Marquez seeking double revenge
By Robert
Morales
Manny Pacquiao beat the daylights
out of Marco Antonio Barrera in November 2003,
stopping him in the 11th round of a one-sided
fight in San Antonio, Texas. Yet, just six months
later - in May 2004 - Juan Manuel Marquez figured
his fight with Pacquiao in Las Vegas was going
to be a walk in the park.
Say what? That's what Marquez told reporters
Tuesday during a conference call promoting his
rematch with Pacquiao a week from Saturday in
Las Vegas. That, Marquez said, was why Pacquiao
decked him three times in the first round of
a fight that eventually was scored a draw.
"What I can tell you is I was pretty confident
in that fight," Marquez said. "I was
connecting well in the first round. I was confident.
I thought it was going to be an easy fight.
But I got the surprise that it wasn't. He caught
me with three great punches."
It is very difficult to believe that a fighter
as intelligent as Marquez, one who had already
boxed professionally for 11 years heading into
that first fight, would think that a fight with
a killer like Pacquiao was going to be a cinch.
His trainer, Nacho Berestein, said that's exactly
what Marquez may have been thinking. Not because
of anything Berestein was telling him, but perhaps
because of what others were whispering in Marquez's
ear as he was preparing for the fight. And Berestein
was not happy about it.
"I was worried," Berestein said, when
asked his thoughts as Marquez was thrice floored
in the first three minutes. "But I was
mad, more than worried. I was angry when I saw
him on the canvas three times. Because we talked
about it before.
"And he was so confident, he was so relaxed
in the first half of the first round. ... And
I was thinking to myself, 'This is not the way
he's supposed to be fighting,' because he seemed
so relaxed. And knowing Manny Pacquiao, that
he is like a wild guy because he throws punches
from everywhere, I knew that at a certain time,
a certain point in the fight, he was
(going to connect) with Juan Manuel Marquez.
And he did it."
Pacquiao connected, all right. But of course,
Marquez more than proved his mettle. Not only
did he get up from three first-round knockdowns,
itself a rarity, he dominated most of the rest
of the fight. Many reporters, including this
one, actually thought Marquez came back to win
the fight.
But one judge had it even, one had it for Marquez
by five points and the other had it for Pacquiao
by five points. Yes, we know, just the typical
curious scoring that seems to occur in Las Vegas.
Then again, the draw did allow Marquez to keep
his two featherweight championship belts.
"I was down three times, but I got up,"
he said. "I got up because of the great
condition I had at that time. But also because
I was defending two titles, two titles that
cost me a lot to win them. And I wasn't letting
them go in three minutes just like that."
Marquez, 34, said he has learned from his mistakes.
During Tuesday's call, he talked about what
will be different this time against Pacquiao,
29. Overconfidence won't be a problem in the
rematch, he said. Psychologically, he insisted
he will be sharp as a tack.
"I'm going to be alert from the first (round)
when the bell rings until the end of the last
round," Marquez said. "It doesn't
matter what round ends the fight. I'm going
to be alert. I'm going to have all my senses.
... I won't be so confident thinking that it's
going to be an easy fight."
It's safe to say that Marquez (48-3-1, 35 KOs)
has many incentives for this return bout. He
wants to defend his super featherweight belt,
he wants to avoid the early knockdowns that
cost him a victory, he wants a victory period
because he believes that the knockdowns notwithstanding,
he won the first fight; he wants to put an end
to Pacquiao's dominance of Mexican fighters;
and he wants to gain a revenge of sorts for
what took place Saturday at Home Depot Center
in Carson.
That's where Israel Vazquez and Rafael Marquez
beat each other to a pulp for 12 rounds, with
Vazquez winning a split decision to retain his
super bantamweight title. Rafael Marquez is
the younger brother of Juan Manuel.
Juan Manuel Marquez was asked if having just
watched his brother in an absolutely brutal
fight could prove a psychological disadvantage
for him because he knows he is heading into
a fight with Pacquiao that could be equally
harsh.
"Not at all," Marquez said. "As
you all seen, Rafael never lost the fight. And
I'm going to be pretty concentrated on the fight.
I'm going to put everything in the fight. That's
what motivates me now more, that I need to win
this fight because of what happened to my brother
and I promise you I'm going to put everything
(in) it."
Well, it's nice that Marquez has his brother's
back. It might not be fair to expect him to
say anything else. Bottom line is, no matter
what the Rafael Marquez camp is saying, or that
of his brother's, there was no robbery at Home
Depot Center. No controversy. Rafael Marquez
deserved the point deduction for the low blow,
and the knockdown was legitimate because the
ropes can't be the only thing holding up a fighter;
plain and simple, that's a knockdown.
And by the way, Vazquez deserved a 10-7 in that
last round. In the eyes of several ringside
reporters polled, all were in favor of a 10-7
round because Vazquez had badly beaten Marquez
for most of three minutes prior to the knockdown
with just seconds left. But all three judges
gave Vazquez only a 10-8.
It's a shame that either fighter had to lose,
but Vazquez won. Fair and square, as they said
in the schoolyard back in the day.
Anyway, most of Marquez's motivation seems to
be well-placed. But the bit about his brother
might not be a good thing for him to latch onto.
He has enough on his plate already without having
to concern himself with his brother's woes.
It's much too dangerous in the ring for that.
Ask Berestein, he thinks plenty of Pacquiao
(45-3-2, 35 KOs).
"The only thing that we are going to be
cautious about, that we are working on is Manny
Pacquiao's left hand," Berestein
said. "We know Manny Pacquiao's left hand
is like a bullet. It is very powerful and very
fast."
Marquez knows, only too well.