in

Pacquiao retires after unanimous win over Timothy Bradley

If it was indeed the final fight of an unforgettable career that launched him from unspeakable poverty in the rural Philippines to worldwide fame and fortune, then Manny Pacquiao went out with the crowd-pleasing brio that was his calling card.

The fighting congressman from Sarangani province dropped Timothy Bradley in the seventh and ninth rounds en route to a unanimous-decision victory on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. All three ringside judges scored it 116-110, as did the Guardian.

Afterward he confirmed the central selling point of the promotion: that it was his last fight.

“Yes, I am retired,” Pacquiao said. “I want to go home to my family and serve the people.”

Pacquiao’s first outing since coming up short against Floyd Mayweather more than 11 months ago found the fighter at a curious point. The ill will left over from an underwhelming showing in the fight of the century and the anti-LGBT rhetoric that cost him an endorsement deal with Nike had cast him, to some extent, in the unfamiliar role of heel.

Instead it seemed the moment was there for Bradley, whose own Hall of Fame career was for so long obscured by their first fight, a highly disputed split decision that went to the American, to step up and finally claim the respect he deserves.

It wasn’t to be. Instead Bradley found himself in with the same nightmare matchup he’d struggled with in two previous meetings: a puncher just as fast and better defensively.
“He was a step ahead of me,” Bradley observed afterward. “I was supposed to be a step ahead of him.”

Pacquiao (57-6-2, 38 KOs) appeared eager to be the aggressor when the opening bell rang but the first round soon became a tactical clash that saw the fighters pawing with jabs and taking the other’s measure. Even when both men opened up by the third, the action came in bursts.

Bradley (33-2-1, 13 KOs) enjoyed his best moments early in the fifth, backing Pacquiao up along the ropes and connecting with a chopping right early before a left-right combination upstairs. But Pacquiao immediately responded in kind and the pair traded
hellfire in the center of the ring with the Filipino getting the better of the exchanges.

For a moment it was the Pacquiao of old. When the bell rang Bradley’s trainer Teddy Atlas had climbed through the ropes and berated his fighter before he could even take his stool.

“When he hurt his opponent he want after him and he did what he was supposed to do,” Pacquiao’s longtime trainer Freddie Roach said.

By the sixth Pacquiao had found his range – a dangerous prospect for Bradley given his hand-speed disadvantage – and in the seventh he dropped the American with a short right hook.

It was a flash knockdown near the end of a strong Bradley round that might have been ruled a slip, but referee Tony Weeks’ ruling that his glove had touched the canvas stood. Far more convincing was the counter left in the ninth than landed flush and sent Bradley clattering to the deck, where the momentum carried him into a reverse somersault.

“Manny was luring me in,” said Bradley, who connected on 99 of 302 punches (33%), compared to 112 of 439 (28%) for Pacquiao. for Bradley according to CompuBox. “He was waiting on me, to commit, to lunge in, so he could counter. Then in spots he would attack. He was being the ocean tonight.”

By then Bradley seemed to know he needed a knockout to win, which made him more vulnerable than ever. He reverted to circling around Pacquiao and pawing with the jab precisely when he needed to step on the gas. The crowd rose to their feet for the final minute, perhaps the last of Pacquiao’s career, before the bell sounded on the 36th round of the trilogy.

“I did everything I could to get him to come to me,” Bradley said. “He was just super smart tonight. He was the smarter man. He’s the best fighter I’ve ever faced in the ring.”

Added Atlas: “I don’t think my fighter came up short, I think I did. Give credit to Manny, Manny was terrific. We wanted to take a little more advantage of his preliminary movement before he exploded forward. I think we had opportunities to do that, but I don’t know that I pushed the right buttons to make it happen.”

The malleability of retirements in boxing is their essential quality, but Pacquiao’s promoter seemed to accept this was the end. “As far as I am concered, until I hear differently, Manny Pacquiao has retired from the sport of boxing,” Top Rank CEO Bob Arum said afterward.

No one does a nostalgia act like Las Vegas. Over the past few years there’s been none bigger than Pacquiao. At 37, he is still a world class operator, one of the sport’s top welterweights capable of beating nearly anyone put in front of him. But for years he’s been marketed as the one-man wrecking crew whose concussive knockout power felled a parade of bigger, stronger opponents.

In reality it’s been seven years since he stopped an opponent inside the distance, a recession attributed to both his ascent to welterweight and the encroachment of Father Time. If Saturday’s fight is his farewell, it’s as good as place to walk away as any.

He’s got plenty to fall back on, not least the forthcoming senatorial election on 9 May in his native Philippines, an office he’s expected to win that will consume far more time than his current duties as a congressman.

“My heart is 50/50,” he said when pressed. “I might enjoy my retired life or I might want to come back. It’s hard to say because I’m not there yet. But right now my decision is to retire.”

By: The Guardian

Written by Web Master

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

Man shoots brother dead over GHS130

Jesus Christ must be stupid to watch me use Juju –Bishop Daniel Obinim