Sunday 3 May 2015

Mayweather vs Pacquiao - round-by-round summary

Pre-fight

Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the ring before taking on Manny Pacquiao
It's six years too late, but Mayweather and Pacquiao finally fight each other in what is dubbed "Fight of the Century".

Round 1

Floyd Mayweather Jr. goes on the offensive against Manny Pacquiao
It’s taken five years and and $300million but boxing’s Big Two finally touched gloves at 4.58am BST and hardly a punch was traded in anger. Cagey start by both fighters.

Round 2

Manny Pacquiao throws a jab
Pacquiao, realises he needs to get ahead early, tries to take control but again no real initiative from either fighter. Manny tries to control the centre of the ring but without much success.

Round 3

Manny Pacquiao throws a right at Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Mayweather beginning to roll his shoulders in that illusive style of his but no fighter can take the initiative Pacquiao needs to get on his bike but can’t get the combinations going. Even again.

Round 4

Manny Pacquiao throws a left at Floyd Mayweather Jr.
The Pacman at last asserting authority and trying to take control. First action of the fight with Pacquiao pinning Mayweather on the ropes. The Pacman’s best round so far.

Round 5

Floyd Mayweather Jr. throws a left at Manny Pacquiao
Instead of pressing forward, Manny allows Mayweather to control the middle of the ring and and get his right cross going for the first time in the fight. Another even round.

Round 6

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao exchange punches
Will this Fight of the Century ever get going? Mayweather is getting $15million a round and is hardly breaking sweat, happy to soak up the pressure on his arms. The Moneymaker nicks round.

Round 7

Beyonce Knowles and Jay Z
The cameras zoom in on Beyonce and she is probably thinking her sister Solange could put up and better show. Hardly any pinches thrown in anger. Mayweather takes round without much effort.

Round 8

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao exchange blows
The Pacman is finally stung into action and connects with a right cross early on but cannot sustain the pressure throughout the round. Mayweather gets on his bike to avoid problems.

Round 9

Manny Pacquiao hits Floyd Mayweather
Three quarters of the way through and no fighter wants to take control. Manny continues to come forward and does enough to win the round but with hardly any punches thrown.

Round 10

Floyd Mayweather Jr. in his corner
The cornermen try to sting their men into action but this is turning into a bore fest. It suits Mayweather but if these two are the best pound-for-pound fighters on the planet they are conning us.

Round 11

Floyd Mayweather, Jr. of the U.S. and Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines lock arms as referee Kenny Bayless breaks them apart
Mayweather has hardly had to break sweat. He is pulling off the Great Las Vegas heist and looks more like Danny Ocean than the oustanding boxer he is meant to be. Steals round again.

Round 12

Floyd Mayweather Jr. reacts after the welterweight unification championship bout
Heads are being shaken in the crowd. The Pacman has not turned up for this fight and Mayweather starts to dance his way out of harms way. He is the Jose Mourinho of boxing.

Pre-fight

Floyd Mayweather Jr. in the ring before taking on Manny Pacquiao
It's six years too late, but Mayweather and Pacquiao finally fight each other in what is dubbed "Fight of the Century".

Round 1

Floyd Mayweather Jr. goes on the offensive against Manny Pacquiao
It’s taken five years and and $300million but boxing’s Big Two finally touched gloves at 4.58am BST and hardly a punch was traded in anger. Cagey start by both fighters.

Round 2

Manny Pacquiao throws a jab
Pacquiao, realises he needs to get ahead early, tries to take control but again no real initiative from either fighter. Manny tries to control the centre of the ring but without much success.

Round 3

Manny Pacquiao throws a right at Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Mayweather beginning to roll his shoulders in that illusive style of his but no fighter can take the initiative Pacquiao needs to get on his bike but can’t get the combinations going. Even again.

Round 4

Manny Pacquiao throws a left at Floyd Mayweather Jr.
The Pacman at last asserting authority and trying to take control. First action of the fight with Pacquiao pinning Mayweather on the ropes. The Pacman’s best round so far.

Round 5

Floyd Mayweather Jr. throws a left at Manny Pacquiao
Instead of pressing forward, Manny allows Mayweather to control the middle of the ring and and get his right cross going for the first time in the fight. Another even round.

Round 6

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao exchange punches
Will this Fight of the Century ever get going? Mayweather is getting $15million a round and is hardly breaking sweat, happy to soak up the pressure on his arms. The Moneymaker nicks round.

Round 7

Beyonce Knowles and Jay Z
The cameras zoom in on Beyonce and she is probably thinking her sister Solange could put up and better show. Hardly any pinches thrown in anger. Mayweather takes round without much effort.

Round 8

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao exchange blows
The Pacman is finally stung into action and connects with a right cross early on but cannot sustain the pressure throughout the round. Mayweather gets on his bike to avoid problems.

Round 9

Manny Pacquiao hits Floyd Mayweather
Three quarters of the way through and no fighter wants to take control. Manny continues to come forward and does enough to win the round but with hardly any punches thrown.

Round 10

Floyd Mayweather Jr. in his corner
The cornermen try to sting their men into action but this is turning into a bore fest. It suits Mayweather but if these two are the best pound-for-pound fighters on the planet they are conning us.

Round 11

Floyd Mayweather, Jr. of the U.S. and Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines lock arms as referee Kenny Bayless breaks them apart
Mayweather has hardly had to break sweat. He is pulling off the Great Las Vegas heist and looks more like Danny Ocean than the oustanding boxer he is meant to be. Steals round again.

Round 12

Floyd Mayweather Jr. reacts after the welterweight unification championship bout
Heads are being shaken in the crowd. The Pacman has not turned up for this fight and Mayweather starts to dance his way out of harms way. He is the Jose Mourinho of boxing.

Saturday 2 May 2015

5 Reasons You Want Manny Pacquiao To Beat Floyd Mayweather In The Big Fight

Floyd Mayweather Jr., center left, and Manny Pacquiao pose during their weigh-in on Friday, May 1 in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)
It’s here. The biggest fight since boxing’s halcyon days of Ali-Frazier takes place tonight at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. The Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight is being jointly produced by HBO and Showtime and is a pay-per-view event (priced at a record $89.95 per view in standard-def and $99.95 in HD). The undercard starts at 9 p.m. ET with the main event between Mayweather and Pacquiao starting somewhere around 11:30 p.m. ET.
But here’s the thing: you want Manny Pacquiao to beat Mayweather. The fight can go the distance, but all things being equal you should hope Mayweather gets beat. Here’s why:
Mayweather Has A Documented History Of Domestic Abuse
While the world was aghast at Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice and his brutal attack on Janay Palmer, who he subsequently married, the fact is that Floyd Mayweather has a documented history of not just one, but seven cases in which he has has been arrested or issued a citation for alleged assaults on five separate women. Calling Mayweather “misogynistic” is an understatement.  Here are two  altercations with Melissa Brim, the mother of Mayweather’s daughter, as described by the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
The first came in February 2001 when during an argument [Mayweather] swung open a car door, hitting her jaw, pushed her into the car and punched her several times in the face and body, according to a lawsuit she later filed. After the “brutal and unprovoked attack,” Brim drove to a convenience store and called police, the lawsuit said.
Five months later, Brim was at the Boulevard Mall with her daughter when Mayweather asked whether his friend could hold the child. After the friend took the girl, Mayweather hit Brim in the neck, her lawsuit said. Mall security called the police, but Mayweather left before they arrived, the lawsuit said.
While Mayweather is going to collect an incredible sum for the fight, as a matter of sending a message, you want Pacquiao to win. Yes, it may be a “lesser of two evils” case, but since Pacquiao has recommitted himself to Christianity three years ago, he has reportedly been clean as a whistle.
While No Longer Poor, Pacquiao Came From Extreme Poverty
Manny Pacquiao could pull in as much as $120 million for the fight on Saturday and has career earnings of $335 million, ranking him second to only Mayweather, but he started off in the Philippines hungry more often than not.
As one of six children of a single mother, many nights they had only water instead of food. Boxing was a way for Pacquiao and his family to break out of poverty.
“I heard that when you fight, even when you lose, you have money,” he explained to ESPN. “And when you win, you receive 100 pesos, which is the equivalent of two dollars. If you lose, one dollar, which is 50 pesos.
“Just put the gloves there, and tape this time. I don’t know boxing. But after that fight, I get 100 pesos. One hundred pesos. I can buy one kilo of rice only four pesos. One hundred pesos, big.”

Everyone Loves An Underdog
Choose to ignore the Mayweather domestic abuse history and Pacquiao’s meager beginnings, you should root for Manny over Floyd because he’s the underdog. While he’s narrowed the gap heading into the fight, Vegas has odds of “Pac Man” winning by Decision or Technical Decision at 15/4 and Knockout at 10/1.
He Has A Legitimate Shot To Win
While many veteran boxing analysts predict Mayweather will win the fight, there’s reason to believe that Pacquiao has a shot at an upset. For one, he beat Oscar De La Hoya in 2008, and De La Hoya gave Mayweather a serious run for his money for six rounds before conditioning got the better of him. In terms of how this fight will go, Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach summed up it this way when talking to Yahoo! Sports.
“You know, it’s a tough fight for Manny, a real tough fight,” Roach said. “This isn’t going to be easy. We know that. But anyone who says Manny doesn’t have a chance is full of it. He’s had a great camp. A great camp.”
An Upset Could Fuel A Comeback For Boxing
The match is a massive financial windfall for all parties involved. Forbes has gone through the insane numbers: the increase of the fighters’ purses to this apex, the fact that it’s PPV’s first billion-dollar match, and that Pacqiao’s earnings will blow by the $400 million mark. But an upset would take us back to the kind of excitement of the days of Ali-Frazier and when a brash young Cassius Clay “shocked the world” and beat Sonny Liston. Boxing is slowly seeing increased interest, as evinced by NBC Sports’ national broadcasts of matches. If Pacquiao were to win the fight, it would create the kind buzz that would ripple for months, if not years.