Pacquiao eyes vindication in fourth bout with Marquez

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – With his ego bruised and his stature diminished after delivering below-par performances in his last two bouts, Manny Pacquiao has set his sights on bold vindication when he fights Juan Manuel Marquez next month.

It will be the fourth time the two boxers will square up in the ring, Pacquiao having narrowly retained his WBO welterweight title with a controversial majority decision when they last met in November 2011.

On that occasion, the Filipino southpaw earned two of the verdicts from the three judges, though it was a surprisingly unimpressive display and boos from disgruntled Marquez fans echoed around the arena after the shock decision was announced.

“Right now my mind is focused on being more aggressive for this fight,” Pacquiao told reporters while preparing for the Dec. 8 bout at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

“If there is a chance in the ring during the fight, why not make the fight easy (by knocking Marquez out) if I have the opportunity?

“I will try not to fight as slow at the end of this fight as I did in the last three fights. That is my focus right now. I want to finish stronger in this fight.”

Mexican Marquez is a three-division world champion and, according to Pacquiao’s shrewd trainer Freddie Roach, he has been the Filipino’s most difficult opponent over the years.

“A 100 percent yes,” the bespectacled Roach told Reuters. “Manny loves it when guys come to him and they’re aggressive.

“Marquez is a counter-puncher and we’re probably going to have to go to him to make the fight happen. It’s a little harder for Manny to do that, so it’s the most difficult style for us, yes.”

ALL-ACTION APPROACH

Marquez and Pacquiao are both renowned for their bold, all-action approach in the ring and they fought to a draw when they first met in May 2004.

The Mexican then lost his WBC super-featherweight title to the Filipino in a controversial one-point split decision in March 2008.

In 2011, Pacquiao was tested to the full in their third encounter before he stunningly beat a visibly angry Marquez after the Filipino’s preparations had been hampered by various distractions, including marital difficulties.