Manny Pacquiao Defeats Timothy Bradley Jr. by Unanimous Decision to Retake Welterweight World Title

Manny Pacquiao regained his welterweight world title, avenging his 2012 loss and handing Timothy Bradley Jr. his first defeat Saturday night. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea/USA TODAY Sports)
Manny Pacquiao regained his welterweight world title, avenging his 2012 loss and handing Timothy Bradley Jr. his first defeat Saturday night. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea/USA TODAY Sports)

In the view of most, Manny Pacquiao easily beat Timothy Bradley Jr. when they first met two years ago. In the rematch, Pacquiao did it again — and this time he also got the decision he deserved. Pacquiao, who promised to return to the aggressive ways that he seemed to have abandoned in recent fights, took it to Bradley throughout the fight before 15,601 on Saturday night at the electric MGM Grand Garden Arena and was rewarded for his efforts.

All three judges had it for Pacquiao, 118-110, 116-112 and 116-112, as he regained his welterweight world title and handed Bradley his first defeat. ESPN.com also had it for Pacquiao, 118-110.

“I knew I had to do more in this fight than I did in the last fight,” said Pacquiao, who showed all the fire Bradley had accused him of no longer having.

Bradley had promised to go for a knockout and he did just that, wading into battle even though he is not known for having much power. He has only one knockout since 2007, against a long-faded former lightweight champion Joel Casamayor, but it did not deter him.

Still, that strategy played into Pacquiao’s hands because he was so aggressive, bordering on being reckless. Pacquiao let his hands fly throughout the fight and although he couldn’t knock Bradley down, he landed dozens of powerful punches and left no doubt that he deserved the victory to reverse the split decision loss he suffered on June 9, 2012.

“He gave me a good fight. He’s not that easy,” Pacquiao said. “I listened to my corner about keeping my hands up and timing. He threw a lot of punches. He threw wide, wide, wide hooks. I got hit one time and said it’s not good to be careless.”

Said Freddie Roach, Pacquiao’s Hall of Fame trainer: “Manny was a little sloppy tonight but I was happy with his performance. It looked like Bradley was going for a one-punch home run.”

Bradley said he was hampered by a right calf injury in the first round, but he did not make excuses. He was a sportsman and gave Pacquiao credit for the victory.

“I have no excuses,” Bradley said. “Stuff happens. I got nothing to say about it. ‎You can’t say nothing against Manny. I lost to one of the best fighters in the world. Manny fought his heart out. I tip my hat to his whole corner, Freddie Roach and his whole team.”

Said Joel Diaz, Bradley’s trainer: “After the first round Tim came back to the corner and said, ‘I think I tore my right calf.’ I began to massage it. He was in a lot of pain from that point on and I didn’t have much to work with.”

As soon as the fight started, Pacquiao turned on his aggressive jets and the pro-Pacquiao crowd began chanting “Manny! Manny! Manny!”

Pacquiao, a southpaw, had great success with his straight left hand. As early as the second round, he used a straight left to knock Bradley off-balance and into the ropes, and then moments later stood him straight up with another excellent left hand. But Bradley, who earned $6 million plus a share of the pay-per-view profits, responded in an action-packed round, slinging overhand rights.

“I tried, I really tried,” Bradley said. “I wanted that knockout. Manny is a great fighter, one of the best in the world. I lost to one of the greatest fighters in boxing. I kept trying to throw something over the top, that was the plan. I knew I had to do more in this fight than in the last fight.”

“Bradley was wild on the outside so I went to the inside,” Pacquiao said.

They continued to let their hands fly in the third round. Pacquiao landed repeatedly with his straight left hand and Bradley landed hard body shots. They spent most of the wild round going for the knockout.

Pacquiao (56-5-2, 38 KOs), who was guaranteed $20 million plus upside on the pay-per-view profits, appeared to hurt Bradley (31-1, 12 KOs) late in the sixth round when he closed the round unloading a sustained flurry with Bradley backed into the ropes. Then he had a huge seventh round. He hurt Bradley and had him hanging on after firing about a dozen unanswered punches with Bradley in a corner. Moments later, he let another flurry fly, although Bradley motioned for him to come to him. Pacquiao obliged and the round ended.

The Filipino icon, still with tremendous speed at age 35, looked more like the younger version of himself, the one who attacked opponents relentlessly. Bradley, 30, of Palm Springs, Calif., was happy to go along and it made for an exciting fight, such as in the ninth round when there were many fierce exchanges, even though Pacquiao got the better of them.

Even though Pacquiao did not get the knockout he said he wanted to get, he still did something nobody else has done — hang an official loss on Bradley.

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SOURCE: ESPN
Dan Rafael

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