Philippine Asian News Today | Page 20

A20 PHILIPPINE ASIAN NEWS TODAY April 16 - 30, 2016 COMMENTARIES/ SPORTS Spectator Will Pacquiao’s win over Bradley translate into votes? By Al S. Mendoza MANNY Pacquiao won, all right. But was it really convincing? Hardly. He won it hands down but not totally significant. Modesty aside, I also scored the fight 116-110 in Pacquiao’s favor. A friend of mine seated beside me during the fight said to me in jest: “Why, all the three judges copied your score.” The fight was the easiest to score. Timothy Bradley Jr. hardly connected in the entire 12 rounds but still, I gave him four rounds. Out of pity? Maybe. If honesty is the best policy, generosity is also a good policy. Uplifts the spirit. Pacquiao dominated the fight virtually from beginning to end. He still had the moves of a young fighter, although slightly a bit slower now. And not as hard a puncher as he used to be. Twice he floored Bradley. Twice he didn’t finish Bradley off. He didn’t fail. He just didn’t want to send Bradley to dreamland. Isn’t B r a d l e y Bible-bound alongside Pacquiao? In the seventh, Bradley fell from getting hit by a left below the ear after first absorbing a right hook. Pacquiao did not pursue a knockout after Bradley got a standing 8-count. He merely went through the motions of finishing the round. Afraid that he might get hit by a lucky punch if he tried mixing it up? The ghost of a knockout loss from a lucky punch courtesy of Juan Manuel Marquez still haunts him four years after the fact? Bradley got decked again in the ninth, this time by a harder left to the kisser that sent him tumbling and somersaulting. After another 8-count, Pacquiao again did not go for the kill. Same reason? Scared of Marquez’s phantom punch suddenly materializing in the heat of an exchange? In the olden days, Pacquiao would turn tiger at the slightest opening, unleashing a rain of punches until his prey has finally crumpled on the floor—limp as an empty sack. If the years had softened his rock-hard fists, I am not surprised. The last time he scored a stoppage was in 2009 yet. And it was not even a knockout victory but rather, a TKO win over Miguel Cotto. Pacquiao was mercilessly pummeling Cotto with hits to the face when the referee said enough is enough and declared a 12th-round TKO loss for the Puerto Rican. In the intervening seven years after that, Pacquiao has stopped stopping his foes. He could only score knockdowns, punctuated by those 6 knockdowns he dealt Chris Algieri before PacMan lost to Floyd Mayweather Jr. on May 2, 2015. After beating Bradley a second time, Pacquiao said he was retiring. Nobody believed him. Me, too. But if he did retire, was it done in a blaze of glory? Hardly. Did his win translate into votes for his senatorial bid on May 9? Hardly, too. But this I can tell you, fellas: Should he win next month at the polls, it will be as hard a pill to swallow. * * * * * * Bryants retires in blaze of glory; Curry stars, too HOW can one scoring 60 points retire as a basketball player? Why will Kobe Bryant leave the game when his 60point output was more than half of his team’s total of 101 points? At 39, he didn’t look it, much less huff and puff as he should at that age. But no. He even sparked the Los Angeles Lakers’ come-from-behind victory on Thursday over the Utah Jazz, triggering the longest standing ovation from a sellout crowd in NBA history. And Bryant was no stranger to 60-point games. Before this farewell game that was more of a farce farewell than anything, Bryant had done 60-point games five times before. In shouldering the Lakers home to an unexpected victory, Bryant fired 15 of his team’s last 17 points in a blazing finish that totally saw him defy Father Time. Fittingly, Bryant made his 60th point with a ringle ss free throw in the waning seconds of the game. Dramatically, Bryant ended his 20-year NBA career by dishing off an assist that sealed the Lakers’ 101-96 Bigger, pricey fight not soon for champ Donaire It may take a while before WBO superbantamweight champion Nonito Donaire Jr. gets to fight in a marquee bout that he’s been longing for. Moments after knocking out title challenger Zsolt Bedak of Hungary in the third round Saturday night in Cebu, Donaire stated his eagerness to battle either fellow champion Carl Frampton or ex-tormentor Guillermo Rigondeaux of Cuba. “I’ve been asked this million times before but I’ll say (I want to face) the best out there,” Donaire told reporters inside his dressing room. “If it’s Frampton, if it’s Rigondeaux, if it’s (Hugo) Ruiz, if it’s anybody that feels that they are better than me, come inside the ring, I’m waiting for you.” A battle with Frampton could only be possible by the end of the year as the unbeaten WBA and IBF 122-lb kingpin is set to move up in weight and battle WBA featherweight champion Leo Santa Cruz of Mexico tentatively set on July 30 in New York. Rigondeaux, meanwhile, was supposed to see action last month in Liverpool opposite British hope James Dickens but was called off after the Cuban failed to obtain a visa. The 35-year-old Rigondeaux (16-0, 10 knockouts) scored a stunning decision win over Donaire in their unification battle last April, 2013 in New York. Rigondeaux is the mandatory challenger to Framp- ton but the Cuban could meet one of the top contenders of the WBA should the superbantamweight crown be declared vacant depending on the result of Frampton’s featherweight bid. “I know I’m going to get it. That’s why I want to build up my name. I have the belt and will try to get the other belts. I’m willing to fight them. I want to fight them,” said Donaire ‘If it’s not Rigondeaux or Frampton, everyone else will just be an activity fight.” Donaire’s win over Bedak was his first title defense after winning the WBO belt by decisioning Mexican Cesar Juarez last December in Puerto Rico.(D. Principe, mb) CONT NEXT PAGE Nonito Donaire walks to his corner as Hungarian Zsolt Bedak (foreground) struggles to get up after being floored for the second time in the second round of their WBO super bantamweight title fight last Saturday night in Cebu City. Donaire knocked down his rival one more time in the third to keep his crown. (Juan Carlo de Vela) WWW.PHILIPPINEASIANNEWSTODAY.COM