China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ring legend Pacquiao calls it quits

Pound-for-pound great hangs up gloves to focus on presidency bid

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MANILA — Boxing legend Manny Pacquiao is officially hanging up his gloves.

The eight-division world champion and Philippine­s senator on Wednesday announced his retirement from the ring.

“As I hang up my boxing gloves, I would like to thank the whole world, especially the Filipino people for supporting Manny Pacquiao. Goodbye boxing,” the 42-year old said in a 14-minute video posted on his Facebook page. “It is difficult for me to accept that my time as a boxer is over. Today I am announcing my retirement.”

Pacquiao finished his 26-year, 72-fight career with 62 wins, eight losses and two draws. Of those 62 wins, 39 were by knockout and 23 by decision. He won 12 world titles and is the only fighter in history to win titles in eight different weight classes.

His retirement from boxing followed a dishearten­ing defeat to Yordenis Ugas in Paradise, Nevada on Aug 21. The younger Cuban boxer, who left for the United States in 2010, beat Pacquiao by unanimous decision, retaining his WBA welterweig­ht title. It was Pacquiao’s first fight in more than two years.

“Thank you for changing my life, when my family was desperate, you gave us hope, you gave me the chance to fight my way out of poverty,” Pacquiao said in the video. “Because of you, I was able to inspire people all over the world. Because of you I have been given the courage to change more lives. I will never forget what I have done and accomplish­ed in my life that I can’t imagine. I just heard the final bell. The boxing is over.”

Pacquaio had hinted at retirement recently. It also had been expected because he is setting his sights on a political battlefiel­d.

Earlier this month, he accepted his political party’s nomination and declared that he will run for Philippine­s president in elections next May. He has promised to fight poverty and corruption.

Pacquiao’s rags-to-riches life story and legendary career brought honor to his Southeast Asian nation, where he is known by his monikers Pacman, People’s Champ and National Fist.

He left his impoverish­ed home in the southern Philippine­s as a teenager, stowed away on a ship bound for Manila. He made his profession­al boxing debut as a junior flyweight in 1995, at the age of 16, fighting his way out of abject poverty to become one of the world’s highest-paid athletes.

Eddie Banaag, a 79-year-old retiree, said Pacquiao was his idol as a boxer and he watched almost all of his fights. But he believes the boxing icon should have retired earlier.

“He should have done that right after his victory over (Keith) Thurman,” Banaag said of Pacquiao’s win over Thurman in July 2019 in Las Vegas, Pacquiao’s second-last fight. “It would have been better if he ended his boxing career with a win rather than a loss.”

Tributes flow

As one of the biggest names in boxing for more than a decade, the sports world was quick to pay tribute to the legend.

Veteran promoter Bob Arum once rated Pacquiao as even better than Muhammad Ali.

“His left and right hand hit with equal power and that is what destroys his opponents,” Arum told Reuters.

Renowned American sportswrit­er and boxing author Dan Rafael tweeted: “The legendary @MannyPacqu­iao officially announces his retirement from boxing. One of the greatest fighters to ever put on gloves. An honor to have covered his career.”

Ted Lerner, a US-born sports journalist in the Philippine­s, told AFP: “He’s gonna go down as a legend of not just boxing but of the sporting world.

“His name will be sort of synonymous with greatness, in the level of Michael Jordan or people who have transcende­d their sport and become like mythical legends.”

 ?? AFP ?? Manny Pacquiao on Wednesday announced he is retiring from boxing after a glittering decades-long career in the ring, describing it as the "hardest decision" of his life.
AFP Manny Pacquiao on Wednesday announced he is retiring from boxing after a glittering decades-long career in the ring, describing it as the "hardest decision" of his life.

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