Los Angeles Times

Bradley likes his chances

Fighter says there’s ‘a smarter approach to everything’ as trainer prepares him to face Pacquiao again.

- By Lance Pugmire

Timothy Bradley Jr. is a 2-1 underdog against Manny Pacquiao, but he thinks trainer Teddy Atlas will make a difference in their second fight together.

LAS VEGAS — With age comes maturity. With belief comes confidence. With Teddy Atlas in his corner, Timothy Bradley Jr. hopes, comes an undisputed victory.

Bradley reasons that his path from a highly criticized split-decision triumph over Manny Pacquiao in 2012, followed by a convincing defeat in their 2014 bout and now Saturday’s trilogy capper at MGM Grand is his great challenge in life.

“I honestly feel deep in my heart you have to suffer,” Bradley said. “If you’re not suffering, you’re not understand­ing why you’re doing what you’re doing.”

Bradley, 32, hurt his feet in the 2012 victory, which most ringside watchers dismissed as poor judging, scrapping the celebratio­n Bradley expected after his triumph and triggering depression.

In the rematch Bradley was hampered by calf pain, weakening an already flawed plan to chase a knockout against Pacquiao, and was dealt his first loss.

“I suffered those injuries for a reason, the controvers­y happened for a reason. … If you learn how to suffer, to make sacrifices, to build and learn from trials and tribulatio­ns, it’ll make you a better person and fighter,” said Bradley (33-1-1, 13 knockouts).

Last year, after Bradley was rocked by a 12th-round punch in a victory over Jessie Vargas, he decided to replace his longtime trainer, Joel Diaz, with Atlas.

Atlas, an ESPN boxing analyst who’s worked with Mike Tyson and former heavyweigh­t champion Michael Moorer, plotted a strategy for Bradley that relies less on extreme conditioni­ng and all the intricacie­s of the sweet science in favor of more attention to defense.

In their first fight together, Bradley put on a strong boxing exhibition in his ninth-round technical knockout of former lightweigh­t world champion Brandon Rios in November. Atlas once told Bradley between rounds, “We’re firemen!” willing to brave the blaze of an opponent’s punching power with a smart counteratt­ack.

Pacquiao (57-6-2, 38 KOs) was impressed enough to grant Bradley another fight in the Filipino’s first bout since his May loss to Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Bradley is a 2-1 underdog against Pacquiao. But with Atlas guiding him, Bradley said his mental approach and training will make him less susceptibl­e to a ring injury.

“I feel I’m going to come out victorious,” Bradley said. “Before, I didn’t have all of the pieces of the puzzle. Now, this third time around, [there’s a] new trainer, new mind-set, new game plan. I feel like I’m refined.

“It’s a smarter approach to everything. … This is the best opportunit­y I have to beat Manny Pacquiao.”

Atlas admits he’s obsessed with finding ways for Bradley to win, and the proof exists on large index cards he stashes in his pocket. One was scribbled with notes such as “Block and move drill,” “Step and punch,” reminders of what Bradley needs to perfect.

“I joke [about the index cards] that this is what you do when you’re born in 1956 … you remind yourself of things you don’t want to forget,” Atlas said. “I thought I was the only one who did it. Then somebody said John Wooden used to, so I said, ‘I’m not in bad company.’

“The thing that concerns me, the thing that burdens me every day — morning, noon and night — is not to fail my responsibi­lity to this kid.”

Atlas appreciate­s how Bradley took a lesser road to become a two-division world champion.

Bradley wasn’t a worldclass prospect and recalled this week the vulnerabil­ity of four-round fights — “[If] you get knocked down, the best you can do is a draw” — and of scrapping in small venues like a Corona lumberyard and Ontario hotel ballroom.

“I came up the hard way,” Bradley said. “It made me stronger. It felt like I was fighting for something, like I had to get somewhere. It made me relevant.

“Manny Pacquiao can fill an arena. Not sure I can reach that stature, but I would like to do the next best thing, and that’s beating Manny Pacquiao.”

lance.pugmire@latimes.com Twitter: @latimespug­mire

‘The thing that concerns me, the thing that burdens me every day . . . is not to fail my responsibi­lity to this kid.’

— Teddy Atlas, trainer for Timothy Bradley Jr.

 ?? Elizabeth Kreutz ?? TRAINER TEDDY ATLAS works with Timothy Bradley Jr. in Las Vegas, preparing him for Saturday night’s third fight against Manny Pacquiao.
Elizabeth Kreutz TRAINER TEDDY ATLAS works with Timothy Bradley Jr. in Las Vegas, preparing him for Saturday night’s third fight against Manny Pacquiao.
 ?? Elizabeth Kreutz ?? TIMOTHY BRADLEY JR., right, believes that with Teddy Atlas guiding him, he’ll be less susceptibl­e to an injury in the ring.
Elizabeth Kreutz TIMOTHY BRADLEY JR., right, believes that with Teddy Atlas guiding him, he’ll be less susceptibl­e to an injury in the ring.

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