Monday, November 16, 2009

FIREPOWER AT LAS VEGAS - MASSACRE AT MGM GRAND



FIREPOWER AT LAS VEGAS
THE MASSACRE AT MGM GRAND

By Doods A. Amora, PEE


HISTORY MADE

Nostradamus’s horror of the unknown has now been revealed and the shockwaves of the aftermath engulfed victory to the Philippines as the tectonic plates continue to shake..!



Fifty-five seconds into Round 12, “Enough is enough!” - Referee Kenny Bayless ruled it. Four rounds ago, he had already seen the irreversible end. And it was in fact a one-sided massacre - a carnage akin to the Diaz, Dela Hoya and Hatton episodes.


WHAT A WAR! Two great fighters, both treasured icons in their own countries, turned the night into a masterpiece. Never to be forgotten beyond eons, COTTO Vs. PACQUIAO together in almost 12 rounds of boxing brought the magnum opus of a super-fight of the modern times. In a non-stop amazing violence, Manny Pacquiao, The Machine (50W-38 KO’s) stopped WBO welterweight champion Miguel Cotto (34W-27 KO’s) in round twelve to win another world title on Sunday morning (Philippine Time) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

And the tough Puerto Rican, Miguel Angel Cotto, his face transformed into a grotesque mask in the end - humbled, owned..., totally vanquished. Now Miguel knows, Freddie Roach’s prediction of a first round knock-out was just a decoya ruse to bring him under the master’s skin, but at least he could have wished the prediction was right.

And HISTORY; yes, was finally made. Where nobody had ever treaded before, MANNY PACQUAIO, the TORNADO FROM THE EAST, the so-called PACIFIC STORM successfully affixed his seventh world crown, in seven weight divisions. An elite feat exclusive only to him, Pacquaio has morphed to quell traditional borders of the often insular bubble of boxing. Together with my allies Noel, Cesar, Ely, Loyde, Ernie, Agnes, Burds, Roland, Audrey, Buboy and Mimi; we were all there through PPV witnessing history in the making in real time.

PACMAN’S INCREDIBLE ARSENAL

But then clearly, the genuine welterweight Miguel Cotto was the toughest & strongest challenge the Pacman had ever faced. He lasted until the 12th round of brutal punishment that even the Diaz, Dela Hoys & Hatton episodes all combined, cannot approximate the intensity and the quality of this one epic war.

“Great guy, great performance” Roach said, referring to Miguel Cotto. “He gave it 100 percent, he came to fight. I told Manny that the only time he will hit you is when you are flat footed. When Manny went flat footed, Miguel started doing better with the jab and the straight punches. He fought a much better fight than I thought he would. We talked to him after the fight, and he's quite a gentleman.”

When Pacquiao knocked off to dislodge Roach’s mitt during a drill, people couldn’t help but mumble about how Miguel could handle such a power. The only guys not buying the signal were Cotto’s camp themselves, of course the great Oscar Dela Hoya, Felix Trinidad and other champions in their own rights who couldn’t believe the phenomenon of a diminutive once-upon-a-time 106 pounder. At the prime of his career, the Boricua champion is truly bigger & stronger, in top shape as a result of superb conditioning bringing along a devastating left hook and body banging abilities that are bests in the sport. How can Miguel Angel Cotto lose?

But then as it turned out, the world’s best the pound-for-pound boxer in a smaller Pacman showcased a flotilla of incredible firepower of speed, stock stamina and relentless ferocity delivered in weird angles. To generally describe the fight, Manny did not dismantle Cotto with one shot, but instead relentlessly tattered Cotto with artilleries in unimaginable speed and fluidity in one combination after another. Manny jampacked Cotto from every conceivable angle, heaving, swinging and connecting in blinding speed before Cotto could have the opportunity to set up his own bombs. And the now famous right hook, the Manila Ice, commissioned to keep Cotto at bay, was Pacman’s answer to Cotto’s lightning quick double jabs. Most of the time successful, the right hook did significant damage preparatory to the left straights.

Cotto, fearsome at times with his vaunted jab & right straight combinations, brought great brilliance into the fight. Frighteningly competitive in the first half of the fight, in several times, Cotto did tag Pacman with his left hooks and uppercuts but Pacman’s super-human form would burn out Cotto all night with fast flurries that sent him backwards. Cotto then would retreat only to find more assault coming once again. And round after round, the script did not change. Pacquiao landed almost twice as many punches as Cotto. Pacman’s 336 to Cotto’s 172 - an indication of Pacman’s dominance with accuracy that was increasing as the rounds went the distance.



ROUND BY ROUND ACCOUNT

I should have been biased. Cotto did not win any round in my scorecard. But he won two rounds on the scorecards of two ringside judges and just one round on the card of the third. The Associated Press gave Cotto just the first round. After a ten hour break, this time sober and more generous, I reviewed the fight and gave Cotto the benefit of Round 1.

Round 1 was fairly even. To our thoughts, as Freddie predicted, this could be the knock-out expected. But as the round progresses it became apparent that it was just a prelude to a systematic demolition of the welterweight champion. Pacquiao was cool in the first round even when Cotto was landing and pressuring Pacquaio with some crispy punches of his own. The smoke cleared and Miguel won this one.

But note that moments before the fight, Freddie Roach said, "In the first round of this fight, I'm going to have Manny make a statement. We're not going to give Cotto momentum, because if you give him momentum, he's going to get stronger. We're going to start quick. We're going to show him our power in the first round. We're going to hit him. We're not going to go in and just start swinging on him. We're going to do it smart. Pacquiao knows exactly what to do. We'll walk Cotto into a fight, because he follows. And when he follows, we're going to take advantage of that."

Again, Freddie Roach's declaration of an early first round assault was a deception. He could not yet afford to allow Manny to trade blows with Cotto because Miguel was yet not predictable. As Manny after the fight said, "Our plan was not to hurry, but to take our time. It was a hard fight tonight and I needed time to test his power." True enough, Cotto believed to have climbed the ring at 165 lbs, was visibly much bigger than 24 hours ago at the weigh in. And Cotto started strong. Manny indeed had to test the waters and if and when the knock-out comes, it pours.

In Round 2, Pacman started to make the 'statement of will & testament' that Roach was referring to – giving us spectators the flavour of how it was to be in the entire fight. With relentless ferocity now unfolded, the round was clearly Manny’s. At the end of the round, swelling of Cotto’s left eye this early becomes visible courtesy of Pacman’s Manila Ice.

Round 3: Cotto retaliated with blazing double left jabs followed by one-two combinations. Miguel, this time in the upperhand was winning the round but then, in the midst of a ferocious exchange, Pacquiao dropped Cotto with a hard right hand to the canvas midway in the third round. The knock down seemed not to badly hurt Miguel but he must have sampled the acidity of Pacman’s power. In some scary moments midway in the round, Pacquaio for the first time in his career employed a ‘rope-a-dope’ - a frightening move knowing of Cotto’s monster body blows. Later rounds would show a repeat of the ‘rope-a-dope’ and the boxing world then must have guessed that it must be a ruse to measure Miguel’s power. Or probably a psychological trap to make Cotto frustrated - realizing that his power was not enough.

The fourth canto was a repeat of Round 2 but with more furious power-packed exchanges. Again Pacman’s scary bait, the ‘rope-a-dope’ recurred and Cotto this time found his left hook target – Pacquiao’s right ear. But after Manny put Cotto on the canvas for the second time with a big half-left hook/half-uppercut reminiscent of Dela Hoya’s calibre 45 late in the fourth round, the Puerto Rican was never the same again. He must have savoured the best of Pacman’s early statements of accounts. At the end of the round, red leaks became visible in above and below Cotto’s right eye, while the left eye starting to bulge.

5th Round: Cotto sat on his corner bearing a void expression of a man lost in the dark. Joe Santiago, his trainer vigorously massaged his scalp to revive him. In this round the bait ‘rope-a-dope’ again resurfaced. Unbelievable, but the apparent confidence of Pacquiao doing the rope-a-dope must have been the off-shoot of Shawn Porter’s simulation and sparring during training. With Pacman’s lowered elbows blocking Cotto’s body sledgehammers and gloves covering Manny’s face, Cotto’s vaunted left hook again found its favourite target – the right ear of Pacman. One interesting revelation in this round was that the ensuing body blows seemed not to hurt Pacquiao but on the contrary, Pacman’s body shots appeared to injure Cotto. Cotto survived the fifth round by regressing to his defensive shell.

The champion’s competitiveness came last in Round 6 when the two fighters engaged in several furious back-and-forth flurries. But once again Pacquiao got the better of it – as a stinging left hand near the end of the round shook Cotto, sending him backwards once again. Cotto then retrogressed to cover his face in a child-like mode and later wrestled and pushed Pacquiao away before the Pacman could land another blow. By then the Filipino’s speed was taking a heavy toll on Cotto’s features. The crimson leaks now oozing with more pressure. Cotto in this round started to backpedal. At the end of the round, Cotto’s left shoulder collar bone started reddening.

Round 7 saw another flurry by the Pacman gobbling up the viscerals out of the Puerto Rican. Cotto was in the verge of falling down again, but as great warrior he was, his left jabs & right straights started working again sometimes tagging Pacquiao. With hands now lowered down, waning stamina must have creeped into Miguel’s system. Then Cotto started to run - switching over to survival mode. This time Pacman had penultimately re-sculptured Cotto’s face into pulp, his left collar bone getting redder. Knowing that Miguel never had backpedalled in his entire career, this is it! The end is near. "I knew when Cotto started backing up, the fight was over," Roach said.

Round 8 was very interesting! Better perhaps than Muhammad Ali’s shuffle, Cotto continued to run on his bicycle, this time faster. This must be the secret special package Cotto’s camp boasted before the fight. A rerun of the previous Round 7, Round 8 could have been the end had it been for the clinching. With Miguel’s body language indicated subjugate sequestration, ordinary mortals would have surrendered to submission in this round. But Cotto never gave up. What a warrior! But wait! This time, shiny and swollen fully, it was perhaps very inviting to taste a bite on the deliciously-looking lechon-like ear of the Pacman.

Cotto was battered again in the 9th Round by another combination that sent him in the verge of falling down for good. But the gallant Cotto briefly escaped but it soon happened again - no matter where Cotto went, Pacquiao seemed to be lording everywhere. There was no fire escape, no safe shelter, nowhere to turn to. Cotto had to bravely clinch the Filipino until the Pacific Tornado had blown over. With each crushing moments, Cotto’s face continued to bulge like a captured toad, his eyes now appearing little more than silhouettes.

Already spitting blood with nose bleeding, Cotto fought pathetically in the finishing rounds as he was just trying to survive. With blood oozing down his face, Pacquiao pounded Cotto almost at will. Frustrated over Cotto’s unabated running saw Pacquaio in Rounds 10 & 11 seemed to momentarily stop fighting. “Common, let’s fight to finish it”, Pacman must have said it. Cotto now becomes a pitiful sight. Cotto’s camp tried to stop the fight after the 11th round, but Cotto went back only to take more punishment before a final flurry along the ropes prompted referee Kenny Bayless to end it.

The fateful 12th round was the Tour De Force for Pacquiao when he threw 13-0 and 11-0 shut-out in overall connects & landed power shots respectively.


CALM AFTER THE STORM

What a man! Miguel Angel Cotto, the Puerto Rican was not an ordinary mortal. Despite the punishment, he was still standing. And while Pacman was kneeling down in his corner in prayer; Miguel Angel Cotto embraced Manny’s back in one of the most touching moments following a total defeat. “I’m still proud. I’ve fought everyone, the greatest welterweights, but Manny’s best boxer of all time,” Cotto said. The gesture earned the gentleman from Puerto Rico greatness in humility and respect amidst a crushing defeat.

On the other hand, "I took a lot of punches in this most demanding fight", admitted Manny after possessing Miguel. It goes without saying, Pacman had proven two things: He can walk through and withstand the big blows of the strongest welterweights and he has the power to stop real welterweight titans.

For the hard fight, Pacquiao earned a guaranteed minimum $13 million (possibly up to $ 18 million after PPV and the others), while Cotto got a minimum $7 million for the exhausting near-death job.


THE MEN BEHIND

High-quality corner, yes – Roach, Ariza, Buboy and the sparmates.

Sun Tzu once preached that “if you know the enemy and you know yourself, you can win a thousand battles.” Freddie, the Coach, the Master Architect of destruction to Pacman’s opposition further believes that knowing the enemy’s habits both good & bad and using it against him guarantees victory just as well. Pacman’s recent victories are not just his. Freddie Roach as well, owns them.

Filipinized American Freddie Roach, Coach Par Excellence together with Strength Conditioning Guru, Colombian Alex Ariza and others worked as a team. We look at all the aspects of conditioning – isometrics, diet, muscle build-up. It’s not the work of any one person. We’re all focused on Manny and we’re excited to be working with the world’s greatest fighter, pound for pound,” Ariza concluded.

"If you rest, you rust". "Your best is not good enough because others must be better". "We need to improve and learning knows no boundaries". "If you stop learning, then you start to die". That for sure in a nutshell, is the philosophy of Freddie Roach, the best boxing guru of all time.


WHAT'S NEXT?

Business is business. It's now time for last man standing, Pretty Boy Floyd Mayweather, Jr.

11/16/2009

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

FIREPOWER AT LAS VEGAS: THE PRE-FIGHT READINGS



FIREPOWER AT LAS VEGAS
(The Pre-Fight Readings)

By Doods A. Amora, PEE



PACMAN Vs. COTTO!

RP (Republic of the Philippines) vs. PR (Puerto Rico)!


A display of contrasting firepower will again radiate to engulf the boxing world. Soon to take place in the now favourite combat capital known as the desert city of Las Vegas, the big engagement is on November 15 (Philippine Time) at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

Blazing Asteroids from the Skies: Featuring Guided Projectiles, Modern Artilleries and Novel Weapons of Demolition!

And New Breed of Heroes, too - in a different kind of War! And excitement in the superlative degree is assured. Boxing will again be alive. With all the guaranteed thrill and adventure, it will surely be the biggest boxing event of the year! THE WBO WELTERWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD!

FIREPOWER draws divergent forebodings and wherefores amongst boxing pundits crazy on the sport. Visions, speculations and predictions all the time precede great battles as emotions fly high amidst the horror of the unknown – the terror on the aftermath from the blast of uncertainty...

Who will partake in the spoils of the war? The Filipinos or the Puerto Ricans? The protagonists being living icons in their respective countries, so much national pride is at stake in this superfight!

I am one of those who fear for it... As a Filipino and together with my countless cohorts; we are looking up for the best that can happen in this episode. Following the country’s devastating natural misfortunes coming one after another, we need a respite and that breather must be a big hit - a huge win by Manny Pacquiao!


READING THE PACMAN

Manny Pacquiao, the Filipino, is the Tornado from the East. The Pacific Storm... so to speak.

Pacman, The Most Exciting Fighter of the Planet is The Pound-for-Pound Best in the World!

Now fighting for the Welterweight (147 lbs) Championship of the World, everyone knows the phenomenon of this once-upon-a-time 106 pounder. As never before imagined, Pacquaio had gone past David Diaz, Oscar Dela Hoya and Ricky Hatton in stunning & devastating subjugation over these big men. In these fights, multitudes of fight fans and boxing experts could not believe the conclusion of the perceived but in reality, conflicting mismatches. Now, the small Pinoy fights big – and every time he fights, boxing becomes alive again.

Pacman's cat-quick footwork will surely run around circles - bringing him to hit at will on Miguel’s facade, most likely in a much better performance from his previous Diaz, Dela Hoya and Hatton fights. With the dreaded ‘Manila Ice’ lurking in the background and the game-ending ‘Left Cross or Left Straight’, a knock-out in the first round is certainly threatening. As we knew, speed from all angles kills.

Freddie Roach, the Coach, in a complete departure from his earlier pronouncement that the fight would go the full distance, now is predicting a first round knock-out. He must have seen it, I believe. Or probably he sees a setback should the fight goes the distance. Or perhaps, Freddie, the shrink, the master battle psychologist, must have brought Cotto under his skin into the proverbial “Roach Trap”. Of course, that's Freddie's patented secret.

Whatever it is, with Freddie engineering the attack, the Pacman has the capability to do it. Cotto, they say, is hittable. Cotto is a slow starter and is perceived vulnerable in the early rounds... Cotto all the while is wide open for lead lefts and left counters.

Expectedly, Pacquiao’s offense must be in high gear from the beginning to end. And remember, although Pacman’s defense is his offense - but not anymore, because brand new sorties reminiscent of Bruce Lee’s Jeet Kune Do and Dumeniko Du Surigao’s Nimo Naranai Do are already in his arsenal as revealed in the Hatton fight. That certainly will give Miguel a pile of perflexing problems.


READING MIGUEL COTTO

TOUGHNESS: No doubt, Miguel Cotto is bigger and stronger – a good number of experts including his trainer, say so. Even Pacquiao himself acknowledged this disadvantage. Miguel is expected to climb the ring at 160 lbs while Pacquiao at 150 lbs or a difference of some 10 big poundage. Nonetheless, Cotto has excellent boxing skills which can't be ignored with more importantly, a finishing brutal knock-out power delivered in precise timing and uncanny accuracy most of the time in the middle and later rounds.

Note that the tough Puerto Rican Miguel Angel Cotto is no-ordinary. He is a smart-thinking fighter who can do adjustments while the game is being played. Versatile as he is, he can be a pressure brawler all night or a boxer as well, it depends on the situation. He also can act as a counter-puncher and a monster in his signature sledgehammer body attacks. And if he hits, he hits big!

The once mighty Ricky Hatton, to me, would have no chance with Miguel Cotto. Then history tells us that Miguel Cotto defeated the super-quick and strong Shane Mosley, the powerful Jab Judah, the sleek Joshua Clottey and the rest of real big guys all in their prime in this shark-infested welterweight division. Miguel had been wobbled a few times in his career but emerges as the victor all the time except for one. His only but contestable defeat was in the ‘hard(ened) hands’ of Antonio Margarito. And he could have defeated Oscar dela Hoya had he had the chance of meeting him in the ring.

HUNGER: This time hungrier than Manny, expect the best of Cotto during fight night. After the Margarito debacle and the ‘not-so-great’ performance against Joshua Clottey, he needs to show to the world that he is still the real deal in the division. Note that Cotto is for real at least for now. Cotto is still young. ‘His brutal artistry is both exciting and terrifying to watch. Every shot he throws is with bad intentions and Jab Judah’s face bore witness to the destructive trade that Cotto plied’ as one international boxing analyst beautifully put it.

But he needs to win this one, big! A defeat to Pacman especially via a 'knock-out' one will send him to retirement. His stock will nose-dive to the cellars and nobody will believe in him anymore. On the other hand, a win even by a split decision will propel him to the mega-buck clash with Pretty Boy Floyd. After all, win or lose with Mayweather will ensure him of an income not consumable in his whole lifetime.

SERIOUS TRAINING: Cotto needs stamina to fight the Pacman. In his fight with Joshua Clottey, it went through the distance - in fact, he got a split decision. In that fight, he seemed to have tired in the final rounds. With Antonio Margarito, at the 11th round, he was TKO’d when he was already tired. In his episode with Jab Judah, although he TKO’d Judah in the 11th round, he was visibly losing steam. One thing good in that fight was that Judah was also exhausted from the beatings of Miguel.

Now I understand why Miguel needs to train longer...

Self-determined, he took three months in a regimen of continuous, uninter-rupted training. Ahead of one month, he knew he has to slowly taper his weight down to the catch weight of 145 lbs. Reminiscence of the Dela Hoya lesson must have prompted him. As of the time of this writing, he had arrived at Las Vegas appearing trimmed and seemingly ready for war. But whether or not the fearsome figure is a manifestation of actual power or a weakness as a result of starvation will be interesting to watch. Cotto had been secretive in his training. He could have pulled punches as shown in his 'slow motion' work-outs for the media not to feast on. Hmmm...

ABILITY TO ABSORB PUNISHMENT: In his fights with the all-time great welterweights, backpedalling was never seen in his vocabulary but Miguel had always been focused & composed. As one notable sports writer said, “his relentless determination showed a seeming inability to take a single step backwards, and an apparent indifference to pain. Cotto’s relentlessness was simply too much for Judah; Cotto was all over him, never allowing him time to establish any sort of rhythm”.

I can now imagine, Miguel will do the same signature with Pacquaio. But then, can he endure, in the words of David Diaz, "the bladed twin fists of the Pacman"?

DIRTY TRICKS: In this year’s biggest blockbuster card, Cotto, 34-1, 27 KO’s, will defend his WBO welterweight title against Pacquiao, 49-3-2, 37 KO’s. Although Miguel Cotto is the champion, it’s Pacquaio, the challenger, who is the man to beat. The odds are showing so. But how can Miguel defeat Manny? To beat Pacman, Miguel must be in super-explosive physical condition and should not weather out until the last round. With three straight months of training, that no doubt I assumed has been achieved. Miguel's chances, to my mind, would be the famed sledgehammer left hooks to the body in the late rounds, granting he survives Manny's early on-slaughts.

But last, not the least - the dirty tricks! When Judah stunned Miguel with a lead left uppercut in the first round, Miguel resorted to burly low blows. And it happened again in the later rounds. I am not sure if he did it intentionally but many believe he is capable of doing such tricks. In a must-win situation, that brought me to the thought that ala Pretty Boy Floyd, Miguel will report for duty at 147 lbs. Even with a $ 2 million penalty, what’s important is the win! If that happens, I would not be surprised...


READING THE HOUSE OF CARDS

This time the Pacman is in his expedition to affix his seventh world championship diadem in seven weight divisions never before accomplished by any gladiator in the sport. Will history be kind to the Pacman?

Well, it has to be. Pacman is the all-time favourite in this match-up. Majority of the so-called connoisseurs are for Pacman’s triumph. I am for it. My friends of course are in it.

But Pacman’s recent fights are not without intrigues and hi-octane skepticisms. How much threshold can a diminitive Pacman gobble up & swallow more than he can chew in the heavier division? Note that David Diaz was just a lightweight. Oscar dela Hoya was not the same as who he was in his prime. Now 'you know' and we know that Ricky Hatton was over-rated and no way matching with Pacquaio’s level. Now at full welterweight, Miguel Cotto, the Champion could be the real deal.

But what goes up must come down. Pacquiao has been winning fights in a long streak. Pacquiao is undefeated in almost five years, on a 10-bout winnings over the biggest names in boxing and now on the verge of becoming a world champion in seven weight divisions. Gunning for his 50th win and 38th KO’s, now he might have forgotten how it is like to lose. He might be in the cloud nine of the false wisdom of invincibility. As I said in my previous article, he has already been on top of the world. Intoxicatingly powerful in such a mood, is Manny taking Cotto lightly? I hope not.

In these times, nobody can beat Pacquiao, except himself. But Manny’s legendary hard training work ethics is now becoming a sneaking conjecture. With interruptions, his training is perceived not as intense as his training for Diaz, Dela Hoya and the Hatton episodes. Inputting into the equation the now recurring tight shooting schedules for movies & commercials, and the perennial distractions - natural calamities or political or personal; observers quip that Manny must have again back to the old habit of just preparing himself up to the par or the skills of his opponent. Again, is Manny taking Cotto lightly? Is the Baguio stint working for his boxing’s best interest?

Roach’s pronouncements have always been in the positive. But Freddie must have known more and may have withheld some lapses which are not palatable to box-office sensibilities. Understandably, one of Freddie’s jobs is to hype the fight. To Manny’s ledger, Roach is just part of his payroll’s list, as I previously wrote. And Freddie has to keep this lucrative employment intact.

But latest reports are disturbing. Is Pacman’s house in danger of collapsing? I fear to imagine the distraction and the destruction of focus created by these recent scenes. Sleeping with the enemy, is Team Pacquiao's downfall creeping from within? Even Coach Par Excellence Freddie Roach himself and Conditioning Coach Alex Ariza now seem to be in the endangered species - candidates for purging later? Somebody’s undertones must have pierced some of the Boss’ ears. I hope it won’t get through, by the way...

I apologize, but that’s the words of careless whispers creeping in the grapevines of the boxing world! The world knows, even Buboy Fernandez, Pacman’s best friend, doesn’t like 'the guy named Michael Koncz'.


READING THE OUTCOME

It is my belief then that Pacquaio, the world's most exciting boxer, the singer, the product endorser, the model, the movie star, the politician - all rolled into one package, will prevail in this fight. It may not be easy but after breaking down Cotto in the earlier rounds, Pacquiao will win by a spectacular Knock-Out between the fifth and seventh rounds.

A devastating combo punctuated by a finale of left lead uppercuts will do it. And Miguel Angel Cotto will join the likes of Hatton in the Wonderland. I hope I’m not wrong this time.

What goes up, must come down? No, not this time. Probably, during the Mayweather encounter when Manny trains himself. If that happens, it's not bad for retirement, anyway...


Doods
11/03/09

See you again in this blogsite come November 16.