Huwebes, Nobyembre 24, 2011

Pacquiao to be honoured by AFP

MANILA, Philippines –The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) is looking to honor Filipino boxing champion Congressman Manny Pacquiao through a formal donning of ranks, AFP spokesman Colonel Arnulfo Burgos said Monday.

“The professionalism, discipline and determination that he displayed in the boxing ring is an inspiration for us soldier in our fight of winning the peace in a different arena,” Burgos said in a press briefing.
Pacquiao currently holds the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Army reserve force.

Burgos said that there is no finalized plan as to where and when they will honor Pacquiao. “Nothing is definite yet, but for sure, they are preparing something for [him].”

Pacquiao’s fights are a big inspiration to the soldiers Burgos said. “Every fight of Pacquiao is dedicated to our citizens and also to our soldiers.”

He added that it will surely boost the morale of the troops if Pacquiao could visit them.
Pacquiao recently won a controversial majority decision against long-time rival, Juan Manuel Marquez.



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Manny Pacquiao to critics: Be true, be Filipino

“Magpakatotoo ka…maging Filipino ka (Be true to yourself…be a Filipino).”
This was boxing idol Manny Pacquiao’s message to his Filipino critics, especially those who rooted for Mexican fighter Juan Manuel Marquez during their bout in Las Vegas which resulted in a controversial finish.

But before lobbing this jab at his critics, the Sarangani lawmaker, speaking  in Filipino perhaps to avoid  being misinterpreted,  thanked his countrymen who supported him in the hard-fought contest.
“Salamat sa sambayanang Filipino sa pagsuporta. Sa awa ng Panginoon, nanalo tayo, (I thank the Filipino people for their support. With God’s mercy, we won),” he said at a press conference at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.
“Doon sa mga ibang tao na naniniwala na di tama yung desisyon eh, magpakatotoo ka…maging Filipino ka (To those who believe that the decision was wrong, be true to yourself, be a Filipino),” he added.
Pacquiao, who arrived Monday aboard a Philippine Airlines flight from California with a brief stopover in Guam, and his wife Jinkee were welcomed at the airport by their four children Jemuel, Michael, Princess and Queen Elizabeth, and friends including former Manila Mayor Lito Atienza and son Ali.
Asked about the hotly debated fight result in Nevada, Pacquiao admitted he was not totally happy with his performance.

But he concluded, “Ang paniwala ko, bago natapos yung 12 rounds ay lamang ako at panalo ako (I believed that before the 12 rounds were through, I was ahead and I won).”
“’Yung inisip ko na ibigay ko ’yung magandang laban ay di ko nagawa (I was not able to make good my plan to give a good fight),” he added.

“So medyo di masyado akong kumbinsido sa performance ko dahil sa ’yung ini-expect na ibigay ko sa mga tao ay di nangyari ang ganun (So I was not thoroughly convinced about my performance because what I expected to give the people did not happen),” Pacquiao added.
“Eh, talagang ganun (That’s the way it is), he said.

Still pound-for-pound king
“Naintindihan natin na di sa lahat ng panahon ay pwede tayong manalo ng one-sided fight. Tsaka, di pwedeng lahat ng kalaban bubugbugin. May kamay din ’yan. Dumating lang `yun pagkakataon na naging close `yun fight (We can understand that we cannot expect to win a one-sided fight all the time. Our opponents also have fists. It only happened that we had a close fight).”
The General Santos City native said he had yet to see published reports that American boxer Floyd Mayweather had dethroned him as boxing’s pound-for-pound king .
“Di ko alam kung saan lumabas ’yan…Siguro sa ibang tao na di dugong-Pinoy ang nag-iisip ng ganyan, (I don’t know where those reports came from. Maybe they’re from people without Filipino blood who are able to think of such things),” he said.

Pacquiao was reported to have been demoted to No. 2 in the pound-for-pound rankings of the US publication Sports Illustrated, as well as ESPN and Yahoo! Sports. They placed Mayweather in the No. 1 spot after a 21-month layoff and three successive wins over Shane Mosley, Victor Ortiz and Marquez.
But Ring Magazine, called the “Bible of Boxing,” continued to recognize Pacquiao as the best after Sunday’s controversial match.

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Losing a tactical battle, winning the war

 

The first picture shown of a beefier Juan Manuel Marquez did not project shining knife-life sharpness.
There was not a hint of the swift, untouchable mountain deer.

The Mexican boxing great appeared more like cattle headed for the meat market.
The eyes were lightless.
His shapeless body flat as a sack.
* * *
Whether lead men in Team Pacquiao, namely Freddie Roach and Alex Ariza, noticed this dumb deterioration could not be determined.
The trainer and conditioning coach were, however, singularly convinced why Marquez had decided to bulk up in a rush.
El Dinamita was raring to fight and make war!
* * *
Marquez, as a consequence, was bestowed a few odd tags.
The most apt was The Bulk or Poorman’s Lou Ferigno.
Anyway, that dull picture was displayed for the boxing world to see more than a couple of weeks before Marquez met Manny Pacquiao in the third bout of their arch-rivalry.
For the record, the result of that bout—Marquez outclassing Pacquiao in a tactical battle but losing by majority decision in the scores of the judges—has divided prizefight aficionados.

* * *
Insisting he clearly won, Pacquiao honestly chided several countrymen who had sided with Marquez and checked if their hearts now also beat for Mexico.
Anyway, whether or not Roach made a slip or committed an oversight should not be worth the bother this late.

But yesterday, Ariza made a clean breast of it in a talk with Joseph Herron of Fight Saga:
Ariza confirmed they had overlooked the fact that Marquez could indeed return to fighting form—to stand sturdy as a tree, withstand Pacquiao’s whirlwind onslaught while hitting back—after a two-week trim-down regimen.

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