Tag: Manny Pacquiao

  • Manny Pacquiao: Famous boxer and man of many parts

    Filipino world champion Manny Pacquiao is one of the top boxers today. He is known all over the world for his excellent fighting skills and for reaching a tremendous height of success. But he is more than just a boxer.

    Today, he stands for change and for being a multi-faceted talent who has done well in several other sports. He has also tried his hand at several other fields, like music, and even serving in the army.

    He won 10 world titles and is the first and only eight-division world champion. Pacquiao achieved the lineal championship titles in four different weight categories.

    Manny Pacquiao is chairman senate committee on ethics

    The Senator was also seen promoting the MP BL Dubai Invasion basketball event at Hamdan Sports Complex. The interesting thing about him is that whichever sports ventures into he fits in so perfectly.

    A politician, Senator, an actor, a boxer, basketballer so many things rolled into one and he keeps looking younger by the day and to say his exploits is having a lot of positive impact on the youths is to put it mildly and they don’t hide their appreciation of him. Avigali Flores a make -up artist while commenting on Gulfnews story on the boxer has this to say ;

    “Two things that attract me to Manny Pacquiao are his personality and his large heart. Even though he didn’t have much while growing up, he has shown the entire world how people can touch the lives of others. He deserves every bit of praise as he has never shown even an inkling of pride. He treats everyone equal, Pacquiao is simply one of a kind.”

     

     

     

  • Manny Pacquiao promoted to full colonel

    Manny Pacquiao promoted to full colonel

     

    Former six-weight world boxing champion Manny Pacquiao has been promoted to full Colonel of the Philippines Army.

    The 38-year-old took to Instagram to share his news and posted several snaps of him posing with members of the Army dressed in camouflaged uniform.

    Pacquiao wrote: ‘Today, I successfully defended my Commandant’s paper to be promoted to a full Colonel.’

    The former welterweight champion is a military reservist and was commissioned as Lieutenant Colonel before going up in rank on Wednesday.

    He is also currently the Philippines’ Senator where he assumed office in June of last year.

    His duties as a Filipino senator stopped him from fighting Jeff Horn in a rematch last month after the Australian beat Pacquiao in a contentious unanimous decision to capture his world WBO welterweight belt back in July.

    Despite having several responsibilities in the various different roles he is currently in, Pacquiao is planning to return to the ring next year and even recently hinted at fighting UFC star Conor McGregor.

    He took to Instagram in an effort to tease McGregor into fighting him by posting a picture of him and writing ‘Happy Thanksgiving! Stay fit my friend. #realboxingmatch #2018’ earlier this month

    Pacquiao started boxing at the age of 14 while living in the streets of Manila for some time. He turned professional when he was 16 years old.

    “Many of you know me as a legendary boxer, and I’m proud of that,” he said. “However, that journey was not always easy. When I was younger, I became a fighter because I had to survive. I had nothing. I had no one to depend on except myself. I realized that boxing was something I was good at, and I trained hard so that I could keep myself and my family alive.

  • Pacquiao Seeks WBO Review of Horn Controversial Win

    Pacquiao Seeks WBO Review of Horn Controversial Win

    Manny Pacquiao has backed a call asking the World Boxing Organisation (WBO) to review the controversial points decision that saw Australia’s Jeff Horn capture the Filipino great’s welterweight world title in Brisbane on Sunday.

    Horn improved his unbeaten record to 17-0-1 after the judges scored the bout 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113 in the 29-year-old’s favour but many observers questioned the outcome, saying the officials had made a ‘hometown decision’.

    While Horn dismissed criticism of his win, the regulatory body of professional sport in the Philippines, the Games and Amusement Board (GAB), requested a ‘thorough review’ of the fight on Monday and Pacquiao has backed their demand.

    Manny Pacquiao suffered his seventh career defeat in controversial fashion against Jeff Horn

    ‘WBO should take appropriate action on the letter sent by the Games and Amusement Board (GAB) so as not to erode the people’s interest in boxing,’ eight-division world champion Pacquiao said in a statement on Wednesday.

    ‘On my part, I had already accepted the decision but as a leader and, at the same time, fighter, I have the moral obligation to uphold sportsmanship, truth and fairness in the eyes of the public.’

    The home favourite was awarded a unanimous decision in front of 50,000 fans in Brisbane 

    Pacquiao has backed a review after arriving back in the Philippines on Monday

    ‘I love boxing and I don’t wanna see it dying because of (an) unfair decision and officiating.’

    On Tuesday, the WBO said that the decision could not be reversed and highlighted the rematch clause in both fighters’ contracts.

    ‘The discretion of a referee or judge cannot be reversed, except in a case of fraud or violation of laws which is not the case in Pac vs Horn,’ the organisation said on their Twitter account.

    ‘The contract for Pac vs Horn provides a rematch clause, which the WBO is in accordance if the promoters decide to move forward.’

  • Pacquiao backs call for review of Horn decision

    Pacquiao backs call for review of Horn decision

    Manny Pacquiao has backed a call asking the World Boxing Organisation (WBO) to review the controversial points decision that saw Australia’s Jeff Horn capture the Filipino great’s welterweight world title in Brisbane on Sunday.

    Horn improved his unbeaten record to 17-0-1 after the judges scored the bout 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113 in the 29-year-old’s favour, but many observers questioned the outcome, saying the officials had made a “hometown decision”.

    While Horn dismissed criticism of his win, the regulatory body of professional sport in the Philippines, the Games and Amusement Board (GAB), requested a “thorough review” of the fight on Monday and Pacquiao has backed their demand.

    “WBO should take appropriate action on the letter sent by the Games and Amusement Board (GAB) so as not to erode the people’s interest in boxing,” eight-division world champion Pacquiao said in a statement on Wednesday.

    “On my part, I had already accepted the decision, but as a leader and, at the same time, fighter, I have the moral obligation to uphold sportsmanship, truth and fairness in the eyes of the public.”

    “I love boxing and I don’t want to see it dying because of (an) unfair decision and officiating.”

    On Tuesday, the WBO said that the decision could not be reversed and highlighted the rematch clause in both fighters’ contracts.

    “The discretion of a referee or judge cannot be reversed, except in a case of fraud or violation of laws which is not the case in Pac vs. Horn,” the organisation said on their Twitter account.

    “The contract for Pac vs. Horn provides a rematch clause, which the WBO is in accordance if the promoters decide to move forward.”

  • Millionaire Boxer Turns Bin Pusher after Controversial Win against Pacquiao

    Millionaire Boxer Turns Bin Pusher after Controversial Win against Pacquiao

    JEFF Horn might be a millionaire world boxing champion, but he still has to deal with the garbage.

    A lot of it was being dumped on him yesterday by Manny Pacquiao, who arrived home in General Santos City, the Philippines, on Monday to say he was robbed of the world welterweight title at Suncorp Stadium on Sunday.

    Pacquiao said that he deserved to win by “four or five rounds” and Horn “fights dirty” and was saved by the bell in Round 9.

    No time to rest for Jeff Horn as he tends to domestic duties at his home in Brisbane’s southern suburbs. Picture: Nathan Richter/Instar Images.

    The blows also came online from furious Pacquiao fans who attacked the champion boxer.

    Some Facebook users labelled Horn a “dirty boxer” while others said he was a “fake champion” or a cheat.

    “How does it feel to become a teacher but a cheater,” one user wrote.

    It’s bin day at boxing champ Jeff Horn’s Brisbane home. Picture: Nathan Richter
    You wouldn’t want to see this down by the bins. Picture: AAP
    Furious Pacquiao fans have attacked the champion boxer. Picture: Nathan Richter/Instar Images

    “Dirty player! You don’t deserve the belt and you know that deep inside,” another person wrote.

    Dozens of anti-Horn comments were made on his Facebook page, some of them levelled at his wife Jo.

    Horn celebrates beating Manny Pacquiao. Picture: Getty Images

    Pacquiao said he had no problem with Horn’s punches only “his elbow-strikes and headbutts”.

     Relaxing at home with Jo yesterday, Horn said he wasn’t worried by Pacquiao’s comments and was sure he would beat him even more convincingly in Brisbane in November in a rematch.

    “It was a close fight but I edged it and I deserved the win,” Horn said.

    “He’s probably trying to talk up the rematch and we’ll see if he really wants it. I’m happy to fight him again — I think I could beat him in even better fashion next time.”

  • Horn brushes backlash over Pacquiao decision aside

    Horn brushes backlash over Pacquiao decision aside

    Australia’s Jeff Horn brushed aside the outcry against his shock victory over Manny Pacquiao on Monday, saying he hoped taking the Filipino’s WBO welterweight title would help reinvigorate boxing Down Under.

    The 29-year-old former schoolteacher was awarded a unanimous 12-round decision over the eight-division world champion, after a bloody battle in front of more than 51,000 fans at Brisbane’s Lang Park on Sunday.

    Not everybody was happy with the victory, awarded with scores of 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113 by the three judges, and former undisputed world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis was among those who disputed whether Horn should have won.

    “There’s always going to be the backlash where people are going to say I am lucky, or whatever,” Horn, his right eye swollen shut, told reporters in Brisbane on Monday.

    “There’s always naysayers, saying I didn’t win the fight.

    “I think I won the fight, a lot of Queenslanders think I won the fight and people around the world. So you will always have the select few that are against you.”

    The critics of the decision pointed to the 182 to 92 punch count in favor of the Pacquiao, with some suggesting that Horn was awarded the victory for effort.

    “This is what’s wrong with boxing,” Lewis tweeted.” Horn was a very game but I’m hard pressed to see how he could have won that fight by any stretch!”

    Pacquiao, whose defeat was his first since his blockbuster clash with Floyd Mayweather Jr in 2015, indicated on Sunday that he would take up the option of a rematch.

    And Horn said he would be delighted to face the 38-year-old in his first title defence.

    “I’m happy to have a rematch. It’d be good to have him back here fighting,” he added.

    “Manny Pacquiao is an absolute warrior, he’s a legend of this sport. He might have come in underdone, if we have a rematch, if he puts it all in, I don’t know…”

    Horn, whose career record improved to 17-0-1, said he would also like to have a crack at 40-year-old Mayweather, who has come out of retirement for a 12-round crossover bout against mixed martial arts champion Conor McGregor.

    “I hope so,” Horn said. “I’m world champ now. And he has been out of action and coming back to have a fight with Conor McGregor.

    It will be a good test for him to cement his record in history to fight another boxer for his title.”

    Horn, whose meeting with Pacquiao shattered the Australian attendance record for a fight, said he would prefer to defend his title on home soil and was hoping for a bit more recognition ahead of his next bout.

    “It was, I guess, the Manny Show,” he said of Sunday’s fight.

    “Even on TV, I can remember watching programmes saying the Manny Pacquiao fight in Brisbane.

    “My name wasn’t normally mentioned in those programmes, but now hopefully I’m a bit more recognised and I’ve established myself in the boxing community a bit more.”

    Horn said he was prepared for the media attention becoming a world champion would bring and hoped his victory would trigger a renaissance in Australian boxing.

    “It puts Australian boxing on the map, it’s what we’ve needed for a long time, it’s kind of died a bit in the past but hopefully this will invigorate it,” he said.

  • Pacquiao prepares to fight former school teacher Jeff Horn

    Pacquiao prepares to fight former school teacher Jeff Horn

    Manny Pacquiao was busy gearing up for his fight against Jeff Horn on 2 July as he worked up a sweat in a gym in his native Philippines.

    The veteran boxer prepared for the bout through a combination of sparring and bag work in the build up to his first fight of 2017.

    Pacquiao was also shown jogging through the streets of the Philippines capital Manila and posing for photos by the ring in the Elorde boxing gym.

    Manny Pacquiao puts on his wrist straps as he gears up for his fight against Jeff Horn

    Pacquiao poses for a photo in a ring at the Elorde boxing gym in Manila, Philippines

    Pacquiao will be fighting in his 68th professional bout when he takes on Australian Horn

    The Filipino will be fighting Horn for the WBO Welterweight world title when they face each other in Brisbane on July 2 at the Suncorp Stadium.

    Pacquiao last fought American Jessie Vargas in Nevada back in November 2016 which was first bout back from a brief spell in retirement.

    In total Pacquiao holds a remarkable record of just six defeats from his 67 professional bouts – the most recent was the May 2015 loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr.

    The Filipino boxer holds a sparkling record of just six defeats from 67 professional fights

    The 38-year-old has not lost since tasting defeat against Floyd Mayweather Jr in May 2015

    Pacquiao will face Horn at the Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane - the latter's home city
    Pacquiao will face Horn at the Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane – the latter’s home city

    His opponent in Brisbane is 29-year-old ex-school teacher Horn who holds an unbeaten record of 16 wins and one draw in professional boxing.

    Horn previously represented Australia at the London 2012 Olympics when he fought in the light welterweight division.

    But Pacquiao earlier said that despite Horn’s relative inexperience, he was not underestimating his opponent.

    Pacquiao said that despite Horn's relative lack of pedigree he is not underestimating him

    Pacquiao goes for a jog through the streets of Manila near his house as he trains for the bout

    Pacquiao and Horn face off to promote the fight which has been titled the 'Battle of Brisbane'

    ‘I am not underestimating Horn. He is a good boxer and very aggressive. A strong fighter,’ he told the Courier Mail.

    ‘I am working on speed and a strong body for the fight but my quickness will help me beat him.’

    Horn will become Pacquiao’s first opponent since Jorge Solis in 2007 that has not previously won a world title.

  • Klitschko out to prove sport and politics do mix

    Klitschko out to prove sport and politics do mix

    IT is a little unfortunate that the most enduring conflation of politics and pugilism was made by Idi Amin. “Boxing is like politics you try to knock out your opponents,” said the butcher of Uganda, famously photographed by the late Monte Fresco as he engaged in mock fisticuffs with Ian Wooldridge.

    Such wisdom has more recently been tested by Manny Pacquiao, who has embraced public service in his native Philippines with the ardour one might expect of a figure anointed by his people as a semi-deity. And yet it is Ukraine’s Vitali Klitschko, who, at 42, confirmed this week that he had all but turned his back on the ring, who could savour the greatest success in a very different form of canvassing.

    There is nothing like the noble art, it seems, for affirming one’s suitability for the highest office. For Klitschko’s audacious move to oppose President Viktor Yanukovych in urging closer ties with the European Union is no mere stunt. Close observers of the febrile machinations in Kiev are convinced that the elder Klitschko brother, victorious in 45 of 47 fights besides his controversial defeat against Lennox Lewis a decade ago, possesses the gravitas to prevail in the 2015 presidential race. In a country starkly divided between the aspirational Orange revolutionaries who swept to power in 2004 and the Russian-speaking, blue-collar Yanukovych advocates in the east, Klitschko has the trappings of global celebrity necessary to span both camps.

    “He is not corrupted,” Taras Berezovets, a leading political strategist, told Time magazine. “Klitschko is probably the single candidate who can bridge the two parts of Ukraine.” It is tempting to hold a rather jaundiced view of boxers with a political bent, given that even Pacquiao has struggled to convert his kudos into results of any electoral significance. As a representative for Sarangani province, he has faced fierce criticism for his poor attendance record at debates, with one congressman describing Pacquiao’s designs upon the Filipino presidency in 2016 as a “big joke”.

    Klitschko, however, never fails to be taken seriously, either by dint of his 41 professional knockouts or his formidable extra-curricular qualifications. He is fluent in both English and German, enabling a constructive acquaintance with Western diplomats such as Victoria Nuland, the US Assistant Secretary of State who travelled to Kiev last week to hand out bread and biscuits to protesters in a sub-zero Independence Square. He also holds the equivalent of a doctorate from Kiev’s National University of Physical Fitness and Sport.

    The one handicap, familiar to boxers as a breed, is Klitschko’s tendency to lapse into the lumpen rhetoric of the weigh-in. Under rigorous inquisition as to how exactly he intended to elicit concessions from the autocrat Yanukovych, he replied: “The president and the government pretend to put a brave face on their bad game. In boxing, this is not possible. If you have a bad game, you end up with a bad face.”

    It was hardly a speech worthy of Cicero. But Klitschko is adamant that he will not deviate from his chosen transition, perhaps deriving confidence from the knowledge that a boxer’s path to the ballot box is a well-trodden one.

    Lord Moynihan, former sports minister and chairman of the British Olympic Association, won a boxing blue at Oxford before he pursued his own seat of power. Alexis ‘Explosive Thin Man’ Arguello, by common consent the finest junior lightweight of all time, likewise became active in Nicaraguan politics following his retirement, becoming mayor of Managua in 2008 before being found dead at his home seven months later, in what was believed to be suicide.

    There are even more exalted examples. Theodore Roosevelt boxed at Harvard, even going so far as to have a ring installed within the White House, where he memorably sparred with former heavyweight champion John Sullivan. Hard-as-oak senator John McCain, similarly, did not acquire his reputation for resilience without a thorough grounding in left hooks and right-arm jabs. He was swiftly recognised as a standout boxing talent at the US Naval Academy, cutting a swathe through the lightweight division. The same passion was manifested throughout a 25-year Senate career, during which he helped draft legislation as the Muhammad Ali boxing reform act.

    From Sebastian Coe to George Weah, sport and politics have become interwoven in the richest of webs. But as the sternest preparation for a second life in office, boxing seems an unimpeachable choice.

     

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