Pacquiao camp questioned fighter’s dedication

DALLAS, (Reuters) – Manny Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie  Roach questioned his fighter’s dedication to boxing in recent  weeks following a training camp that was more chaotic than  usual, he told Reuters yesterday.

Filipino Pacquiao (51-3-2, 38 KOs), who takes on Mexico’s  Antonio Margarito (38-6, 27 KOs) Saturday in Cowboys Stadium in  Texas for the vacant WBA super welterweight belt, is known for  being heavily involved in extra-curricular activities.

The actor and singer, arguably the most famous person in  the Philippines, added to an already busy schedule earlier this  year when he was elected to Congress in his home country, which  Roach said is a priority for Pacquiao.

“The fun stuff I don’t care about, it takes his mind off  the fight and then we get back to normal,” said Roach, who has  trained 26 other world champions including Oscar De La Hoya and  Mike Tyson.

“(But Congress) is something he really cares about and he  wants to be good at, so it’s kind of competition really.” Roach said a particularly jarring moment came during a  recent day of training when Pacquiao turned to him and said he  missed his job.      “I said, ‘Manny, this is your job.’ And he said, ‘No, I  miss Congress.’ Right then, I thought on Monday morning he’d be  going to Congress instead of to the gym,” said Roach.
However, since camp moved to Roach’s Wild Card Gym in Los  Angeles, the trainer said: “everything has fallen into place. I  was nervous in the Philippines. Now I’m 100 percent happier.”

Margarito trainer Robert Garcia is not convinced there were  ever any problems in the Pacquiao camp.
“Freddie Roach is the best trainer in the world. There’s no  way he’s going to take a fighter into the ring, especially  Manny Pacquiao, unless he knows he’s 100 percent ready,” said  Garcia. “This is just the stuff Freddie says to mess with our  minds or hype up the fight a little.”