
Where EAST meets the Northwest

POUND-FOR-POUND POUNDING. Manny Pacquiao defeated Shane Mosley by unanimous
decision last month in a World Boxing Organization welterweight title bout in
Las Vegas. Pacquiao (white gloves) had a clean knockdown in the third round
(left photo), dropping Mosley to the canvas for just the third time in his
career. At right, Pacquiao lands a punch against Mosley in the ninth round. (AP
Photos/Mark Terrill)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #11 (June 6, 2011), page 9.
Pacquiao wins third straight unanimous decision
By Mike Street
Special to The Asian Reporter
Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao didn’t give his fans the fight they wanted to see
last month. He didn’t face the undefeated Floyd Mayweather Jr. since the
fighters’ camps couldn’t agree on the terms for the fight of the century. And
his fans didn’t get to see the Filipino go toe-to-toe with the powerful "Sugar"
Shane Mosley, who had never been knocked out in his career. Instead, they saw
Manny chase Mosley around the ring, attacking him repeatedly while the larger
man avoided contact from the Filipino fighter many consider the world’s best
pound-for-pound boxer.
Before the fight, some wondered if Pacquiao, a congressman in the
Philippines, might be looking past his older opponent or focusing on his other
careers as a singer and politician. Some expect Pacquiao, who has won titles in
eight different weight divisions, to finally fight a boxer too big for him to
handle. Others pointed to Mosley’s three-inch height and seven-inch reach
advantage as well at his longer ring history, although it’s been years since he
was called the world’s best pound-for-pound boxer.
The fight looked like an equal matchup at the start, as both men probed each
other’s defenses. Pacman looked less mobile than usual, wading in and trying to
land a few hard blows before the counterpunching Mosley could return fire. When
the fighters worked up to combinations in the second round, Mosley dodged some
of the Filipino’s lunging shots, but not all of them, and Manny ended the round
with an energetic flurry of punches that staggered his opponent and swayed the
judges and crowd in his favor.
Satisfied that he could penetrate Mosley’s defenses without absorbing much
punishment, Pacman opened up more in the third, moving more as he gained
confidence, using his speed to find openings against his elder, slower opponent.
Pacman exploited one of those openings by faking a punch and then landing a
straight left to Mosley’s jaw. The blow dropped Mosley to the canvas for just
the third time in his career, a clean knockdown that changed the flow of the
fight.
Pacquiao had already said before the fight that he wanted to knock his
opponent out, something he attempted for the next nine rounds to no avail.
Pacman landed plenty of straight lefts, but Mosley backed away or clinched
before his opponent could follow them up with solid combinations. The constantly
retreating Mosley threw enough punches that the referee could not warn him for
stalling, but the crowd soon turned against the timid challenger, booing him and
chanting "Manny! Manny!" whenever Pacquiao pressed his advantage.
The fight looked like it might turn in the 10th round, when Pacman hit the
canvas, only the fifth time the Filipino has been knocked down in his career.
Replays showed that Pacquiao had slipped while ducking a punch from Mosley, and
the referee later apologized to Manny’s corner for calling it a knockdown. But
without instant replay in boxing, the bad call remained in the judges’
scorecards.
Still, the score remained undeniably in Pacquiao’s favor, and he forewent any
semblance of defense in the final rounds, trying to put the backpedalling
fighter down for good. The crowd changed their chants to "Knock him out!" and
the cheers became increasingly mixed with boos as Mosley refused to engage
Pacman.
After the fight ended, the judges gave the bout to Manny Pacquiao
unanimously, the third such victory in a row by the Filipino. In the previous
two bouts, some wondered if Pacman’s inability to knock out his opponent meant
his reach had finally exceeded his grasp, after ascending seven weight
divisions. The reason for his decision against Mosley, however, was undeniable:
His opponent was running scared.
A battered Mosley called the knockdown "the most legitimate" in a long time,
and called his opponent the fastest he’d ever seen, hitting him with power he’d
never experienced before. Mosley said he’d been unwilling to take the risks
necessary to win, and many excoriated him for quitting after the knockdown in
the third round.
Fellow boxer Bernard Hopkins noted that Mosley touched gloves with Pacquiao
before each round (fighters typically do this just once, at the start of the
bout) and called it the "body language of submission." He preserved his
no-knockout record, but little else, as the 39-year-old seems to have little
future.
Pacquiao, on the other hand, said his legs had tightened up on him in the
later rounds, making it difficult for him to generate power and leverage. The
pain undoubtedly came from chasing his opponent around the ring. "I hit him in
the third round," he said. "Then it was run, run, run."
Pacquiao will now look ahead toward the inevitable showdown with Mayweather,
though the two fighters’ promoters could continue to dodge the superfight of the
century to build up the suspense — and the financial return — as high as
possible. Eventually, however, the promoters will, like Mosley last month, run
out of time to avoid the inevitable.
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