Pacquiao’s hammer blow leaves new champion sore

LAS VEGAS, (Reuters) – Manny Pacquiao admitted his  hand was still feeling a little bruised two hours after a  booming left hook knocked out Britain’s Ricky Hatton in the  second round of their eagerly awaited showdown on Saturday.

The Filipino challenger claimed the IBO light-welterweight  title after sending Hatton sprawling to the canvas twice in the  opening round before knocking him out cold with one second  remaining in the next.

“I believe it was a very hard punch,” Pacquiao told  reporters after improving his career record to 49-3-2 with 37  knockouts. “My hand still hurts.”

Hatton’s assistant trainer Lee Beard said: “There was  nothing Ricky could do. He got caught with a few good shots, he  got back up and then obviously he got caught with that one big  shot at the end.”

Although Pacquiao was widely regarded as the best  pound-for-pound fighter in the world, Hatton was believed to  hold a size advantage at his natural weight of 140 pounds in a  division where he had never previously lost.

However, Pacquiao always believed he would prove to be the  stronger man.

“Before the fight, a lot of people think Ricky Hatton’s  bigger than me but I didn’t put that in my mind,” said the  30-year-old, who weighed only 106 pounds on his professional  debut.

“I still believe that my body’s bigger than Ricky. But with  respect, he’s still a good fighter.”

Pacquiao’s promoter Bob Arum applauded the Filipino’s  performance as “astounding” after his man had competed for only  the third time above the super featherweight division.

“This kid improves with every single fight,” Arum said.  “He’s doing things he wasn’t doing two or three years ago.

“His defence is now tremendous. His reflexes are  tremendous. I have never seen any fighter combine the speed and  the explosive power that he does.”

“I told Ricky Hatton not to be discouraged,” Arum added.  “There are plenty of people out there for him to fight. Nobody  in the world can beat this little Filipino.”

Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach agreed.

“Manny’s unbelievable,” he said. “He makes me look good.  He’s the best fighter in the world. He’s in his prime right  now. He’s on top of his game. Anyone in the world, he can  beat.”

Asked about the possibility of a clash with American Floyd  Mayweather Jr, who announced earlier on Saturday he would  return from retirement to fight Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez on  July 18, Roach sounded doubtful.

He suggested instead future matchups with WBA welterweight  champion Shane Mosley and WBO holder Miguel Cotto.

“I think he (Mayweather) is scared of Pacquiao,” Roach  said. “If Cotto wants to come down a few pounds or if Shane  Mosley wants to come down a few pounds, we can make that  happen.”