Horn stuns Pacquiao in bloody battle

Horn stuns Pacquiao in bloody battle

July 03, 2017
Jeff Horn (R) of Australia punches Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines during their bout in Brisbane Sunday. — Reuters
Jeff Horn (R) of Australia punches Manny Pacquiao of the Philippines during their bout in Brisbane Sunday. — Reuters

SYDNEY — Australia’s Jeff Horn stunned Filipino Manny Pacquiao in a bloody Brisbane battle to claim a unanimous 12-round decision and win the WBO world welterweight title in front of 50,000 fans at Lang Park Sunday.

The unheralded 29-year-old former schoolteacher, who improved his record to 17-0-1, was awarded the win over the eight-division world champion by scores of 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113.

“I’m so happy, I can’t explain my feelings,” Horn said at ringside, before welcoming the prospect of a rematch.

“I’ve just believed since I was very young that I could do this.”

Pacquiao, one of the finest boxers of his generation, paid the price for a slow start and his inability to end the fight with a knockout.

The 38-year-old was knocked off his stride by the aggression of the taller and heavier Australian in the early rounds but looked to have weathered the storm as the fight wore on and Horn tired.

With blood pouring from both sides of his forehead after accidental butts, the southpaw launched a fierce assault on Horn which nearly ended the contest in round nine.

“Show me something in this round, or I’m going to stop the fight,” the referee warned the Australian.

Horn, who was cut above his right eye in round two, said he had been exhausted and rattled by the Filipino’s punches.

“It was hard, hard getting through that round, hard getting hit, getting caught with a shot and then continue on,” Horn said.

“(But) I was like ‘settle down everyone, I’m fine’. I was recovering pretty quickly.”

The Australian showed remarkable powers of recuperation as he battled gamely on through the final three rounds with Pacquiao, who earned the last of his 38 knockouts in 2009, unable to capitalize on his dominance.

The bout ended with the fighters in a clinch on the ropes and although Pacquiao gave a little shuffle and a grin to show he had plenty left in the tank, his fate was in the hands of the judges.

“Very tough. I didn’t expect that tough,” said Pacquiao, whose record now reads 59-7-2. “It’s okay, it’s part of the game. That’s the decision of the judges, I respect that.”

Pacquiao, who had hoped for an impressive victory to fire talk of another fight against Floyd Mayweather Jr, said he would “absolutely” return for the contracted rematch against Horn.

An emotional Horn brandished a walking stick as he also called out the undefeated Mayweather, who has come out of retirement at 40 years of age for a 12-round crossover boxing match against mixed martial arts champion Conor McGregor.

“This is no joke, which one does he want? The walking stick or the gloves?” the Queenslander said.

The loss stunned people in the Philippines, where Pacquiao, now a high-profile senator, has long been a national hero.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s spokesman, Ernesto Abella, said the loss “would not diminish the honors he bestowed to the people and to the flag”.

“Nothing will change: Senator Manny Pacquiao will remain our People’s Champ,” Abella said.

Some critics slammed it as a hometown decision, saying the statistics had Pacquiao landing twice the number of power punches as Horn.

Pacquiao’s conditioning trainer, the Los Angeles-based former Australian heavyweight Justin Fortune, was critical of the referee and the judging.

“Manny lost the fight, but Jeff Horn looks like a pumpkin. Those scores, that card? It should be the other way,” he said.

Fortune said Pacquiao should have put it beyond doubt.

“When you come into someone’s backyard, you need to really do a number on them or knock them out,” he said. “That’s boxing. You get given a gift sometimes, you get (swindled) sometimes. But when you come to someone’s house, you’re supposed to mess them up, make a statement. Never leave it in the judge’s hands.”

“It was a close fight, it could have gone either way,” said Arum. “A couple of close rounds, but you can’t argue with the result.”

Roach had said earlier in the week that he’d think about advising Pacquiao to retire if he lost the fight, but they’re already considering a rematch. — Agencies


July 03, 2017
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