A Saturday press conference is in the works for smack-talkers Adrien Broner and Paulie Malignaggi.
Marquez: 'I was getting to Pacquiao easily'
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Juan Manuel Marquez will meet Manny Pacquiao for the fourth time in an HBO Pay Per View-televised clash on Dec. 8 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. In November, Pacquiao (54-4-2, 38 knockouts) escaped with a highly disputed majority decision over Marquez (54-6-2, 39 KOs), with whom he has also battled to a draw and won a previous split decision. Pacquiao floored Marquez three times in the first round of their initial meeting as featherweights in May of 2004, and dropped him once in the third round of their second as junior lightweights in March of 2008. Pacquiao, who turns 34 on Dec. 17, chose to face Marquez over a return bout with Tim Bradley, whose controversial split decision in June dethroned Pacquiao as the WBO's 147-pound titleholder and ended his 15-bout winning streak that included eight stoppages. Marquez, who turned 39 in August, rebounded with April's unanimous decision over Sergei Fedchenko for the WBO's junior welterweight belt. In a training blog distributed by HBO, Marquez recalled his first bout with Pacquiao: MONDAY, NOV. 12: "I was very excited to face Manny Pacquiao. In his last fight, he had moved up to featherweight and totally destroyed Marco Antonio Barrera in impressive fashion. After seeing that fight, my trainer, Nacho Beristain, and I put in the hardest training camp I had ever had in preparation for defending my titles against Pacquiao
"In the first minute of the fight, I was getting to Pacquiao easily. He seemed very tentative and I decided this would be a good time to be more aggressive – as a surprise attack -- and back him up.
"Each time I got up from those two knockdowns, I was even more determined to get him. I was impatient and careless, and that was a mistake, because he knocked me down a third time. But this time, I saw the punch but I couldn't block it.
"In the corner between rounds, Nacho emphasized that there were still 11 rounds left in this fight, and if I stuck to our training camp strategy, I could pull myself out of the hole that had me down
"I attacked him before he could get set and stayed away from his left hand. He had no other weapons besides his left, and he had no answers to my counter-punching and movement. Photos courtesy of HBO Lem Satterfield can be reached at lemuel.satterfield@gmail.com |
Juan Manuel Marquez on his controversial draw with Manny Pacquiao in their first fight: "I got up from three first-round knockdowns and gave him a boxing lesson for the final 10 rounds."



