marquez, but he could certainly be 0-3, and his hold on the No. 1 position on boxing's unofficial pound-for-pound lists might take a hit in some quarters.

Their third fight was another incredibly close and competitive one waged at the highest level of boxing. It was everything that is right about the sport: two great competitors and future Hall of Famers leaving everything they have in the ring.

In the end, however, it was Pacquiao who got the nod. Judge Glenn Trowbridge gave it to Pacquiao 116-112, Dave Moretti had it 115-113, and Robert Hoyle had it 114-114. ESPN.com had it 114-114 also.

"The fans of Marquez, of course, aren't happy, but my fans are happy," Pacquiao said. "I clearly won the fight. He is a good fighter, but I do my best. It is very clear that I won the fight."

"This is the second robbery of the two that we had, and I think this was even more clear than the first," Marquez said. "We won with the clearer punches. The audience protested because they saw us win again. I thought I got robbed. It happens again and again. I don't know what else I can do to win."

Two judges gave Pacquiao the 12th round, which was ragged and not definitive. Had Marquez -- who was told by Beristain that he was ahead -- won it on those cards, the fight would have been a draw.

The Filipino congressman has yet to definitively defeat Marquez, the lightweight champion who moved up in weight for a fight contracted at a catchweight of 144 pounds. His style just gives Pacquiao fits. Probably always will.

Marquez (53-6-1, 39 KOs) darted to an early lead as he flustered Pacquiao (54-3-2, 38 KOs), who earned $22 million plus a piece of the pay-per-view profits. He landed a lot of right hands and looked strong as a welterweight, where he had fought only once before but lost a lopsided decision to Mayweather in 2009.

Freddie Roach, Pacquiao's trainer, was concerned, telling Pacquiao he needed to pick it up after the sixth round. Pacquiao did just that, fighting his way back into the fight.

Maybe Pacquiao, who made his third welterweight title defense, was feeling a little desperate as he tried to turn it into a slugfest and the fighters began to trade with abandon in the ninth round, when Pacquiao suffered a small cut over his right eye. It was just great theater to watch.

"It would be difficult to decide. Maybe I retire, maybe I don't," Marquez said. "It is so hard when you're fighting against a rival and also against the three judges."

If Marquez retires -- or doesn't -- Mayweather looms for Pacquiao. It's the fight the world wants to see -- no disrespect to Marquez.
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