Commentary
Mismatch indeed: Pacquiao dominates De La Hoya
Freddie Roach predicted Oscar De La Hoya wouldn't be able to pull the trigger against Manny Pacquiao. Turns out, he was right. Pacquiao dominated De La Hoya for eight one-sided rounds on Saturday.
Originally Published: December 7, 2008
By
Dan Rafael | ESPN.com
LAS VEGAS -- The legions who criticized the Oscar De La Hoya vs. Manny Pacquiao fight as a mismatch were right.
But it didn't go the way they banked on it going. No, De La Hoya, the naturally bigger man, a man who had fought from 130 to 160 pounds and won titles in the six divisions along the way, didn't score the easy victory. No, he didn't score even a tough victory. Instead, he got his rear end kicked all over the ring for eight wickedly lopsided rounds. In the end, it was the shell of De La Hoya, with his left eye swollen, who retired on his stool at the end of the eighth round when trainer Nacho Beristain threw in the towel Saturday night before a packed MGM Grand Garden Arena crowd of 15,001. David, er, Pacquiao, had slayed De La Hoya, who we might never see in the ring again (or at least shouldn't see in the ring again) after a massive destruction that landed him in the hospital as a precaution afterward. Is there any doubt that Pacquiao, the Filipino whirlwind, is the best pound-for-pound fighter? Certainly not after that performance.[+] Enlarge

AP Photo/Mark J. TerrillManny Pacquiao's speed and two-fisted attack proved too much for Oscar De La Hoya.
[+] Enlarge

Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty ImagesManny Pacquiao can look forward to big paydays after punching his way past Oscar De La Hoya.
- ESPN.com boxing writer since 2005
- Writes pound-for-pound rankings
- Five years at USA Today
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