Pacquiao fired up for third bout with Marquez

Manny  Pacquiao
Manny Pacquiao

HOLLYWOOD, California, (Reuters) – Occasionally  criticised for being too much of a gentleman in the ring, Manny  Pacquiao is more motivated than ever for his WBO welterweight  title defence next month against Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez.  

The boxers have met twice before, fighting to a draw in May  2004 before the Mexican lost his WBC super-featherweight title  to the Filipino southpaw in a controversial split decision in  March 2008.  

However, Marquez has repeatedly claimed he won both  contests and Pacquiao felt insulted after his opponent wore a  T-shirt bearing the legend: “We Were Robbed” when their Nov. 12  showdown in Las Vegas was promoted in the Philippines. 
 

Juan Manuel MarquezManny Pacquiao

“I have never been so motivated as I am for this fight,”  Pacquiao told Reuters on Wednesday before sparring with his  trainer Freddie Roach at the Wild Card Boxing Club. “I almost  can’t wait for the fight.  

“I want to prove that he (Marquez) was wrong in wearing  that T-shirt claiming he won the last two fights.  

“So this is kind of a special fight, the most important  fight in my boxing career, because I want this fight to be the  answer to all the doubts that have been raised.”  

Asked if he had taken Marquez’s claims personally, Pacquiao  replied: “Right now, outside the ring, there is nothing  personal but when I get into the ring on Nov. 12 it’s going to  be personal for us.”
  
Roach, who has worked with 31 world champions in his Wild  Card gym on the outskirts of downtown Los Angeles, said he had  never seen Pacquiao so fired up for a fight.  

“He’s motivated but he still won’t talk about it,” Roach  told Reuters, referring to the baiting by Marquez. “I say to  him: ‘Manny, you don’t like this guy?’ And he just smiles at  me. I let him enjoy it.  

“When Marquez came out to the Philippines and wore that  T-shirt, he embarrassed Manny a little bit. It was a slap in  the face and I think Manny will pay him back.”  

Roach, a shrewd tactician who has been uncannily accurate  with his fight predictions, forecast a Pacquiao victory inside  the distance at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.  

“I don’t think the fight’s going to last six rounds,” Roach  said. “It’s going to be a helluva fight until it ends because  one thing about Marquez is that he will fight.  

“They say he (Marquez) has put on a little bit of muscle  and he is getting a little bigger upstairs. It looks like he  might want to exchange with us and I hope that happens.”   
 
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Pacquiao, who has won world titles in an unprecedented  eight weight divisions to cement his status as the best  pound-for-pound boxer, will go into the bout as a heavy  favourite against Marquez.  

However, Roach felt the Mexican, a three-division world  champion, would once again be the toughest opponent the  Filipino has faced in his illustrious career.  
“Manny loves it when guys come to him and they’re  aggressive,” said Roach. “Marquez is a counter-puncher and  we’re probably going to have to go to him (Marquez) to make the  fight happen.  

“It’s a little harder for Manny to do that and there is no  question that Marquez has the most difficult style for us.”  

Pacquiao, who proudly arrived at the Wild Card gym in a  gleaming Ferrari that he bought last week, will be fighting for  the first time since he retained his WBO welterweight title  with a unanimous points victory over Shane Mosley in May.  

In that bout, as well in his previous two wins against  Joshua Clottey and Antonio Margarito, the Filipino was  criticised by many of his supporters for ‘going soft’ on his  opponents in the late rounds.  

On Nov. 12, however, Pacquiao can be expected to go full  throttle against Marquez, who recovered from three knockdowns  in the opening round to earn a draw when they first clashed in  May 2004.  

Just ask any of Pacquiao’s sparring partners who have come  in for a pounding in recent weeks at the Wild Card gym.  

“Manny has been a little rough on his sparring partners,”  Roach said with a smile. “But they try and hold him and they’re  doing a good job. Manny is  a completely different animal to  the guy that fought Marquez the first time.”