Cotto pummelled by Pac Man

Filipino continues remarkable run by stopping welterweight champ in Las Vegas

Last updated: 15th November 2009   Subscribe to RSS Feed

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Manny Pacquiao enhanced his status as pound-for-pound king as he stopped Miguel Cotto in the final round to claim his WBO welterweight title in Las Vegas.

Pacquiao claimed his sixth world title at a sixth different weight class as he produced another power-packed performance despite stepping up in weight once again.

The big showdown in Vegas lived up to all expectations with a furious battle almost going all the way, but Pacquiao's constant barrage finally proved too much in the closing stages.

Another stunning victory over a bigger man came for Pac Man, who was troubled early in the fight but soon started to hammer his opponent who bravely hung on until the 12th.

The Filipino hero, who dismantled Oscar de la Hoya over eight rounds in his first fight at welterweight 11 months ago, followed up by destroying light welterweight king Ricky Hatton in May.

This time, fighting for only the second time at 145 pounds, the man who started his career at 107lbs marched to a 50th victory of his professional career with his 38th stoppage.

Record

Cotto, whose record now stands at 34-2, got off to an encouraging start, more than coping with Pacquiao's speed and keeping his rival at bay with a series of strong jabs in the opening round.

There was more of the same at the start of the second but Pacquiao gradually found his rhythm and began to find Cotto, 29, with big left leads that were landing with increasing frequency as the round wore on.

Cotto caught his man with a big left hook after getting Pacquiao against the ropes for the first time in the fight but the Filipino ended the second on top with a series of stunning combinations as the Puerto Rican mixed it with his rival a little more.

Cotto returned to a more cautious jabbing mode in the third but nothing could have stopped a lightning fast right hook to the head that caught him off balance and sent him to the canvas for the first time.

Cotto appeared unhurt and finished the round strongly, landing a vicious upper cut through Pacquiao's gate followed by a stinging left hook.

Barrage

The fourth saw Pacquiao open with a barrage that only seemed to encourage Cotto, who finally pinned his rival on the ropes for a sustained period of the round.

Yet when Pacquaio came off the ropes he did so emphatically, turning Cotto and then knocking him down with a clubbing right hook, left hook combination that definitely hurt the Puerto Rican.

Cotto survived and enjoyed a comeback in the fifth, hurting Pacquiao first with an upper cut and then with a left hook, following up in the sixth with another left hook that the little man merely acknowledged with a grin, following that with straight left that rocked his opponent, Cotto responding with another big left of his own only to see another smile in response.

From then on, it was all Pacquiao, dishing out punishment on the Puerto Rican seemingly at will, Cotto replying only sporadically as both eyes swelled over the seventh, eighth and ninth rounds, perpetually kept on the back foot by the relentless PacMan.

The 10th saw Pacquiao give Cotto something of a breather but the writing was on the wall, Pacquiao controlling the rhythm and pace of the fight as his opponent backpedalled throughout.

The 12th and final round saw Cotto quickly in trouble again as Pacquiao resumed the onslaught, referee Kenny Bayless finally bowing to the inevitable as the Puerto Rican was backed into a corner and stepping in to end the contest.