Cape Times

Pacquiao: We will do our best to make you happy

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LOS ANGELES: After five years of bickering, posturing, and false alarms, Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao stood face-to-face on Wednesday to mark the official countdown to one of boxing’s most anticipate­d fights.

Pacquiao, wearing a dark suit and tie, arrived on stage for the news conference as AC/DC’s “Thunderstr­uck” blared through the speakers. He was followed by Mayweather, who was in a light suit with no tie and walked in to Queen’s “We Will Rock You.”

The two men then stood face-to-face and side-to-side, as a roar of camera shutters tracked their every move, before sitting with their respective camps in the only news conference they will hold to hype their May 2 fight.

And while neither boxer took questions from the media packed inside the Nokia Theater in downtown Los Angeles, each exuded confidence.

“This is a fight that the world can’t miss,” Mayweather said from his podium. “I’m in the gym working right now, ... pushing myself to the limit because I never wanted to win a fight so bad in my life.”

The fight at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas between Mayweather and Filipino southpaw Pacquiao is expected to be the highest grossing bout in history.

“This is what you are waiting for since five years ago,” said Pacquiao, who has held world titles in eight different weight divisions. “The fight is on and we’re very excited ... we will do our best on May 2 to make you happy.”

Pacquiao told a group of reporters that he was not worried about the upcoming bout and was more concerned about prior fights with Oscar De La Hoya, Antonio Margarito, Miguel Cotto.

Those fights came when Pacquiao, 36, was closer to his prime. Mayweather, 38, is also closing in on the end of his career and Pacquiao’s camp feel that works to their advantage.

“(Mayweather) had a better chance of winning five years ago,” said Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach. “He has slowed down. I think Manny knows how to beat him. We have to dominate him in the first round and take him out of his comfort zone right away.”

There are no shortage of contentiou­s storylines in this matchup. Roach has exchanged words with Mayweather’s father and trainer, Floyd Mayweather Sr., while fight promoter Bob Arum used to work with Mayweather instead of Pacquiao before a falling out split the pair.

Pacquiao was out walking the red carpet by the time Mayweather arrived fashionabl­y late .

But it didn’t take long Wednesday for Mayweather to put the fight into perspectiv­e in a way that only a fighter nicknamed “Money” can.

“You get to this level where you’re making nine figures in 36 minutes,” Mayweather said, “and you have to be a winner.”

Mayweather said the fight reminded him of when he was young and Marvin Hagler and Sugar Ray Leonard fought in a huge middleweig­ht title match in 1987. Mayweather said he wondered then how there could ever be a fight as big as that one.

Now he’s in a fight that will be bigger, if only because technology has advanced far enough to sell it to almost every home in the country.

“For me to be in the biggest fight in boxing history ... I kept my fingers crossed and here we are today,” said Mayweather.

“It’s all about timing and I think we couldn’t choose a better time,” Mayweather said. “This is a fight the world can’t miss. This is an unbelievab­le matchup.”

“This is a fight the world can’t miss. This is an unbelievab­le matchup.”

 ?? Picture: JONATHAN ALCORN, EPA ?? THE ULTIMATE BILLBOARD: Floyd Mayweather Jnr and Manny Pacquiao pose on stage during a press conference in Los Angeles yesterday announcing their May 2 super-fight in Las Vegas.
Picture: JONATHAN ALCORN, EPA THE ULTIMATE BILLBOARD: Floyd Mayweather Jnr and Manny Pacquiao pose on stage during a press conference in Los Angeles yesterday announcing their May 2 super-fight in Las Vegas.

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