Showing posts with label UNLV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UNLV. Show all posts

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Pacquiao vs. Vargas: prefight analysis and betting prediction



Fight: Manny Pacquiao (58-6-2, 38 KOs) vs. Jessie Vargas (27-1, 10 KOs)
Location: Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, Nevada
Date: November 5, 2016
Weight class: Welterweight (147 lbs)
Title(s) on the line: WBO Welterweight title
TV: Top Rank PPV
Line: Pacquiao -570, Vargas +480 (5 Dimes, 11/5/16)
Ring Magazine Rankings: Pacquiao: not ranked (due to brief retirement), Vargas: #8 ranked welterweight
Style: Pacquiao: Southpaw, Vargas: Orthodox
Referee: Kenny Bayless


Why you should watch this fight


To see if the recently unretired and current Philippine Senator Manny Pacquiao can reclaim his previously perennial status atop the welterweight division (and as one of the elite boxers pound-for-pound) by beating current WBO welterweight champion Jessie Vargas... or if the younger, technically skilled, and highly confident Vargas can pull off the defining win of his career by defeating one of the great boxers in the history of the sport in his adopted hometown of Las Vegas (where he has lived and trained since he was a child).

Pacquiao is not quite the electrifying fighter he was in his prime but - based on his impressive unanimous decision victory last April vs. Timothy Bradley - he still has elite speed and very good power, which should provide for an entertaining matchup with the scrappy, former two-time Mexican national champion Vargas, who likes to fight inside and will likely be willing to trade power punches with Pacquiao.

Pacquiao spent over 600 weeks (over 12 years) in the Ring Magazine pound-for-pound top 10 rankings before dropping off earlier this year due to a brief retirement; a convincing win vs. Vargas will likely return him to top pound-for-pound status.

This fight will be shown on PPV, though will be televised by Top Rank PPV instead of HBO, who had been under contract to televise Pacquiao's fights. HBO declined to televise this fight due in part to lack of interest in the matchup with Vargas and to avoid clustering the HBO boxing schedule (Andre Ward/Sergey Kovalev PPV on November 19th and the now-canceled Fury/Klitschko matchup that had been scheduled for October 29th.)

Loquacious ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith will make debut as a boxing color analyst for this fight, commentating alongside Brian Kenny, who will serve as the blow-by-blow announcer. Tim Bradley, who fought Pacquiao in his last fight this past April and who fought Vargas back in 2015, will also serve as an analyst for the fight.

Why Manny Pacquiao will win


Pacquiao is universally considered one of the best boxers in the history of the sport and, alongside Floyd Mayweather Jr., is one of the top two boxers of this generation. Judging by his performance this past April vs. Bradley - a possible future hall-of-famer who was coming off of an impressive TKO victory of granite-chinned Brandon Rios - Pacquiao is likely still one of the elite fighters in the sport. The freakish, next-level athleticism and talent that made Pacquiao a global icon is for the most part still there.

Although more than 10 years older, Pacquiao still has clear and significant hand speed and power advantages over Vargas, who has shown some solid power in his last couple of fights but only has 10 KOs in 28 career fights (36%). Pacquiao is an ambush-style fighter who is adept at moving in on his opponents and using his excellent hand speed to move out of range before his opponents can counter. Although not quite as fast or as strong as he was in his prime, it would be shocking if Pacquiao doesn't consistently beat the much slower Vargas to the punch with his speed and evade Vargas's pocket attack with his head movement and footwork, both of which are still amongst the best in boxing.

The 5'10" Vargas possesses a 4.5" height advantage and 4" reach advantage over Pacquiao, but Manny has had great success in previous fights vs. taller fighters with significant reach advantage (see his fights vs. 5'11" Antonio Margarito, 5'10" Oscar De La Hoya, and 5'10" Chris Algieri who were all dominated by Pacquiao despite their height and a 5" reach advantage). Vargas is a solid, technically skilled fighter but his attack will likely be somewhat stymied vs. Pacquiao (as it was vs. 5'6" Tim Bradley) as he will at times have to bend over and adjust the angles at which he naturally throws punches to land clean punches vs. his shorter opponent.

With clear disadvantages in speed, power, talent, athleticism, and experience, Vargas's chances lie largely on whether he can time Pacquiao and land a big right hand to set up a TKO/KO upset - as he did in his last fight in a 9th round TKO victory vs. betting favorite Sadam Ali and as he almost did late in the 12th round of his June 2015 fight vs. Bradley when he stunned Bradley with a big right hook. But Pacquiao is a highly experienced fighter who has actually fought a much more cautious and defensively responsible style since his KO loss to Juan Manuel Marquez in 2012; Pacquiao is better than he was even in his prime at keeping his guard up and still has very good head movement so it will be tough even for a skilled, classic Mexican-style boxer like Vargas to catch him with a big shot (especially given the speed disparity).

There's also the question of how much Pacquiao has really fallen off over the past few years. While obviously not the KO king he was in his prime (though the lack of KOs can mostly be attributed to  fighting guys who are naturally bigger than him at welterweight), his performances have still generally been top-level; Pacquiao's only losses in the last 4.5 years came vs. 1) an undefeated Tim Bradley in a split decision loss that the vast majority of boxing fans, experts, and media felt Pacquiao won decisively, 2) a KO loss to Marquez that Pacquiao was winning decisively and looking to finish early before getting caught with a big punch, and 3) a unanimous decision loss to a boxer widely considered the best fighter of this generation, Floyd Mayweather - a fight where he was able to win 4 rounds on 2 out of 3 of the judges' scorecards despite (at least according to Pacquiao) having an injured right shoulder. It can easily be argued that Pacquiao's skills haven't deteriorated nearly as much as people think and that he's (at 37 years old) maybe even the best welterweight in the world right now with Mayweather retired from the sport. 

Vargas is a good boxer and the current WBO welterweight champion but thus far in his career hasn't shown anything special to suggest that he would be a threat to upset Pacquiao. The best win of Vargas's career was his most recent fight vs. unbeaten, but unproven contender Sadam Ali and he lost convincingly in his 2015 fight vs. Timothy Bradley, a fighter Pacquiao has beaten convincingly twice (arguably three times). Over the past 17 years (spanning 38 fights), Pacquiao's only losses have been competitive losses to hall-of-fame caliber opponents (Mayweather, Marquez, Erik Morales, and possibly Bradley); Vargas is very widely considered a level (or two) below these caliber of fighters.

Despite this fight taking place in Las Vegas - where Vargas has lived and trained for several years - the fan-friendly and still extremely popular Pacquiao is the main attraction for this fight and will be the overwhelming crowd favorite, which sometimes affects (in favor of the crowd favorite) the action inside the ring and the judging outside of it.

Even with the personal and political distractions in his life, Pacquiao has always been an unflappable fighter who is seemingly unaffected by the pressure of big PPV fights. But for less experienced Vargas this is his first time headlining a PPV card; it's unclear how the atmosphere and pressure surrounding his first PPV fight will affect him.

Why Jessie Vargas will win


Vargas is the current WBO welterweight champion of the world and is coming off of the best win of his career, a 9th round TKO vs. betting favorite Sadam Ali, who was undefeated at the time.

Vargas is a very skilled, well-rounded, aggressive boxer with a good jab, good reach (4" reach advantage over Pacquiao), and what has recently proven to be a dangerous right hand. With only a 36% KO percentage Vargas isn't known for his power, but in his last couple of fights his big right hand led to an upset TKO victory of Ali and allowed him to stun and nearly knock down Bradley late in the 12th round of their fight in 2015. While not as reckless as he was in his prime, Pacquiao is still a highly aggressive fighter; if Vargas can time Pacquiao's attack, even one big counter right hand from Vargas could be devastating for Pacquiao. Pacquiao has proven at times to be susceptible to right hand counters (most notably Marquez's overhand right to stop Pacquiao in 2012 though Marquez had plenty of success with right hand counters in all four matchups with Pacquiao).

Vargas is the younger fighter (by over 10 years) in the middle of his prime while Pacquiao - though still arguably elite - is several years past his prime and highly prone to slippage at this point in his career,  especially given that his highly aggressive fighting style depends largely on a freakish athleticism that will inevitably deteriorate as he gets older. Pacquiao has generally fought well in recent fights but the fact remains he has lost 3 out of his last 7 fights (over 40% of his fights over the past 4.5 years). If we see further slippage from Pacquiao it would certainly open the door for the fresher, highly confident Vargas.

A classic Mexican-styled boxer, Vargas is a tough, scrappy fighter who has never been stopped and has only been knocked down once in his career (in the 3rd round of a fight he came back to win comfortably by unanimous decision). Vargas may be able to handle Pacquiao's power better than most expect; if so the newly found power in Vargas's right hand will present a huge threat to Manny's attacking, come-forward style over the course of the entire 12 rounds.

Pacquiao will be the overwhelming crowd favorite but this fight is talking place in Las Vegas, where Vargas has lived with his family and trained since he was a child; despite the potentially hostile environment at the Thomas & Mack Center, fighting in his adopted hometown should add an element of comfort for Vargas.


Prefight Analysis


Vargas is an underrated talent but I can't give him more than a puncher's chance to win this fight. It's true that Pacquiao is not the fighter he once was - not as strong, not as fast, and doesn't throw as many punches as he used to - but based on the performance we saw just seven months ago against an A-level fighter in Tim Bradley (a fighter who beat Vargas decisively), Pacquiao is still (at least) a level above Vargas in terms of speed, power, and skill.

Pacquiao will consistently beat Vargas to the punch and frustrate him with his speed, movement, and ability to land power punches cleanly from unexpected angles. Vargas was hit consistently and cleanly by Bradley in their 2015 fight (Bradley landed 49% of his power shots over the last six rounds of the fight) and he even had trouble in the early rounds of his most recent fight vs. Ali's offensive attack so he'll really be up against it facing a fighter who lands cleaner, faster, and harder than any other opponent he's faced in his career.

Vargas has a clear size and reach advantage but Pacquiao historically has looked even more impressive vs. bigger, taller, rangier fighters (see Pacquiao's fights vs. De La Hoya, Margarito, and Algieri) due at least in part to taller fighters having more difficulty being able to adjust angles to land cleanly vs. shorter, elusive opponents like Pacquiao.

Vargas is tough and durable, but is a basic and somewhat predictable 1-2 puncher who will likely be overwhelmed  by Pacquiao's speedy 3-5+ punch combinations and ability to get out of the pocket before Vargas has a chance to counter. Vargas has shown improved power in recent fights but Pacquiao in recent years has been a much more cautious, defensively responsible fighter than he was in his prime; I see Pacquiao being careful to keep his guard up (as he's done in all recent fights since the Marquez KO) and not allow Vargas to set traps and time him with a big right hand.

In my opinion, the only question in this fight is whether Pacquiao wins this fight by a wide unanimous decision or by stoppage. Pacquiao's A-level skills, speed, and power vs. a relatively inexperienced Vargas's pocket-oriented, somewhat flat-footed style makes a stoppage a very real possibility. But Vargas is a gritty, durable boxer who's never been stopped in his career in against a fighter in Pacquiao who's punch output has decreased dramatically over his past several fights and hasn't stopped anyone in nearly seven years. (Pacquiao's last stoppage came in November 2009 vs. a slightly weight drained Miguel Cotto.) While a knockout is a very realistic possibility (due to  Vargas's non-elusive, flat-footed style and discrepancy in skill, speed, and power), I like Vargas's larger, durable, younger frame to last 12 rounds vs. a more cautious-as-of-late Pacquiao who doesn't seem to have the killer instinct he had in his prime.

Pacquiao is a hyper-aggressive fighter  who is still at times defensively irresponsible; while I expect Pacquiao to win this fight easily, at odds better than 16-1, I do think it's well worth it to hedge a bet on Pacquiao with Vargas to win by stoppage given Vargas's grit and the respectable power he's shown in recent fights.


 Prediction: Pacquiao by unanimous decision
Recommended bets: 1) Pacquiao by unanimous decision (1.5 units)
2) Vargas by TKO/KO (.3 unit)


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Friday, November 6, 2015

Bradley vs. Rios: prefight analysis and betting prediction



Fight:  Timothy Bradley (32-1-1-1, 12 KOs) vs.  Brandon Rios (33-2-1, 24 KOs)
Location: Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, Nevada
Date: November 7, 2015
Weight class: Welterweight (147 lbs)
Title(s) on the line: WBO World Welterweight title
TV: HBO
Line: Bradley -380, Rios +340 (5 Dimes, 11/6/15)
Purse: Bradley: $1.9 million, Rios: $800,000
Ring Magazine Rankings: Bradley: #4 ranked welterweight, Rios: Not ranked
Style: Bradley: Orthodox, Rios: Orthodox
Referee: Tony Weeks

Positives for Bradley
Negatives for Bradley
Positives for Rios
Negatives for Rios
Summary/Prediction


Positives for Bradley

  • Current WBO welterweight title holder. As a five-time world champion at junior welterweight and welterweight, Bradley is an experienced, battle-tested boxer whose resume is on par with the best 140 and 147 lb fighters of the past decade. Other than Floyd Mayweather is the only boxer to defeat future first ballot hall-of-famers Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez. With his June 2013 split decision victory vs. Marquez, Bradley likely sealed his ticket into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. 
  • A long-time undefeated fighter whose only loss in career was a competitive unanimous decision loss to Pacquiao in April 2014. As recently as last year was ranked the #3 pound-for-pound boxer in the sport by Ring Magazine; has defeated an impressive list of former world champions including Pacquiao, Marquez, Lamont Peterson, Devon Alexander, Ruslan Provodnikov, Miguel Vazquez, Kendall Holt, Nate Campbell, Jessie Vargas, and Junior Witter. Most or all of the former world champions Bradley has beaten were better skilled, arguably tougher opponents than Rios at the time. 
  • Technically savvy, versatile boxer who can outbox opponents from the outside with reach, speed, and movement but is also often willing to use his toughness and physical strength to brawl inside. Bradley is a skilled boxer who is adept at adjusting to his opponent's tendencies during fights - shown most notably in his first fight with Pacquiao where he outworked Manny in the 2nd half of the fight. Bradley comes into this fight with Rios with a clear skill advantage.
  •  Determined boxer with heart who is good at finding ways to win close fights. Despite all he's accomplished in boxing is still highly motivated and still fights like he has something to prove after the controversy surrounding his first fight vs. Pacquiao over three years ago.  
  • Bradley is an elusive fighter with catlike quickness in both his hands and feet. Bradley possesses very good to great vertical and horizontal movement which should allow him to have success evading Rios's pressure over the course of the fight. Rios is a relatively slow, flat-footed fighter who will likely have trouble cutting off the ring vs. the more mobile Bradley and will also likely have trouble beating Bradley to the punch due to inferior hand speed. 
  • Many feel Rios is a threat to defeat Bradley by TKO/KO but Bradley has already survived (and beaten) better power punchers than Rios in Pacquiao and Provodnikov who were both also more mobile than Rios. Bradley is arguably a different level of fighter than Rios, with clear skill, speed, and quickness advantages, as well as a slight reach advantage and jab which he should be able to use to keep Rios at bay throughout most of the fight.
  • Bradley has a new trainer in current ESPN boxing commentator Teddy Atlas, who has trained (or helped train) former world champions Mike Tyson, Michael Moorer, and Alexander Povetkin. Atlas has not been an active trainer in recent years, but is more experienced and arguably more knowledgeable than Bradley's former trainer Joel Diaz. Atlas is reportedly training Bradley to keep distance and box from range in the upcoming fight vs. Rios, which will likely be to Bradley's advantage.
  • Although Bradley has shown a questionable chin in the 12th round of recent fights vs. Vargas and Provodnikov, Bradley is a mentally tough fighter who has never been stopped in his career. The knockdowns Bradley suffered vs. Provodnikov is the only time Bradley has been knocked down in his career.
  • Not overly powerful (only 12 KOs in his career and 1 KO in past 8.5 years), but has enough power to keep his opponents honest. Almost knocked Marquez down late in the 12th round of their October 2013 fight.


Negatives for Bradley

  • At 32 years old, Bradley has looked past his prime and somewhat battle-worn in recent fights; in his last three fights Bradley has an unimpressive record of 1-1-1. Last year, Bradley faded in the later rounds of his loss vs. Pacquiao and draw vs. Diego Chaves (though the Chaves fight was a fight many still felt he won convincingly). In Bradley's most recent fight vs. Vargas, he was almost knocked down late in the 12th round and possibly could've been stopped if he hadn't been saved by the bell. Rios - a more natural pressure fighter with better power than Vargas - is coming off one of the more impressive wins of his career with his TKO victory vs. Mike Alvarado and poses a real threat if Bradley slows down in the later rounds as he's done in recent fights.  
  • Bradley has mediocre to below average punching power, which will allow Rios - who has an excellent chin - to take chances and be relentlessly aggressive throughout the fight. Unlike the Pacquiao fight, Rios won't have to worry about power with Bradley's counter punching so should have opportunities in spots to corner and unload power punches on Bradley despite his clear disadvantage in foot speed.   
  • Bradley is an elusive fighter but his defense is arguably overrated and has been especially questionable as of late. Bradley has been getting hit increasingly flush in recent fights, in particular when he chooses to stand in at close range and brawl. Bradley sometimes shows an inclination to brawl (rather than box) in certain spots (an inclination that has increased since his controversial win vs. Pacquiao), which could be to his detriment vs. a dangerous pressure fighter in Rios. 
  • This will be Bradley's first professional fight without Joel Diaz as his trainer. Teddy Atlas, Bradley's new trainer, is a highly respected and skilled trainer (even more so than Diaz by most accounts) but it's a huge unknown what effect a new trainer will have on an older, past prime boxer who'd only been with one trainer his entire career.


Positives for Rios

  • Former WBA lightweight champion. Very good pressure fighter with dangerous power in both hands. Brawler who fights especially well from the inside and is very effective at cutting off the ring. Earlier this year scored one of the more impressive wins of his career with a 3rd round TKO victory vs. Mike Alvarado in Alvarado's hometown of Denver, Colorado. (Alvarado is a former light welterweight champion who beat Rios in their previous fight.) In October 2012 Rios earned a 7th round TKO victory vs. Alvarado - Alvarado's first loss as a professional. 
  • Has one of the best chins in boxing. Consistently walks through flush power punches. Has never been stopped in his career and only been knocked down once, a 2006 fight vs. Joel Ortega (a fight which he came back to win by 5th round KO).
  • Has good counterpunching skills. Rios often takes flush power punches in order to throw even more powerful counterpunches - which is an effective style for him due to his excellent chin and deceptively quick hand speed. If Saturday's fight vs. Bradley turns into a brawl (which it could given Bradley's inclination at times to brawl), Rios stands a good chance of having success as that type of fight comes much more naturally to Rios than Bradley.    
  • Relentless puncher from the inside. Inside hooks and overhand rights were especially effective in his three fights vs. Alvarado. Uses body attack well to wear down his opponents over the course of a fight. 
  • Like Bradley, Rios is a very tough boxer who fights with a warrior mentality and tremendous will to win.  Will be highly motivated to win this fight as he knows his career as a top-level boxer may be in jeopardy with a loss.
  • Longtime trainer is Robert Garcia, widely considered one of the elite trainers in boxing. Garcia was the 2012 BWAA Trainer of the Year and was voted Ring Magazine Trainer of the Year for 2012 and 2013.  
  • Rios is Mexican-American; due to his fan-friendly fight style and the anticipated solid presence of Mexican/Mexican-American fight fans, it is expected that the crowd at the Thomas & Mack Center will be pro-Rios.


Negatives for Rios

  • Very stationary, flat-footed, predictable fighter. In Bradley will be fighting a boxer with a significant advantage in technical skill, boxing IQ, mobility, and hand speed. Rios will have to turn fight with Bradley into a brawl in order to win; in a pure boxing match, Bradley likely wins easily with his superior skill, speed, and slight reach advantage (which he can use to maintain distance from Rios's power punching).
  • Rios has lost two out of his last four fights, including a wide unanimous decision loss to Manny Pacquiao (a fight where he arguably didn't win a single round). Rios looked good in his win earlier this year vs. Alvarado but Alvarado, by his own admittance, didn't train properly for the fight and was heavily distracted by legal and substance abuse issues. Rios's only other win in the past two years was a DQ victory last year vs. Diego Chaves who was actually ahead on two out of three judge's scorecards before being disqualified due to intentional elbow to face. Rios has actually been behind on at least one judge's scorecard at the time of stoppage in four out of his last six fights. 
  • Though he has an excellent chin, Rios has poor defensive skills. Uses very little head movement and is more than willing to take flush punches in order to land his own power punches. This style has generally been effective for him in his career but results in easy scoring opportunities for higher skilled opponents such as Alvarado in their first two fights and Manny Pacquiao, who he lost to by wide unanimous decision in November 2013.  
  • Like Bradley has been through some brutal wars in recent fights, most notably his first two fights vs. Alvarado and his November 2013 unanimous decision loss vs. Pacquiao. Will Rios, who is getting older and never in his career beaten a boxer with Bradley's skill, be able to stay competitive vs. a pound-for-pound caliber fighter?



Prefight Summary


There are certainly some reasons why Rios could win this fight. Rios is highly confident and coming off perhaps the best win of his career - an easy 3rd round TKO victory vs. Mike Alvarado after the two split their two previous highly competitive (and fight-of-the-year caliber) fights. Although Alvarado, by his own admittance, came into the fight a bit out of shape and distracted by personal issues, Rios fought with a sense of urgency we've rarely seen in him before and looked as sharp and accurate as he has ever looked.

Rios is indeed a skilled brawler who, while not as fast or talented as Bradley, is effective at cutting off the ring and will almost certainly have his opportunities over the course of 12 rounds, especially vs. Bradley who seems to have a natural inclination towards brawling when pressured. Bradley can be elusive, but he's also shown susceptibility in recent fights to getting hit, most notably in his 2013 fight vs. Provodnikov (where he suffered the 1st knockdown of his career and appeared out on his feet on multiple occasions) and late in his most recent fight vs. Vargas, where he was hit flush and struggled to stay on his feet in the closing seconds of the 12th round. (Vargas, with only 9 KOs in 27 fights, is not known for his punching power.)

Bradley has been in some wars in recent fights and appears to be not quite the fighter he once was; if  what seems to be a rejuvenated Rios can maintain pressure on Bradley throughout the fight and turn it into a brawl, it's highly conceivable Rios could wear Bradley down and get the TKO/KO victory in the later rounds.

But, at the end of the day, I do think even a slightly past prime, battle-worn Bradley should be able to box circles around what is essentially a B-level fighter in Brandon Rios. Not a lot of people realize Bradley has been one of the top fighters pound-for-pound in the sport over the past decade (just last year ranked as high as #3 pound-for-pound by Ring Magazine) and has the solid resume to back it up. Bradley has clear skill and speed advantages over Rios (as Pacquiao did when he fought Rios, though Bradley can't match Pacquiao's power) and *should* (like Pacquiao) be able to win nearly every one with effective boxing and movement.

Bradley's inclination to brawl could get him in trouble in spots but Rios, in my opinion, is too slow and flat-footed to give Bradley consistent trouble over the course of 12 rounds. Bradley has already fought (and beaten) better punchers with more skill than Rios and should have little to no problems in this fight.

I think Bradley by decision is far and away the smartest bet in this matchup *but* would recommend
hedging the bet with Rios by TKO/KO in rounds 7-12 as a knockout in the last 4-6 rounds of the fight is the only way I see Rios winning.


Prediction: Bradley by decision (2 units) 

[Recommended Hedge: Rios by TKO/KO in rounds 7-12 at +717]

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