SPORTS

Fight Of The Century: 'Underdog' Pacquiao 'confident' of out-punching Mayweather

April 30, 2015

Manny Pacquiao trains in preparation for his fight against Floyd Mayweather Jr. at the Wild Card Boxing Club in Los Angeles, California. Photograph: Harry How/Getty Images

Filipino politician-turned-boxer Manny Pacquiao has said that he is fully confident of beating undefeated US boxing champion Floyd Mayweather despite being tipped as the 'underdog' for the much-anticipated 'fight of the century' bout on May 2 in Las Vegas.

Mayweather would go head-to-head against Pacquiao in the richest fight in history at the MGM Grand Arena in a bid to prove that he is the greatest fighter of his generation.

A big number of fans cheered Pacquiao and Mayweather as they arrived ahead of the weekend's super-fight at MGM Grand arena in Las Vegas.

Pacquiao told fans he was “excited and 100 percent confident of breaking the American's unbeaten streak”.

"Any time I am the underdog, I like that. It means my killer instinct and focus is fully there. This is the moment I believe he will experience his first loss," he told his fans, the BBC reported.

A 2-1 underdog, the Filipino southpaw told reporters at the MGM Grand on Wednesday that he had regained the sense of anticipation he had for fights a decade ago, though he was reluctant to give a prediction about the outcome.

"I don't have a prediction," Pacquiao smiled as he spoke in a small interview room before joining Mayweather and their respective camps at the MGM Grand for their final pre-fight news conference.

"I am excited and confident. It's the first time I have felt like this before a fight in a long time. The killer instinct, the feeling and the focus I have is like 10 years ago.

"For some of my previous fights I never feel this, but now it is different. I am 100 percent relaxed and confident. It's a good feeling."

The Filipino boxer added that he believes Mayweather would experience his first loss in the high-octane clash.

Mayweather has never been beaten in 47 fights since turning pro in 1996, whereas Pacquiao has lost five of his 64 bouts.

 

WBC/WBA welterweight champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. and WBO welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao pose with a WBC championship belt as Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach looks on during a news conference at the KA Theatre at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas on Wednesday. Photograph: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Pacquiao, who has a 57-5-2 record with 38 knockouts, is expected to earn over $100 million from a bout predicted to be the biggest-grossing prize fight of all time but hoped he would make a much bigger impact through his own life story.

The 36-year-old boxer, an adored figure in the Philippines, left home at 14 to help support his mother and her six children and, for a while, he lived on the streets.

"I can't imagine the boy who was starving and sleeping on the street has become what I am now. It is beyond my imagination," said the eight-time world champion.

"The most important thing is ... to give inspiration to people around the world that there is a god who can make someone like me from nothing into something."

The long awaited megabout has been over five years in the making and several obstacles had to be overcome before it became a reality.

Negotiations for a 2010 fight collapsed over the American's demand for random drug testing and Mayweather has often hinted at illegal methods by questioning how Pacquiao could have won world titles in an unprecedented eight weight classes.

"I feel like I am the one who really wants this fight to happen," said the Filipino.

"For me, it's about how we can make the fans happy. They are paying big money ... so they deserve to have a good fight."

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