Thursday, October 21, 2021

THE BIG FAREWELL: Pacquiao Retires

 

His nickname was “Pac-Man,” though he should’ve been called the Muhammad Ali of the Pacific Rim. Such was his image: a larger than life figure who elevated the Philippines with each of his stirring victories. 

 

From the night in 2003 when he entered the Alamodome to challenge the already legendary Marco Antonio Barrera, Manny Pacquiao seemed hell-bent on scaling one career peak after another. An embarrassing generation of heavyweights had made it possible for men weighing no more than jockeys to captivate boxing audiences as they’d not done since the Great Depression. It was once again the small man’s moment; hungry for fame, Pacquiao soared. By 2009 he was boxing’s most reliable star. By 2012 he was an international name and a Philippine congressman, and by the time he announced his retirement this month he was an institution. It is probably true that Pacquiao did more to put the Philippines onto the world’s radar than all of the great Filipino fighters before him combined.

 

When he recently said farewell to boxing at age 42, Pacquiao shared with Julio Cesar Chavez and Roberto Duran the rare distinction of being a foreign fighter beloved in the U.S. To a stubborn minority of fans, Pacquiao was a spotlight hound, plagued by enough controversies to sully his smiling image – unproven steroid accusations,  political connections of dubious merit, and a grab-bag of excuses when things didn't go his way,  everything from mysterious injuries to ill-fitting socks. But to the majority, Pacquiao was a kind of genius: a wicked southpaw puncher, a crafty boxer, always prepared to fight (unlike Duran), charismatic and charming (unlike Chavez), and perfectly attuned to what the customers wanted from a champion. 

 

Pacquiao’s reputation was not made by promoters and could not have been. In an era when fighters were at the mercy of networks, Pacquiao flew through boxing like a meteor, forcing the world to follow him in a lightning game of ‘catch me if you can.’ A short fellow with a wispy mustache who could barely speak English, he was hardly the debonair sports figure preferred by segment producers, yet his presence howled at us through television screens – we saw his frustration during tough fights, the joy he took in his own dazzling footwork, the satisfaction he took at his own perfection – and he reached across a mass medium in ways few fighters do, pounding his gloves together, smiling, weeping, wincing, scowling. He was like an opera star,  his every gesture reaching out to the cheapest seats. 

 

His style seemed reckless, designed to sweep across rings and leave opponents disoriented before they were socked to the canvas, but what gripped his audience was Pacquiao’s ravenous appetite for battle. Even late in his career when he had slowed down he still looked like a predator smelling blood. At times his combinations seemed awkward, but in the middle of these sloppy displays came the pinpoint left hand, a round of lazy fireworks capped off by a single live grenade. The knock against Pacquiao in the early days was that he lacked sophistication, that he was nothing more than a feisty guy who enjoyed a good scrap. Yet when his prey was cornered, the execution was swift and exact, as if he’d gone from being a berserker swinging his sword to a cold, professional assassin. Pacquiao became all the more intriguing when we learned of a member of his posse whose job it was to ward off evil spirits.

 

This belief in hoodoo followed Pacquiao throughout career. It was even revealed that a dozen or so of his camp followers were positioned around his bed as he slept, the idea being that if a succubus found its way to Pacquiao’s hotel room, it would become confused and sink its fangs into the throat of a mere sparring partner rather than the beloved international boxing star. He may have been fighting in American football stadiums and living like a raja, but he was still the ragged boy who grew up in the Philippine slums, a man who attended cockfights and believed in ghosts. This is why there were stories of his countrymen, unable to afford shoes for their children but gathering on fight night, watching the action on a TV attached to a car battery. They lived vicariously through their champion whose life seemed magical. If an evil entity dared to get near Pacquiao, his fans would’ve torn it to pieces and had their hero ready for church on Sunday.

 

As displayed across 72 professional bouts and nearly as many amateur contests, Pacquiao’s raison d'être was to please crowds. “I just want to make the people happy,” Pacquiao said after his fights. He was a ham at heart, often appearing on talk shows to sing old pop hits - the high point may have been when he joined Will Ferrell for a duet of John Lennon's 'Imagine,' Pacquiao's schoolboy earnestness almost palpable. He also starred in a handful of cornball action flicks, including one where he wore a Captain Marvel cape and saved the planet. We knew members of his camp by name, and we even knew his wife, Jinkee, by sight. There were Pacquiao toys and dolls, purchased by grown men. The latest news is that he plans to run for president of his country. No one is surprised. This was no ordinary boxer, though his story had traditional boxing tropes: growing up in extreme poverty, achieving fame and glory, suffering some crushing defeats, overcoming personal problems, and then the later years, punctuated by comebacks and miracle wins. Throughout, he kept a twinkle in his eye, like the night he was receiving his prefight instructions in his dressing room and interrupted the referee to ask, “If my opponent is down on one knee, can I hit him?” When told no, he looked into the camera and winked. No matter the heights he reached, Pacquiao always seemed like a street urchin who had broken into a candy store, tossing the goodies to his pals outside.

 

Like most fighters, Pacquiao overstayed his welcome, and recently he lost to an opponent he would’ve blown away just a few years ago. In the 2010s, a less vicious Pacquiao emerged – he was so proud of his increased ring savvy that outsmarting opponents became preferable to knocking them senseless. But his admirers will always remember his string of knockout wins in the 2000s, when it seemed like sparks were flying from his gloves. The drama came from our fear that this funny little fellow might walk into a punch, as he did on occasion, his style of diving towards an opponent seeming more suicidal as he took on larger men. He was like a tightrope walker; there was always a feeling of relief when he got to the end of a fight without falling to his doom. 


Whether he belongs at the same table as Ali or Ray Robinson is irrelevant. At a time when boxing needed a new superstar, he planted his flag in the ground and declared himself the man to watch. There were other great fighters in the past few decades,  but few were as fun as Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao, whose roaring left hand and impish smile provided a small amount of light in an increasingly dark new century.

 

- Don Stradley

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

CHANGING OF THE GUARD

Anthony Joshua stood in his corner, his back to the ring, resting his head across his forearms. If the great artist Auguste Rodin had wanted to sculpt a figure and call it "The Colossus in Defeat," this was the pose. 

It was near midnight, British time, in Tottenham Stadium, September 25, 2021, a bit less than eight  years to the day of Joshua's professional boxing debut, when he'd come from the Olympics with a gold medal and an aura of burgeoning greatness. He'd need less than a round to beat a fellow named Emanuel Leo that day at the 02 Arena. In more recent times he has looked anything but great. He's just one of many reasonably talented heavyweights at work today, albeit a rich and photogenic one.

There's no reason to feel badly about Joshua's recent loss. He has earned  millions in his career. It just so happens that a quicker, more determined challenger, the Ukrainian Oleksandr Usyk, beat the wealthy champion for 12 rounds and took his title. That's boxing. However...

We're less surprised than we might've been. Joshua was most everyone's pick to defeat  Usyk. He was a genuine heavyweight giant, while Usyk was a beefed up former cruiserweight who had looked lackluster in recent bouts. Yet the loss wasn't an earth shattering upset, not comparable to when Joshua was knocked out by Andy Ruiz two years ago in New York. This time there was only a sense that our doubts about Joshua are fully realized, and shame on anyone who buys into the hype again.

Joshua has been uneven since winning the championship from Wladimir Klitschko in 2017, a rousing bout where he showed impressive grit and courage. Since then, as if reaching the top of the business had worn him out, he has proven to be unreliable, a sort of majestic racehorse that won't run. Not even promoter Eddie Hearn, Joshua's chief supporter, could put a shiny spin on his losing effort against Usyk. "I don't think it was a great performance from AJ," Hearn said. "He looked tired as the fight went on."

Joshua was a gentleman in defeat, saying only that he'd lost to the better man. Despite a rematch clause, there were no loud promises  to return and get his title back. He, too, seems weary of his own hype. 

"I think the rematch is very tough," said Hearn, "but there's absolutely nowhere to hide."

Indeed, Joshua is far too comfortable and famous to fight his way back the old-fashioned way. He also looks less like a great fighter every time he steps into a ring. Usyk beat him by official scores of 117–112, 116–112 and 115–113, while many observers thought the difference was wider than indicated by the ringside judges. Joshua had a few moments of good offense in the sixth round, and was intermittently effective with body shots, but throughout the fight he seemed confused by Usyk's movement, unable to adapt. He was nearly out on his feet in the twelfth, offering only slap-punches while southpaw Usyk popped him at will with straight lefts.

Armchair viewers weighed in with their thoughts after the bout. Most zeroed in on Joshua's lack of focus,  how he appears to have something wrong mentally. Others wonder if he has become too much of a boxer, forsaking the punching power of his earlier days. There's some truth in all of this, but the overriding knock on Joshua is that he is a typical young athlete of the era, built on a scale worthy of Mount Olympus but too pampered to maintain the requisite hunger of a champion. 

Who knows if Usyk will suffer the same consequences. He's scrappy, with a sense of humor, a nice change from the occasionally dour Joshua. There are those who say other heavyweights are better, but the one Usyk whipped on September 25 was the one  recognized as the champion of the world by four different sanctioning bodies. 

The pattern of the fight was discernible from the opening round. Joshua moved about on stiff legs, hesitant to throw his right hand. Usyk, realizing early that he was more nimble than Joshua, chipped away at him with rights. The event wasn't entirely one-sided; Usyk's face was bruised after the bout, proof that  championships don't change hands easily. The only real drama, though, was realizing that the Ukrainian underdog was pulling off an upset.

Joshua's chin, questionable even in some of his best outings, held  up this time. Yet he spent the final moments of his second championship reign against the ropes, on the verge of falling out of the ring. The final bell saved him.

There was a time in the distant past when a new heavyweight champion was major news. The imagery that reporters used in those days, that a new champion was "crowned," while the old was "dethroned," evoked a sense of  historical significance, as if they were chronicling the downfall of a king. With Joshua's loss, there's no sense of a king having fallen. He's just another athlete with more money than he'll ever need. Among his many endorsement deals, Joshua recently signed a three-year contract with a hemp supplier. As the "ambassador" for the Love Hemp Group, he's decidedly less than kingly. Long live the king of hemp.

What Joshua has going for him is British fandom. The Brits are forever loyal to their fighters, and lesser boxers than Joshua maintained strong followings even after some dreadful defeats. There were 70,000 customers in Tottenham. The British will likely buy into their man again. "Keep positive," Joshua said on social media after the bout, "even if the world’s crumbling in front of you!" 

It was a nice sentiment, but one wonders if sentiment is all Joshua has left. 

 

- Don Stradley


 

 


Monday, June 7, 2021

The YouTube Invasion

It's not as if last night's exhibition between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Logan Paul established a new low in boxing. But a promoter would have to work pretty hard to get any lower. 

There was little to take away from the event. Paul, a "YouTube celebrity," failed to make us think he was a star in the making. As for Mayweather, he looked nothing like the greatest fighter of his era, not even a 44 year-old version.  

"You've got to realize, I'm not 21 any more," Mayweather said. "It's good to move around with these young guys."

Paul, who finished the fight on his feet, was ecstatic. "This is one of the greatest moments of my life," he said.

But if going the eight round distance with a certified Hall of Fame fighter was only "one of" his greatest moments, we can't imagine what Paul considers his absolute zenith. Maybe he was more fulfilled  the time he filmed a corpse in Japan's "suicide forest" and uploaded the footage to his YouTube channel. 

As a YouTuber, Logan Paul is the equivalent of the schoolyard creep who eats nasty things on a dare. As a fighter, he's on par with the characters we used to see on Fox's Celebrity Boxing show of 20 years ago, back when one of The Partridge Family kids flailed away at  one of The Brady Bunch kids.

"I don't want anyone to tell me anything is impossible ever again," Paul said. "Everyone can beat the odds and do great things in life."

The crowd at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium may not have known what odds he referred to, nor did viewers at home. Home viewers may have beaten some odds just in seeing the fight;  the Showtime PPV feed was so botched that many spent the night staring at a blank screen. What would they have missed for their 50 bucks? The chance to watch Paul wrap his long arms around Mayweather, and to hear a bunch of loopy Showtime commentators shout BING on those few occasions when Mayweather actually landed a punch. But anyone with money to burn on such a farce can't be pitied. They had to know what was coming.

Paul appeared to be as big as a Viking chieftain, but was content to clinch his much smaller and much older opponent. The fight had no judges, so if Paul was still standing at the end he could claim a sort of moral victory for YouTubers everywhere. And though Mayweather scored with the occasional punch, he was simply too little to hurt the man in front of him. 

A fighter with Mayweather's vast experience was expected to dominate a novice such as Paul and knock him out. When this didn't happen, observers were puzzled. Did Mayweather let Paul survive? Mayweather offered no excuses after the event.

"I had fun," he said.

In some ways, it was like any other Mayweather fight, his opponent tiring as each round passed, Mayweather landing his sneak shots. The difference here was that Mayweather spent more time coming forward, while Paul backed away, a slightly dim mastiff intimidated by a feisty schnauzer. 

Suppose you were Mayweather, and you stood to make millions of dollars to fight a character from YouTube. Sure, you could do as your old rival, Manny Pacquiao, was doing, and fight tough men like Errol Spence or Keith Thurman. But would you really risk your health against such young tigers? Of course not. Add Paul to Mayweather's recent list of opponents - MMA star Conor McGregor, who'd never boxed professionally, and Tenshin Nasukawa, the tiny fellow "knocked out" by Mayweather for what appeared to be a gathering of Japanese businessmen -  and it is clear that Mayweather has become the high priest of novelty boxing.

As it turned out, Mayweather did the right thing by fighting Paul. He made a lot of money and left the ring without a scratch. Also, as it turned out, he looked his age. At times he looked like a man struggling with a King-size mattress. There's talk that he might fight Paul's brother, Jake, who made a scene at a recent press conference by stealing Mayweather's hat. We may be starved for fights, but we don't need another round of Mayweather versus the Paul family.

After the final bell,  Logan Paul did a handstand in the ring. Some observers compared him to Rocky Balboa going the distance with Apollo Creed. Of course, the fictional Balboa was a journeyman who lived in a hovel. Paul lives in a mansion in Puerto Rico and once spent $2 million on Pokemon cards. 

Still, there's no reason to dislike Paul. Perhaps we should get used to his type. We're bound to see more fighters just like him, guys with no real credentials but big followings on Twitter. If Sunday's exhibition draws anywhere close to a million buys, we may see a new generation of boxers born on our social media feeds. In our media-soaked world, being a cheap celebrity may be the quickest route to a title shot.

 - Don Stradley






Monday, May 24, 2021

The Kid Brother

"Marvin is gone," the old woman said, "but I have another son." 

This is Brockton, Massachusetts. Marvelous Marvin Hagler used to live here. 

It is Sunday afternoon, May 23rd, Hagler's birthday. Hagler's been dead for two months, and the little crowd in Marciano Stadium is celebrating "Marvelous Marvin Hagler Day." 

The woman is Hagler's mother, Ida Mae. She has sat by quietly as a series of invited guests stood on a podium and paid tribute to Hagler, the former middleweight champion of the world. During a stifling hot afternoon, she has endured  some off-key singing from a choir, and a lot of talk from local politicians, none of whom were around when Hagler was fighting. A few well known figures from the boxing world dropped by to pay their respects. Those who couldn't make it sent video tributes that played on a big screen. Now Ida Mae is onstage, holding a bouquet of flowers, addressing the small audience.

She seems elegant, but wiry and tough. You think, yes, this is the sort of woman who could've raised Hagler. But now Ida Mae is talking about this other son.

"He has been so helpful to me since Marvin passed on...I  don't know what I'd do without him..."

In the distance one can see Robbie Sims, the half-brother of Hagler. He has spent the entire afternoon on the outer rim of the event, a plain red cap pulled down over his eyes. 

Watch any of Hagler's old fights on YouTube. Watch the Hagler team running to the ring to be introduced. Sims is always up front, clearing the path for his brother, the champion. 

"Marv was captain of the ship," Robbie once told me, "and I was the first mate."

Robbie had a pretty good career. Bob Arum used to call him "the gatekeeper," because he'd fight the middleweights who weren't deserving of a title shot. If they couldn't get past Robbie, they couldn't get to Marvin. When Marvin left the boxing scene, Robbie's career petered out. He spent the later part of it fighting in makeshift rings set up in local restaurants. Relieved of his gatekeeper duty, he spent more time getting high and chasing women. 

The Brockton cops grabbed him one night, shoved him in the backseat of a squad car, and told him point blank we don't give a damn about you or your brother. He spent the night crying in a jail cell, promising God that he would be a better man. 

He ended up in rehab. He cleaned himself up, found religion, felt the hand of God on his shoulder, and went to work as a truck driver. God was good for him. Now he's here, in Brockton, listening to people talk about Marvin.

Very late in the afternoon, the MC introduces Robbie by name. "Rockin' Robbie Sims!"  

Robbie looks startled. A woman takes his arm and guides him to a safe spot one hundred yards behind the stage. He watches the  rest of the presentation from this distance, an anonymous figure in a near empty football field. 

He looks surprisingly thin. His clothes are clean and pressed, but they hang as loosely on him as a scarecrow's rags. He gets bored and starts walking around the field. He walks with a limp, the left leg dragging. Now and then he makes a funny face, or breaks into a robot dance. I keep thinking this is strange behavior for the brother of a legend.

I met  Robbie a dozen years ago at a fundraiser where his brother was signing autographs for charity. Robbie was in a corner by himself, seated against the wall, almost hidden by a large potted plant.

He was visibly uneasy. He asked a photographer to snap a photo of him with Marv. Then he walked out. 

I saw him a week later at the Brockton gym where he and Marv used to train. He hit a bag,  worked up a sweat, talked about old times. He had a lot to say about God and Satan ("The devil always knew how to reach up and press my buttons") and how he didn't enjoy being in public ("Too many voices from the past; too many ghosts"). It wasn't so much an interview as a chance to let Robbie ramble.

When the interview was published, he didn't like it. He said it was strange to read about himself. Yet he wanted 20 copies to hand out to his friends and family. I still hear from people who know him. He's a sweetheart, they say, but weird. He doesn't own a phone.

On Marvelous Marvin Hagler Day, the gathering in Brockton is shrinking. People file out to avoid the crushing heat. By the time Ida Mae gets up to speak, she's addressing only a few dozen local people, her tinny voice echoing around the deserted  stadium. The small turnout is a jarring reminder that Marvin fought a long time ago, back when Reagan was president.

It doesn't appear that Robbie will speak. This is a shame because I remember him once telling me how much he enjoyed being Marvin's brother. 

"My career was over as soon as Marv retired," Robbie said. "It wasn't fun anymore." 

I remember Robbie giggling like a child, telling stories about his youthful days with Marvin, how they would stand together in front of a mirror, posing side by side like boxers,working on the techniques Goody had taught them that day, shadowboxing in total silence so they wouldn't wake up Ida Mae. Now, hot winds blow into his face, making him squint; empty water bottles roll by his feet like tumbleweeds in a dead western town.

"Marvin is gone," his mother was saying, "but I have another son."

Instead of bringing Robbie to the stage, she introduces some Italian fellow, Marvin's driver. 

Robbie stays in the background, looking on. The driver says a few words, unintelligible because of the cheap sound system and the rising wind. And that's it. 

The M.C. thanks everyone for coming. The politicians file out. Marvelous Marvin Hagler Day is over.

At the far end of the field, away from everybody, Robbie starts applauding, putting his hands together for his mother's other son. 

Perhaps he's wondering if life will ever be fun again now that the ship's captain is gone.

 

- Don Stradley