Welcome back fight fans to another video here
on The Fight Game. The sport of boxing has seen some extraordinary
characters who transcended the sport in more ways than one both inside and outside the
ring. Global waves of emotion,
dazzling displays of skill, determination and will-power, blistering fast hand-speed,
destructive power, or perhaps a respectful demeanor that's to inspire many generations
to come. All great boxers tend to present one of those
aspects. But what if I told you there's one boxer who
presents all of those things. I present to you, Manny 'Pac-Man' Pacquiao. Once a young boy who arose from the depths
of the Philippines to the absolute pinnacle of Boxing. In his early career Pacquiao had some haters,
but he saw them as motivators. In a sport muddled with brash proclamations
Manny Pacquiao is a man of a singular strand, belief in his own ability. The common foe has felt the perpetual wraith
of his vigor and zest. His reign was not the saga of a boxer, but
a rise from rags to riches, and then again to greatness. To topple not only those in front of him,
but those who laid far beyond. One by one, Manny Pacquiao overthrew the champion
of 8 weight divisions as a confident invader in foreign land. Manny Pacquiao is a fighter who's achieved
things that lesser men would call impossible. So far we've made a 2-part series overlooking
moments where Manny Pacquiao defied his opponent in the ring, you guys showed incredible support
for Pacquiao by watching, liking and commenting on the videos, so in this video
we make Part 3. Welcome to this video here on The Fight Game,
where we breakdown some times where Manny Pacquiao defied his opponent, and we analyse
deeply the mechanics that enabled him to systematically dismantle his opponent in
the ring. [PACQUIAO vs. JULIO] We look to Manny Pacquiao's fight versus Jorge
Julio, a 47-fight veteran at the time from Colombia. It was Pacquiao's third fight in the United
States and the second defense of his 122 pound world title. The fight started with Pacquiao establishing
his position in the center of the ring. Quickly Pacquiao lunges in an attempt to land
his left hand. He motions with the left hand
again, almost getting the feel for it rather than intending to land it. Again he tries to land the left hand. On his fourth time he lands the left hand
the cleanest so far, although it didn't seem to have much
grit behind it. Again he lands the left hand, Pacquiao sure
was eager to get comfortable landing that left hand. After Pacquiao
got the feel for the left hand he started to let it go with great intention. It was like target practice, he kept landing
with pin-point accuracy. With laser-like precision Pacquiao
became familiar with the way he can land the left hand. All of these left hands are in only the first
round by the way. Let's hear what coach Freddie Roach had to
say. Roach: "I want you to use the jab a little
bit more. Okay? You're a little bit wild with your punches
okay, I want you to go behind the double jab." As you heard, Roach instructed Pacquiao to
use the jab more. And that's just what Pacquiao did. [CROWD NOISE] Pacquiao scored a knockdown in the first 10
seconds of the round by doing as he was told, Manny Pacquiao is a very coachable boxer. Julio got up but Pacquiao knocked him down
another time quickly after. [CROWD NOISE] Once again Pacquiao showed just how powerful
his left hand is. Julio got up again, and Pacquiao saw victory
in sight and continued to pressure Julio. Commentator: "Pacquiao is just getting ready
to swing away again, Bill Clancy has seen enough!" A very impressive 2nd round victory for Manny
Pacquiao. He showed skill, power and coachability. Announcer: "Manny... The Destroyer... Pacquiao!" [PACQUIAO vs. BRONER] Manny Pacquiao has had his fair share of trash-talking
opponents. But in his fight against Adrien Broner Manny
Pacquiao held an inevitable constituent, his first fight past the age of 40. Pacquiao has been doubted many times in the
build up to his fights, there tends to be the common reasoning of size, this opponent
or that opponent is too big for Manny to handle,
but he sure did prove them wrong. As we approach the tail end of Manny Pacquiao's
career, we as observers are introduced to a new reasoning, age. Most boxers fade drastically past the age
of 40, well, Manny Pacquiao is not most boxers. In his fight against a young Adrien Broner,
Pacquiao proved to the world that he doesn't only defy opponents,
but age itself. The build up was fueled by Broner's trash-talking
antics, but Pacquiao remained cool as ever. Broner brought words to the table, but it
was Pacquiao who brought action to the ring. The fight took place in Las Vegas and attracted
fans from all around the world. It was Experience versus Youth, Offense versus
Defense, Pacquiao versus Broner. But of course the question many were asking
was is Manny Pacquiao still good enough to compete with the young guns of the sport. The fight started with Pacquiao being active
with his feet and lead hand. Broner, despite his mishappenings, is quite
the crafty boxer when he puts his mind to it. Pacquiao
edges, looking for an opening, and quickly gets Broner to the ropes. Broner did a good job of defending. Pacquiao got Broner to the ropes again, but
Broner again showed craftiness by holding. Pacquiao was able to slightly land his right
hand in his next attack. Pacquiao then found the opening for his left
hand. Despite it's lack of back and forth action,
the first round had of a lot of active feinting and footwork. The fact that Pacquiao was able to out-move
Broner at the age of 40 showed that age mattered not to Manny Pacquiao. The fight continued onward from there with
Pacquiao trying to get inside the defense of Broner. Broner is generally quite good at evading
the punches, but he's a single-shot fighter. That means he rarely throws in combinations,
and that would later prove troublesome for Broner against one of the greatest combination
punchers in the sport. Broner is always looking
for that one perfect punch, you can see here he's looking to land that clean right hand
as Pacquiao comes in. Single-shot fighters also tend to get overwhelmed
by aggression, which can be seen here. [CROWD NOISE] In the clinch Broner pushed his elbow to Pacquiao's
throat, which of course is against the rules and quite disrespectful. Pacquiao however the polar-opposite, remained
emotionless to the foul. Here Pacquiao motions, Broner ducks thinking
a left hand is coming, but Pacquiao waits for Broner to come back up before throwing
it and consequently lands clean. At 40 Pacquiao was not who he once was, but
it looked like it was still better than the youth of today. The middle stages saw Pacquiao land with more
authority. Round 7 was Pacquiao's most dominant round
in the fight. [CROWD NOISE] Pacquiao's speed was too much for Broner who
often gets overwhelmed by high-volume combination punchers. Also watch here how Pacquiao breaks Broner's
high-guard defense by dragging his glove down and lands through the opening. Round 8 Saw Pacquiao land a sweet right hook
after Broner's jab. We don't really see how clean it landed until
we see it in slow motion. In round 9 Pacquiao landed a very hard left
hand nearly dropping Broner. Pacquiao avoids Broner's right hand, comes
back in with a jab and then lands the left hand clean to the chin. It's impressive Broner managed to stay standing
after a shot like that. Much of the fight included Pacquiao cutting
Broner down, looking for a path of attack, but it's difficult to fight a boxer like Adrien
Broner who much prefers to stick and move. However despite this, Pacquiao still managed
to out-box a boxer who wanted to do the out-boxing. Manny Pacquiao is unmatched in both speed
and intensity. Broner had little interest in trading with
Pacquiao as he avoided a war by all means. Pacquiao came to fight like always. A very comfortable decision win for Pacquiao,
a true example of his grandiosity as he defied Adrien Broner's
youth, and age itself. [PACQUIAO vs. MARQUEZ II] The epic rivalry between Manny Pacquiao and
Juan Manuel Marquez is one that's produced a common respect between two gargantuan boxing
fanbases, the fanbase of the Philippines, and the fanbase of Mexico. History will look very kindly on boxers such
as Pacquiao and Marquez, and considering we have a 4-fight rivalry between them both we
just had to include this particular fight in this series. The first fight ended in a draw, which was
a very entertaining affair with high-volume action. The second fight held massive anticipation
not only from the clash of fanbases, but from the hype surrounding the spectacle of their
first meeting. Pacquiao was beginning to solidify himself
as someone really special in the sport, a win over Marquez would set that in stone. Pacquiao started the fight moving his head
side to side staying off the straight line and perhaps trying to reveal a movement in
which telegraphs Marquez's attack. Neither fighter willing totally to stand toe-to-toe
as they remained active in-and-out with the feet. Marquez quickly landed a great right hand. Towards the end of the first round we saw
a little more action but in the same see-saw style with the feet. Pacquiao and Marquez are very strong punchers
who respect one another's power. They know one punch can knock them down, and
so they were cautious with how much time they spent within eachothers range. And such a scenario nearly came to fruition
when Marquez landed a massive left hook with 5 seconds left to go. Commentator: "Uppercut by Marquez... HUGE LEFT HOOK!" A very impressive shot by Marquez who landed
while both fighters rotated their position. Pacquiao entered the next round surely cautious,
making sure not to get caught by another shot like that, but also to recover still from
the previous round. However he regained his confidence as the
round approached the last minute. And very soon the dynamic would quickly change. Commentator: "DOWN GOES MARQUEZ!" Just when you thought Pacquiao might be in
trouble, he knocks Marquez down. Marquez got up and both fighters ended the
round in a roaring blaze. The next round started with a continuation
in pace. These are 2 very evenly matched warriors. Such amazing skill displayed by both boxers. Marquez began to gain momentum towards round
6. Going into the second half of the fight it
seemed practically even, but remember Pacquiao did score a knockdown in round 3. Pacquiao uses his right hand often to measure
up for his powerful left hand. His left hand is truly one of the most dangerous
punches in the history of the sport. His style very much revolves around setting
up his left hand, it's not only his knockout punch, but his scoring one too. Pacquiao started the championship rounds with
a crazy interception with the left hand. Pacquiao rolls under Marquez's left hook,
and with the momentum he lands a left hook to the face of Marquez with an elastic
snap. A truly extraordinary display of his boxing
ability. Pacquiao attempted to capitalize on what seemed
to be a hurt Marquez. The championship rounds put even the greatest
of champions to the test. Their heart, skill, pride and durability is
revealed to all spectators right there in the ring. If there's one place in the world you can't
hide, it's in the boxing ring. As the final round it looked like Pacquiao
was finally going to get a victory. [CROWD NOISE]
Commentator: "And here comes the crowd, on their feet, one more right hand from Marquez! One more combination from Pacquiao!" [BELL RINGS] What a great fight. Pacquiao thought he won, but Marquez thought
he also won. It was a very close fight, but the knockdown
Pacquiao scored secured him a very close decision victory. A simple conclusion came from these violent
delights, just how even a match these great fighters were to one another. A victory for Manny Pacquiao was the product
of the violent determination of two passionate warriors. That brings a close to this video, we hope
you enjoyed it and if you did consider checking out Part 1 and 2 to this series by checking
out the channel. Also a massive thank you to
all the loyal subscribers who liked and commented on the previous videos. We'll see you in the next video here on The
Fight Game.