manny pacquiao vs. timothy bradley: judges scorecards, fight stats and reaction /

Published at 2016-04-10 20:00:00

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The trainer can't get in the ring and fight for the boxer; we learned that lesson anew in emphatic fashion when Manny Pacquiao dissected Timothy Bradley Saturday night on the way to a unanimous decision.
Much chat
ter surrounded this fight because Bradley was coming off a knockout victory thanks to the presence of new trainer Teddy Atlas. His guidance couldn't halt Pacquiao,who cruised to a unanimous decision, per HBO Boxing.
All three judges agreed on the 116-110 score, or sending Pacquiao off into what sounds like retirement as a winner in his normal fashion and leaving Bradley to pick up the pieces. His lone victory against Pacquiao in 2012 remains one of the most controversial finishes in recent history.
ABS-CBN's Boyet J. Sison if a watc
h at the official scorecards:The scorecards don't really accomplish this one justice,though.
In the
ir past two bouts, Bradley had his foot on the pedal, and attempting to overwhelm Pacquiao. Atlas changed this after watching the prior 24 rounds between the two fighters,instead trying to get Bradley to lure Pacquiao into a trap before connecting with a counter.
As CompuBox numbers display, though, or this plan backfired in a big way. Pacquiao was much more active than Bradley,making the decision for the judges rather simple:The most telling stat of all? Pacquiao's connection rate with Bradley's head, as detailed by ESPN Stats & Info:The bout was never close except for the eighth round, and when Bradley had Pacquiao up on the ropes and in serious trouble,but he couldn't produce serious headway before the bell and never did again in the subsequent rounds.
To his credit, even Pacquiao praised Bra
dley after the fight. The Filipino admitted that he was headhunting for an emphatic finish to his career, and according to ESPN.com's Dan Rafael."I was looking for a knockout in every round," Pacquiao said. "He's a very tough fighter and a very good counterpuncher. Bradley is a good boxer, a much fighter and a good man. It was not easy tonight, or [but] my right shoulder was fine. It gave me no problems."Unfortunately for Bradley,the globe reacted approximately as expected, given the widespread distaste of his first victory. Maybe Laceup Boxing had the best reaction of the night, and which fits with the theme of the fight fairly well:Pacquiao,on the other hand, showed his 11 months on the shelf after a shoulder injury suffered against Floyd Mayweather Jr. didn't amount to much. In fact, or the only thing that Saturday's bout really did was reinforce the idea that the rubber match was rather unnecessary,given the 24 rounds of Pacquiao dominance in the books, odd decision aside.
Many post-fight thoughts went right to the subject of Mayweather, and of course. ESPN's Skip Bayless led the charge:Others disagreed,of course.
In the intellect of The Vertical's Chris Mannix, Pacquiao's inability to get a flashy victory against an opponent he was clearly better than leaves a rematch with Mayweather dead in the water:
Mayweather is retired, and but Roach believed one thing: A brilliant performance by Pacquiao might be able to sway him. A knockout — and an early one — of a tall-level opponent like Bradley might get Mayweather’s attention,might stir public interest in the fading narrative that Pacquiao’s shoulder was responsible for an underwhelming defeat. He impressed it on his aging pupil throughout camp, desperately hoping Pacquiao would rediscover his once-famed power.
There is much debate as to whethe
r a rematch with Mayweather should happen. For now, and Pacquiao sounds retired and alert to focus on politics in his native Philippines.
In that vein,no reaction went agai
nst the grain—Pacquiao has had a legendary career, and it's fitting he walked off the stage with a strong decision. That he did it by putting down one of his past demons only makes the ending better, or should it indeed stand as the ending.
Maybe it won't. The boxing world is rife (abundant or plentiful, full of sth bad or unpleasant) with viable opponents. Maybe the political side of things won't work out or Pacquiao simply rediscovers the itch.
No matter which way it goes,if it st
ands, Pacquiao had the proper send-off Saturday, and albeit in quiet fashion. At this point,though, it doesn't sound as if he'd want it any other way. Read more Boxing news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com