Manny Pacquiao retirement: 5 fights that define the Filipino icon

Building greatness: Five fights that define Manny Pacquiao.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in April of last year. We’re posting it again after Manny Pacquiao announced his retirement from boxing.

 

Greatness is achieved step by painstaking step over a substantial period of time.

Few get there. And those who do can generally point to defining victories that served as those rare stepping stones that lead directly to the International Boxing Hall of Fame. All great fighters have that in common.

With that in mind, Boxing Junkie is initiating an occasional series called “Building Greatness,” in which we select a special fighter and provide five stepping-stone victories that demonstrated his greatness.

Our first subject: Manny Pacquiao, who over more than two decades proved over and over again that he is one of the best fighters of all time.

Here are five fights that helped define him:

LEHLO LEDWABA

Manny Paquiao (right) arrived as an important fight by knocking out Lehlo Ledwaba in 2001. Jed Jacobsohn / Allsport

Date / site: June 23, 2001 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Junior featherweight
Records: Pacquiao 32-2; Ledwaba 33-1-1
At stake: Ledwaba’s IBF title
Result: Pacquiao TKO 6
Background: Ledwaba, a talented South African, was one of the hottest fighters in the world when he agreed to defend his 122-pound title against Pacquiao on the Oscar De La Hoya vs. Javier Castillejo card. Some believed he was a future pound-for-pounder. Pacquiao? Trainer Freddie Roach had an inkling that his little Filipino was special but few others were aware of his potential. Until this fight. Pacquiao, throwing quick, hard punches from impossible angles and at a remarkable rate, stunned Ledwaba and everyone watching by dominating the champion in every conceivable way en route to a spectacular knockout. Pacquiao won every round on all three cards through five rounds. The future Hall of Famer was a secret no more. He had arrived.

***

MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA

Pacquiao returned to a homecoming parade after his first victory over Marco Antonio Barrera. Joel Nito / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: Nov. 15, 2003 / Alamodome, San Antonio
Division: Featherweight
Records: Pacquiao 37-2-1; Barrera 57-3
At stake: Nothing
Result: Pacquiao TKO 11
Background: This was only the first of Pacquiao’s nine fights against one of the great Mexican trio of Barrera, Erik Morales and Juan Manuel Marquez. But he proved in this fight — the main event at the Alamodome — that he was capable of dominating a truly great opponent. Pacquiao, too fast, too powerful, too good for Barrera, had wide leads on all three cards and was pounding Barrera at will when the victim’s corner ended the slaughter with four seconds remaining in the penultimate round. “This is a fight that will shake up the boxing world,” HBO commentator Larry Merchant said toward the end of the fight. And indeed it did. A star was born that night. Pacquiao would end up with a record of 6-2-1 against the Mexican Hall of Famers.

***

OSCAR DE LA HOYA

Pacquiao (right) established himself as a superstar with his victory over Oscar De La Hoya. AP Photo / Mark J. Terrill

Date / site: Dec. 6, 2008 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 47-3-2; De La Hoya 39-5
At stake: Nothing
Result: Pacquiao TKO 8
Background: In retrospect, Pacquiao’s knockout victory over De La Hoya makes sense. The Mexican-American superstar was 35, in decline and dropped considerable weight to make the fight happen. However, at the time, it was difficult to imagine the diminutive Pacquiao beating such a gifted, experienced and naturally bigger opponent. We learned quickly that the young, dynamic Filipino was too much for this version of De La Hoya, who had neither the reflexes nor wherewithal to cope with Pacquiao’s speed and accurate punching. He battered his one-time idol for eight rounds – losing only one round on one card – before De La Hoya’s handlers decided enough was enough and he didn’t come out for Round 9. The victory proved to be Pacquiao’s threshold to superstardom.

***

MIGUEL COTTO

Miguel Cottos face tells the story of his one-sided fight against Pacquiao. Mark Ralston / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: Nov. 14, 2009 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 49-3-2; Cotto 34-1
At stake: Cotto’s WBO title
Result: Pacquiao TKO 12
Background: Pacquiao followed his stunning victory over De La Hoya with perhaps his greatest knockout, a breathtaking, one-punch stoppage of the durable Ricky Hatton on May 2, 2009. However, his victory over Cotto was more important. The Puerto Rican had built a reputation as one of the best fighters in the world over the previous half decade. And, frankly, Pacquiao had his way with him. Cotto felt Pacquiao’s power early – going down in Rounds 3 and 4 – and had no appetite to exchange punches from then on. Instead, he turned to his formidable skill set and dancing ability but even that failed him in the end. Cotto, his face a battered mess, was taking a pounding when referee Kenny Bayless finally stopped the fight.

***

KEITH THURMAN

Pacquiao (right) fooled those who though he was too old by outpointing Keith Thurman last year. John Gurzinski / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: July 20, 2019
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 61-7-2; Thurman 29-0
At stake: Thurman’s WBA title
Result: Pacquiao SD 12
Background: Pacquiao had many more-dominating performances than this one in his nearly quarter-century career. The elements that made this one special? Pacquiao’s age (40) and Thurman’s perceived ability. Pacquiao certainly wasn’t a has-been, having beaten Adrien Broner in his previous fight, but he was relatively old, couldn’t fight at the same pace he once did and was a small 147-pounder. All that figured to work in favor of Thurman, a big, strong welterweight who was in the second fight of a comeback from injuries. Turned out that even a diminished version of Pacquiao could still beat an elite 147-pounder. Pacquiao got off to a quick start by putting Thurman down in Round 1 and then fought in energy-conserving bursts to win rounds and ultimate the fight, albeit by a narrow margin. Surprise, surprise. The great one still had more to give.

[lawrence-related id=24002,23991,23360,22603]

Manny Pacquiao retirement: 5 fights that define the Filipino icon

Building greatness: Five fights that define Manny Pacquiao.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in April of last year. We’re posting it again after Manny Pacquiao announced his retirement from boxing.

 

Greatness is achieved step by painstaking step over a substantial period of time.

Few get there. And those who do can generally point to defining victories that served as those rare stepping stones that lead directly to the International Boxing Hall of Fame. All great fighters have that in common.

With that in mind, Boxing Junkie is initiating an occasional series called “Building Greatness,” in which we select a special fighter and provide five stepping-stone victories that demonstrated his greatness.

Our first subject: Manny Pacquiao, who over more than two decades proved over and over again that he is one of the best fighters of all time.

Here are five fights that helped define him:

LEHLO LEDWABA

Manny Paquiao (right) arrived as an important fight by knocking out Lehlo Ledwaba in 2001. Jed Jacobsohn / Allsport

Date / site: June 23, 2001 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Junior featherweight
Records: Pacquiao 32-2; Ledwaba 33-1-1
At stake: Ledwaba’s IBF title
Result: Pacquiao TKO 6
Background: Ledwaba, a talented South African, was one of the hottest fighters in the world when he agreed to defend his 122-pound title against Pacquiao on the Oscar De La Hoya vs. Javier Castillejo card. Some believed he was a future pound-for-pounder. Pacquiao? Trainer Freddie Roach had an inkling that his little Filipino was special but few others were aware of his potential. Until this fight. Pacquiao, throwing quick, hard punches from impossible angles and at a remarkable rate, stunned Ledwaba and everyone watching by dominating the champion in every conceivable way en route to a spectacular knockout. Pacquiao won every round on all three cards through five rounds. The future Hall of Famer was a secret no more. He had arrived.

***

MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA

Pacquiao returned to a homecoming parade after his first victory over Marco Antonio Barrera. Joel Nito / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: Nov. 15, 2003 / Alamodome, San Antonio
Division: Featherweight
Records: Pacquiao 37-2-1; Barrera 57-3
At stake: Nothing
Result: Pacquiao TKO 11
Background: This was only the first of Pacquiao’s nine fights against one of the great Mexican trio of Barrera, Erik Morales and Juan Manuel Marquez. But he proved in this fight — the main event at the Alamodome — that he was capable of dominating a truly great opponent. Pacquiao, too fast, too powerful, too good for Barrera, had wide leads on all three cards and was pounding Barrera at will when the victim’s corner ended the slaughter with four seconds remaining in the penultimate round. “This is a fight that will shake up the boxing world,” HBO commentator Larry Merchant said toward the end of the fight. And indeed it did. A star was born that night. Pacquiao would end up with a record of 6-2-1 against the Mexican Hall of Famers.

***

OSCAR DE LA HOYA

Pacquiao (right) established himself as a superstar with his victory over Oscar De La Hoya. AP Photo / Mark J. Terrill

Date / site: Dec. 6, 2008 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 47-3-2; De La Hoya 39-5
At stake: Nothing
Result: Pacquiao TKO 8
Background: In retrospect, Pacquiao’s knockout victory over De La Hoya makes sense. The Mexican-American superstar was 35, in decline and dropped considerable weight to make the fight happen. However, at the time, it was difficult to imagine the diminutive Pacquiao beating such a gifted, experienced and naturally bigger opponent. We learned quickly that the young, dynamic Filipino was too much for this version of De La Hoya, who had neither the reflexes nor wherewithal to cope with Pacquiao’s speed and accurate punching. He battered his one-time idol for eight rounds – losing only one round on one card – before De La Hoya’s handlers decided enough was enough and he didn’t come out for Round 9. The victory proved to be Pacquiao’s threshold to superstardom.

***

MIGUEL COTTO

Miguel Cottos face tells the story of his one-sided fight against Pacquiao. Mark Ralston / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: Nov. 14, 2009 / MGM Grand, Las Vegas
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 49-3-2; Cotto 34-1
At stake: Cotto’s WBO title
Result: Pacquiao TKO 12
Background: Pacquiao followed his stunning victory over De La Hoya with perhaps his greatest knockout, a breathtaking, one-punch stoppage of the durable Ricky Hatton on May 2, 2009. However, his victory over Cotto was more important. The Puerto Rican had built a reputation as one of the best fighters in the world over the previous half decade. And, frankly, Pacquiao had his way with him. Cotto felt Pacquiao’s power early – going down in Rounds 3 and 4 – and had no appetite to exchange punches from then on. Instead, he turned to his formidable skill set and dancing ability but even that failed him in the end. Cotto, his face a battered mess, was taking a pounding when referee Kenny Bayless finally stopped the fight.

***

KEITH THURMAN

Pacquiao (right) fooled those who though he was too old by outpointing Keith Thurman last year. John Gurzinski / AFP via Getty Images

Date / site: July 20, 2019
Division: Welterweight
Records: Pacquiao 61-7-2; Thurman 29-0
At stake: Thurman’s WBA title
Result: Pacquiao SD 12
Background: Pacquiao had many more-dominating performances than this one in his nearly quarter-century career. The elements that made this one special? Pacquiao’s age (40) and Thurman’s perceived ability. Pacquiao certainly wasn’t a has-been, having beaten Adrien Broner in his previous fight, but he was relatively old, couldn’t fight at the same pace he once did and was a small 147-pounder. All that figured to work in favor of Thurman, a big, strong welterweight who was in the second fight of a comeback from injuries. Turned out that even a diminished version of Pacquiao could still beat an elite 147-pounder. Pacquiao got off to a quick start by putting Thurman down in Round 1 and then fought in energy-conserving bursts to win rounds and ultimate the fight, albeit by a narrow margin. Surprise, surprise. The great one still had more to give.

[lawrence-related id=24002,23991,23360,22603]

Manny Pacquiao vs. Yordenis Ugas: date, time, how to watch, background

Manny Pacquiao vs. Yordenis Ugas: date, time, how to watch, background.

MANNY PACQUIAO CHALLENGES WBA WELTERWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER YORDENIS UGAS ON SATURDAY NIGHT AT T-MOBILE ARENA ON PAY-PER-VIEW

***

YORDENIS UGAS (26-4, 12 KOs)
VS. MANNY PACQUIAO (62-7-2, 39 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Aug. 21
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Welterweight
  • At stake: Ugas’ WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Pacquiao No. 15 (Boxing Junkie)
  • Odds: Pacquiao 3-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robert Guerrero vs. Victor Ortiz, welterweights; Mark Magsayo vs. Julio Ceja, featherweights; Carlos Castro vs. Oscar Escandon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pacquiao UD
  • Background: Pacquiao returns more than two years after he outpointed Keith Thurman at 40 to win the WBA 147-pound title, which later was given to Ugas because of the Filipino icon’s inactivity. The now-42-year-old was scheduled to face an enormous challenge in two-belt titleholder Errol Spence Jr. but Spence pulled out with an eye injury. The Texan’s misfortunate is Ugas’ ultimate opportunity, as the Cuban will be taking part in the biggest and most-lucrative fight of his career. And Ugas is a legitimate threat to defeat Pacquiao. He is skillful, experienced and rugged. He has a number of quality victories and was competitive in all four of his losses, including a split decision against Shawn Porter in 2019 that some believe should’ve gone his way. He’s coming off a split-decision victory over Abel Ramos last September. Pacquiao doesn’t throw as many punches as he once did; he fights in spurts now. However, he proved in his upset of then-unbeaten Thurman that he remains quick and capable into his 40s. We’ll see what, if any impact the two-year hiatus will have on Pacquiao. He says the time was beneficial because it allowed his body to rest. Of course, this is a much-watch fight because we never know which fight will be the all-time great’s last.

[lawrence-related id=22391,22368,22355,21990]

Manny Pacquiao vs. Yordenis Ugas: date, time, how to watch, background

Manny Pacquiao vs. Yordenis Ugas: date, time, how to watch, background.

MANNY PACQUIAO CHALLENGES WBA WELTERWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER YORDENIS UGAS ON SATURDAY NIGHT AT T-MOBILE ARENA ON PAY-PER-VIEW

***

YORDENIS UGAS (26-4, 12 KOs)
VS. MANNY PACQUIAO (62-7-2, 39 KOs)

  • Date: Saturday, Aug. 21
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT (main event later in show)
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Welterweight
  • At stake: Ugas’ WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Pacquiao No. 15 (Boxing Junkie)
  • Odds: Pacquiao 3-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robert Guerrero vs. Victor Ortiz, welterweights; Mark Magsayo vs. Julio Ceja, featherweights; Carlos Castro vs. Oscar Escandon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pacquiao UD
  • Background: Pacquiao returns more than two years after he outpointed Keith Thurman at 40 to win the WBA 147-pound title, which later was given to Ugas because of the Filipino icon’s inactivity. The now-42-year-old was scheduled to face an enormous challenge in two-belt titleholder Errol Spence Jr. but Spence pulled out with an eye injury. The Texan’s misfortunate is Ugas’ ultimate opportunity, as the Cuban will be taking part in the biggest and most-lucrative fight of his career. And Ugas is a legitimate threat to defeat Pacquiao. He is skillful, experienced and rugged. He has a number of quality victories and was competitive in all four of his losses, including a split decision against Shawn Porter in 2019 that some believe should’ve gone his way. He’s coming off a split-decision victory over Abel Ramos last September. Pacquiao doesn’t throw as many punches as he once did; he fights in spurts now. However, he proved in his upset of then-unbeaten Thurman that he remains quick and capable into his 40s. We’ll see what, if any impact the two-year hiatus will have on Pacquiao. He says the time was beneficial because it allowed his body to rest. Of course, this is a much-watch fight because we never know which fight will be the all-time great’s last.

[lawrence-related id=22391,22368,22355,21990]

Fight Week: Manny Pacquiao returns against titleholder Yordenis Ugas

Fight Week: Manny Pacquiao returns against titleholder Yordenis Ugas on Saturday in Las Vegas.

FIGHT WEEK

MANNY PACQUIAO CHALLENGES WBA WELTERWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER YORDENIS UGAS ON SATURDAY NIGHT AT T-MOBILE ARENA ON PAY-PER-VIEW

***

YORDENIS UGAS (26-4, 12 KOs)
VS. MANNY PACQUIAO (62-7-2, 39 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Aug. 21
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Welterweight
  • At stake: Ugas’ WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Pacquiao No. 15 (Boxing Junkie)
  • Odds: Pacquiao 3-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robert Guerrero vs. Victor Ortiz, welterweights; Mark Magsayo vs. Julio Ceja, featherweights; Carlos Castro vs. Oscar Escandon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pacquiao UD
  • Background: Pacquiao returns more than two years after he outpointed Keith Thurman at 40 to win the WBA 147-pound title, which later was given to Ugas because of the Filipino icon’s inactivity. The now-42-year-old was scheduled to face an enormous challenge in two-belt titleholder Errol Spence Jr. but Spence pulled out with an eye injury. The Texan’s misfortunate is Ugas’ ultimate opportunity, as the Cuban will be taking part in the biggest and most-lucrative fight of his career. And Ugas is a legitimate threat to defeat Pacquiao. He is skillful, experienced and rugged. He has a number of quality victories and was competitive in all four of his losses, including a split decision against Shawn Porter in 2019 that some believe should’ve gone his way. He’s coming off a split-decision victory over Abel Ramos last September. Pacquiao doesn’t throw as many punches as he once did; he fights in spurts now. However, he proved in his upset of then-unbeaten Thurman that he remains quick and capable into his 40s. We’ll see what, if any impact the two-year hiatus will have on Pacquiao. He says the time was beneficial because it allowed his body to rest. Of course, this is a much-watch fight because we never know which fight will be the all-time great’s last.

Also fighting this weekend: Cruiserweight prospect Ali Baloyev (10-0, 7 KOs) faces Rolly Lambert Fogoum (11-1-1, 10 KOs) on Friday in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (ESPN+); Kali Reis (17-7-1, 5 KOs) defends her WBA junior welterweight title against Diana Prazak (14-3, 9 KOs) on Friday in El Cajon, Calif. (UFC Fight Pass); and Jair Valtierra (15-0, 8 KOs) faces Alberto Ruiz Ibarra (10-2, 7 KOs) in a lightweight bout on Friday in Mexico City (Telemundo).

Fight Week: Manny Pacquiao returns against titleholder Yordenis Ugas

Fight Week: Manny Pacquiao returns against titleholder Yordenis Ugas on Saturday in Las Vegas.

FIGHT WEEK

MANNY PACQUIAO CHALLENGES WBA WELTERWEIGHT TITLEHOLDER YORDENIS UGAS ON SATURDAY NIGHT AT T-MOBILE ARENA ON PAY-PER-VIEW

***

YORDENIS UGAS (26-4, 12 KOs)
VS. MANNY PACQUIAO (62-7-2, 39 KOs)

  • When: Saturday, Aug. 21
  • Where: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas
  • TV/Stream: Pay-per-view
  • Division: Welterweight
  • At stake: Ugas’ WBA title
  • Pound-for-pound ranking: Pacquiao No. 15 (Boxing Junkie)
  • Odds: Pacquiao 3-1 favorite (average of multiple outlets)
  • Also on the card: Robert Guerrero vs. Victor Ortiz, welterweights; Mark Magsayo vs. Julio Ceja, featherweights; Carlos Castro vs. Oscar Escandon, featherweights
  • Prediction: Pacquiao UD
  • Background: Pacquiao returns more than two years after he outpointed Keith Thurman at 40 to win the WBA 147-pound title, which later was given to Ugas because of the Filipino icon’s inactivity. The now-42-year-old was scheduled to face an enormous challenge in two-belt titleholder Errol Spence Jr. but Spence pulled out with an eye injury. The Texan’s misfortunate is Ugas’ ultimate opportunity, as the Cuban will be taking part in the biggest and most-lucrative fight of his career. And Ugas is a legitimate threat to defeat Pacquiao. He is skillful, experienced and rugged. He has a number of quality victories and was competitive in all four of his losses, including a split decision against Shawn Porter in 2019 that some believe should’ve gone his way. He’s coming off a split-decision victory over Abel Ramos last September. Pacquiao doesn’t throw as many punches as he once did; he fights in spurts now. However, he proved in his upset of then-unbeaten Thurman that he remains quick and capable into his 40s. We’ll see what, if any impact the two-year hiatus will have on Pacquiao. He says the time was beneficial because it allowed his body to rest. Of course, this is a much-watch fight because we never know which fight will be the all-time great’s last.

Also fighting this weekend: Cruiserweight prospect Ali Baloyev (10-0, 7 KOs) faces Rolly Lambert Fogoum (11-1-1, 10 KOs) on Friday in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (ESPN+); Kali Reis (17-7-1, 5 KOs) defends her WBA junior welterweight title against Diana Prazak (14-3, 9 KOs) on Friday in El Cajon, Calif. (UFC Fight Pass); and Jair Valtierra (15-0, 8 KOs) faces Alberto Ruiz Ibarra (10-2, 7 KOs) in a lightweight bout on Friday in Mexico City (Telemundo).

Could Manny Pacquiao’s punching power be key vs. Errol Spence?

Could Manny Pacquiao’s punching power be key against the favored Errol Spence on Aug. 21 in Las Vegas?

Manny Pacquiao hasn’t been a power puncher as welterweight. In 18 fights above 140 pounds, he has only three knockouts in 14 victories.

The Filipino icon’s pop played a role in his most-recent fight, though. He put Keith Thurman down in the opening round to set the tone for that bout and went on to win a split decision and a 147-pound title in July 2019.

And his longtime trainer, Freddie Roach, believes his protégé’s power could play a role in his pay-per-view challenge of beltholder Errol Spence Jr. on Aug. 21 in Las Vegas.

“I told Manny that knocking down Keith Thurman early gave him a lot of momentum in that fight, and I’d like to see that again in this fight,” Roach said Wednesday. “He knows that he has to use his speed to do that. He understands completely what I want.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vF7w98qiOio&t=46s

Roach said Pacquiao also has shown in sparring that he can still land big shots, which is a good sign for him.

“He had probably his best sparring yesterday (Tuesday),” he said. “We went 10 rounds and he got two knockdowns. It was the old Manny Pacquiao from 10 years ago.

“He’s not as big of a puncher usually at welterweight, but those knockdowns yesterday were a great boost for him.”

That said, Roach and Co. recognize that Spence, a big, strong welterweight, can hurt any opponent.

Thus, a mistake could cost Pacquiao dearly, as it did when he was stopped by one punch from rival Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012. Roach has emphasized in training the necessity for Pacquiao to continually move.

“Spence is a good boxer, but he’s a very good puncher,” Roach said. “We know that when we get inside, we have to be smart getting back outside. It has to be quick combinations and then out right away.”

So how does Roach think the fight will play out? In Pacquiao’s favor.

“I think Manny is going to outbox Spence,” he said. “His footspeed is unbelievable and much better than his opponent’s. Spence follows you around and is heavy on his feet. He seems very set to the ground.

“Manny’s speed will overwhelm him. I’m really happy with the game plan so far.”

[lawrence-related id=22065,21990,21857,21847,21799,21748,20984,20426]

Could Manny Pacquiao’s punching power be key vs. Errol Spence?

Could Manny Pacquiao’s punching power be key against the favored Errol Spence on Aug. 21 in Las Vegas?

Manny Pacquiao hasn’t been a power puncher as welterweight. In 18 fights above 140 pounds, he has only three knockouts in 14 victories.

The Filipino icon’s pop played a role in his most-recent fight, though. He put Keith Thurman down in the opening round to set the tone for that bout and went on to win a split decision and a 147-pound title in July 2019.

And his longtime trainer, Freddie Roach, believes his protégé’s power could play a role in his pay-per-view challenge of beltholder Errol Spence Jr. on Aug. 21 in Las Vegas.

“I told Manny that knocking down Keith Thurman early gave him a lot of momentum in that fight, and I’d like to see that again in this fight,” Roach said Wednesday. “He knows that he has to use his speed to do that. He understands completely what I want.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vF7w98qiOio&t=46s

Roach said Pacquiao also has shown in sparring that he can still land big shots, which is a good sign for him.

“He had probably his best sparring yesterday (Tuesday),” he said. “We went 10 rounds and he got two knockdowns. It was the old Manny Pacquiao from 10 years ago.

“He’s not as big of a puncher usually at welterweight, but those knockdowns yesterday were a great boost for him.”

That said, Roach and Co. recognize that Spence, a big, strong welterweight, can hurt any opponent.

Thus, a mistake could cost Pacquiao dearly, as it did when he was stopped by one punch from rival Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012. Roach has emphasized in training the necessity for Pacquiao to continually move.

“Spence is a good boxer, but he’s a very good puncher,” Roach said. “We know that when we get inside, we have to be smart getting back outside. It has to be quick combinations and then out right away.”

So how does Roach think the fight will play out? In Pacquiao’s favor.

“I think Manny is going to outbox Spence,” he said. “His footspeed is unbelievable and much better than his opponent’s. Spence follows you around and is heavy on his feet. He seems very set to the ground.

“Manny’s speed will overwhelm him. I’m really happy with the game plan so far.”

[lawrence-related id=22065,21990,21857,21847,21799,21748,20984,20426]

Manny Pacquiao opens training camp for Errol Spence fight with a bang

Manny Pacquiao has opened training camp for his fight against Errol Spence Jr. with a bang.

Manny Pacquiao evidently hit the ground running in his first day of training for his fight against Errol Spence July 20 in Las Vegas.

The welterweight titleholder arrived today at his gym-away-from-home Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif., a day after leaving his home in the Philippines. And, according to longtime trainer Freddie Roach, he arrived in shape.

He began the day with a five-mile run and 1,000 sit-ups before an afternoon session at the iconic gym, according to a news release. He then worked out for nearly three hours, with nine rounds on the mitts.

Roach was impressed.

“If this is how Manny hits with jet lag, I may need to get new gloves with thicker padding for our next sessions,” Roach said. “He was incredible sharp for his first day. He hit hard with good power. After all these years, I’m still amazed at the great condition he’s in when he comes to training camp. After traveling around the world yesterday, he put in a full day here – mitts, speed bag, shadow boxing – the works.

“The best part was at the end when he lifted his shirt to show me his six pack and said, ‘Freddie, I’m still here.’”

Pacquiao (62-7-2, 39 KOs) knows the challenges he faces against Spence (27-0, 21 KOs).

Spence, ranked No. 4 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list, is 31 years old and his prime. No. 15 Pacquiao is coming off a sensational victory over Keith Thurman but that fight took place more than two years ago and he’s 42.

Spence is about a 2½-1 favorite in the fight.

“Errol Spence is a very difficult fight for me, perhaps the most difficult of my career,” Pacquiao said. “But I have been an underdog my whole life. I am used to that. It is why I work so hard. But the love and the prayers of my fellow Philippine citizens and Filipinos around the world sustain and inspire me.

“I fight for the glory of my nation and for underdogs everywhere.”

[lawrence-related id=8679,20984,20426,9244,8190]

Manny Pacquiao opens training camp for Errol Spence fight with a bang

Manny Pacquiao has opened training camp for his fight against Errol Spence Jr. with a bang.

Manny Pacquiao evidently hit the ground running in his first day of training for his fight against Errol Spence July 20 in Las Vegas.

The welterweight titleholder arrived today at his gym-away-from-home Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood, Calif., a day after leaving his home in the Philippines. And, according to longtime trainer Freddie Roach, he arrived in shape.

He began the day with a five-mile run and 1,000 sit-ups before an afternoon session at the iconic gym, according to a news release. He then worked out for nearly three hours, with nine rounds on the mitts.

Roach was impressed.

“If this is how Manny hits with jet lag, I may need to get new gloves with thicker padding for our next sessions,” Roach said. “He was incredible sharp for his first day. He hit hard with good power. After all these years, I’m still amazed at the great condition he’s in when he comes to training camp. After traveling around the world yesterday, he put in a full day here – mitts, speed bag, shadow boxing – the works.

“The best part was at the end when he lifted his shirt to show me his six pack and said, ‘Freddie, I’m still here.’”

Pacquiao (62-7-2, 39 KOs) knows the challenges he faces against Spence (27-0, 21 KOs).

Spence, ranked No. 4 on Boxing Junkie’s pound-for-pound list, is 31 years old and his prime. No. 15 Pacquiao is coming off a sensational victory over Keith Thurman but that fight took place more than two years ago and he’s 42.

Spence is about a 2½-1 favorite in the fight.

“Errol Spence is a very difficult fight for me, perhaps the most difficult of my career,” Pacquiao said. “But I have been an underdog my whole life. I am used to that. It is why I work so hard. But the love and the prayers of my fellow Philippine citizens and Filipinos around the world sustain and inspire me.

“I fight for the glory of my nation and for underdogs everywhere.”

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