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Mayweather Sr: ‘I felt Pacquiao won’


Floyd Mayweather, Sr. AFP PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines – Even one of the staunchest critics of Manny Pacquiao thought the Filipino boxing hero won the fight against Timothy Bradley Jr.

Floyd Mayweather Sr. told ESPN Saturday (Sunday in Manila) that to him Pacquiao was “well in control” of the fight.

“I thought Tim Bradley put up one helluva fight. But I didn’t think he won the fight,” he said.

Mayweather Sr.  said he did not score the fight but he knew Pacquiao won.

“I felt he (Pacquiao) won the fight. I felt like there was a gap, where you could see who was winning,” he said.

In a fight Pacquiao seemed to have in hand, two judges decided otherwise, giving Bradley a split decision Saturday night and ending the Filipino fighter’s remarkable seven-year unbeaten run.

Promoter Bob Arum fumed, the crowd at the MGM Grand arena booed, and Pacquiao seemed stunned when the decision was announced. Arum said there would be a November rematch, though he blasted the way the decision went down.

“I’ve never been as ashamed of the sport of boxing as I am tonight,” said Arum, who handles both fighters.

Bradley came on strong in the later rounds, winning five of the last six rounds on two scorecards and four on the third. He won 115-113 on two scorecards, while losing on the third by the same margin. The Associated Press had Pacquiao winning 117-111.

“I did my best,” Pacquiao said. “I guess my best wasn’t good enough.”

Pacquiao tried to turn the fight into a brawl, using his power to hurt Bradley in the early rounds. But Bradley changed tactics in the middle rounds and used his boxing skills to win enough rounds to take the narrow decision for the welterweight title.

It ended a 15-fight winning streak by Pacquiao dating to 2005 that turned him into a boxing superstar and made him a national hero in the Philippines.

“I thought I won the fight,” Bradley said. “I didn’t think he was as good as everyone says he was. I didn’t feel his power.”

Ringside punching statistics showed Pacquiao landing 253 punches to 159 for Bradley, who vowed before the fight to take the 147-pound title from Pacquiao. The Compubox statistics showed Pacquiao landing more punches in 10 of the 12 rounds.

Bradley was so confident that he had oversized tickets printed up for a Nov. 10 rematch that will now likely happen.

Bradley seemed hurt in the fourth and fifth rounds, but Pacquiao had trouble landing big punches after that. Still, he seemed in control of the fight everywhere but on the judge’s scorecards.

“Can you believe that? Unbelievable,” Arum said. “I went over to Bradley before the decision and he said, `I tried hard but I couldn’t beat the guy.’”

Bradley said he hurt his ankle in the second round, and that trainer Joel Diaz said he could either quit or try to take the fight to Pacquiao.

“I got my second wind in the sixth round,” Bradley said. “I worked the angles, sticking and moving.”

Pacquiao said he studied Bradley on tape before the fight and wasn’t surprised by anything he did. He said he thought he was in control of the fight and was shocked when the decision went against him.

“He never hurt me with his punches, most of them landed on my arms,” Pacquiao said.

Pacquiao tried to brawl with Bradley and seemed to hurt him in both the fourth and fifth rounds. But Bradley started moving and counter punching, though he never seemed to land any shots that hurt Pacquiao.

Pacquiao had vowed to look impressive against Bradley after struggling in his last outing with Juan Manuel Marquez, a fight many thought he lost. And he did early, landing good long left hands while beating Bradley to the punch on most exchanges.

“He hurt me a couple of times with his left,” Bradley said. “He’s a beast.”

Trainer Freddie Roach told Pacquiao after the 10th round that he had control of the fight, and urged him to fight hard the final two rounds.

“You have six minutes to go, son,” Roach said. “It’s your fight.”

But it wasn’t Pacquiao’s fight, with Bradley getting credit for winning some of the close middle and later rounds. After the 11th round Bradley went back to his corner and trainer Joel Diaz told him he needed to win the final round.

“I listened to my corner,” Bradley said. “I got to give him a rematch now.”

Arum said there will be one on Nov. 10, though he thought Pacquiao won easily, as did most writers at ringside.

“I’ll make a lot of money off the rematch, but this was outrageous,” Arum said.

It was the biggest fight of Bradley’s career and it came with a minimum $5 million payday. The rematch will be even richer, though Pacquiao’s loss could damage any plans for a fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Mayweather did not see the fight because he is serving a sentence on a domestic abuse charge at a jail a few miles from the MGM Grand. With a report from Tim Dahlberg, AP Boxing Writer


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Tags: Boxing , ESPN , Floyd Mayweather Sr. , Manny Pacquiao , Pacquiao-Bradley , Politics , Sports , Timothy Bradley

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_W4RTNUSX3BQCWCDQAA562BFC5I Lito G

    Very boring match….. not even worth a rematch…

  • AFPako

    As long as Pacquiao lives in this kind of livelihood he will not succeed. He needs to give up and focus on the will of God which is to live righteously and be a servant. Boxing is a game of the idolatrous Romans. They like to see gladiators fight for their lives and die in the coloseum. That was despicable in the eyes of the Lord God Yahweh.  Manny, you are now led by the HOly Spirit , stay away from sin and live according to love and forgiveness. Mammon will only lead to death and destruction. God curses the evil deeds of man when they say i love you Lord but live the way s of mammon.

  • AFPako

    Mayweather Sr  is all shzt talk . Yamu yamu palagi magsalita. Hindi mo maintindihan. Fck the blackazz!

  • joshua kings

    ok, this is it:
    1. ortiz will get his rematch with mayweather in november 2012;
    2. pacquaio will get his with bradley also in november (10);
    3. then whoever will emerge as winners of these two bouts will face-off in may 2013.
    in al this, the real winner will be the promoter/s, as in the pacquiao-bradley fight last saturday.

    ang galing mo, bob arum (the devil’s advocate or incarnate), par excellence…either way, arum (remember, arum is bradley’s promoter, too) goes laughing all the way to the bank, with his dummy judges and nevada commissioners.

    • AFPako

      What else can you expect from a dirty Jew the likes of Arum, Madoff and many more. Their god is money and money. THey live by deceitful ways. Walang ayos mga ito.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XQIPMGHIKFLIQX2GYRZPEV2VIY floydelyn

    quoting Bradley: “I didn’t think he was as good as everyone says he was. I didn’t feel his power.”

    come on Bradley, your mouth was wide open, you were gasping for breath, your feet wobbled, and your punches came in so slow it was obvious you could not withstand 1-2 combinations from pacquiao. you review the tape and then confirm this to us here: at one point, pacquiao caught you on the side of the neck right below the ear. i’m sure that strike was what you remembered when you said the guy is a beast. you looked awful, dude.

    also when you review the tape, take not of pacquiao’s accurate hits – they all landed right on target – your face, your jaw, your neck. man, you took a beating right there.

    did you even come close to pacquiao’s pinpoint accuracy. no, not at all. you only kept hitting pacquiao’s gloves, when you’re not striking him with almost-below-the-belt blows. 

    • joshua kings

      got it all right, floydelyn;
      bradley went back to the ring on a wheelchair, the favorite medical euquipment of liars and cheats.

  • Oliver82

    Sa rematch 1st round patulogin mo na si egoy Manny!

  • Karabukov

    “I’ve never been as ashamed of the sport of boxing as I am tonight,” said Arum, who handles both fighters.

    Methink that Arum doth protest too much, don’t you?

  • aristeosj

    Boxing is still business and pacquiao is a willing participant to this.he did not complain even sayin that he respects the decision.that is just a lot b##ls##t.



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