Daily Dispatch

Pacman pleased with ruling

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FILIPINO boxing hero Manny Pacquiao said yesterday that a World Boxing Organisati­on panel ruling that he had won his controvers­ial bout against Timothy Bradley would help restore people’s faith in the sport.

The WBO on their website yesterday said all five members of a special panel it asked to review the controvers­ial June 9 Las Vegas bout scored it in favour of Pacquiao.

The WBO said they could not overturn the result of the fight or ask Bradley to surrender the belt, but that it could authorise a rematch.

“I hope with this ruling the public’s faith in boxing would be restored,” 33-year-old Pacquiao said by phone from his home in the southern Philippine­s.

“I was not surprised by the WBO ruling. I knew that I won, so did the whole world. But that is already over and I am now focusing on the next fight.”

He said he and his promoter Bob Arum would discuss his next move in a Los Angeles meeting set for next week, but remained coy on who would be his next opponent.

“We’ll soon find out who I will fight next,” he said, when asked if he was aiming for a rematch against US fighter Bradley.

Bradley snatched Pacquiao’s welterweig­ht belt via a split decision, with two judges scoring it 115-113 for the American and a third scoring it 115-113 for Pacquiao.

With streak.

The decision sparked outrage in the boxing-crazy Philippine­s and in the United States, where two senators pushed for the creation of a national boxing commission to regulate the sport. Arum questioned the competence of the judges and pressed for an inquiry from the Nevada attorney general’s office.— Sapa-AFP the win,

15-fight, Bradley snapped Pacquiao’s

seven-year winning

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