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 In a Powerful Comeback, Pacquiao Batters Rios Through 12 Rounds

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In a Powerful Comeback, Pacquiao Batters Rios Through 12 Rounds Vide
PostSubject: In a Powerful Comeback, Pacquiao Batters Rios Through 12 Rounds   In a Powerful Comeback, Pacquiao Batters Rios Through 12 Rounds Icon_minitimeSun Nov 24, 2013 2:52 am

Say this for Brandon Rios: he hardly ever backed away.

In a Powerful Comeback, Pacquiao Batters Rios Through 12 Rounds 24Fight-articleLarge

Manny Pacquiao kept coming at him. He kept striking Rios with left hands to the chin, the nose, the right and left side of his body and both eyes. By the later rounds, Rios’s face was swollen, bruised and bloodied, and Pacquiao, as the sport of boxing knew him before his knockout loss last December, had returned to devastating form.

Plenty will be said as to how Pacquiao’s chosen opposition figured into this resurgence. But those who, like Rios, insisted this bout would be defined by calls for Pacquiao’s retirement were sorely mistaken — Rios most sorely of all.

To say Pacquiao (55-5-2) won by unanimous decision is to undersell just how one-sided the contest was. He seemed to win every round, and if those rounds were split in half, or into quarters, it still could have been a shutout.

The three judges gifted Rios (31-2-1) three rounds total on their cards. Pacquiao’s entourage lifted him off his feet in the center of the ring. Someone draped a championship belt over his shoulder and he threw both arms skyward. It felt like 2009 or 2010.

“I just got beat by one of the best fighters in the world,” Rios said.

He then added, with more than a dash of understatement: “He’s very fast. He has a lot of different angles. He’s difficult to box against.”

The bout had seemed like a line of demarcation for Pacquiao. Either he would overwhelm a slower Rios with the speed that marked his career ascension, or he would look like a boxer still feeling the impact of his last fight, a knockout at the right hand of Juan Manuel Marquez.

The crowd booed Rios as he entered, and it remained behind Pacquiao throughout.

If there was any question about how he would respond, Pacquiao answered the doubts early — with a flurry of exchanges. He came out aggressively, and he landed left hands to the stomach and the face.

Rios did most of his early work in close. He tried to turn the bout into a brawl. He wrapped Pacquiao and punched at both sides of his body.

In the fourth round, Pacquiao looked like 2009 Pacquiao: vintage, relentless, strong. He slung left hands and slipped away from Rios, landed and dipped away. It seemed at once savage and balletic. In the fifth, one straight left landed square on Rios’s chin. It appeared to wobble him, but again he shook his head.

“I was winning the whole fight,” Pacquiao said. “That’s what mattered.”

He added, “This is still my time.”

Pacquiao strolled into his dressing room shortly after 10 a.m. His pre-fight meal had consisted of chicken, fish, soup and white rice — breakfast, as it were. The time change for his preparations did not seem to bother him, although he definitely seemed aware of it. He asked for the time maybe a dozen times over the next 90 minutes. He wanted the clock on the wall turned on.

His mother, Dionisia, found Pacquiao in a corner of the room. He took her right hand and held it tenderly to his forehead, and they prayed for maybe 30 seconds.

His trainer, Freddie Roach, approached soon after, practically swimming through the crowd that surrounded Pacquiao as he wrapped his most prized possessions. Pacquiao twisted tape around his left hand, starting with the fingers, moving down toward the wrist.

“You all right?” Roach asked him, and Pacquiao nodded.

He said nothing. He did not lift his head toward Roach.

“You good?” Roach asked.

Pacquiao nodded once again.

He hosted a steady stream of visitors, among them the boxers Miguel Cotto and Ruslan Provodnikov and the soccer star David Beckham. Provodnikov, through an interpreter, told Pacquiao that he wanted him to take it easy on Rios, so that he could fight Rios next.

Pacquiao’s wife, Jinkee, stopped her husband near the door. She hugged him.

“Ladies and gentlemen, from ... ” he said, trailing off, as he bounced on his toes.

“Let’s get ready to rumble!” she said.

More:  http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/24/sports/in-a-powerful-comeback-pacquiao-batters-rios-through-12-rounds.html
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