LAS VEGAS — He’s a vegan in a sport where meat is king, a thinking man’s fighter in a game that embraces brawlers. Timothy Bradley never wavered in his chase for boxing glory, even when his bank account was down to $11 and there was no guarantee he would ever be on the big stage.
He’s finally got his big fight against Manny Pacquiao, and Bradley isn’t about to let the chance of a lifetime go by. Not after he’s gone through so much to get to where he’s at.
“It’s been a long journey but I knew someday I’d get here,” Bradley said. “I just didn’t know when or how.”
Bradley will fight Pacquiao on Saturday in a bout that will earn him millions and could get him the respect he still craves. He’s a decided underdog, but some in boxing like his chances against a fighter who struggled his last time out and suddenly is regarded as vulnerable.
Count Bradley among them. He’s believed in himself since he was working as a waiter to support his boxing career and later when his bank account was depleted and he had to go to England for a $40,000 payday and his first title shot.
At Wednesday’s final prefight press conference, he was so confident he held an oversized copy of a ticket for a Nov. 10 rematch with Pacquiao — a fight that would only happen if Bradley wins the first fight.
“It’s all or nothing,” Bradley said. “No rounds off. Round by round I have to win each one.”
So far that hasn’t been a problem in Bradley’s career. He’s won all 28 of his fights, though he’s never fought anyone with the pedigree of Pacquiao. He got the fight not just because of his undefeated record, but the feeling in the Pacquiao camp that he is too slow and doesn’t punch hard enough to make him a threat.
Bradley would like nothing better than to prove them wrong.
“He’s going to respect me, believe it,” Bradley said. “As soon as I tag him he’s going to respect me.”
Bradley fights for only the second time at 147 pounds, moving up to challenge Pacquiao for a piece of the welterweight title. He will make a minimum $5 million, but there will be even more lucrative fights in the future should he pull off an upset against the Filipino boxer/politician.
Oddsmakers make Pacquiao a 4-1 pick, and he’s got some motivation of his own. He barely escaped with a decision in his last fight against Juan Manuel Marquez, and there are whispers that at the age of 33 he is slipping.
Trainer Freddie Roach said Pacquiao — who gave up drinking, gambling and basketball in favor of Bible reading sessions since the Marquez fight — must win or he will advise him to retire.
“I would like there to be a knockout,” Roach said. “He wants to prove he’s not all done like some people say. He has heard it, and I think he has something to prove in this fight.”
Roach has downplayed Bradley as an opponent, saying his best weapon is leading with his head and that he doesn’t have the speed or power to beat Pacquiao. He sees him more as the club fighter he once was in Southern California than a legitimate threat to one of the most exciting — and popular — names in boxing.
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