Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao
(, /pa'kjaw/ in Cebuano and Tagalog; born December 17, 1978), known as Manny "Pac-Man" Pacquiao
is a Filipino professional boxer. He is the former WBC Lightweight world champion, WBC Super Featherweight world champion, IBF Super Bantamweight world champion, and WBC Flyweight world champion. He has also held the Ring Magazine
titles for Featherweight, Super Featherweight, and Light Welterweight divisions. For his achievements, he became the first Filipino and Asian boxer to win five world titles in five different weight divisions. He is currently the IBO and Ring Magazine
Light Welterweight champion and is rated by the Ring Magazine as the #1 pound-for-pound boxer in the world. He is also the first boxer to win the lineal championship in four different weight classes. [1]
Since becoming famous, he as also dabbled in politics, acting and music recording.
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MANNY PACQUIAO TICKETS
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Personal life
Pacquiao was born in
Kibawe, Bukidnon,
Mindanao and currently resides in his home town
General Santos City,
South Cotabato,
Philippines.
[2] He is married to Jinkee Pacquiao
[3] and they have four children.
[4]
Early career
Pacquiao started his professional boxing career at the age of 16 at 106 lbs (Light Flyweight). His early fights took place in small local venues and were shown on
Vintage Sports'
Blow by Blow
, an evening boxing show. His professional debut was a 4-round bout against Edmund "Enting" Ignacio on January 22, 1995, which Pacquiao won via decision, becoming an instant star of the program. Close friend Mark Penaflorida's death in 1994 spurred the young Pacquiao to pursue a professional boxing career.
His weight increased from 106 to 113 lbs before losing in his 12th bout against Rustico Torrecampo via a third-round
knockout (KO). Pacquiao had not made the weight. So he was forced to use heavier gloves than Torrecampo, thereby putting Pacquiao at a disadvantage.
[5]
Shortly after the Torrecampo fight, Pacquiao settled at 112 lbs, winning the WBC Flyweight title over
Chatchai Sasakul in the eighth round only to lose it in his second defense against
Medgoen Singsurat, also known as Medgoen 3K Battery, via a third-round knockout on a bout held at
Nakhon Si Thammarat,
Thailand. Technically, Pacquiao lost the belt at the scales as he surpassed the weight limit of 112 lbs (51 kg).
Following his loss to Singsurat, Pacquiao gained weight anew. This time, Pacquiao went to the Super Bantamweight division of 122 lbs (55 kg), where he picked up the WBC International Super Bantamweight title. He defended the title five times before his chance for a world title fight came.
Pacquiao's big break came on June 23, 2001, against IBF Super Bantamweight champion
Lehlohonolo Ledwaba. Pacquiao stepped into the fight as a late replacement and won the fight by technical knockout to become the IBF Super Bantamweight champion on a bout held at
MGM Grand,
Las Vegas,
Nevada. He defended this title five times and fought to a sixth-round draw against
Agapito Sánchez in a bout that was stopped early after Pacquiao received 2 headbutts.
Pacquiao's rise
1st fight with Barrera
Pacquiao went on to defend his title four times with expert training from
Freddie Roach at the Wild Card Gym, improving his hand speed and mental preparation before the match that many consider to have defined his career, a bout against
Marco Antonio Barrera. Pacquiao, moving up in weight and in his first fight ever in the Featherweight division, brought his power with him and defeated Barrera via a TKO in the 11th round at the
Alamodome,
San Antonio, Texas. Although this fight was not recognized as a title fight by any sanctioning bodies, Pacquiao was recognized as world champion by
Ring Magazine after his victory,
[6] and he held that title until relinquishing it in 2005.
1st fight with Márquez
Only 6 months removed from his win over Barrera, Pacquiao went on to challenge another respected Mexican counterpuncher,
Juan Manuel Márquez, then holder of the
World Boxing Association (WBA) and International Boxing Federation (IBF) Featherweight titles. The fight held at the MGM Grand ended in a controversial draw after he knocked down Márquez three times in the first round but lost most of the latter rounds. One of the judges later admitted to making an error in the scorecards because he scored the first round as "10-7" in favor of Pacquiao instead of the standard "10-6" for a three-knockdown round.
1st fight with Morales
Pacquiao once again moved up another division from 126 to 130 lbs to fight another Mexican legend, three-time division champion
Érik Morales on March 19, 2005, at the MGM Grand Las Vegas. However, this time around, at his first fight in the Super Featherweight division, Pacquiao lost the 12-round match by a unanimous decision from the judges.
WBC International Super Featherweight title
On September 10, 2005, Manny Pacquiao fought
Héctor Velázquez at
Staples Center in
Los Angeles, California. He knocked Velázquez out in 6 rounds to capture the WBC International Super Featherweight title. On the same day, his rival, Erik Morales, fought against
Zahir Raheem. However, Morales fought a lackluster performance, losing to Raheem via unanimous decision.
2nd bout with Morales
The much-anticipated rematch between Pacquiao and Morales happened on January 21, 2006 at
Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas. In that fight, Morales escaped being knocked down twice, one during the 2nd round by holding on to the ropes and the other on the 6th round by falling on the referee's body. Pacquiao eventually knocked Morales out in the 10th round, dealing him the first knockout loss in his boxing career.
Oscar Larios
On July 2, 2006, Pacquiao defeated
Óscar Larios, a two-time Super Bantamweight champion who had moved up two weight divisions in order to face Pacquiao. Despite his camp's big promise of an early knockout, the fight went until the final round, with Pacquiao knocking down Larios two times during the 12-round bout for the WBC International Super Featherweight title held at the
Araneta Coliseum in
Quezon City, Philippines.
[7]
Final bout with Morales
Pacquiao and Morales fought for a third time (with the series tied 1-all) on November 18, 2006. Witnessed by a near-record crowd of 18,276, the match saw Pacquiao defeating Morales via a third-round knockout at the
Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
[8]
After the Pacquiao-Morales rematch,
Bob Arum, Pacquiao's main promoter, announced that Manny returned his signing bonus check back to
Golden Boy Promotions, signaling intentions to stay with
Top Rank. This resulted in GBP's decision to sue Pacquiao over contractual breaches.
[9]
At the end of 2006, he was named by both
HBO and
Ring Magazine as the "Fighter of the Year", with HBO also naming him as the most exciting fighter of the year.
Jorge Solis
After a failed promotional negotiation with Marco Antonio Barrera's camp, Bob Arum chose
Jorge Solís as Pacquiao's next opponent among several fighters that Arum offered him to fight as a replacement. The bout was held in
San Antonio,
Texas on April 14, 2007. In the sixth round of the bout, an accidental headbutt occurred, giving Pacquiao a cut under his left eyebrow. The fight ended in the eighth round when Pacquiao knocked Solis down twice; with Solis barely beating the count after the second knockdown, the referee (who was also a doctor) was prompted to stop the fight. The victory raised Pacquiao's win-loss-draw record to 44-3-2, with 34 knockouts.
Second bout with Barrera
On June 29, 2007, it was announced that
Top Rank and
GBP agreed to settle their lawsuit, meaning the long-awaited rematch with
Marco Antonio Barrera will occur despite being the #1 contender for the Super Featherweight title of Juan Manuel Márquez.
Since Bob Arum was out on a vacation, GBP's chief executive Richard Schaefer politely declined to discuss Pacquiao’s purse from the October 6, 2007 rematch with Marco Antonio Barrera (at the Mandalay Bay Resort Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas). However, Pacquiao was likely to get a purse of $5 million, plus possibly a share of the pay-per-view rights.
[10] Pacquiao defeated Barrera in their rematch via an easy unanimous decision. In the 11th round, Pacquiao's punch caused a deep cut under Barrera's right eye. Barrera retaliated with an illegal punch on the break (WHAT?) that dazed Pacquiao but also caused the referee to deduct a point from Barrera. Two judges scored the bout 118-109, whereas the third scored it 115-112.
[11]
Other events
In
The Ring Magazine
, Pacquiao (45-3-2) remained at the top of the Junior Lightweight division (130 lbs). He had been in the ratings for 108 weeks. Pacquiao was also at No. 2 in the pound-for-pound category behind former Welterweight champion
Floyd Mayweather Jr.
[12] [13]
On November 13, 2007, he was honored by the WBC as
Champ Emeritus
during its 45th Annual World Convention held at the
Manila Hotel.
[14]
On November 20, 2007, José Nuñez, manager of
WBO Super Featherweight champion
Joan Guzmán, accused Pacquiao's handler Bob Arum of evading a match between the two boxers to protect Pacquiao.
[15] Guzmán went as far as to directly call out Pacquiao at the postfight press conference of the Pacquiao-Barrera rematch in front of a stunned crowd at the
Mandalay Bay Events Center's media room in
Las Vegas.
[16]
The 240-member
House of Representatives of the Philippines, on August 7, 2008, issued a Resolution, sponsored by
South Cotabato Rep. Darlene Antonino-Custodio, which recognized Pacquiao as “a people’s champ” - “for his achievements and in appreciation of the honor and inspiration he has been bringing ... to the Filipino people.” He received a plaque from Speaker
Prospero Nograles.
[17] [18]
On July, 2008, it was announced that Pacquiao would be the flag bearer of the
Philippines at the 2008 Summer Olympics.
[19] He became the first Filipino Olympic non-participant to be Team Philippines’ flag-bearer during the August 8 opening ceremonies of the
2008 Summer Olympics at the
Beijing National Stadium. Swimmer
Miguel Molina,
2005 Southeast Asian Games’ Best Male Athlete, yielded the honor to Pacquiao, upon
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo's request to national sports officials on the
Philippines at the 2008 Summer Olympics.
[20]
Rematch with Márquez
On March 15, 2008, in a rematch against
Juan Manuel Márquez called "Unfinished Business", Pacquiao won via a disputed split decision in a close, hard fought battle in which Pacquiao knocked Márquez down in round 3. Pacquiao won the
WBC and
The Ring
Super Featherweight belts, making him the first Filipino to win three world titles in three different weight divisions (Pacquiao was a former WBC Flyweight champion and former IBF Super Bantamweight champion).
During the postfight interview, Márquez’s camp called for an immediate rematch. Richard Schaefer, GBP CEO, offered a $6-million guarantee to Pacquiao for a rematch. Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, still stinging from the less-than-stellar revenue from
Kelly Pavlik’s immediate rematch with
Jermain Taylor, said the fight will probably happen but only after there is time to “put a little air under it.” Pacquiao, for his part, said "I don't think so, this business is over" because he planned to move to lightweight (135 lbs) to challenge
David Díaz, the reigning WBC Lightweight champion at that time. Díaz won the majority decision over Ramón Montano that night as an undercard of the "Unfinished Business" fight.
WBC Lightweight title
On June 28, 2008, at the
Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, Pacquiao defeated
David Díaz via ninth-round knockout to become the WBC Lightweight champion. With the victory, Pacquiao became the only Filipino and Asian boxer to win four major titles in four weight classes and also became the first Filipino fighter to ever win a world title at Lightweight.
[21] [22] The fight ended at 2:23 of the ninth round and was viewed by 8,362 spectators. Bob Arum announced that Pacquiao is most likely to fight November 15
[23] versus 130-lb
Venezuelan champion
Edwin Valero or
Humberto Soto in
Planet Hollywood, and he also mentioned the name of WBA,
WBO, and
IBF Lightweight champion
Nate Campbell. "I can fight in November," Pacquiao stated, "Who I fight is the job of my promoter (Bob Arum)." Díaz had his best payday,
$850,000, and Pacquiao earned at least $3 million.
[24] [25]
Bob Arum reported that the Pacquiao-David Díaz fight which made $ 12.5-M (250,000
pay-per-view subscriptions at $ 49.95 each), paled in comparison to the 400,000 in the Márquez showdown. The sales reached over $20 million. Pacquiao’s 3 classic fights with Érik Morales earned a combined sales of 1 million pay-per-view hits. After
HBO and
Top Rank get their share, Pacquiao and Díaz will get theirs based on the contract, that is, in addition to the $ 3 million contract pay. Official records revealed an attendance of only 8,362 tickets of the seating capacity of 12,000.
[26]
Meanwhile,
WBC president Don
José Sulaimán clarified that Pacquiao is not a 5-division but 4-division world champion, because the November 2003 Barrera fight was a non-title bout.
[27]
Holding both the WBC Super Featherweight and Lightweight titles following the win, Pacquiao decided to vacate his Super Featherweight title in July 2008 in order to defend his Lightweight crown.
[28]
Pacquiao vs. De La Hoya
On December 6, 2008, Pacquiao faced
Oscar De La Hoya at the
MGM Grand Hotel in
Las Vegas,
Nevada, in a fight called
Dream Match. Pacquiao asserted himself over De La Hoya from the first round till the eighth round. De La Hoya's corner threw in the towel before the start of the 9th round. Pacquiao won via
technical knockout.
[29] [30]
Presented by
Golden Boy Promotions and
Top Rank, Inc., the bout was scheduled as a 12-round, non-title fight contested at the 147-pound
Welterweight limit. Although Pacquiao went into the fight widely recognized as the leading
pound-for-pound boxer in the world, some boxing pundits had speculated that 147 pounds could be too far above his natural weight against the larger De La Hoya.
[31]
Pacquiao received $15 to 30 million (share of the
pay-per-view), plus a guaranteed amount.
[32]
Tickets reportedly sold out just hours after they went on sale. The total gate revenues were said to be nearly $17 million dollars. That amount apparently gave the bout the second largest gate revenue in boxing history.
[33]
Pacquiao vs. Hatton
On May 2, 2009, Pacquiao fought
Ricky Hatton for the
IBO and
Ring Magazine Light Welterweight titles
[34] at
MGM Grand Las Vegas in
Las Vegas, Nevada.
[35]
The fight was originally placed in jeopardy due to disputes with both camps over the fight purse money. Eventually, the money issue was settled and the fight went on as scheduled.
HBO aired the contest.
[36]
Pacquiao started the fight strong, knocking down a sluggish Hatton twice in the first round. At the bell, Hatton seemed to have re-grouped, only to get knocked down for the third time 2:59 into the second round, awarding Pacquiao the win by KO.
[37]
Pacquiao vs. Cotto
On November 14, Pacquiao is slated to face
WBO welterweight champion
Miguel Ángel Cotto of
Puerto Rico, at the
MGM Grand Las Vegas. Even before Ricky Hatton's fight against
Paulie Malignaggi last year, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum stated his desire for Pacquiao to fight Cotto.
[38] Pacquiao then gave Arum the go signal to arrange the fight after Cotto won a hard-fought decision against
Joshua Clottey at
Madison Square Garden in
New York City.
[39] Meanwhile, current
WBA welterweight champion
"Sugar" Shane Mosley tried to lure Pacquiao to fight him.
[40] Mosley even offered Pacquiao for a fight at
junior welterweight (140 pounds), Pacquiao's weight class as of the moment.
[41] However, after unsuccessful attempts, Mosley shifted his focus to a fight against WBC welterweight champion
Andre Berto.
[42]
Among the details that were agreed upon for the Pacquiao-Cotto fight were the weight (both camps agreed to the 145-pound catchweight) and the purse (Pacquiao will get the 65% share of PPV buys, as compared to Cotto's 35% share).
[43] As of the moment, it is still not clear whether Cotto's WBO welterweight belt will be at stake, although WBO has ranked Pacquiao as the #1 contender for Cotto's welterweight belt.
[44]
Politics
Pacquiao ran for a
congressional seat to represent the
1st district of South Cotabato, but he was defeated by
Darlene Antonino-Custodio. Custodio had 139,061 votes, whereas Pacquiao received 75,908 votes.
[45]
Pacquiao has said he will enter politics after he ends his boxing career. He quietly visited the Philippine
Commission on Elections, escorted by
Arnold "Ali" Atienza (son of then-Manila Mayor
Lito Atienza), to transfer his residence from General Santos City to Manila.
[46] This fueled speculations that he may seek an elective post in the nation's capital, which even gave him the title "Adopted Son" after he won his earlier bouts.
His name was once mentioned as a possible vice-mayoralty candidate to the younger Atienza when the latter sought the city's highest post in the 2007 elections, but this did not pan out after Sen.
Panfilo Lacson, then the leading candidate for Manila mayor, backed out for contentions regarding Lacson's residency issues (in which Pacquiao also had such issues).
Being known as an
Arroyo supporter, his name is also being floated as a candidate of the
Lakas-CMD party for the mayoralty race of
General Santos City against incumbent Mayor Pedro Acharon. Instead, he was recently sworn-in as a member of the
Liberal Party under the Atienza wing, thus further fueling his political ambition.
On February 12, 2007, the famed boxer announced that he was running for congress representing South Cotabato.
[47] His decision however easily turned off both his fans and the general public.
[48] Election experts stressed that as Pacquiao insists on participating in his next professional boxing match, he will immerse himself into a legal conflict regarding campaign exposure, especially since the match will be televised nationwide. Aside from that, COMELEC commissioner
Benjamin Abalos mentioned a possible legal entanglement could ruin Pacquiao's candidacy because he already registered himself as a Manila resident months before.
Numerous sports personalities and analysts around the Philippines expressed that Pacquiao should think seriously and deeply about his sports career, which could potentially be destroyed by the dirty world of politics. On February 24, 2007, in
Cebu City, Pacquiao was booed by thousands of spectators as his presence was acknowledged by the organizers of The Battle of Cebu, a WBO-sanctioned boxing festival.
[49] [50] [51] [52] [53] The embarrassment later led to confusing statements made by then-Manila Mayor Lito Atienza
[54] that the famed fighter would withdraw. The negative sentiment among Cebuanos over Pacquiao's political aspiration was felt even before the "The Battle of Cebu" was held because at least one citizen's comment got published by local newspaper Sun Star.
[55]
In relation to the Pacquiao's April 14 fight with
Jorge Solis, the political opposition stated that they would not press for a ban on the broadcasting of the match despite its potential to violate election campaign rules.
[56] Although he won over Solis, Pacquiao's appeal diminished most likely due to his political ambition. His last fight attracted noticeably smaller audiences, and his performance was considered by many as disappointing.
[57] [58] Some election candidates even turned the Pacquiao-Solis match into campaign gigs.
[59] Over at General Santos City, Diocese of Marbel spokesman Fr. Angel Buenavides considered President Arroyo's endorsement of Pacquiao as a "curse" because constituents in the area have strong anti-Arroyo sentiments.
[60]
On May 17, 2007, Pacquiao suffered a lopsided election defeat to incumbent representative Darlene Antonino-Custodio, with a deficit of approximately 37,000 votes according to the
NAMFREL tally. Meanwhile,
WBC head
José Sulaimán stated that Pacquiao "doesn’t appear to be having the same dynamic impact at the ballot box, as he does in the ringed square."
[61] The defeat became a depressing matter for the boxer himself because he lost a huge sum of money when his supporters allegedly funneled campaign funds to their own pockets. Pacquiao's personal money was part of the campaign budget.
[62] Ironically, Pacquiao's fans rejoiced over his defeat.
[63] Some even declared his loss as a "victory" for boxing. On May 20, 2007, Manny Pacquiao formally conceded to congresswoman
Antonino-Custodio, vowing to return to boxing and spend more time with his family.
[64] [65] [66]
In August 2007, Pacquiao filed a P30-million libel suit against four journalists of the
Manila Bulletin due to an article which stated that he "is reported to be a compulsive gambler and is known to bet hundreds of thousand in casinos, cockfighting, and billiards."
[67] The case was later dismissed via "affidavit of desistance", and Pacquiao stated that pursuing the case would only cause inconvenience to him and his family.
[68]
On September 1, 2008, Pacquiao was sworn by Secretary
Ronaldo Puno, as member of
Kabalikat ng Malayang Pilipino (Kampi). Pacquiao officially announced that he is retiring in August 2009, and will be running again in the
Philippine general election, 2010.
[69] [70]
In popular culture
A film based on Pacquiao's life,
Pacquiao: The Movie
, was released on June 21, 2006, featuring Filipino actor
Jericho Rosales as Manny Pacquiao and was directed by
Joel Lamangan.
[71] The film flopped at the box office, grossing a total of only P4,812,191 (approximately US$99,322), as confirmed by Lamangan. In 2008, Pacquiao starred with
Ara Mina and
Valerie Concepcion in his latest action movie titled "Anak ng Kumander". The movie was not a commercial success and was panned by critics.
Pacquiao is featured in the boxing video games
Fight Night Round 2
,
Fight Night Round 3
and
Fight Night Round 4
.
EA Sports released a limited edition demo of Fight Night Round 4, featuring
Pacquiao and
Ricky Hatton prior to their
May 2 fight.
[72]
He became the first
Filipino athlete to appear on a
postage stamp.
[73]
With his popularity, various business sectors have solicited Manny Pacquiao's help in endorsing their products through commercial advertisements in print and in broadcast media. These include detergents, medicines, foods, garments, telecommunications, and even a political ad for
Chavit Singson during the
May 14, 2007 elections. His most acclaimed commercials yet were for
Nike's "Fast Forward" campaign (along side
Kobe Bryant,
Maria Sharapova,
Roger Federer,
Cristiano Ronaldo and
Liu Xiang)
[74] and for
San Miguel Beer with
Jet Li [75] and Érik Morales
[76].
On April 12, 2007, the COMELEC canceled his commercial appearances in accordance with existing Philippine election laws. Airing of the commercials resumed after the elections.
Upon the expiration of his contract with
ABS-CBN, he signed up with
GMA Network as an actor on September 2007. On December 17, 2007, after finishing a movie, Pacquiao went to the GMA Network to tape his first episode of
Pinoy Records
.
[77]
Pacquiao briefly starred for the TV series by
GMA,
Carlo J. Caparas'
Totoy Bato
, alongside fellow actors
Robin Padilla and
Regine Velasquez. It was first aired in February 2009.
Pacquiao and American actor
Sylvester Stallone are in plans of doing a movie. Stallone has stated interest in doing a movie with Pacquiao, who he said will be his co-star in the movie. Stallone, being a Pacquiao fan, showed interest. If the script passes and both sides agree, the film will be Pacquiao's big break to the American audience and American main stream. Plans were only confirmed and interest, thus the script is in works and confirmation as well of both sides agreements of the plot and characters are still not confirmed.
[78]
Pacquiao was also mentioned by
World Wrestling Entertainment's
ECW on Syfy
color commentator Matt Striker in reference to
Christian's tag team match with
Tommy Dreamer vs.
Jack Swagger and
Mark Henry. Striker compares Christian's left and right punches like the speed of Pacquiao's fists.
[79]
Pacquiao has been included by
Time Magazine as one of
the world's most influential people for the year 2009, for his exploits in boxing and his influence among the Filipino people.
[80] Pacquiao was also included by
Forbes Magazine in its annual
Celebrity 100 list for the year 2009, joining Hollywood actress
Angelina Jolie and fellow athletes
Tiger Woods and Bryant.
[81] Forbes also listed Pacquiao as world's 6th highest-paid athlete, with a total of $40 million from second half of 2008 to first half of 2009. The athletes who ranked ahead of Pacquiao were Woods at number 1 spot ($110 million); Bryant, basketball legend
Michael Jordan, and
Formula One star
Kimi Räikkönen sharing the number 2 rank ($45 million each); and football superstar
David Beckham at number 5 ($42 million).
[82] Pacquiao had also won the 2009
ESPY Awards for the
Best Fighter category, beating fellow boxer
Shane Mosley and
Brazilian
mixed martial arts fighter
Lyoto Machida.
[83]
Professional boxing record
|-
|align="center" colspan=8|
49 Wins
(37 knockouts, 12 decisions),
3 Defeats
(2 by knockout, 1 by decision),
2 Draws
|-
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Res.
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Opponent
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Type
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Rd., Time
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Date
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Location
| align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3"|
Notes
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Ricky Hatton
|
KO
| 2
(12),
2:59
| 2009-05-02
|align=left| MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Won IBO and Ring Magazine World Light Welterweight Titles.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Oscar De La Hoya
|
TKO
| 8
(12),
3:00
| 2008-12-06
|align=left| MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
A non-title fight, fought at Welterweight.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
David Díaz
|TKO
| 9
(12),
2:24
| 2008-06-28
|align=left|
Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Won WBC World Lightweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Juan Manuel Márquez
|Decision
(split)
| 12
(12)
| 2008-03-15
|align=left| Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Won WBC and vacant Ring Magazine World Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Marco Antonio Barrera
|Decision
(unan.)
| 12
(12)
| 2007-10-06
|align=left| Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Jorge Solís
|KO
| 8
(12),
1:16
| 2007-04-14
|align=left|
Alamodome,
San Antonio, United States
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Érik Morales
|KO
| 3
(12),
2:57
| 2006-11-18
|align=left|
Thomas and Mack Center, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Óscar Larios
|Decision
(unan.)
| 12
(12)
| 2006-07-02
|align=left|
Araneta Coliseum,
Quezon City,
Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Érik Morales
|TKO
| 10
(12),
2:33
| 2006-01-21
|align=left| Thomas and Mack Center, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Héctor Velázquez
|TKO
| 6
(12),
2:59
| 2005-09-10
|align=left|
Staples Center,
Los Angeles, United States
|align=left|
Won vacant WBC International Super Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ffdddd; color: black;" class="table-no2" |Loss
| align=left|
Érik Morales
|Decision
(unan.)
| 12
(12)
| 2005-03-19
|align=left| MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
WBC International Super Featherweight Title on the line.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Fahsan Por Thawatchai
|TKO
| 4
(12),
1:26
| 2004-12-11
|align=left|
Fort Bonifacio Global City,
Taguig City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #dae2f1"|Draw
| align=left|
Juan Manuel Márquez
|Draw
| 12
(12)
| 2004-05-08
|align=left| MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
WBA and IBF World Featherweight Titles on the line.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Marco Antonio Barrera
|TKO
| 11
(12),
2:56
| 2003-11-15
|align=left| Alamodome, San Antonio, United States
|align=left|
Won Ring Magazine World Featherweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Emmanuel Lucero
|KO
| 3
(12),
0:48
| 2003-07-26
|align=left|
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, United States
|align=left|
Retained IBF World Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Serikzhan Yeshmagambetov
|TKO
| 5
(10),
1:52
| 2003-03-15
|align=left|
Rizal Park,
Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Fahprakorb Rakkiatgym
|KO
| 1
(12),
2:46
| 2002-10-26
|align=left|
Rizal Memorial College Gym,
Davao City, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained IBF World Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Jorge Eliecer Julio
|TKO
| 2
(12),
1:09
| 2002-06-08
|align=left|
The Pyramid,
Memphis, United States
|align=left|
Retained IBF World Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #dae2f1"|Draw
| align=left|
Agapito Sánchez
|Technical Draw
| 6
(12),
1:12
| 2001-11-10
|align=left|
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium,
San Francisco, United States
|align=left|
WBO and IBF World Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Lehlohonolo Ledwaba
|TKO
| 6
(12),
0:59
| 2001-06-23
|align=left| MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States
|align=left|
Won IBF World Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Wethya Sakmuangklang
|TKO
| 6
(12)
| 2001-04-28
|align=left|
Kidapawan City,
Cotabato, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Tetsutora Senrima
|TKO
| 5
(12)
| 2001-02-24
|align=left|
Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left| Nedal Hussein
|TKO
| 10
(12),
1:48
| 2000-10-14
|align=left|
Ynares Center,
Antipolo City, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left| Seung-Kon Chae
|TKO
| 1
(12),
1:42
| 2000-06-28
|align=left|
Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Arnel Barotillo
|KO
| 4
(12)
| 2000-03-04
|align=left|
Ninoy Aquino Stadium, Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Reynante Jamili
|KO
| 2
(12)
| 1999-12-18
|align=left|
Elorde Sports Complex,
Parañaque City, Philippines
|align=left|
Won WBC International Super Bantamweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ffdddd; color: black;" class="table-no2" |Loss
| align=left|
Medgoen Singsurat
|KO
| 3
(12)
| 1999-09-17
|align=left|
Pakpanag Metropolitan Stadium,
Nakhon Si Thammarat,
Thailand
|align=left|
Lost WBC World Flyweight title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Gabriel Mira
|TKO
| 4
(12),
2:45
| 1999-04-24
|align=left|
Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained WBC World Flyweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left| Todd Makelim
|TKO
| 3
(10)
| 1999-02-20
|align=left|
Kidapawan City, Cotabato, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Chatchai Sasakul
|KO
| 8
(12)
| 1998-12-04
|align=left|
Tonsuk College Ground,
Phutthamonthon, Thailand
|align=left|
Won WBC World Flyweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Shin Terao
|TKO
| 1
(10)
| 1998-05-18
|align=left|
Korakuen Hall,
Tokyo,
Japan
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Panomdej Ohyuthanakorn
|KO
| 1
(12)
| 1997-12-06
|align=left|
South Cotabato Stadium,
Koronadal City,
South Cotabato, Philippines
|align=left|
Retained OPBF Flyweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Melvin Magramo
|Decision
| 10
(10)
| 1997-09-13
|align=left|
Cebu City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Chokchai Chockvivat
|KO
| 5
(12)
| 1997-06-26
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
Won OPBF Flyweight Title.
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Ariel Austria
|TKO
| 6
| 1997-05-30
|align=left|
Almendras Gym, Davao City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left| Wook-Ki Lee
|KO
| 1
(10),
1:04
| 1997-04-24
|align=left|
Makati City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Mike Luna
|KO
| 1
(10)
| 1997-03-03
|align=left|
Muntinlupa City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left| Sung-Yul Lee
|TKO
| 2
| 1996-12-28]
|align=left|
Muntinlupa City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Ippo Gala
|TKO
| 2
| 1996-07-27
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Bert Batiller
|TKO
| 4
| 1996-06-15
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
John Medina
|TKO
| 4
| 1996-05-05
|align=left|
Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Marlon Carillo
|Decision
| 10
(10)
| 1996-04-27
|align=left|
Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ffdddd; color: black;" class="table-no2" |Loss
| align=left|
Jesus "Jojo" Mallari
|KO
| 3
| 1996-02-09
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Lito Torrejos
|Decision
|
(5)
| 1996-01-13
|align=left|
Parañaque City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Rolando Toyogon
|Decision
| 10
(10)
| 1995-12-09
|align=left|
Manila, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Rudolfo Fernandez
|TKO
| 3
(10)
| 1995-11-11
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Renato Mendones
|TKO
| 2
(8)
| 1995-10-21
|align=left|
Puerto Princesa City,
Palawan, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Lolito Laroa
|Decision
| 8
(8)
| 1995-10-07
|align=left|
Makati City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Armando Rocil
|KO
| 3
| 1995-09-16
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Acasio Simbajon
|Decision
(unan.)
| 6
(6)
| 1995-08-03
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Dele Decierto
|TKO
| 2
| 1995-07-01
|align=left|
Mandaluyong City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Rocky Palma
|Decision
| 6
(6)
| 1995-05-01
|align=left|
Montano Hall,
Cavite City, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Pinoy Montejo
|Decision
| 4
(4)
| 1995-03-18
|align=left|
Mindoro Occidental, Philippines
|align=left|
|-align=center
|style="background: #ddffdd; color: black;" class="table-yes2" |Win
| align=left|
Edmund Enting Ignacio
|Decision
| 4
(4)
| 1995-01-22
|align=left|
Mindoro Occidental, Philippines
|align=left|
Titles
Major:
- WBC world flyweight champion
- IBF world super bantamweight champion
- WBC world super featherweight champion
- WBC world lightweight champion
Minor:
- OPBF flyweight champion
- WBC international super bantamweight champion
- WBC international super featherweight champion
- IBO world light welterweight champion
The Ring Magazine titles:
- World featherweight champion
- World super featherweight champion
- World light welterweight champion
Lineal Championship titles:
- World flyweight champion
- World featherweight champion
- World junior lightweight champion
- World junior welterweight champion
Recognitions
- 2006 & 2008 Ring Magazine Fighter of the Year
- 2006 & 2008 [84] Boxing Writers Association Of America Fighter of the Year
- 2009 ESPY Awards Best Fighter [85]
- WBC Emeritus Champion
- The Ring Magazine #1 Pound For Pound
- 5-Time PSA Sportsman of the Year
- 2008 University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) Honorary Award for Sports Excellence [86]
- 2008 BoxingScene.com Fighter of the Year [87]
- 2008 Sports Illustrated Boxer of the Year [88]
- 2008 SecondsOut.com Fighter of the Year [89]
- 2008 TheSweetScience.com Boxer of the Year [90]
- 2008 WBC Boxer of the Year [91]
- 2008 Yahoo Sports Fighter of the Year [92]
- 2008 ESPN Star's Champion of Champions [93]
- 2009 TIME 100 Most Influential People (Heroes & Icons Category) [94]
- 2009 Forbes Magazine Celebrity 100 (ranked 57th) [95]
See also
- List of lightweight boxing champions
- List of super featherweight boxing champions
- List of super bantamweight boxing champions
- List of flyweight boxing champions
- List of IBF world champions
- List of IBO world champions
- List of WBC world champions
- List of The Ring world champions
- List of boxing triple champions
- List of boxing quadruple champions
- List of boxing quintuple champions
- List of boxing sextuple champions
- List of current world boxing champions
- Reigning boxing champions
- Ring Magazine pound for pound
References
- SI.com, Beatdown of Hatton lifts Pacquiao into pantheon of all-time greats
- canadastarboxing.com, Profile and Bio
- rightpuindits.com, Manny Pacquiao has a baby girl!
- examiner.com, Boxer Manny Pacquiao welcomes baby girl
- Manny Pacquiao: Conquering the Boxing World
- Pacquiao Relinquishes Ring Magazine Title
- Manny Pacquiao's tune up fight Philippines vs. Mexico
- Pacquiao destroys Morales!
- Golden Boy to sue PacMan; Filipino ring idol No. 2 pound-for-pound
- Pacquiao purse $5m?
- sports.yahoo.com, Pacquiao rolls past Barrera in rematch
- Ratings and championship policy
- Donaire, Condes make it to Ring Magazine ratings
- WBC honors Pacquiao as ‘Champ Emeritus’
- Boxing News - 24 hours/day - Reload often!
- Guzman beats Soto, wants Pacquiao next
- abs-cbnnews.com, Congress, ex-rival honor Pacquiao
- inquirer.net, Pacquiao declared ‘people’s champ,’ envoy to Games
- "Boxing icon to carry Philippine flag for Beijing Olympics", Xinhua, July 4, 2008
- inquirer.net, Pacquiao records another first
- eastsideboxing.com, Pacquiao solidifies position as Pound-for-Pound #1
- Natividad, Ivan. "Manny Pacquiao WBC Lightweight Title Coverage", AsianWeek, 2008-07-02. Retrieved on 2008-07-03
- abs-cbnnews.com, Nevada says Pacquiao-Valero fight set Nov.15
- sports.espn.go.com, All hail the new king
- iht.com, Manny Pacquiao stops David Díaz in 9th round to claim unprecedented fourth title
- abs-cbnnews.com, Sales of Pacquiao-Diaz pay-per-view may hit $12.5-M
- boxingscene.com, Sulaiman's position on Pacquiao title controversy
- fightnews.com, Pacquiao to stay at 135!
- inquirer.net, Pacquiao wins!
- gmanews.tv, Pacquiao reigns over de la Hoya
- mirror.co.uk, Barry McGuigan - This little and large freak show makes me feel queasy
- inquirer.net, Longest training for Pacquiao’s ‘greatest fight’
- Tickets for De La Hoya-Pacquiao nearly sold out - Boxing - Yahoo! Sports
- latimes.com, Undercard to Pacquiao-Hatton: HBO vs. Showtime
- No Pacquiao Panic By Arum, Certain Manny Will Accept 50-50 Split!
- HBO bests Showtime in bid for bout
- Pacquiao Knocks Out Hatton in Title Bout - NYTimes.com
- ABS-CBNNews.com, Arum: After Hatton, Pacquiao may fight Cotto
- Yahoo! Philippines through PhilStar.com, Pacquiao okays Cotto showdown - Arum
- Inquirer.net, Mosley: 'Manny will earn more fighting me'
- LATimes.com, Shane Mosley willing to go down to 140 pounds to fight Pacquiao
- EastsideBoxing.com, Shane Mosley Focuses His Attention On Andre Berto, Welterweight Unification In The Works
- GMANews.tv, Pacquiao-Cotto duel whets fight fans’ appetite for action
- WBO Boxing Rankings
- Pacquiao files bid for South Cotabato’s Congress seat
- philstar.com, Manny transfers residence
- Pacquiao to seek South Cotabato congressional seat
- Say it ain’t so, Manny, fans implore Pacquiao
- Pacquiao cheered, booed in Cebu City
- Finally, a politician who is not tone deaf! Manny hears, yields to vox populi!
- Quijano: Fans roll out ‘Ceboo welcome’ for PacMan
- Malilong: Boo for the politician
- Pages: For Z, more Zzzz’s before The Dream
- Pacquiao withdraws congressional bid
- Speak Out: People's champ no more
- Pacquiao foes retreat after news ban bid sparks protests
- Fight fails to generate Pacmania in Cebu
- Pacquiao's win lacks drama
- Local bets turn Pacquiao bout sites into campaign gigs
- 'Arroyo's blessing curse for Pacquiao'
- (Update) Pacman KO'd in final Namfrel tally for Gen San
- Pacquiao ‘sad,’ ‘depressed’ over poll results, lost cash
- Pacquiao’s fans elated by defeat
- Pacquiao concedes defeat in bid for Philippines Congress
- Manny Pacquiao's Political Defeat is Boxing's Gain
- Pacquiao, downed by Darlene, was too confident
- Pacquiao files P30-m libel suit vs 4 journalists
- mb.com.ph, Pacquiao’s libel case vs Bulletin dismissed
- sports.inquirer.net/breakingnews, Pacquiao retiring next year; to run in 2010
- abs-cbnnews.com, Pacquiao joins Arroyo's Kampi party
- Joel Lamangan’s ‘Pacquiao:’ Another knockout punch at the box office?
- GameTrailers.com - Pacquiao vs. Hatton Gameplay Demo for Fight Night Round 4
- Boxing champ Pacquiao to appear on RP postage stamp, 05/03/2008
- KOBE BRYANT and other NIKE SUPERSTARS Commercial - YouTube.com
- Jet Li for San Miguel Beer commercial - YouTube.com
- San Miguel Beer Commercial With Pacquiao And Erik Morales - YouTube.com
- gmanews.tv, iGMA discovers Manny Pacquiao's Achilles heel
- philstar.com, Coming soon: Pacman and Rocky
- canoe.ca, ECW: Bourne, Kidd steal show
- 2009 TIME 100 Most Influential People - Time.com
- Forbes.com 2009 Celebrity 100 List
- The World's Highest-Paid Athletes (2009) - Forbes.com
- Pacquiao is 2009 ESPY Awards' Best Fighter - GMANews.tv
- No Surprise: Pacquiao Fighter of the Year - NYPost.com
- Lakers, LeBron among 2009 ESPY winners - ESPN.Go.com
- abs-cbnnews.com, Pacquiao receives UAAP Sports Excellence award
- BoxingScene.com's 2008 Year-End Awards Part II
- SportIllustrated.com, SI.com's 2008 Boxing Awards
- SecondsOut Fighter Of The Year: Manny Pacquiao
- thesweetscience.com, Pacquiao as 2008 TSS Boxer of the Year
- philboxing.com, WBC names Pacquiao ‘World Boxer of the Year’
- sports.yahoo.com, Meet the Fighter of the Year
- hoops.blink.ph, Pacquiao named ESPN STAR Sports’ Champion of Champions
- Manny Pacquiao in 2009 TIME 100 - Time.com
- Manny Pacquiao in 2009 Celebrity 100 - Forbes.com