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Where EAST meets the Northwest

CLOSE AND CONTROVERSIAL. Manny Pacquiao, right, of the Philippines, hits
Mexico’s Juan Manuel Marquez during a World Boxing Organization welterweight
title fight held last month in Las Vegas. The third bout between the two men
again ended in close, controversial fashion. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
From The Asian Reporter, V21, #23 (December 5, 2011), page 9.
Manny Pacquiao faces his fiercest rival a third time
By Mike Street
Special to The Asian Reporter
Fans of the Filipino boxer Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao have been waiting for
someone to truly challenge their champion. Pacman hasn’t lost a fight since
2005, a span of 14 fights that included just one close bout, a 2008
split-decision victory over Juan Manuel Marquez. Pacquiao and Marquez had also
faced each other four years earlier, ending in Pacman’s second career draw,
thanks in part to a judge’s scoring error. When the two men met for the third
time last month, the fight again ended in close, controversial fashion, an
indication either of their fierce matchup or the decline of Manny Pacquiao.
When Pacquiao and Marquez first squared off in 2004, the Filipino was still a
featherweight and hadn’t begun the march toward higher weight classes that
established him as one of the world’s top pound-for-pound fighters. Exhibiting
the speed and power that remain his hallmark, Pacman knocked down Marquez three
times in the first round, an outcome that would have ended the fight under
different rules.
Instead, Marquez was saved by the bell and grew stronger as the fight
continued, clearly winning several of the late rounds. After the required 12
rounds, two of the judges scored the fight in favor of each fighter, while the
third, Burt Clements, scored it dead even. Although the results stood, Clements
later admitted he’d scored the three-knockdown first round incorrectly, and
Pacman should have won the fight on his card. Pacquiao also revealed he’d
injured his hand in the furious first round, preventing him from continuing his
early assault.
This flawed outcome brought added significance to their 2008 rematch, which
occurred after both fighters had climbed weight classes. Since their first bout,
Pacquiao had fought seven superfeatherweight matches, losing once to Erik
Morales (just Pacman’s second career defeat) before defeating Morales in two
subsequent rematches. Marquez, on the other hand, fought in the lighter
featherweight division for five of his next seven bouts, also losing once,
against Indonesian Chris John.
Pacman seemed more comfortable at the higher weight and proved it by dropping
Marquez late in the third round, then nearly flooring him again soon after
Marquez returned to his feet. But Marquez recovered in the middle rounds,
building an advantage over Pacquiao that continued through the end of the fight.
The judges awarded Pacquiao a split decision, with the tiebreaking judge giving
the fight to Pacman by just a point. Many observers questioned the scoring in
the sixth round, which seemed to have been dominated by Marquez, but which two
judges had given to Pacman. Controversy reared its head once again.
In the years since that second fight, the two fighters’ careers have
continued to diverge. Pacman has vaulted into international prominence, becoming
the first fighter to win a title in eight different weight classes. He has
dominated internationally known fighters such as Oscar de la Hoya and "Sugar"
Shane Mosley, and he scored a dramatic second-round knockout of Ricky Hatton in
2009. Marquez, in the meantime, battled lesser-known fighters or those in
decline, like two fights against the once-formidable Juan Diaz. The one
exception, Floyd Mayweather, Jr., beat Marquez handily by unanimous decision.
For this reason, commentators saw the ascendant Pacquiao as a clear favorite
over the 38-year-old Marquez in their third matchup, and prefight odds were
heavily in Pacman’s favor. Reality, however, told a different story. As in their
previous meetings, both men dominated different portions of the fight, but this
time, Marquez didn’t kiss the canvas, highlighting what some see as Pacquiao’s
declining power. The Mexican’s improved durability might have also come from
familiarity with Pacman’s fast-and-furious style, in which he attacks from
multiple angles with a variety of punches.
Whether it was Marquez’s defense or Pacman’s diminished power, the fight
featured some tentative early rounds, unlike their earlier matchups. Pacquiao
remained aggressive, however, and Marquez retreated and dodged the onslaught
before striking back in the middle of the fight. Building from his
counterpunches, Marquez staggered Pacman near the end of the fourth and fifth
rounds and opened a cut inside Pacman’s mouth. But Pacquiao redeemed himself
with energetic flurries late in several rounds, possibly influencing the scoring
of the judges.
Though neither boxer dominated the final rounds, Pacman was more aggressive;
this and several more late-round combinations appeared to give him the edge.
When the fight went to the scorecards, two of the judges gave Pacquiao the
fight, while the third judge scored it dead even. Marquez’s Mexican compatriots
at the Las Vegas fight booed their fighter’s defeat, lobbing empty beer bottles
into the ring, and Marquez, convinced he had been robbed, stormed off to the
dressing room without a word for ringside interviewers.
As postfight emotions cooled, analysts pointed to the Compubox statistics,
which gave the edge to Pacman in nearly every category. Many of those who
protested the final decision remembered prefight expectations; a final score
this close can be seen as a kind of victory for Marquez.
Inevitable discussions arose about a fourth fight between the two fierce
rivals, but speculation about Pacquiao’s future loomed much larger. Although the
superfight against Floyd Mayweather, Jr. has yet to come together, ESPN’s Kieran
Mulvaney pointed out that Pacman’s lack of dominance in this latest bout has
taken some of the luster — and payday — away from that matchup. Whomever the
multi-weight Filipino sensation takes on next, everyone will be watching to see
if he can regain his once-spectacular form, or if he is indeed a great fighter
in decline.
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