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ED GRANEY: Pacquiao awaits bell for Mayweather fight

It is in Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s corner now. It is up to him.

The money will be more than enough. The challenge could be like one he has never accepted.


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Manny Pacquiao has certainly done his part.

The bloody mess that is once again Miguel Cotto's face is clear proof.

"It is my job to fight in the ring," Pacquiao said. "It is up to the promoters to make the fights."

It has to be made because it makes too much sense, because what it could mean to boxing as the sport continues to compete for interest and pay-per-view buyers alongside those who have converted to mixed martial arts.

Boxing is in better health than most surmise, but Mayweather-Pacquiao could put years on the ol' ticker.

It came to this Saturday night: At times, long after the outcome was decided and everyone with eyes inside the MGM Grand Garden and those watching from home knew what ultimately would happen, Pacquiao appeared to give Cotto pause.

It came to this: Late in what was a one-sided scorecard for Pacquiao, the Filipino machine acted as if he felt bad about hitting Cotto yet again. One of the most remarkable boxers in history would halt briefly, as if to give his opponent time to gather himself. But ulitimately, he knew what had to be done and went for the knockout several times in the last few rounds.

A fight that ended with a 12th-round TKO could have and should have been stopped three rounds earlier.

What is the point of allowing such a beating to continue?

What does it prove other than to risk irreparable damage?

"It was my decision to keep fighting," Cotto said. "I wanted to continue."

What can you say? The toughest guys aren't always the smartest.

"(Pacquiao) is the best fighter," Cotto said, "I have ever fought."

And sometimes they are.

Pacquiao is a different cat, all right. He walks into what most thought his toughest fight yet like he's strolling down a boardwalk, all smiles and waves. You half expect the guy to enter a ring licking a vanilla cone with sprinkles.

But then a bell rings and a few rounds pass and the speed begins to appear. That amazing speed.

You don't have to dress up a historic achievement like becoming the only prize fighter to win seven world titles in seven weight divisions, Pacquiao having taken from Cotto the WBO welterweight belt here Saturday to claim No. 7.

You don't have to overstate the implausible feat of beginning a professional career at 106 pounds, winning your first title at 112 and now having beaten a champion like Cotto silly at a catch-weight at 145 pounds.

It came to this: Pacquiao still could have won had the fight been at 147. I'm not even sure he would have known, what with all the smiles and waves.

"This is my last weight division," Pacquiao said. "It was a hard fight tonight. I needed time to test his power. I practiced for a disciplined fight and not panicking. That was the key. (Cotto) is a very strong fighter."

Which makes the beating he took all the more impressive from a Pacquiao perspective.

It was close for a round or two. Cotto opened with jabs that kept Pacquiao's speed from bothering him. But you can only keep a cheetah calm for so long. When it wants to run, forget about it.

It was more imposing than the defeat of Oscar De La Hoya 11 months ago, because Pacquiao that night hammered a washed-up champion who had nothing. It wasn't as dramatic as the one-punch leveling of Ricky Hatton, but the damage was far more noticeable over nearly 12 rounds Saturday.

Cotto in July of 2008 left the MGM Grand after being beaten soundly by the likely plaster-filled gloves of Antonio Margarito and was transported to a local hospital.

There was no plaster this time, but his post-fight journey again took Cotto to a trauma center for multiple scans.

"Manny stayed on the ropes much too long early in the fight," said Freddie Roach, Pacquiao's trainer. "But the speed was too much. The movement was too much. It should have been stopped sooner."

Some in his corner, including his father, wanted to. But the Puerto Rican fighter pressed on until referee Kenny Bayless stepped in and saved him from losing even more blood.

Manny Pacquiao is a wonder.

It is in Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s corner now.

It is up to him.

Money won't be an issue. There will be truckloads for all parties involved.

Boxing wants it. Needs it.

Can you imagine what a night it could be?

Las Vegas Review-Journal sports columnist Ed Graney can be reached at egraney@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4618. He also can be heard weeknights from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. on "The Sports Scribes" on KDWN-AM (720) and www.kdwn.com.

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Yor wrote on January 11, 2010 08:14 AM: To be simple is great.Pacman is one of them.he proves it inside the ring,he is an amazing boxer,talented yet humble.pacman likes to shut up mayweather's mouth.I love to to see it in the ring.


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EnriKe wrote on November 17, 2009 12:28 PM: There's no official word that Margarito dispatched Cotto with "plaster-filled gloves"... In my opinion if they fight again Margarito would still come on top, and he should face Pacquiao next, since Mayweather won't...
I think Pacquiao should be considered as one of boxing's greatest since he has proven that he is unstoppable.


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Fight Fan wrote on November 16, 2009 01:11 AM: I don't think Las Vegas will allow to have this megafight happen anywhere else except Las Vegas. I don't see Mayweather's fans traveling to Asia to see this fight or any of the stars interested. I do agree the fight should happen and it will. If it does it will happen in Las Vegas. If you need a bigger venue the Thomas and Mack center is available or if you want a stadium venue - Sam Boyd is also available. U2 just had a super concert there last month. Say NO to Macau!


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TURBOCAP wrote on November 15, 2009 08:05 PM: There are still a lot of STUPID people out here who still doesn't believe how great Pac is…. From the time he fights Barrera (2003), no body in favors with him, and then Morales and Marquez…. Still they don’t believe him, then Oscar (who doesnt admit how hard the punches he recieve) and then Hatton and Cotto.... Now they still say Manny is not good enough! Everytime he fights a bigger oppenents, he gets wilder! So it's time SHUT-UP the Family Mayweather's monkey mouth and these STUPID blind people out here! Bring it on - Pacquiao vs Mayweather or else give Mayweather and his fans a pillow fight!


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billy37 wrote on November 15, 2009 05:45 PM: I say get an education. Become an electrician, a mechanic, a doctor, a lawyer — anything but a fighter. In this trade, it's the managers that make the money and last the longest. With that said, congratulations to Pacquiao. Here's another piece of valuable information I found.

http://ketiva.com/Arts_and_Humanities/pacquiao_conquers_cotto_for_tko_win.html


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len dogg wrote on November 15, 2009 04:58 PM: Floyd is the better fighter and boxer period. Manny is too small and he swings too wild. preety boy floyd is undefeated,


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waingro wrote on November 15, 2009 04:07 PM: D REASON FLOYD'S PUNCHES DON'T HURT:

floyd is such a jittery pu $$y that before he throws a punch he begins to jump back to avoid a counter and few of his opponents realized this.

this is not lost in team pacquiao who knows that if lil' floyd slows down to plant his feet to gain power in his punches by even a hundreth of a second, that's all pacquiao needs to punch through floyd's pretty face.


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Rick wrote on November 15, 2009 03:41 PM: DOMINATION, what else can you say. Cotto had 2 rounds while Pacman punished Cotto with 2 knockdowns and had 10 rounds. This was not a well-matched fight, however it was a good fight. This little Filipino is the Energizer Bunny with fangs and claws. He has blazing speed, endurance and he's also a master tactician. If Floyd accepts the fight, he has to be in the best shape of his life. Freddie was again brilliant in preparing Pacman. Cotto was a strong opponent, however with a lesser fighter it would have been a different outcome. Remember this is the same person that defeated Mosley and you know that Floyd was terrified of fighting Mosley. I bet Floyd will stay hidden when he hears that Pacman dismantled Cotto. At least he can still make it rain at the strip clubs and drive his supercars. Albeit he is selling his SLR Mclaren at a Florida dealership. I wonder why????


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jherome wrote on November 15, 2009 02:52 PM: come out under your bed lil floyd!!!
where are you???


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fred vil wrote on November 15, 2009 02:41 PM: We should not belittle Pacquiao's victory over DL Hoya. If it was another boxer who fought DL Hoya instead of Pacquiao under the same conditions, the former could have defeated his opponent. Only months before DL Hoya pummeled and defeated Forbes. And months before his fight with Forbes, he almost defeated Mayweather. In short, DL Hoya was not a washed up boxer, Pacquiao was just a very good fighter as he has shown in knocking out Hatton and then Cotto. Even pacquiao's win over Hatton was ignored by doubters saying he is a limited fighter. This is the dilemma of Pacquiao, critics always have an alibi why he won and yet before the fight they would say Pacquiao was matched up vs. a boxer who would defeat him. Angelo Dundee and Mayweather were two of them, who ate their words everytime Pacquiao fights. The latter even is saying Pacquiao takes strong enhancing drugs to ensure his wins. On fighting Mayweather Jr, I think Floyd will not fight Pacquiao, because he is only after the money and since he will not get the lion's share of the purse. He can no longer demand this because of Pacquiao's demolition of Cotto and this fight's PPV will surely be bigger than the Mayweather-Marquez mismatch. Amen,


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