Pacquiao-Marquez: Weekend Review and Ratings Update
By Cliff Rold
They say a tie is like kissing one’s sister. After 36 rounds, Manny Pacquiao leads Juan Manuel Marquez 2-0-1 in the win column. To those who watched their fights, it remains difficult to see one man’s superiority over the other.
This scribe saw Pacquiao ahead 115-113 on Saturday. The first two times, the edge was seen going to Marquez. All three fights are a terror to score. If they fought into old age, they’d go down to the last tooth on the last denture.
It’s hard to say whether a rivalry like this is made in heaven when they fight like they were forged in hell.
It’s sure heavenly to watch.
Let’s got to the report cards.
Grades Marquez kept himself off the deck and, as was the case in their second fight, he exceeded expectations. Those who felt age, and weight, might make a difference didn’t pay enough attention to how good Marquez looked in beating Juan Diaz and Michael Katsidis last year, present author included.
They also ignored history. In 1989, Tommy Hearns was written off in a rematch with Ray Leonard. He proved, in the ring, that he was just that strong a foil to “Sugar.” Marquez didn’t suffer the robbery Hearns did in that ‘draw’ (acknowledging that there are some who feel different) but he left the same sort of awe.
Great rivals are that for a reason. These two just can’t master the other and know how to constantly push each other. Consider the flip in rounds five and six. Marquez schooled Pacquiao in the fifth, beating him to the punch and putting on a clinic of effective right hands. With a minute to rest, Pacquiao came out for the sixth and used a small step back to draw Marquez into some quick counters.
Then came round nine, both men letting it all hang out, each landing combinations in turn, reminding all of what has been so special in their combat.
In the end, Marquez will have to look to the final two rounds and wonder if he could have done more. Like Winky Wright, who gave away the twelfth to Jermain Taylor for the Middleweight title a few years back, Marquez seemed to ebb just a bit in the eleventh and twelfth, more so in the latter. He lost both rounds on two of three official cards.
Eric Ray Scribe - News
This scribe saw Pacquiao ahead 115-113 on Saturday. The first two times, the edge was seen going to Marquez. All three fights are a terror to score. If they fought into old age, they'd go down to the last tooth on the last denture.

Seriously, that made my day but I certainly wasn't the only scribe to have vouched for him. I know that Jake Donovan, Lem Satterfield and Eric Raskin penned their own columns advocating his cause and it was the actual members of the BWAA who voted him
Dorothy Chapman, the scribe for the Wilton Girl Scouts, wrote that the Beaver Patrol divided into groups and worked on signalling and junior citizenship. Amherst, Brookline and Hollis were ready to vote on a three-town cooperative school.

Paul W. Arnold is a veteran Hip Hop scribe whose work over the last decade has appeared in the pages of XXL, Vibe, The Source, Elemental Magazine, Murder Dog, Scratch, Down and several other print publications, as well as online at AllHipHop.com and