Pacquiao dominates Broner in unanimous decision win
WBA welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao showed flashes of his past brilliance as he delivered a dominant performance to earn a unanimous decision victory over Adrien Broner in Las Vegas on Saturday.
The 40-year-old Filipino multiple world champion was quicker and more accurate as he controlled each round and cruised to the triumph to take his career record to 61-7-2.
American Broner, 29, fought gamely and stayed upright despite being hit with several heavy combinations but was ultimately outclassed.
Retired great Floyd Mayweather attended the fight, fuelling speculation of a rematch against Pacquiao, who the undefeated American beat in 2015.
Two judges scored the bout 116-112 in favour of Pacquiao, while the third had the Filipino Senator a 117-111 winner.
"I’m so happy," said Pacquiao. "God gave me this blessing (of good health). At the age of 40 I can still give my best."
About the only person in attendance who disagreed with the outcome was Broner (33-4-1), who protested the result emphatically in his post fight interview.
"I beat him. Everyone out there knows I beat him," Broner said. "I controlled the fight, he was missing and I hit him clean more times."
It was difficult to take Broner's claims seriously on a night when he was relegated to the role of defensive fighter.
Pacquiao appeared the younger and more spry of the two as he attacked his opponent's midsection and ultimately landed 47 body shots to Broner's three.
In the seventh round, Pacquiao pushed Broner back to the ropes and delivered an onslaught of punches that left Broner holding on for survival.
Pacquiao nearly knocked his opponent down again in the ninth when he delivered a clean left hook to Broner’s chin that knocked him back.
"I wanted to push more but my trainer said 'do not be careless, wait for him and you counter'," Pacquiao said.
The final few rounds were anticlimactic as Broner played it safe and Pacquiao stayed in control.
At the final bell, Pacquiao dropped to his knees in his corner for a moment of contemplation.
Pacquiao is enjoying a career turnaround after uninspiring efforts that left many believing his career was nearing an end.
"I don’t believe my career is over," Pacquiao said. "I proved it in my last fight against (Lucas Matthysse) and now proved it again. The Manny Pacquiao journey still continues."
Mayweather, whose last outing was a farce of an exhibition bout against a Japanese kickboxer, refused the entreaties of a ringside TV reporter to indicate whether he would be willing to fight Pacquiao again.
The Filipino was less reticent.
"Tell him to come back to the ring and then we will fight," Pacquiao said.
"I’m willing to fight if he’s willing to come back in boxing."
Published: by Radio NewsHub