Thursday, April 2, 2009

Red carpet Ricky



Ricky Hatton is an old stablemate, and good friend of Michael Gomez. They were together under Billy Graham.

Ricky pitched up in Hollywood this week and was handed the real red carpet treatment. Film stars Mickey Rourke and Mark Wahlberg were on hand at the famous Roosevelt Hotel on Monday night, for the final media leg of the worldwide attraction that's 'Hatton-Pacquiao'!

We are Stateside to gain a real insight into the camps of both Hatton and his outstanding ring foe Manny Pacquiao, and this special evening press conference was a great start! Hundreds of Hatton and Pacquiao fans had been waiting all day for a glimpse of their heroes, and there was a real fight fever in the air.

Men, women, children... everyone. Plenty of supporters on both sides, but especially for Pacquiao. Yet I spoke to some knowledgeable fans who feel this is Hatton's fight. They were passionate with their views.

Ricky appears to be in serious shape already, and there is a burning desire and edge to him. As the underdog, he is desperate to prove people wrong again, and is utterly convinced that he will finally become the pound-for-pound champion.

Pacquiao was cheered by the hordes hanging out on Hollywood Boulevard. Sharply dressed, relaxed and cool, Pacquiao once again offered no real fight prediction.

Sideshow

This is one classy champion, who prefers to keep his quotes to a minimum and let it all fly on fight night. Tremendously dedicated, Pacquiao seemed in excellent condition with over four weeks to go; there was a glow about Manny, and he really looked the part.

A sideshow was provided between trainers Freddie Roach and Floyd Mayweather, who continues to goad and wind up his arch rival. Mayweather's poems have hit Manchester and London on this global tour and he was off again here.

Promoter Bob Arum added to the circus by providing a garish trophy for the winning coach - just to add some spice and a sub-plot to the fascinating main event.

Fight figures joined the celebs on show, and I caught up with Victor Ortiz, one of the finest prospects in world boxing. What a great guy. Victor will soon be in hard training for a crack at the WBA Light-Welterweight champion Andreas Kotelnik, but he cannot wait for the Hatton-Pacquiao fight. He sparred with Oscar De La Hoya before the Golden Boy's nightmare against Pacquiao. He might be a fine southpaw for the Hitman's camp too this time, if they can work something out.

The media turn out was enormous - you know it's a big event when photographers bring step-ladders - and there was much jockeying for position, but our excellent cameraman out here, Oli Hallowes, managed to fight his way through through the madness so we could interview the main protagonists on the red carpet. It was a different, fun and memorable event: tune into Friday Fight Night for our exclusive piece from Hollywood.

Back home, well done to Tony Quigley for his rousing British Super-Middleweight title win against the always-brave Tony Dodson last week. I would love to see Quigley in another Liverpool showdown against Paul Smith.

As a commentator, it is obviously imperative to remain impartial, but it's only human nature to get close to people, and it's very easy to find friends within the fighting industry - mostly those who I have worked with for years.

Adamant

'Smigga' is a pal - we were brought together through our passion for Liverpool Football Club. Not only do I think his boxing talent will turn him into a domestic champion one of these days, I fully expect to see Paul in Rome for the Champion's League final on May 27th!

Ricky is another good mate of mine. But that's not the reason I feel he may upset the odds and defeat Manny Pacquiao. I really think he can win this fight. I never thought he'd beat Floyd Mayweather in December 2007, and as others began to sway towards him when that mega-match closed in, I remained adamant that Ricky would, unfortunately, come up short. The weight, the timing, really just the simple brilliance of Mayweather.

Pacquiao deserves his place at the top; he is a supremely fast, skillful, powerful southpaw who has achieved truly great things, but he is not the defensive genius that's Mayweather. I'm not sure Manny beats Floyd - a fight we should see if Pacquiao wins on May 2nd - because Mayweather's 'retirement' was never permanent.

Yet I don't think Pacquiao necessarily beats Hatton. This time the weight is correct, and the time may be right for the Hitman. Ricky Hatton could well become pound-for-pound king.

Having said that, I have been mightily impressed with Pacquiao's attitude and drive ahead of the super-fight. I also really like, admire and rate his trainer Freddie Roach. Freddie told me over and over again that Pacquiao would easily stop De La Hoya in the middle rounds. I ignored him.

Now he predicts Hatton's downfall in a short, explosive tear up a la Hagler-Hearns. Roach actually has a big soft spot for Hatton, but he really likes his fighter in this, and says Ricky won't last three rounds.

I am standing poised to ignore my friend Freddie again - maybe that's my folly - but it's not a heart-over-head call. I just have a sneaky suspicion that Ricky Hatton will be too much for Manny Pacquiao at his beloved 10 stone.

However, if you read my exclusive report next week from the training camp of the man Hatton must topple, you will see why Manny Pacquiao is the heavily fancied pre-fight favourite...

Source: skysports.com

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