The Freeman

Bradley, Marquez Sunday in Phl

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LOS ANGELES — Timothy Bradley remembers the first and final rounds of his last bout. The rest has vanished into a foggy haze.

The welterweig­ht champion candidly acknowledg­es his brain took a beating in his victory over Ruslan Provodniko­v last March. Determined to prove his ring bravery to a doubting public, Bradley (30-0, 12 KOs) consciousl­y abandoned years of technical discipline and waded into a fistfight with the Siberian brawler.

"I wanted to prove to people that I was the true champion," Bradley said this week. "I was going to prove it to everybody just by trying to knock out Ruslan. I was trying to show a different side of me."

He paid for it with a swollen skull, ugly injuries and two months of pain and slurred speech. Yet it's a transactio­n he would make again.

"I still want the fans to be happy," Bradley said. "I'm a four-time world champion, and I'm trying to build a fan base. That's tough. I'm trying to make the real big money. I think about all of this. ... I almost died in that fight, but I loved the attention after it."

That visceral display in an outdoor ring in Carson, California, set him up for a lucrative pay-per-view fight against vaunted Mexican champion Juan Manuel Marquez in Las Vegas on Saturday night. Bradley is determined to be smarter against Marquez, but he also remembers how he got to the Thomas and Mack Center.

"I'm not stupid," he said. "I know a lot of people are probably going to watch this fight because of that fight."

Bradley's strategy stemmed from his fury and confusion after his victory over Manny Pacquiao in his previous fight.

The decision was among the most criticized in recent boxing history, and Bradley took it all very personally. The online comments on Twitter and Facebook would start at 5 a.m. and wouldn't stop until about 3:30 a.m. the next day, leaving Bradley baffled by the trolls' tenacity.

"Man, they wake up thinking about me," he said. "I was in a bad place. A lot of people lost a lot of respect for me, especially the fans, after the Pacquiao fight. A lot of people were like, 'Bradley is a fake champion. He doesn't deserve the belt.'"

Nine months of simmering anger culminated in a decision he announced to his wife, Monica, the night before his fight against Provodniko­v.

"I was like, 'I'm going to beat him down. I'm going through him,'" Bradley said. "And my wife was scared. She said, 'Don't do it, don't do it.' She cried that night, because she knew what I was going to do. When it happened after the first round, in the second round, she got up and left, because she knew my plans. She knew it wasn't going to get any better."

Bradley remembers getting knocked down by Provodniko­v in the first round, and he recalls the brutal 12th round. He has watched the other 10 rounds on video.

"I was just blown away," Bradley said. "I was like, 'Wow, why did I fight like that?' I just couldn't believe that I was able to take that many big shots like that, and I couldn't believe I was still standing after the fight. It just showed me what type of fighter I am, the type of heart I have, the type of determinat­ion I have."

The fighters traded huge shots throughout the night, including a dynamic sixth round. Bradley also returned to his usual sharp boxing for long stretches with prodding from his infuriated trainer, Joel Diaz, who threatened to stop the fight if Bradley didn't stop taking crazy risks.

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 ??  ?? Boxers Timothy Bradley, left, and Juan Manuel Marquez face off for photograph­ers after a news conference in Las Vegas. Bradley is scheduled to defend his WBO welterweig­ht title against Juan Manuel Marquez on Saturday.
Boxers Timothy Bradley, left, and Juan Manuel Marquez face off for photograph­ers after a news conference in Las Vegas. Bradley is scheduled to defend his WBO welterweig­ht title against Juan Manuel Marquez on Saturday.

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