"Unfinished Business": Pacquiao chronicles 12 (page 3)

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

"Unfinished Business": Pacquiao chronicles 12 (page 3)


In round 4, Pacquiao started strong and seemed to have gotten a rhythm for the first time in the fight. He was coming in and out and hitting Marquez with his punches with better precision than the previous 3 rounds. Marquez kept backing off, showing signs that he hasn’t completely recovered from the knockdown. Pacquiao repeatedly tagged Marquez with his right jab, left straight combos to the delight of his fans. HBO analyst Emmanuel Stewart commented, “Pacquiao seems to be much stronger now. His confidence looks like it has come back,” as the tempo of the fight started to lean towards Pacquiao’s favor. Marquez would keep trying though and landed some isolated shots, but they were too few and far away from the other to even consider the round competitive. (Pacquiao 10, Marquez 9)
 Round 5 opened as Steward showered Pacquiao with high praise. Steward said,
"He loves to fight. You can see it in his eyes. I don't think there's ever been anybody in the boxing ring that loves to fight like he does."
And further elaborated,
"I think that he would be rather doing this than anything in the world. Just looking in his eyes you can see the intensity and the fierceness. Certainly, he is a true fighter."
The round though was turning back into a boxing match similar to the first two rounds. Marquez seemed to have regained his composure and was picking his spots with increased accuracy, Pacquiao in his part was also showing his improved boxing skills as he utilized his jab more often, picked off Marquez's punches and also counter-punched when he had an opportunity. This round could've definitely gone either way. Compubox did little to help determine the round's winner as both fighters logged in almost identical numbers with Pacquiao having a one punch edge in connects and Marquez a 2% edge in accuracy. Might as well toss a coin on this one or score it an even round. Depending on what you saw, and ringside judges did not have the privilege of a replay like I do, you can give the round to Pacquiao based on his aggressiveness or to Marquez for dictating the pace and bouncing back. Marquez also landed the best punch of the round with a straight right that connected flush on Pacquiao's jaw. I'll give that round to Marquez. (Marquez 10, Pacquiao 9)
Marquez opened round 6 with renewed confidence. He had gotten his bearings back and Pacquiao seemed like he was starting to doubt himself again. Pacquiao was tentative and Marquez was masterfully out-boxing him. HBO commentator Jim Lampley commented saying "In rounds like this you can feel Juan Manuel Marquez out-thinking Manny Pacquiao." Marquez countered Pacquiao and caught him out of position on various occasions. (Marquez 10, Pacquiao 9)
At the midway point of the fight, Pacquiao was ahead my cards 57-56 with both fighters taking 3 rounds each and Pacquiao leading by a point because of the knockdown. Coincidentally I have the same scores at this point with HBO analyst Larry Merchant and Harold Lederman during fight night.
Round 7 started similar to how the last two rounds did. The fight was favoring Marquez's pace and he was looking to continue his success against Pacquiao. In the middle of the round however, both men's head would clash for an inadvertent head-butt that opened up a cut on Marquez's right eye. The referee had to stop the bout momentarily for the ringside physician to check the cut and wipe off the blood that was dripping from Marquez's eye. Sensing blood, Pacquiao jumped on Marquez and turned the fight back into a brawl. He connected in bunches with his combinations as Marquez seemed more like the fighter in round 4 trying to fend off a Pacquiao storm. Around the 1:10 mark, Pacquiao started a flurry that had Marquez wobbly for a second. Every time Pacquiao fought at his usual relentless pace, it was evident that he came out on top but when he doubts himself and try to box with Marquez, he gets taken to school. In this round though, Pacquiao's aggression saw him through. (Pacquiao 10, Marquez 9)
Marquez opened round 8 with a vengeance. He went straight at Pacquiao and landed clean punches together with a straight right hand that opened a cut on Pacquiao's left eye. Pacquiao looking obviously bothered by the cut was backpedalling and getting tagged in the process. Pacquiao in the past has had a hard time adjusting to cuts and in this instance it was his lead eye that got damaged which affected his vision. In one instance, Pacquiao lunged back as if Marquez was stalking him when his opponent was simply standing still. He was having problems locating his opponent and seeing punches. He was practically fighting blind. It was as vulnerable as I've ever seen Pacquiao in a fight. He kept trying to fend Marquez off but the cut was really bothering him. Marquez took advantage of the situation as he landed with combinations and perfectly placed punches. (Marquez 10, Pacquiao 9)
At the start of the 9th round, Pacquiao's cutman Joe Chavez, was able to stop the bleeding from his lead eye. Pacquiao came out looking like a man on a mission and determined to win. Perhaps he had sensed that if he was indeed going to win, he had to make a move now or risk his eye getting completely shut. It worked and the momentum shifted back to Pacquiao's favor. Every time Marquez would land a 1-2 combination or a right straight, Pacquiao would come back with his own combination and then some. He tagged Marquez with left straights and was moving way better than he did the previous round. At the 23 second mark, the referee called for time as he had the ring side physician check on the status of Marquez's right eye which was worsening with every Pacquiao blow. After getting the go signal from the doctor, Marquez and Pacquiao would go at it in the dying seconds of the round. Marquez momentarily abandoned his game plan and let it all hang. Pacquiao though got the slight edge in the flurry by landing a couple more shots while backing Marquez to the ropes. As the bell sounded, Pacquiao did the Muhammad Ali shuffle as if telling Marquez he can keep going forever. (Pacquiao 10, Marquez 9)
Pacquiao opened the 10th round with a brilliant counter left hook while ducking and slipping from a Marquez left. The shot almost knocked Marquez down if not for his great balance which helped him regain his footing after the highlight real shot Pacquiao gave him. Pacquiao would follow-up with one of his vicious flurries as he stalked Marquez and backed him to the ropes. Marquez courageously fought back despite getting hit with a lot of punches. Pacquiao was going for the kill as the crowd noise reached deafening levels. At the midway point, the crowd starts cheering "Manny! Manny! Manny!" after Pacquiao tags Marquez with another vicious left. Big round for Pacquiao as he proved that the cut he sustained in round 8 was not enough to take him out of the fight. As he recovered from his cut though, Marquez's kept getting worse. More and more blood started to drip from the right eye. Marquez was getting desperate while Pacquiao looked like he was getting stronger. (Pacquiao 10, Marquez 9)
In-between rounds, Marquez's trainer Beristain was shown trying to mend Marquez's ugly cuts. HBO's Lampley was already suggesting the fight might be stopped due to the severity of the damage to Marquez's right eye.

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