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Manny Pacquiao asked if he still believed he beat Mayweather as announced in the rematch

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Manny Pacquiao asked if he still believes he beat Mayweather as rematch announced

Manny Pacquiao hopes to avenge his most celebrated defeat by meeting Floyd Mayweather for a second time, 11 years after their first meeting. Although reflecting on their first fight, “Pac Man” expressed disappointment.

In 2015, Mayweather held the unified WBC and WBA welterweight world titles while Pacquiao held the WBO crown, and the lure of unifying the three belts was enough to finally force the welterweight stars to clash after years of encouragement.

In the fight, Mayweather did a better job and delivered a disciplined, controlled showing record a relatively wide unanimous decision victory on the scorecards – probably the best victory of his legendary career.

However, in an interview with The whole fight against smokePacquiao revealed that he still believes he won the fight due to the number of punches thrown compared to “TBE.”

“I went to hospital immediately after the fight and underwent surgery [on] my arm. It really hurt.

“I knew about his style, but the thing is – I judge. I expect I won the fight because he didn’t throw too many punches, I throw a lot of punches.

“I reviewed Compubox [numbers] like in ponderous motion from round one to round 12, [checking] how many punches he threw, how many punches he landed, this is boxing.

“I don’t complain or do anything [excuses]. It happened this way. This has happened to me many times.”

Compubox reported that Pacquiao threw and landed fewer punches than Mayweather, scoring 19% of his shots and being significantly less effective than the winner, who landed 148 of 435 punches thrown (34%), although these numbers remain disputed.

The Mayweather-Pacquiao II fight will take place on Saturday, September 19 at The Sphere in Las Vegas, and the fight will be available to watch live on Netflix.

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Boxing

MVP launches women’s platform with Dubois-Harper on ESPN’s first card

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Most Valuable Promotions is launching MVPW, a fresh global platform for women’s boxing, and has announced a multi-year deal with ESPN that will kick off on April 5 with three events in which Alycia Baumgardner, Caroline Dubois, Ellie Scotney, Shadasia Green and Holly Holm will compete in separate bouts.

The inaugural event, MVPW-01, will be MVP’s previously announced UK debut, headlined by WBC lightweight champion Dubois (12-0-1, 5 KO) and WBO titleholder Terri Harper (16-2-2, 6 KO) in a 10-round unification fight at Olympia Events in London. It will also feature unified women’s featherweight champion Scotney (11-0) taking on WBA champion Mayella Flores (13-1-1, 4 KO) to determine the undisputed champion in a fight scheduled for 10 rounds, while Chantelle Cameron (21-1, 8 KO) will move up two divisions and face Michaela Kotaskova (11-0-4, 2 KO) in 10-round junior middleweight fight for the vacant WBO title.

MVPW-02 will take place on April 17 at the Infosys Theater at Madison Square Garden in Recent York, and unified junior lightweight champion Baumgardner (17-1, 7 KO) will defend her titles against South Korea’s Bo Mi Re Shin (19-3-3, 10 KO) in the main event, which will be fought under men’s rules and consists of 12 3-minute rounds. Green (16-1, 11 KO) will co-fight with her unified super middleweight titles against former delicate heavyweight champion Lani Daniels (11-4-2, 1 KO).

“Recent York sets the tone for boxing’s biggest nights. To become undisputed there was monumental, and the fans embraced me from the very beginning,” Baumgardner said in a statement. “For me, every fight comes with an ascension. I’m here to dominate and continue to build something that will last beyond belts. ESPN is the place where greatness is documented and I’m ready to perform at that level. This fight is also a special intersection: two Korean fighters on this type of stage is something fans don’t see often and I’m proud to represent every part of me.”

Holm (34-3-3, 9 KO) and Stephanie Han (12-0, 3 KO) will fight in a rematch for Han’s WBA lightweight title on May 30 at MVPW-03 in the champion’s backyard in El Paso, Texas. Han defeated Holm by technical decision after an accidental clash of heads ended their first meeting in the seventh round.

“This time in my city, there will be no excuses, no what-ifs, and there will be no doubt about who is the better player,” Han said. “I can’t wait to showcase my skills to millions of fans on ESPN.”

ESPN will be the US home of MVPW until 2028. The promotion’s stable of fighters also includes unified featherweight champion Amanda Serrano, undisputed bantamweight champion Cherneka Johnson, WBC featherweight champion Tiara Brown, IBF junior middleweight champion Oshae Jones, Ebanie Bridges and Tamm Thibeault.

“From the beginning, MVP has been strategically focused on creating an umbrella brand that is the global home of women’s boxing, featuring the best fighters in the world, that engages existing boxing fans and attracts an untapped fan demographic representing women’s sports, and today we proudly enter a fresh era,” said Nakisa Bidarian and Jake Paul, co-founders of Most Valuable Promotions. “Over the past five years, we have invested heavily in female athletes, hosted historic and record-breaking events, and proven that these female athletes belong on the biggest stages of the sport.”

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Jai Opetaia says the stripes are collecting dust, but they still want them all

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Image: Jai Opetaia Says Belts “Collect Dust," But Still Wants Them All

When asked about the newly introduced Zuffa bar and what it would mean to add another title to his collection, Opetaia rejected the idea that the hardware itself made a substantial difference.

“These are just material things,” Opetaia said during a press conference. “They’re sitting in my house collecting dust in closets and stuff. It’s more about being a champion, being a world champion, having my name out there. That’s what I’m chasing.”

The comment was unique because Opetaia used the same press conference to reiterate his ambition to become the undisputed cruiserweight champion, a goal that depends entirely on winning major titles from the sport’s sanctioning bodies.

“My dream is to become undisputed,” Opetaia said. “If everyone doesn’t work together to make this dream come true, I won’t be able to achieve it.”

These two ideas don’t fit comfortably together. At the end of the night, the belts may go on the shelf, but they remain the same prizes that fighters must earn to prove they lead the division.

The remark also came as Opetaia praised Zuffa Boxing during fight week, saying he was treated better there than anywhere else while the promotion revealed its own championship belt.

Boxing has always had this strange habit. Fighters say that belts are just pieces of metal, and yet they devote their entire careers to chasing them, because these titles still determine who will be at the top.

Opetaia goes to Sunday’s fight with Glanton, who lives in the same reality. The strip may collect dust later, but the path he thinks he wants still runs straight through more of them.

Personally, I’ve always had a challenging time accepting that belts mean nothing when the entire sport still goes through them.

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Floyd Mayweather’s verdict on Manny Pacquiao’s strength is revealed ahead of rematch

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Floyd Mayweather’s verdict on Manny Pacquiao’s power resurfaces ahead of rematch

A clip of Floyd Mayweather assessing Manny Pacquiao’s strength added context ahead of the September 19 rematch.

The pair will face each other in their second meeting at The Sphere in Las Vegas, with Mayweather preparing for his first confirmed fight since 2017.

Despite the “professional” label attached to his fight with Conor McGregor, many say it’s no gigantic deal because “Money” comfortably stopped the UFC star in 10 rounds.

Nevertheless, the five-division world champion temporarily ended his career with an astonishing 50-0 (27 KO) record before taking part in a series of exhibitions and recently announcing his return to the professional ring.

Since their first meeting in 2015, Pacquiao has also competed in several exhibition matches and has also made eight professional appearances.

In the last of them, in July, he drew with Mario Barrios, the then WBC welterweight champion, after an almost four-year break after a defeat against Yordenis Ugas.

Even when he lost by unanimous decision to Mayweather, it was believed that the Filipino’s best form was long behind him, or at least he was far from the powerful punch that stopped Ricky Hatton in 2009 – which was one of 39 knockouts in his 73 fights.

So it should come as no surprise that Mayweather, during his interview with REBELLION more than six years ago, he had only a few words of praise for Pacquiao’s punching power.

“Don’t get me wrong. Pacquiao obviously has power. He’s solid. I’ve never felt it before, but he’s solid.

“He felt me ​​too – and that’s why he took his time there quickly – so we felt each other.”

Entering the rematch at the ages of 49 and 47, respectively, Mayweather and “Pac Man” are certainly not the bulky hitters they once were, but they clearly still believe they have what it takes to beat each other.

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