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  1. #1

    Default Ring Magazine's Pound for Pound List


    Pound For Pound
    All Weights

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    1. Manny Pacquiao
    Country: Philippines
    Record: 49-3-2 (37 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #1 | Last Week: #1 | Weeks On List: 283
    Titles: The Ring
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    2. Juan Manuel Marquez
    Country: Mexico
    Record: 50-4-1 (37 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #2 | Last Week: #2 | Weeks On List: 112
    Titles: WBA, WBO, The Ring
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    3. Bernard Hopkins
    Country: USA (Philadelphia, Pa.)
    Record: 49-5-1 (32 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #3 | Last Week: #3 | Weeks On List: 152
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    4. Shane Mosley
    Country: USA (Las Vegas, Nevada)
    Record: 46-5-0 (39 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #4 | Last Week: #5 | Weeks On List: 15
    Titles: WBA
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    5. Israel Vazquez
    Country: Mexico
    Record: 43-4-0 (31 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #5 | Last Week: #4 | Weeks On List: 92
    Titles: The Ring
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    6. Rafael Marquez
    Country: Mexico
    Record: 37-5-0 (33 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #6 | Last Week: #6 | Weeks On List: 50
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    7. Miguel Cotto
    Country: Puerto Rico
    Record: 33-1-0 (27 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #7 | Last Week: - | Weeks On List: 1
    Titles: WBO
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    8. Nonito Donaire
    Country: Philippines
    Record: 21-1-0 (14 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #8 | Last Week: - | Weeks On List: 1
    Titles: IBF
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    9. Vic Darchinyan
    Country: Armenia
    Record: 32-1-1 (26 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #9 | Last Week: #10 | Weeks On List: 13
    Titles: WBA, WBC, IBF
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    10. Celestino Caballero
    Country: Panama
    Record: 32-2-0 (22 KOs)
    Ranking: This Week: #10 | Last Week: #9 | Weeks On List: 15
    Titles: WBA, IBF



    PACQUIAO STILL #1, DONAIRE NOW # 8 RING MAGAZINE POUND-FOR-POUND

    By Maloney L. Samaco
    PhilBoxing.com
    Tue, 05 May 2009


    Donaire.

    Following his thundering second-round knockout victory over Ricky Hatton, future boxing all-time great Manny Pacquiao retains his prestigious Ring Magazine pound-for-pound title as of the May 3, 2009 ratings of “The Bible of Boxing.” He is also the new junior welterweight title holder of The Ring Magazine.


    Ricky Hatton is nowhere to be found in the top ten pound-for-pound latest rankings. Before his downfall, he was listed at number 8 and was in the elite list for 23 weeks. The Hitman lost also his Ring and International Boxing Organization (IBO) junior welterweight title to The Pacman.

    Now at number 8 in the latest top ten rankings is Nonito Donaire, Jr., the International Boxing Federation (IBF) and IBO flyweight champion. His impressive win over previously unbeaten Raul “Cobra” Martinez convinced the editorial board of the respected boxing magazine to place the “Filipino Flash” in the number 8 position. It was the first time he was listed in the exclusive roster.

    Vic Darchinyan of Armenia, whom Donaire dethroned by a staggering KO, was elevated from number 10 last week to number 9 this week in the pound-for-pound list. He is the current World Boxing Council (WBC), World Boxing Association (WBA) and IBF junior bantamweight/superflyweight champion. Celestino Caballero of Panama, the WBA and IBF junior featherweight champion, dropped from number 9 last week to number 10 this week.

    Juan Manuel Marquez, who is slated to face former pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather, Jr., remained at number 2. Marquez is The Ring Magazine, WBA and WBO lightweight champion. Bernard Hopkins of the United States stayed at number 3. American Shane Mosley, the WBA welterweight champion rose to number 4 from number 5 last week.

    Israel Vasquez of Mexico, The Ring junior featherweight titlist, slid to number 5 from number 4 last week. Rafael Marquez of Mexico remained at number 6, while Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico, the WBO welterweight champion, barged into number 7 in the list from nowhere last week. Cotto was rumored to be one of Pacquiao’s future opponents.

    In the junior welterweight ratings of The Ring Magazine, Hatton dropped to number 2 from his throne after the devastating loss last May 2. The number 1 contender in the division based on The Ring ratings is undefeated American Timothy Bradley. He is also the WBC and WBO champion.

    The WBA champion in the junior welterweight division is Andreas Kotelnik of Ukraine. The IBF champion is Juan Urango of Colombia. Bradley, Kotelnik, and Urango are all not in the same caliber of Pacquiao. A fight with anyone of them won’t deliver the goods in pay-per-view, unlike a Pacman fight with either Marquez or Mayweather.

    Although, he is still several miles away from Pacquiao’s achievements, Doniare is the only Filipino boxer in sight who can approximate The Pacman’s career success. Donaire is now rated number 1 by The Ring in the flyweight division, with the title remaining vacant. It is a rare instant when two Filipino boxers were simultaneously rated by “The Bible of Boxing” in the top ten pound-for-pound list.



    PACQUIAO STILL #1, DONAIRE NOW # 8 RING MAGAZINE POUND-FOR-POUND


    Nonito Donaire is following the footsteps of Pacman. I was surprise to see him on this list




    RING Ratings Update
    Posted May. 4, 2009 at 10:16pm
    By Doug Fischer
    Buzz up!
    Manny Pacquiao solidified his status as the sport’s best fighter with his awe-inspiring second-round knockout of Ricky Hatton on Saturday in Las Vegas.

    The victory earned Pacquiao (49-3-2, 37 knockouts) THE RING’s world junior welterweight championship -- his sixth title (three RING belts; four of the alphabet variety) in as many weight classes -- and justified his No. 1 position in THE RING’s Pound-for-Pound Top 10, where he has been rated longer than any other fighter currently on the elite list.

    Pacquiao has been in THE RING’s pound-for-pound rankings for 283 consecutive weeks (almost 5½ years), dating back to his breakthrough first victory over Marco Antonio Barrera in November 2003.

    No other fighter currently rated on the pound-for-pound list comes close to matching Pacquiao’s amazing longevity. In fact, only two other fighters have more than 100 consecutive weeks in the ratings, No. 3 Bernard Hopkins (152) and No. 2 Juan Manuel Marquez (112), who just happens to be Pacquiao’s chief rival.

    Earlier this year there had been some debate among hardcore fans and boxing media as to whether the pound-for-pound top spot that Pacquiao has held since Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s retirement last summer should belong to Marquez.

    Those backing Marquez pointed out that many observers thought the veteran technician won the split-decision loss to Pacquiao in their hotly contested 130-pound rematch last March.

    The Marquez supporters were also more impressed with the Mexican master’s jump to lightweight, where he won THE RING championship by knocking out Joel Casamayor last September, than they were of Pacquiao’s brief foray into the 135-pound division, where he picked up an alphabet belt by battering David Diaz.

    They respected Marquez’s thrilling come-from-behind KO of Juan Diaz in February more than Pacquiao’s one-sided thrashing of Oscar De La Hoya last December.

    Casamayor is a far superior fighter than the tough-but-limited David Diaz, and the crafty Cuban vet (who suffered his first KO defeat against Marquez) made for a more dangerous first fight at lightweight, they said.

    Juan Diaz didn’t have De La Hoya’s name or fame but the young, hungry lightweight contender was a tougher challenge and made for a much better fight than the faded superstar provided Pacquiao, the Marquez supporters added.

    They made valid points.

    However, the painfully one-sided beating Pacquiao administered to Hatton, who was on the pound-for-pound list and is still in his prime, and the chilling finality of his one-punch KO put an end to the debate for now.

    While Pacquiao’s opposition might not quite equal that of Marquez’s recent foes, the former flyweight titleholder’s ability to jump back and forth between weight classes and the dominating fashion in which he’s won his recent fights personifies the term “pound for pound”.

    Beginning with the Marquez rematch, Pacquiao has competed in four different weight classes in his last four fights -- junior lightweight, lightweight, welterweight and junior welterweight -- and his performances against solid-to-excellent opposition earned him Top-5 RING ratings in each division.

    Pacquiao’s the man for now. There’s no debating that.

    At least until Marquez takes on the comebacking Mayweather Jr. on July 18.


    POUND-FOR-POUND SHAKEUP

    Hatton, who was ranked No. 8 last week, was jettisoned from the pound-for-pound rankings, which, along with the departure of THE RING’s 108-pound champ Ivan Calderon, made room for two new additions to the Top 10.

    Two-time welterweight titleholder Miguel Cotto (33-1, 27 KOs) returned at No. 7, and flyweight titleholder Nonito Donaire (20-1, 13 KOs) entered at No. 8.

    There was also some reshuffling in the Top 10 as Israel Vazquez (No. 4 last week) switched places with Shane Mosley (No. 5 last week), unified titleholder Vic Darchinyan moved from No. 10 to No. 9, and Celestino Caballero slipped from No. 9 to No. 10.

    “Ricky Hatton’s knockout loss to Manny Pacquiao knocked him out of the pound-for-pound ratings and presented an opportunity to overhaul THE RING’s Pound-for-Pound Top 10,” said THE RING editor Nigel Collins. “We dropped Ivan Calderon (No. 7 last week), who fights infrequently and is scheduled to face Rodel Mayor, a weak challenger who has lost three of his last six fights. Calderon is a brilliant defensive boxer and a legitimate world champion, but is simply not doing enough to maintain his position among the best of the best.

    “Israel Vazquez, THE RING junior featherweight champion, has not fought since his amazing rubber-match victory over Rafael Marquez in March 2008. As Vazquez had a legitimate eye injury, which required multiple surgeries, he retains his status as world champion. Nonetheless, he has been demoted from No. 4 to No. 5 due to his lengthy inactivity.

    “Nonito Donaire makes his pound for pound debut at No. 8. Inactivity had hampered THE RING’s No. 1 flyweight’s entry, but his recent KO of previously undefeated Raul Martinez confirmed that his 2007 knockout over Vic Darchinyan was no fluke.

    “Miguel Cotto, who was dropped following his TKO loss to Antonio Margarito, returns at No. 7 due to the cloud of suspicion hanging over all of Margarito’s victories since he was caught trying to load up his hands prior to his KO defeat by Shane Mosley, who has advanced from No. 5 to No. 4.”


    DIVISIONAL UPDATES


    WELTERWEIGHT:

    Pacquiao (No. 5 last week) moved to junior welterweight, which boosted all fighters rated No. 6 and below last week up one rung each and made room for undefeated Vyacheslav Senchenko (29-0, 20 KOs) of Ukraine to debut at No. 10.

    JUNIOR WELTERWEIGHT:

    Pacquiao is the new RING magazine 140-pound world champion thanks to his spectacular second-round knockout of Hatton, who drops to No. 2. The title change and Hatton’s demotion pushes down all fighters rated No. 2 or below last week one spot each and forced out Nate Campbell (No. 10 last week).

    http://www.ringtv.com/blog/643/ring_ratings_update/
    Last edited by freesoul; 05-06-2009 at 03:27 PM.

  2. #2
    10: Reasons Pacquiao is great
    Posted May. 4, 2009 at 02:10pm
    By Michael Rosenthal
    Buzz up!



    A weekly boxing list compiled by Michael Rosenthal. This week: Ten reasons Manny Pacquiao is great.

    1. 5-1-1 against top Mexicans: This cannot be overemphasized. His consistency against Barrera, Morales and Marquez is his greatest achievement.
    2. 17-1-2 with Freddie Roach: He joined forces with Roach in 2001 and has been an absolute force ever since against some of the best fighters in the world.
    3. Manner in which he wins: He’s not just winning fights; the way he destroys his opponents also leaves viewers in awe.
    4. Longevity: He has been ranked among the top few fighters in every weight class in which he has fought for more than 10 years.
    5. Opposition in general: He has fought 15 times against current or former world title holders and is 11-2-2. He’s also 7-1-1 against future hall of famers (assuming Hatton gets in).
    6. Always improving: There has been no plateau in his career. He’s been a pro for 14 years yet continues to improve dramatically.
    7. Maintaining power at heavier weights: He had KO power at 108 pounds and he seems to have the same KO power at 140. Amazing.
    8. Maintaining speed at heavier weights: A fighter is supposed to slow down as he gets heavier. Could Pacquiao be getting quicker?
    9. Ability to deal with pressure: He has the hopes and dreams of a country on his shoulders yet never seems fazed and almost always gets the job done.
    10. The punch: Sometimes a single moment in a fighter’s career stands out above everything else. His KO punch on Saturday might be his moment.


    10: Reasons Pacquiao is great

  3. #3
    C.I.A. ceden_yu143's Avatar
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    grbe diay aning pacman sah.....

    mabuhay ang Pilipino...

  4. #4
    Donaire is our next boxing hero

  5. #5
    #8 naman diay c donaire sa ring magazine ..

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