Quantcast
   FASTBREAK:   
Home SportBoxing

Pacman expected to arrive Friday

By Francis Ochoa
Cebu Daily News



LOS ANGELES?Manny Pacquiao heads home today to a country waiting to clog the streets in celebration of its favorite hero?s latest conquest.

The pound-for-pound king is expected to arrive early Friday in Manila, where he will make the usual rounds of courtesy calls, including one to No. 1 supporter President Macapagal Arroyo, whose husband Mike watched as Pacquiao wrote his name in boxing?s history books.

Pacquiao defeated Miguel Cotto Saturday in Las Vegas, to snatch the Puerto Rican?s WBO welterweight crown and become the first boxer to win world titles in seven different weight categories.

?I?m sure the people are screaming right now,? Pacquiao said when asked after the bout what he thought the people in the country were doing right after he annihilated Cotto via a 12-round technical knockout.

?This victory is for them, for all the support they have given me,? he added.

Pacquiao is expected to take a vacation after his toughest fight so far, one where he received more hits than his last three victories combined.

?Cotto is a tough fighter and it was a tough fight,? said Pacquiao.

MAYWEATHER FIGHT

While he is in vacation, his management team will try to put together the biggest fight of 2010, a superbout pitting Pacquiao against undefeated former pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Mayweather eased the path toward the fight?which will kick off with a long-drawn war at the negotiating table?when he called out Pacquiao right after the Cotto bout.

Mayweather, in fact, expressed his seriousness by plunging into a rigorous workout in a Las Vegas gym just 36 hours after Pacquiao?s latest conquest.

On top of negotiations will be the purse split between the two fighters. Trainer Freddie Roach said that Pacquiao deserves a larger share of the purse because of the huge pay-per-view hits generated by his latest fight.

Roach said Mayweather?s fight?a 12-round decision over Juan Manuel Marquez?generated over one million PPV buys because of Pretty Boy?s opponent.

Although no figures were released at presstime, reports from Puerto Rican media had said that the fight, dubbed ?Firepower,? generated a whopping $120 million in PPV revenues.

Mayweather, meanwhile, said in a story posted by Fighthype.com that he still deserves a lion?s share of the profits in a bout against Pacquiao because all roads lead to him.

?Floyd Mayweather is the face of boxing,? said Pretty Boy. ?All roads lead to Floyd Mayweather.?

Article Services

Share
Advertisement

Also on INQUIRER Sports
Gear Up!
Running–improperly–can be hazardous to health
Health, Fitness And Training
Biggest Loser Asia aims to be more sensitive
Improve Your Game
Improving badminton footwork
Sports Buzz
Life after PBA for the "Fortune Cookie"
Inquirer Golf
Clutch Glory