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]

Ricky Hatton confident son Campbell will adapt to big stage

Ricky Hatton is confident that son Campbell will adapt to the big stage as a professional boxer.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Campbell Hatton, the son of Ricky Hatton, begins his professional boxing journey on the Alexander Povetkin-Dillian Whyte card Saturday in Gibraltar (DAZN).

Hatton, 19, will face Jesus Ruiz (0-10) in a scheduled four-round lightweight contest, with his father by his side.

While taking in the picturesque views in the British territory ahead of fight night, the senior Hatton addressed concerns that Campbell’s first pro fight was taking place on such a high-profile card.

“To be completely honest, the first time he stepped into the boxing gym and picked those gloves up, I just knew it was going to happen because it’s in the genes,” the former world champion told Sky Sports.

“He’s got a lot of pressure on his shoulders, a lot to live up to, and I’m very, very proud of him and the build-up that Sky Sports and Matchroom and 258 Management have given him. But it does put a lot of pressure on the little man’s shoulders.

“I wouldn’t have let him do this, though, if I didn’t think he was able to cope with it all. He’s got a great platform here and I think people are gonna like what they see.

“It’s a little bit different to [the town of] Widnes! I was very fortunate that I was able to box in the big shows, a lot of Naseem Hamed undercards. I fought my second professional bout at Madison Square Garden underneath Nassem against Kevin Kelley, and I coped with it well enough.

“I think he will cope with it well enough too on stages like this. And it’s beautiful, isn’t it? Getting used to fighting on stages like this will stand him in good stead further down the line when he gets where, hopefully, we think he’s going to get.”

[lawrence-related id=18851,18819,18800]

Ricky Hatton confident son Campbell will adapt to big stage

Ricky Hatton is confident that son Campbell will adapt to the big stage as a professional boxer.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on DAZN.com.

***

Campbell Hatton, the son of Ricky Hatton, begins his professional boxing journey on the Alexander Povetkin-Dillian Whyte card Saturday in Gibraltar (DAZN).

Hatton, 19, will face Jesus Ruiz (0-10) in a scheduled four-round lightweight contest, with his father by his side.

While taking in the picturesque views in the British territory ahead of fight night, the senior Hatton addressed concerns that Campbell’s first pro fight was taking place on such a high-profile card.

“To be completely honest, the first time he stepped into the boxing gym and picked those gloves up, I just knew it was going to happen because it’s in the genes,” the former world champion told Sky Sports.

“He’s got a lot of pressure on his shoulders, a lot to live up to, and I’m very, very proud of him and the build-up that Sky Sports and Matchroom and 258 Management have given him. But it does put a lot of pressure on the little man’s shoulders.

“I wouldn’t have let him do this, though, if I didn’t think he was able to cope with it all. He’s got a great platform here and I think people are gonna like what they see.

“It’s a little bit different to [the town of] Widnes! I was very fortunate that I was able to box in the big shows, a lot of Naseem Hamed undercards. I fought my second professional bout at Madison Square Garden underneath Nassem against Kevin Kelley, and I coped with it well enough.

“I think he will cope with it well enough too on stages like this. And it’s beautiful, isn’t it? Getting used to fighting on stages like this will stand him in good stead further down the line when he gets where, hopefully, we think he’s going to get.”

[lawrence-related id=18851,18819,18800]

Video: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua: British legends say it must happen

Heavyweight titleholders Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua seem to be a near an agreement to fight this year. The matchup would be the biggest fight between two British heavyweights in the history of the sport, making it imperative in the minds of many …

Heavyweight titleholders Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua seem to be a near an agreement to fight this year.

The matchup would be the biggest fight between two British heavyweights in the history of the sport, making it imperative in the minds of many in the U.K. that they complete the deal.

In this video, courtesy of DAZN, three prominent British fighters — Ricky Hatton, Joe Calzaghe and Amir Khan — discuss the magnitude of the showdown and what it would mean to British boxing and the sporting scene in general.

Here’s what they had to say.

[jwplayer JI2lTWL1]

 

 

Video: Tyson Fury vs. Anthony Joshua: British legends say it must happen

Heavyweight titleholders Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua seem to be a near an agreement to fight this year. The matchup would be the biggest fight between two British heavyweights in the history of the sport, making it imperative in the minds of many …

Heavyweight titleholders Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua seem to be a near an agreement to fight this year.

The matchup would be the biggest fight between two British heavyweights in the history of the sport, making it imperative in the minds of many in the U.K. that they complete the deal.

In this video, courtesy of DAZN, three prominent British fighters — Ricky Hatton, Joe Calzaghe and Amir Khan — discuss the magnitude of the showdown and what it would mean to British boxing and the sporting scene in general.

Here’s what they had to say.

[jwplayer JI2lTWL1]

 

 

Degrees of Separation: Linking Tim Tszyu to his famous dad

In this version of Degrees of Separation, Boxing Junkie linked Kostya and Tim Tszyu in only four steps.

Six degrees of separation is a theory that everyone in the world is separated by no more than six social connections.

In other words, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows Queen Elizabeth. Or so the concept goes.

We’re borrowing the six degrees concept – well, sort of loosely – to connect fighters from the past to their more contemporary counterparts in our new occasional feature, “Degrees of Separation.”

Example: Let’s connect Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Super easy; we did it in two steps. Senior fought Grover Wiley, who fought Junior.

In this installment of the Boxing Junkie feature, we decided to link another father and son — Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu and Tim Tszyu, who took a big step in his career by stopping former welterweight titleholder Jeff Horn on Saturday in Australia.

How many steps did it take? Only four even though the elder Tszyu hasn’t fought since 2005.

Check it out:

Kostya Tszyu fought …

Ricky Hatton, who fought …

Manny Pacquiao, who fought …

Jeff Horn, who fought …

Tim Tszyu

Could you do it in fewer steps? Let us know via Twitter or Facebook. Or you can contact me on Twitter. And please follow us!

Read more:

[lawrence-related id=12195,12112,12084,10791,10285,9247,8900,8391,8175,7844,7296,7100,6851,6625]

Degrees of Separation: Linking Tim Tszyu to his famous dad

In this version of Degrees of Separation, Boxing Junkie linked Kostya and Tim Tszyu in only four steps.

Six degrees of separation is a theory that everyone in the world is separated by no more than six social connections.

In other words, you know someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows Queen Elizabeth. Or so the concept goes.

We’re borrowing the six degrees concept – well, sort of loosely – to connect fighters from the past to their more contemporary counterparts in our new occasional feature, “Degrees of Separation.”

Example: Let’s connect Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. to Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. Super easy; we did it in two steps. Senior fought Grover Wiley, who fought Junior.

In this installment of the Boxing Junkie feature, we decided to link another father and son — Hall of Famer Kostya Tszyu and Tim Tszyu, who took a big step in his career by stopping former welterweight titleholder Jeff Horn on Saturday in Australia.

How many steps did it take? Only four even though the elder Tszyu hasn’t fought since 2005.

Check it out:

Kostya Tszyu fought …

Ricky Hatton, who fought …

Manny Pacquiao, who fought …

Jeff Horn, who fought …

Tim Tszyu

Could you do it in fewer steps? Let us know via Twitter or Facebook. Or you can contact me on Twitter. And please follow us!

Read more:

[lawrence-related id=12195,12112,12084,10791,10285,9247,8900,8391,8175,7844,7296,7100,6851,6625]

Floyd Mayweather highlights Showtime Boxing Classics May lineup

Showtime has announced its May lineup of replays, beginning with two Errol Spence Jr. fights this Friday.

More Showtime Boxing Classics are on the way.

Showtime has announced its May lineup of replays, beginning with two Errol Spence Jr. fights this Friday. Other featured fighters include Keith Thurman, Floyd Mayweather, Joe Calzaghe and Leo Santa Cruz.

All shows are on Fridays and begin at 10 p.m. ET / PT.

Here is the schedule:

May 1 – Spence vs. Kell Brook, Spence vs. Lamont Peterson

May 8 – Keith Thurman vs. Shawn Porter, Thurman vs. Danny Garcia.

May 15 – Floyd Mayweather vs. Marcos Maidana I, Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor

May 22 – Ricky Hatton vs. Kostya Tszyu, Joe Calzaghe vs. Jeff Lacy

May 29 – Leo Santa Cruz vs. Carl Frampton II, Santa Cruz vs. Abner Mares II.

Building greatness: Five fights that define Manny Pacquiao

Here are five victories that defined Manny Pacquiao as one of the greatest fighters of his generation.

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.