Manny Pacquiao to Face the Man Who Says He Beat Him — Twice

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Chris Cozzone / AFP / Getty Images

Manny Pacquiao, right, and Juan Manuel Marquez duke it out at the World Boxing Council super-featherweight championship on March 15, 2008, in Las Vegas

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Since his last meeting with Pacquiao, Marquez has fought six times, losing to Floyd Mayweather Jr. in 2009. Marquez, a naturally slight man, fights his best at around 130 lb. In boxing, the weight classes were developed to combat physics: bigger men create more force in their punches. While Pacquiao is an exception, smaller men adding weight to compete in higher weight divisions usually run into problems because they lose quickness and struggle with the power and reach of larger-framed men. When Marquez — known as Dinamita for his explosive counterpunches — fought Mayweather, he had been forced to rise two weight classes and weighed 142 lb. He looked uncomfortable throughout the fight.

Saturday's bout ("Pacquiao-Marquez III") at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas will favor Pacquiao because it is at a welterweight catchweight of 144 lb., near Pacquiao's ideal heft. Taking a page from Pacquiao's regimen, Marquez has spent his training camp adding muscle to his frame. He hired Angel Hernandez, a strength-and-conditioning coach, who put him on an intense weight-lifting program. Many boxers shy away from the weight room because they feel like weight-lifting techniques don't give them "functional muscles." Hernandez also raised eyebrows in the boxing community when it was reported that he supplied steroids to track stars Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery and later became the key government witness in the case against the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative. Marquez insists, however, that he is not juiced. "Whatever testing they want to do, blood or Olympic, I am ready to do it," says the Mexican boxer. "We'll do it, no problem, as long as he does it too."

Pacquiao's trainer does not have good reviews for the new Marquez. Says Roach: "Marquez looks old and slow. He has gotten worse." Roach, a five-time trainer of the year, has trained 31 world champions. He says his fighter has developed into one of the greatest champions the world has seen and predicts that Pacquiao will knock out Marquez by Round 6. Roach says the fight is deeply personal to Pacquiao. "Manny's not going to be kind in this fight," says Roach. "I don't have to motivate him to knock this guy out."

Roach said training camp was more intense than normal, and they were having difficulty persuading $1,000-a-week sparring partners to return every day because Pacquiao had been inflicting so much daily punishment. Roach says Pacquiao hit one boxer so hard that the opponent's legs buckled, and the sparring mate suffered an ankle sprain.

Roach has Parkinson's disease, resulting in tremors and foot drop, but when he gets into the ring with Pacquiao, he moves fluidly and the tremors disappear when he works the mitts. It's as if the two men are making music: pat, pat, pat, pat — pat, pat, pat, pat. "That's it, Manny, that's it," he says, as they work on different combinations and footwork to counter the counterpuncher. Roach is considered a master cornerman psychologist too. Pacquiao has been pushing himself so hard in camp to train against Marquez that Roach bent the truth during a recent session in order to get him to let up a bit. He told Pacquiao that he needed to slow down because a Mexican television station was in the gym filming and he didn't want any of the footage to be seen by Marquez. Pacquiao believed the white lie and eased up.

One day recently, as Pacquiao wrapped his own hands before a sparring session in the cramped dressing room of the Wild Card, he told me, "Marquez was screaming that he wanted this fight. That's why I train hard, because, you know, I want to end this and end the doubts." He gave a sly smile and let out a knowing giggle. Pacquiao abhors trash-talking, but Marquez had obviously gotten under his skin. Quietly, he said, "He talks too much. It's not good for a fighter to talk a lot without action. I don't talk a lot. Just action."

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