Found the following article on another site about the upcoming fight. It's a good read and a more accurate assesment of each fighters chances compared to the opinions of a select few on this thread!
Manny Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton - Will This Dream Match Come True?28.03.09 - By Andrew Harrison: ‘Remember that scene from Raging Bull when Jake Lamotta is lamenting the fact that his size will forever preclude him from fighting Joe Louis? Don‘t you get the same feeling of frustration when you realize Pacquiao vs. Ricky Hatton can never happen?’ -Jeff Ryan, June 2006.
What a difference a few years can make. When the above statement was written, Manny Pacquiao was blazing his way through the super featherweight division after recently despatching Erik Morales in blistering fashion. Hatton meanwhile was busy making noise himself at light welter, following up his title winning triumph over Kostya Tszyu with a blood and thunder knockout victory over the awkward Carlos Maussa.
Although the gap between them was a mere 10 lbs, the idea of the duo facing off against each other at this point would have seemed absurd.. Consensus thought was that Pacquiao had more or less reached his limit at super feather, a full 24 lbs on from his professional debut. Hatton on the other hand was about to head North in search of more lucrative assignments at welterweight, a venture ultimately destined for failure. With both vying for the unofficial title of boxing’s most exciting performer alongside perennial thrill machine Arturo Gatti and with neither appearing on the other’s radar, Ryan’s frustration appeared well founded.
In around five weeks time however, the match most never dreamt would one day happen, will play out before a captivated world wide audience and as it draws closer, the prospect becomes more enthralling by the day. A fight which crosses over to the masses may just finally deliver the goods and provide the sport with a major shot in the arm.
Too often of late, the fights which are brought to the attention of the casual fan, usually with an overblown fanfare, end up leaving Joe the Plumber shaking his head and exclaiming ‘is that all there is to boxing these days?’
Many of the truly huge blockbuster fights of recent vintage, Trinidad De la Hoya, Lewis Holyfield I & II, Lewis Tyson and Mayweather De la Hoya, although intriguing encounters, ultimately disappointed. We got a bang for our buck with the Tyson Holyfield battles in terms of excitement I’ll grant you, yet it was hard not to feel short changed after Tyson fouled out in the rematch. Away from the spotlight, truly epic fights involving the likes of Gatti Ward, Marquez Vazquez and Corrales Castillo unfolded to reaffirm our belief that the fight game was just as good as it ever had been, not that old Joe would ever have known about it. Shrinking column inches meant that the great fights remained tucked away whilst the observers who only popped in on our sport from time to time for the big ones, witnessed much ballyhoo with little substance, a most frustrating scenario.
There are two phrases which are guaranteed to leave me cold and running for cover. The first is ‘this guy is the new Tommy Hearns’ (you can guarantee he’s nothing of the sort, from Vernon Forrest to Paul Williams, anyone it seems who fits the Hearns body type ends up having that one thrown at them). The second is ‘this fight could be Hagler Hearns all over again’………….cue tepid 12 rounder.
Hearns is one of the most exciting fighters who ever laced them up, so it’s natural to yearn for another one like him, his barnburner with Hagler remains arguably the most exciting fight of all time. Loathe as I am to put the kiss of death on Pacquiao Hatton, I’m starting to believe we could be in for something which at least bears comparison.
Hatton has proven a top class performer at 10 stone, his forays into the welterweight division against Collazo (a debateable points win) and Mayweather (his only defeat, by knockout) bringing him his poorest returns as a fighter. As a light welterweight however, Hatton has ruled as Ring champion for almost four years, making five successful title defences since his career high point, the championship winning effort over Kostya Tszyu. Tough, powerful and strong for the weight, Hatton is the proverbial immovable object.
Pacquiao is as dynamic a performer as they come. A force of nature between the ropes, Manny has adapted his tornado like style under the umbrella of Freddie Roach. Able to box superbly from his southpaw stance, he has developed into the stellar pound for pound king of boxing. Despite the wonderful skills he has honed which allow him to dart in and out of distance whilst peppering opponents with lead fisted attacks, Pacquiao like Hearns, can’t resist a good old tear up.
Despite Hatton bringing on board Floyd Mayweather Sr. in an attempt to regain some movement and boxing fluidity, I fancy that his approach come fight time, will be not too dissimilar to Hagler’s was on that windy Vegas evening in 1985; namely to keep swinging the swords until there are no more heads to roll. Ricky does have boxing skills, however attempting to box clever as he did against Ben Tackie or Eamonn Magee would appear to be the wrong tactics completely here. He must look to exploit his advantages in strength and size in this one and bully the naturally smaller man, much as he did against Jose Luis Castillo.
If this is the way Hatton elects to fight, then there seems little doubt that the Pacman won’t oblige him in a brawl. Roach will be programming him to box as he did against Oscar and David Diaz, both flawless fighting exhibitions, however once the leather starts flying and Manny’s hackles rise I’d wager we’ll see fighting and slugging as opposed to cerebral boxing. If Roach’s prediction of the ‘Hitman’ falling in three comes to fruition, it would indeed invoke memories of that night of unsurpassable violence from ’85.
Back to 2006 and Steve Farhood’s take on who he thought was boxing’s most thrilling fighter, descriptions which reaffirm that boxing may finally come up trumps with a crossover fight which not only generates PPV sales, but delivers the goods also:
‘Both guys have solid chins…..both guys are prone to cuts….both fighters have had to beat fighters with blood flooding into their eyes….both guys are able to knock an opponent out in the late rounds…..we might lean toward Pacquiao because his whirlwind attack is more attractive than Hatton’s smothering style, but as far as pure excitement goes, it’s a close race between these two’.
EDIT: double post
Last edited by Conrad; 03-28-2009 at 10:55 AM.
Whoever wins, I bet this thread will reach 100+ pages after the fight.![]()
Last edited by :::PSL:::; 03-28-2009 at 10:50 PM.
link --> Will Hatton’s Career Survive A Beating From Pacquiao?
By Scott Gilfoid:
With two wins over less than impressive opponents in his last two fights, Ricky Hatton (45-1, 32 KOs) will once again step into the fire, this time against Manny Pacquiao (48-3-2, 36 KOs) on May 2nd in Las Vegas, Nevada. Hatton, 30, is taking a huge risk in fighting Pacquiao, who looked unbeatable recently in dismantling Oscar De La Hoya earlier in the month. The fight, which many felt would be a competitive one, saw De La Hoya take a terrible beating, bad enough so that Oscar had to quit on his stool after the 8th round. Hatton, despite his loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr., a 10th round stoppage in 2007, and a close call against Juan Lazcano after being hurt by him, Hatton remains a popular fighter. However, the question remains, will Hatton continue to be popular if he’s beaten as badly as De La Hoya and David Diaz were against Pacquiao?
Right now, Hatton couldn’t have chosen a worse time to fight Pacquiao, because at 30, Pacquiao is fighting at his best, and looking downright invincible. Hatton, heavy straight ahead, one-paced pressure fighter, would seem to be tailor made for Pacquiao, who for his part, can do it all - box, slug and move. Pacquiao, like Mayweather, won’t stand directly in front of Hatton and allow him to wrestle, maul and land his shots at close range like the more limited fighters that Hatton has faced. Pacquiao will likely fight the same way he did against De La Hoya, moving in and out, landing blinding fast combinations and circling the ring on Hatton.
This is almost without a doubt going to be a fight where Hatton takes terrific punishment, and gets battered without stop. Certainly, Hatton has the power to take Pacquiao out if Manny chooses to stand directly in front of him and trade shots at close range, but that’s not how Pacquiao fights.
He’ll move often, drilling the much slower Hatton with fast combinations before he has time enough to respond to the punches. I think, if it gets bad enough, we may see Hatton quit on his stool in the same manner that De La Hoya did.
When he sees that he has no chance in the fight, and that he’s only taking needless punishment, Hatton may prefer to save himself for another day. However, a bad loss to Pacquiao will all but destroy any chances for Hatton to take on Mayweather, although De La Hoya will still probably be an option for him.
The public would probably have little interest in seeing him fight anyone, however, until Hatton redeems himself with some good wins over top talent like Junior Witter or Timothy Bradley, but that’s not likely something that Hatton will do.
He’ll probably go from a knockout loss to Pacquiao straight into another mega fight against De La Hoya, but it will be obviously a much less popular fight than it would otherwise be if Hatton could somehow beat Pacquiao. But, I don’t give Hatton much if any chance at beating Pacquiao, and have to be logical about this. Hatton will take his beating, just like De La Hoya, and the only hope is that Hatton can at least make it close enough so as not to suffer in losing.
What a relative, unbiased article. Was that written by Pac's mom?
I would hardly consider Paulie Malignaggi an unremarkable opponent, he was the #2 guy at 140. What's funny is he then refers to Witter as "top talent".
link --> Hatton-Pacquiao: What’s Ricky Going To Do When Things Fall Apart?
By William Mackay:
As I play this fight through my mind wondering how it’s going to play out, I just can’t see Ricky Hatton (45-1, 32 KOs) fighting any other way than he’s always done for most of his career, and against a fighter as good as Manny Pacquiao (48-3-2, 36 KOs), that’s just not going to it done. May 2nd is quite a long time, but even if the fight were to take place in a year, I see Hatton as still fighting with the same, face forward, wrestle and hit, style that he’s done for his entire career.
If his new trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. has had any effect on changing Ricky’s style, I can’t see it. Aside from a few jabs against Paulie Malignaggi, a harmless opponent with little power, Hatton fought pretty much as he always does, mostly slugging it out. Against Pacquiao, who’s much faster in terms of hand and foot speed, Hatton is going to have some serious problems almost immediately in that fight.
Unlike his bout with Floyd Mayweather Jr. where Hatton did a fair job in the first half of the fight, I see him having immediate problems against Pacquiao. The problem is that Hatton’s just too slow to match Pacquiao’s blazing hand speed and will find himself getting hit repeatedly in the face early on. I’m sure that his trainer, Mayweather Sr., will have a lot of back up strategies, mostly advising Hatton to try and stay on the outside, to work his jab and use lateral movement against Pacquiao. Sorry, but that won’t work. Pacquiao moves to quickly with feet and can get within punching distance in a fraction of a second to land his hard, spearing jab and straight left.
What then will Hatton do? My guess is he’ll do the typical thing, forgetting all the complicated advice from Mayweather Sr. and just bum rush Pacquiao repeatedly, hoping for the best but getting the worst of it. The bum rush strategy, something Hatton has made famous in fights against Kostya Tszyu, Jose Luis Castillo and not so famous in his fight against Mayweather Jr., is been an old standby for Hatton for many years and it’s mostly worked well for him during that time.
Only recently, in a loss to Mayweather Jr. and in a fight against Juan Lazcano, where Hatton was hurt twice in the fight while rushing in wildly, did his bum rush strategy not work. Unless I miss my guess, it will probably fail again when Hatton meets up with Pacquiao. Pacquiao will be ready for it. His trainer Freddie Roach will have prepared Pacquiao extensively on how to cope with Hatton’s face forward attacks, likely having him move just enough to pick Hatton off as he comes forward.
Hatton did a good job in his last fight, ducking under the jab of Malignaggi to land right hands. It won’t work against Pacquiao. He’ll fire off blazing fast combinations when Hatton tires to lob his slow right hands and get his shots in well before him.
In the end, I doubt Hatton will be able to make it even as far as Oscar De La Hoya without folding. Perhaps the only reason that Oscar made it that far was because he was able to use the ring to escape to the outside for brief spells. This saved him from taking even more punishment, but in the end it couldn’t save him from losing the battle, because eventually Pacquiao caught up to him enough times to take his heart and beat him into quitting.
Hatton won’t do this, and will instead rush foolishly straight into the maw of Pacquiao’s much superior offensive firepower and will be quickly riddled to pieces. By the time that he realizes that he made a mistake, Hatton will be too hurt to escape and will be overwhelmed and taken out by Pacquiao. If Hatton’s lucky, he might see the 6th round but no more than that.
Those articles make me sick at the measure of how biased they are... you would think they were writ by SaddoBoxer himself.![]()
My turn to post a training video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qm6G5diNXpo
Looking at that I think Rickys jab has improved shed loads..
There are rumors that this bout could also end up as IBF championship. But I strongly doubt though. Urango will not vacate his belt win or lose to Berto.
I think hattons in serious trouble if he's cut early because be like was mentioned in another post refs wont be as hesitant as to step in. Pac mans also got to to be ready because hattons not going to come out as dead at the weight as odlh and is body work on the inside will be key.
Boxing News 24 always posts very subjective articles which bring nothing to attention except the narrowmindedness of their writers. All you have to do is check the comments below to see what people generally think of the articles.
Maybe Pacquiao does have the advantage, he certainly brings a lot to the ring, but to rule out Hatton in any fight, hell, to rule out any fighter completely in any fight is totally disrespectful and bone headed.
Everyone has their day, no matter who fights you cannot rule out a result different to what you expect, cos' all that matters happens on the night and boxing is just as unpredictable, perhaps even more so than any other sport.
Pacquiao is a damn good fighter and I admire him, but never ever rule out Ricky Hatton.
Last edited by clintuk; 03-29-2009 at 06:20 PM.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks