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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Erik in town; Marquez keen on Pacquiao

By Abac Cordero
The Philippine Star 03/29/2007

El Terrible is back in Manila.

More than two months after his first visit to the Philippines,
Mexican ring icon Erik Morales is back in the country to do another commercial for San Miguel Beer.

Morales flew in Tuesday. The last time he was here last January, the three-time world champion and his wife Andrea had a blast doing the SMB commercial and visiting the exclusive resort of Amanpulo. Bob Arum of Top Rank broke the news about Morales’ second visit to the Philippines to boxingtalk.com.

Meanwhile, the World Boxing Council is keeping its fingers crossed that Top Rank and Golden Boy could soon settle their differences and pave the way for a Manny Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Marquez fight later this year.

Pacquiao, who faces Jorge Solis on April 14 in San Antonio, Texas looms as the next best fight for Marquez, who dethroned Marco Antonio Barrera. Pacquiao reportedly suffered a cut in his left eyebrow during sparring at the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles. But his handlers described it as a "minor scratch.

" Since Barrera hinted that he’s not ready to face Marquez in an immediate rematch, the WBC champion said he’s just as excited to face Pacquiao, and resume their rivalry that ended in a questionable draw in 2004. Marquez said if the fight happens, the result will be very different.

"Manny attacks without defense, sometimes disregarding what sort of punches are coming back his way. I’m telling you, my next fight against Manny is going to be very different," said Marquez.

" I was over confident in the first fight, and almost paid the consequences. In our next fight, I’m going to be concentrating fully.

The key will be a combination of intelligence, boxing skills and also power. And I must insure that he doesn’t connect strongly with his left," Marquez said.

Top Rank, under Bob Arum, and Golden Boy, under Oscardela Hoya, have gone to court, disputing the promotional rights over Pacquiao and dimming hopes of a fight between boxers from the two stables.

"Well, great fights, have great complications. It’s unfortunate that they are having their own fight, and that could prevent great fights from happening," added Sulaiman.

Morales is back; Pacman injured

By Nick Giongco

ERIK MORALES slipped into the country unnoticed Tuesday night to do a commercial, according to Top Rank big boss Bob Arum.

Morales is not in Manila and is expected to resurface this weekend with wife Andrea, Arum added.

Arum bared Morales’ Philippine trip during an interview with Gregory Leon of boxingtalk.
According to internet reports, Morales will shoot another commercial in the next few days, a perfect followup to his San Miguel advertisement that he starred on together with Manny Pacquiao and trainer Freddie Roach that was filmed in mid-January.

"Erik is in the Philippines making another commercial and he’s going to be returning to fight David Diaz sometime in June for the WBC lightweight title.

The fight will either be in the Midwest or Chicago," Arum said.

When Morales and his wife came here in January, a television station was able to shoot the pair being escorted out of the arrival area en route to the Diamond Hotel.

During their brief visit, the Morales’ vacationed in the ultra-luxurious Amanpulo resort in Palawan before shooting the TV commercial for San Miguel that became a big hit not only among fight fans but viewers as well.

Morales and Roach were paid well for their appearances in the commercial that was shot in a high-end village just outside of Manila.

Meanwhile, Pacquiao sustained a cut on his left eyebrow while he was sparring at the Wild Card Boxing Club yesterday, according to a report by GMA Channel 7.

The cut was a minor one and was not that serious for the promoters to postpone his April 14 bout with Mexican Jorge Solis at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.

"Hindi ko na mabilang kung ilan ang sparring rounds ko pero everything’s going smooth as far as my training is concerned," said Pacquiao while relaxing at his apartment at the Palazzo in Los Angeles.

Pacquiao lawyer Franklin Gacal was able to talk with Pacquiao yesterday "but Manny did not tell me about the cut that he suffered."

"I am a bit concerned because it will surely be the target of Solis," added Gacal, who will file Pacquiao’s COC today in Koronadal.

Pacquiao is running against incumbent Darlene AntoninoCustodio in the first district of South Cotabato in the May 14 polls.

Too Many Titles, No Real Champ

A Commentary by Scott Crouse

In the movie "Braveheart," William Wallace entreats a reluctant Robert the Bruce to join him with these words: "Your title gives you right to the throne of Scotland, but men don't follow titles, they follow courage."

As much as that might have applied to the quest for leadership in 13th-century Scotland, it applies as much today in the sport of boxing, which is chock full of titles but essentially leaderless and running out of true followers.

Boxing fans, frustrated with too many titles and too few recognizable stars, are tuning out and turning away. The courage that Wallace spoke of is still plentiful and unequaled in any other sport. The problem is that it's just spread too thinly among a plethora of titles and champions.

The exponential increase of titles and title-holders -- created by the various sanctioning bodies like the WBA, WBC and IBF -- is suffocating the sport by generating a prevailing attitude of confusion and indifference among fans. These organizations have almost single-handedly destroyed the sport with their corruption and greed, coupled with their propensity for the insanely stupid. They care about pleasing the fans about as much as the IRS cares about customer satisfaction. Clearly, the most destructive influence they have had, as far as fan disinterest, has been to minimize championship merit by maximizing championship status by awarding far too many fighters a little trinket they call a championship belt.

With more titles than shamrocks on St. Patrick's Day, fans have become confused, detached, and worst of all apathetic to the sweet science. Almost every other sport has an identifiable champion or leader, someone universally recognized as the best. But in boxing asking the question "Who's the champ?" is as absurd as visiting the Playboy mansion and asking "Who's the blonde?"

At the end of the season there is only one MLB, NFL, NBA, and NHL champion. Only one champion is crowned in the Boston Marathon, Kentucky Derby, Tour de France, Bassmaster Classic, or Westminster Dog Show. You don't have multiple champions at Wimbledon, Daytona, or Augusta. There aren't multiple winners on American Idol or Survivor. Fans of any sport or competition simply want someone to stand out and rise above the rest; someone they can identify as the best and call the champ.

Consider that in January, 1957, there was a modest total of only eight world champions, from heavyweight to flyweight. By January, 1977, the number of world champions had increased to 20. This was mostly due to the advent of the World Boxing Council in 1963 which, combined with the World Boxing Association (formerly the National Boxing Association until changing its name and global focus in 1962), now created two champions in most divisions. However, as recently as January, 2007, with the International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Organization long since added to this alphabetical quagmire there was a mind-numbing total of sixty-two individuals recognized as world champions!

In the past, like the aforementioned 1957, everyone knew who the middleweight or lightweight champion of the world was. Today, even the most dedicated fans are hard-pressed to name every titleholder in a given weight division. Until recently, the heavyweight champion of the world was one of the most recognizable athletes on the planet. Today, one of the heavyweight titleholders could be standing next to you and he would be about as recognizable as last year's final pick in the NFL draft.

Owning a title has become like owning a Hummer -- it used to be special, but now that everyone has one, who cares? The irrelevance of world titles can be demonstrated by considering this:

Bernard Hopkins, Shane Mosley, Ricky Hatton, and Manny Pacquiao --four of the biggest names in boxing -- do not own world titles. Now consider that Silvio Branco, Malcolm Klassen, Zsolt Erdei, and Souleymane Mbaye do own world titles.

No wonder boxing is more screwed up than Britney Spears.

The resultant mess from world titles multiplying faster than chipmunks in springtime is apparent. It begins by diluting the talent pool within each division. If there are four world champions who represent four sanctioning bodies, then there are four sets of ratings with four sets of contenders. This creates too many "contenders" and significantly diminishes the talent within each division.
This contender-crisis creates undeserving challengers for one of these titles. Fighters who otherwise might never make it into a legitimate top ten are given number one status by a particular alphabet organization and a shot at their title (paying exorbitant sanctioning fees to these organizations doesn't hurt either).

Titles are then won by unknown and undeserving fighters. This is to take nothing away from the fighters themselves, but this situation allows fighters who might never have even been ranked otherwise to win titles. It also makes more likely the potential for mismatches and non-competitive fights.

This ultimately leads to a major identity crisis among boxing's lengthy list of world champions. After all, when there are 62 world champions, how can even the most hardcore fan know who they are? One is more likely to know the names of the Lighting Director and Key Grip in "Rocky V" than the names of the four heavyweight titleholders.

Winning a world title is supposed to be special. It is supposed to distinguish between the elite and the non-elite. It is supposed to set one apart from the others as the very best. But when everyone owns a title, then who can legitimately claim to be the best? And the sad reality is if everyone is a world champion, then no one is a world champion.

Boxing as a sport, if nothing else, is a survivor. It has survived its share of scandals and scoundrels, riots and racism, mobsters and mismatches, fixes and Fan-Man. But right now the greatest enemy to its survival is the fact that it has 62 individuals who call themselves world champion -- the best.

Let's not kid ourselves. Boxing, in one form or another, has been around since people were drawing pictures of woolly mammoths on cave walls and getting their boxing news on stone tablets. It's really not a matter of whether it will survive, but whether it can thrive.

For boxing to capture the attention of audiences as it once did, and garner the type of devotion it used to, it needs to give fans identifiable heroes. A champion needs to be someone who has earned the right to be called the very best, not just someone who owns a title.

After all, men don't follow titles.