Round 2
Round 3
Round 4
Round 5
Round 6
Round 7
Round 8
Round 9
Round 10-11
Round 12
LAS VEGAS — Miguel Cotto walked out of the MGM bruised and battered but unbowed.
“I just came from a fight so that’s how I’m supposed to look,” Cotto, according to Top Rank pointman Ricardo Jimenez, told someone who made a comment that the Puerto Rican fighter looked “beat up and swollen” after the fight.
Cotto took so many blows to the head he had to skip the post-fight press conference. He was taken to the UMC Hospital for precautionary measure, and Jimenez said the ex-champion was to undergo a complete body scan.
“Miguel wants to come out here. He’s a real man. But the Nevada State Athletic Commission wanted him to go straight to the hospital. So he had to go. Not because he wanted to but because the commission wanted to,” said fight promoter Bob Arum.
Cotto, according to Jimenez, was okay as he was brought to the hospital, and needed no help as he boarded the Team Cotto bus that took him to the hospital. The bus was loaded with around 30 members of his family and his team.
Cotto had cuts over or under both eyes and bled from the fourth round onwards. His trunks, white with red bands, were stained with his own blood. Pacquiao did not go home unscathed either as he wore puffy eyes to his post-fight concert.
It took Pacquiao a little longer to attend the press conference because doctors had to do some procedure to drain blood from inside his right ear. So he showed up at the press conference with his head bandaged and his right ear protected.
But it was Cotto who drew sympathy from all those who saw the fight.
“Miguel Cotto has always been a courageous fighter. It’s just that he was in with a guy who’s the best fighter of our era and may very well be the best fighter ever. My heart goes out for him — to see his face and to see the damage,” Arum added.
LAS VEGAS – Don’t expect Manny Pacquiao to go higher than 147 lb so whoever wants to fight him next should stay within the vicinity.
“For me this is the last division I will fight in,” said the newly crowned WBO welterweight champion and possibly a future congressman in Saranggani in the Philippines.
“I just want to take a vacation and it’s up to my promoter who my next opponent is. This was a hard fight (at 147). I think 154 (super-welterweight) is too big for me,” said Pacquiao.
“But I’m happy with this victory,” said the only fighter in history to win seven world titles in seven different weight classes.
He started his career in 1995 at 105 lb, and as he grew older he gained on weight, but just got stronger and faster winning crowns in the flyweight, super-bantamweight, featherweight, super-featherweight, lightweight and junior welterweight.
And now, as a true welterweight.
LAS VEGAS – Here’s the same old question: who’s next?
This was the biggest question that faced Manny Pacquiao and his promoter, Bob Arum, after the Filipino’s sensational and historic victory over Miguel Cotto at the MGM Grand on Saturday evening.
The who, according to Arum, should come first, but as of the moment there’s nothing as clear as the blue Nevada sky as to who gets to face Pacquiao next, and who fights the world’s greatest boxer.
Arum dropped the names of three boxers who may have the chance. Or at least, those who had the chance.
First was Shane Mosley, the reigning WBA welterweight champion, who had practically begged for a fight with Pacquiao before the fight with Cotto was sealed right after Pacquiao demolished Ricky Hatton last May.
Arum said Mosley was close to making the fight with Pacquiao and in fact was being considered a worthy opponent, until he decided to fight undefeated fellow American Andre Berto on Jan. 30 here in Las Vegas.
Arum said he couldn’t imagine what went through Mosley’s mind making the Berto fight, and announcing it the day before the Pacquiao-Cotto fight, when months ago he was crying for a fight with the Pinoy attraction.
“Shane Mosley says nobody wants to fight him and he wants to fight the winner of the Pacquiao-Cotto. Then he signs a contract to fight Berto. He could have been a great opponent. But what the hell was he doing?” said Arum.
“Shane says Pacquiao is ducking him and that’s not the truth. Manny is just ducking him in the sense that he can’t fight two guys in the same night. Manny is open to fight anybody. But I’m not gonna negotiate in the newspapers,” said Arum.
Then came the name everybody was waiting for: Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Arum had said that the undefeated American, whom he used to promote until they had a bitter falling out, can set a fight with Pacquiao if he drops his “delusional” thoughts of getting the bigger share of the purse.
“If he wants the fight he knows whom to call. He hates me and I hate him but it doesn’t really matter. Enough of the trash talk. If they want the fight they know whom to call. Period. Period,” Arum told the press.
“Don’t listen to Floyd Sr. who’s my friend but talks too much and don’t listen to the rest of them,” said Arum, who expects a call from Golden Boy’s Richard Schaefer anytime next week with regards to Mayweather’s stand.
“The world wants to see a (Pacquiao) fight with Mayweather. I want Mayweather. But if Floyd wants 65-35 (in his favor) he won’t get it,” said Roach.
MANILA, Philippines - HBO boxing analyst Larry Mercant was overheard as saying how the streets of Manila would go crazy after the fight.
In fact, not only the streets of Manila but also at various venues all over the metropolis, particularly at the historic Araneta Coliseum where an estimated 15,000 fans, went on a frenzy right from the opening bell.
That scene would be replicated all over the country – from as far as down south in Manny Pacquiao’s hometown in Gen. Santos City to as far north as one of Pacquiao’s closest friends Gov. Chavit Singson’s province in Ilocos – as they all savored the Filipino icon’s historic victory over Puerto Rican Miguel Cotto.
“Walang katulad talaga si Manny (Manny is one of a kind). By becoming the first fighter to win seven titles in different divisions, Pacquiao is unquestionably the world’s best pound-for-pound boxer,” a fan who watched the fight at Mall of Asia said.
“Manny always makes us proud to be Filipinos,” said another Pacquiao supporter.
Over at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum in Manila, nearly 8,000 came as early as 6 a.m. to avail themselves of the free viewing and snacks, courtesy of Department of Energy and Natural Resources Secretary Lito Atienza, whom Pacquiao looks up to as father.
LAS VEGAS - Manny Pacquiao knocked down Miguel Cotto twice and turned his face into a bloody mess before finally stopping him 55 seconds into the 12th round Saturday to win his seventh title in seven weight classes.
The Filipino star used his blazing speed and power from both hands to cement his stature as the best pound-for-pound boxer in the world.
"The Manny Pacquiao Blog". Click here for stories and updates on the Filipino boxing champ.
Cotto took such a beating that his face was a river of red from the fury of Pacquiao’s punches but he refused to quit even as his corner tried to throw in the towel after the 11th round.
The fight was billed as a 145-pound classic, and in the early rounds it didn’t disappoint. The two went after each other with a vengeance and Cotto more than held his own as they traded punches in the center of the ring.
Pacquiao dropped Cotto with a right hand early in the third round, but he wasn’t badly hurt and came back to finish the round strong. But after Pacquiao put Cotto on the
canvas with a big left hand as Cotto was advancing forward late in the fourth round, the Puerto Rican was never the same again.
“Our plan was not to hurry but to take our time,” Pacquiao said. “It was a hard fight tonight and I needed time to test his power.”
Cotto fought gamely but in the later rounds he was just trying to survive as blood flowed down his face and Pacquiao kept coming after him relentlessly. In the 12th, Cotto went back out to take even more punishment before a final flurry along the ropes prompted referee Kenny Bayless to stop the fight.
Cotto’s face was swollen, blood was flowing from his nose and his cuts, and he simply couldn’t stop Pacquiao from bouncing inside and throwing both hands at will.
“I didn’t know from where the punches were coming,” Cotto said. “Manny Pacquiao is one of the best boxers I ever fought.”
Pacquiao, coming off spectacular wins over Oscar De La Hoya and Ricky Hatton, added another one against Cotto, who had lost only once and held the WBO version of the welterweight title.
Pacquiao did it in trademark fashion, throwing punches in flurries and from all angles until Cotto began to slow down and then pursuing him relentlessly until the fight finally ended.
The fight will likely set up an even bigger fight against Floyd Mayweather Jr., and many in the capacity crowd at the MGM Grand arena began chanting “We want Floyd! We want Floyd” after the fight ended.
“I want to see him fight Mayweather,” trainer Freddie Roach said.
Mayweather may have second thoughts after Pacquiao did what no other fighter has done before and win a belt in a seventh weight class.
More impressive, though, is how he has fought, dismantling opponents despite moving up consistently in weight.
The welterweight ranks will be the last ones Pacquiao conquers, though. He said he will not move up any more in weight.
History
“This is the last weight division for me,” Pacquiao said. “It’s history for me and more importantly a Filipino did it.”
Pacquiao was credited with landing almost twice as many punches - 336-172 - as Cotto. He earned a minimum $13 million for the win, while Cotto got $7 million Pacquiao was favored, largely off his last two performances in which he forced De La Hoya to quit on his stool and then knocked out Hatton with a huge left hook in the second round.
Back home, President Arroyo enjoined the public to emulate the grit and determination to win against any odds shown by boxing champion Manny Pacquiao who triumphed against Puerto Rican fighter Miguel Cotto Saturday in Las Vegas (Sunday Manila time).
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