
The
fistic debate about which fighter is the best finally
will be settled when World Boxing Council (WBC) super
featherweight champion JUAN MANUEL MARQUEZ defends his
title against three-division world champion MANNY
PACQUIAO in a 12-round battle for pound-for-pound
supremacy. Promoted by Golden Boy Promotions and Top
Rank, in association with Romanza Boxing Productions and
MP Promotions, Marquez-Pacquiao II will take place
Saturday, March 15 at the Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino
and will be produced and distributed live by HBO
Pay-Per-View beginning at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT.
Tickets for
Marquez-Pacquiao II, priced at $600, $400, $300, $200
and $100, go on sale
This Saturday! December 22, at 10 a.m.
PT, at the Mandalay Bay box office and at all Las Vegas
Ticketmaster locations (select Smith’s Food and Drug
Centers, Macy’s West at the Fashion Show Mall, and Ritmo
Latino). Ticket sales are limited to eight (8) per
person. To charge by phone with a major credit card,
call Ticketmaster at (702) 474-4000 or Mandalay Bay
(702) 632-7580. Tickets are also available for purchase
at
www.mandalaybay.com
or
www.ticketmaster.com.
Boasting near identical records and professional
achievements, it is no question that their first
encounter for the featherweight title ended in a draw
when they fought May 8, 2004 in Las Vegas. It was a
“Fight of the Year”-style rumble that featured furious
exchanges, leaving both warriors bloodied and swollen.
Marquez, then the defending International Boxing
Federation (IBF) and World Boxing Association (WBA)
featherweight champion, was forced to dig deep and make
the appropriate adjustments after Pacquiao started out
fast and sent Marquez to the canvas three times in the
first round. Pacquiao, entered the fight coming off of
an impressive eleven-round destruction of then
featherweight champion Marco Antonio Barrera,
Marquez (48-3-1, 35 KOs), from Mexico City, Mexico,
captured his first world title in 2003, stopping former
world champion Manuel Medina in the seventh round to
capture the vacant IBF featherweight title. He unified
the title by dethroning WBA champion Derrick Gainer to
set the stage for his first mega-fight against Pacquiao.
Following his majority draw against Pacquiao, Marquez
successfully defended both title belts, winning
decisions over Victor Polo and Orlando Salido, before
traveling to Indonesia to face Chris John, where he lost
a controversial decision.
Marquez successfully
advanced into the super featherweight division this year
by dethroning WBC champion Marco Antonio Barrera in
March and successfully defending that title in November
against Ricardo Rocky Juarez.
Dubbed "Republica Enemy No. 1," Pacquiao (45-3-2, 34
KOs), from General Santos City, Philippines, has
blitzed through the best fighters Mexico has had to
offer since 2003 including Erik Morales (KO 3, TKO 10),
Barrera (TKO 11, W 12), Oscar Larios (W 12), Emanuel
Lucero (TKO 3), Hector Velazquez (TKO 6) and Jorge Solis
(KO 8). The only blemish on this impressive resume was
the draw against Marquez. Pacquiao, was named 2006
Fighter of the Year by the Boxing Writers Association of
America and The Ring magazine for his two
spectacular knockout victories of Mexican icon and
three-division champion Morales, as well as his
dominating 12-round unanimous decision over former world
champion Larios. The hard-hitting southpaw has won 21
of his last 22 bouts including 2007 victories over
Barrera and Solis.