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News > Sport

Pacquiao Regains WBO Crown and Now Heads for Electoral Battle

  • From boxer to politician and back to boxing.

    From boxer to politician and back to boxing.

Published 10 April 2016
Opinion

Manny Pacquiao is participating in next month's elections in the Philippines. He is running for one of 12 vacant seats in the upper house of Congress.

Filipinos in cinemas, parks and army bases across the country burst into applause and shouts on Sunday as they watched boxing icon Manny Pacquiao floor American champion Timothy Bradley before regaining the WBO welterweight crown in Las Vegas.

After the ring victory, the 37 year-old former world boxing eight-division champion is looking for a knockout win in next month's Philippine elections. Opinion polls showed him in 10th place for 12 vacant seats in the upper house of Congress.

"We are truly happy because our prayers that Manny will win were answered," James Morena, a 67 year-old retiree, told Reuters. "His chances of winning in the elections are higher because he regained his credibility and trust of the people."

Pacquiao did not disappoint his legion of fans watching the match in the Philippines, knocking down Bradley twice and dominating the fight as all three judges scored 116-100 in his favor. Experts also believed this would be his last fight but they were convinced otherwise after watching his outstanding performance.

"Manny Pacquiao has done the Filipino nation proud again by winning decisively against Timothy Bradley," Herminio Coloma, the president's spokesman, said in a statement.

It was Pacquiao's first fight for nearly a year after his mega-fight loss to Floyd Mayweather, and was supposed to be his final professional fight as the two-term sitting congressman promised to concentrate on politics and his family.

He is running under the opposition coalition party.

In February, Pacquiao was at the centre of a controversy over a remark he made in an interview on Philippine TV. When the devout Christian was asked his view on same-sex marriage, he said gays are "worse than animals,” a comment that prompted Nike to drop his sponsorship.
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