{The following article is written by Kelsey McCarson of bleacherreport.com.}
Manny Pacquiao isn’t quite as explosive as he used to be. But that doesn’t mean he’s become a less complete fighter, or one that is less dangerous in 2015 to Floyd Mayweather’s reign atop pound-for-pound rankings.
{Image from Chris Hyde/Getty Images.}
No, Pacquiao’s best chance to defeat Mayweather is right now.
Skeptics will tell you that it’s not true. They’ll point to the destructive version of Pacquiao who ran roughshod over naturally larger opponents from 2008-2011, fighters such as Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto.
Pacquiao was a force in 2009.
They’ll argue Pacquiao’s impressive one-punch power, the type that laid waste to Hatton in the blink of an eye, is gone forever, never to return. They’ll tell you that the power itself was laid waste by the nefarious onslaught of old age.
Gone too, they’ll probably add, is Pacquiao’s otherworldly speed. They’ll admit that he’s still supremely fast, just not blindingly so.
These well-meaning critics of the 2015 version of Pacquiao aren’t altogether wrong. At age 36, Pac-Man isn’t quite the supreme physical specimen he once was. He is not in his physical prime.
If one is to only examine factors like how fast and how powerful a man is to determine his fighting prime, then surely the 2010 version of Pacquiao would be the top candidate for such an honor.
That Pacquiao, the one that came oh-so-close to meeting Mayweather in a proposed March 2010 superfight, had just come off of his most fantastic performance ever, a one-sided, 12th-round stoppage of Cotto.
That Pacquiao had separated the lineal champion at 140 pounds, Hatton, from both his championship and his senses two fights prior in just two rounds.
That Pacquiao had made De La Hoya look like a rank amateur just three fights before, and had sent the Golden Boy to his stool after eight brutal rounds of pummeling him, never to return to the life of a prizefighter again.
But here’s something that’s lost in all the hubbub about how great a destructive force Pacquiao was back then. The very quality that made him such an obliterator of famed fighting men could very well have also been his undoing against the premier counterpuncher in boxing at that time, Mayweather, a man who was also in his physical, and perhaps even fighting, prime.
Pacquiao’s lesson on just how risky unbridled aggression can be to a fighter came in 2012.
After appearing a bit lackluster in wins over Shane Mosley and Juan Manuel Marquez, and after being on the wrong side of one of the more egregious robberies in boxing history against Timothy Bradley, Pacquiao met Marquez for the fourth time in his career in December 2012.
This version of Pacquiao appeared anything but lackluster. This was classic Pac-Man, the one whose mission was to seek and destroy whoever stood in front of him. This was the fighter fans had seen ruthlessly dismantle De La Hoya, Hatton and Cotto. He was just as fast, just as powerful and just as reckless.
Pacquiao appeared to be on his way to a win over Marquez in the fourth fight.
This was vintage Pacquiao.
Even though Marquez’s power had suddenly reached superlative heights, and even though Pacquiao was knocked down by a glancing blow he partially blocked in Round 3, Pacquiao seemed to be on his way to annihilating Marquez the very same way he had done so to other great fighters just a few years prior.
Pacquiao knocked Marquez down in Round 5 and was going in for the kill at the end of Round 6 when the bloodied and bruised Marquez delivered the perfect counterargument to Pacquiao having his best shot against Mayweather in 2010.
With one punch, Marquez demonstrated that Pacquiao would probably have been too aggressive for his own good against Mayweather had the two met before this night. Marquez knocked Pacquiao out cold with one wonderfully delivered right-hand blow as Pacquiao hurled himself forward. Mayweather might have done the same.
It was a tough lesson, but an important one.
Marquez landed the perfect punch in Round 6 to score the KO.
If Mayweather did not exist, it is Marquez who would be considered the best counterpuncher of the era. That isn’t to say the men fight in the same style. They do not. But both rely on landing punches on their opponents as the other man tries to mount an offense of his own.
And both men are exceptional at it.
The version of Pacquiao who rose from the ashes of the sixth-round knockout is not the same man he was then. He is not the hyper-aggressive barbarian out for blood no matter what the cost.
Instead, Pacquiao has wisely adopted a less aggressive, but more effective approach of mitigating risk with his feet and relying on his still-excellent hand speed and punching power to carry the day.
Pacquiao’s last three fights are evidence of a changed man. Yes, Pacquiao is still aggressive and a tremendous offensive fighting machine.
Pacquiao is a smarter, better fighter now.
But against the two fighters with punching power he had to respect, Brandon Rios and Timothy Bradley (in the 2014 rematch), Pacquiao consistently made a point to step away from his opponents throughout the fights so as not to get caught by a powerful counterpunch.
Even against Chris Algieri, Pacquiao coasted to the decision win after realizing somewhere among the six knockdowns of his opponent that he could rattle Algieri’s bones at will. But why give Algieri the only chance he had of pulling out the win by giving him opportunities to land a bout-altering counterpunch?
Pacquiao is a smarter fighter now. He won’t rush into Mayweather’s offense foolhardily. He won’t leave himself open to counterpunches that he’ll never see coming. He’ll keep the fight right where it should be, at the proper distance, where Pacquiao can let his hand speed, power and volume punching carry the rounds for him.
Pacquiao still may not defeat Mayweather. He’s naturally smaller than his opponent and the ringside judges are used to awarding Mayweather wins at the MGM Grand in his adopted hometown of Las Vegas.
But Pacquiao has a better shot at a victory in 2015 than at perhaps any other time during his career. If timing truly is everything in life, Pacquiao is right where he needs to be heading into the biggest fight of his career.
Showing posts with label Algieri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Algieri. Show all posts
Monday, March 2, 2015
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Pacquiao vs Algieri Fight Highlights
When Manny PAcquiao met Chris Algieri in the ring it wasn't what most boxing analysts had expected. Chris Algieri is young compared to Pacquiao. And Algieri has a unique, unpredictable style that won him against Ruslan Provodnikov. It was a match where Ruslan Provodnikov almost had it, but it turned the other way by ALgieri. Algieri won in a close split-decision.
But Manny PAcquiao just demolished him after punch after punch ALgieri couldn't avoid. Algieri even was knocked down a couple of times. However, no knock out that took place, considering Manny is a knock out puncher. Maybe because Manny learned his lesson now. What all matters to him now is to win and not to knock out every opponent. He learned that lesson from his 4th fight against Juan Miguel Marquez.
Watch the full fight of Manny Pacquao versus Chris Algieri below:
But Manny PAcquiao just demolished him after punch after punch ALgieri couldn't avoid. Algieri even was knocked down a couple of times. However, no knock out that took place, considering Manny is a knock out puncher. Maybe because Manny learned his lesson now. What all matters to him now is to win and not to knock out every opponent. He learned that lesson from his 4th fight against Juan Miguel Marquez.
Watch the full fight of Manny Pacquao versus Chris Algieri below:
Friday, October 10, 2014
Pacquiao vs. Algieri to get just one 24/7 episode on HBO on November 8th
In what has to be seen as a bad indication of how they perceived the November 22nd fight between Manny Pacquiao and Chris Algieri, HBO will be televising just one Pacquiao/Algieri 24/7 episode instead of multiple ones like we’ve seen with many of Pacquiao’s other boxing fights.
The Pacquiao/Algieri 24/7 episode will be televised on November 8th at 1:00 a.m. (ET/PT on HBO after the Bernard Hopkins vs. Sergey Kovalev fight on Championship Boxing from the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
The bad news is that if the Pacquiao-Algieri fight does poorly on PPV like some boxing writers think it will then Pacquiao will lose pretty much all the bargaining power that he ever had with Floyd Mayweather Jr. If Pacquiao-Algieri brings in only 400,000 PPV buys or less, Pacquiao would be lucky to get a 70/30 purse split for a Mayweather fight, and I doubt Pacquiao would ever accept that offer.
Boxing fans will have to be satisfied with seeing just one 30-minute episode of the Pacquiao-Algieri 24/7, because that’s all HBO is going to be putting out for this fight. This is obviously going to hurt the chances of the Pacquiao vs. Algieri fight bringing in a reasonable number of pay-per-view buys on HBO, because the 24/7 episodes was one way for Algieri to introduce himself to the casual boxing fans, many of which have never seen or heard him before.
Algieri himself said that during the run up to the fight that fans would get to know him more due to the media coverage. But with HBO just going to for one Pacquiao/Algeri 24/7 episode, it’s going to make it very, very tough for Top Rank to get the casual fans excited about the fight. Algieri hasn’t helped matters any by playing mister nice guy during interviews and on the press tour.
If he had talked trash about Pacquiao, he’d have helped his own cause by getting boxing fans excited about the fight. But Algieri has come across as more of college professor when giving interviews than a charismatic trash talker that he needed to be for him to help make the Pacquiao-Algieri fight a success.
You can only wonder what 4 or 5 episodes of Pacquiao/Algieri would have been like on HBO 24/7. With neither fighter having anything bad to say about each other, and with one of the only interesting people now gone from Pacquiao’s camp in Alex Ariza, boxing fans would likely have to be content with watching Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach brag and make bold predictions for 30 minutes of every episode. That obviously wouldn’t have worked.
{This article is written by Chris Williams from boxingnews24.com}
The Pacquiao/Algieri 24/7 episode will be televised on November 8th at 1:00 a.m. (ET/PT on HBO after the Bernard Hopkins vs. Sergey Kovalev fight on Championship Boxing from the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
The bad news is that if the Pacquiao-Algieri fight does poorly on PPV like some boxing writers think it will then Pacquiao will lose pretty much all the bargaining power that he ever had with Floyd Mayweather Jr. If Pacquiao-Algieri brings in only 400,000 PPV buys or less, Pacquiao would be lucky to get a 70/30 purse split for a Mayweather fight, and I doubt Pacquiao would ever accept that offer.
Boxing fans will have to be satisfied with seeing just one 30-minute episode of the Pacquiao-Algieri 24/7, because that’s all HBO is going to be putting out for this fight. This is obviously going to hurt the chances of the Pacquiao vs. Algieri fight bringing in a reasonable number of pay-per-view buys on HBO, because the 24/7 episodes was one way for Algieri to introduce himself to the casual boxing fans, many of which have never seen or heard him before.
Algieri himself said that during the run up to the fight that fans would get to know him more due to the media coverage. But with HBO just going to for one Pacquiao/Algeri 24/7 episode, it’s going to make it very, very tough for Top Rank to get the casual fans excited about the fight. Algieri hasn’t helped matters any by playing mister nice guy during interviews and on the press tour.
If he had talked trash about Pacquiao, he’d have helped his own cause by getting boxing fans excited about the fight. But Algieri has come across as more of college professor when giving interviews than a charismatic trash talker that he needed to be for him to help make the Pacquiao-Algieri fight a success.
You can only wonder what 4 or 5 episodes of Pacquiao/Algieri would have been like on HBO 24/7. With neither fighter having anything bad to say about each other, and with one of the only interesting people now gone from Pacquiao’s camp in Alex Ariza, boxing fans would likely have to be content with watching Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach brag and make bold predictions for 30 minutes of every episode. That obviously wouldn’t have worked.
{This article is written by Chris Williams from boxingnews24.com}
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