Crying Pacquiao 'let Philippine fans down'

AFP
Manny Pacquiao's loss stunned a huge Philippine audience watching the fight live on television on Sunday

MANILA (AFP) –

Manny Pacquiao throws a right at Juan Manuel Marquez (L) during their welterweight fight in Las Vegas on December 8. Pacquiao shed tears on national television Monday, saying he had let his country down in his devastating knockout loss to Marquez.

Philippine boxing hero Manny Pacquiao shed tears on national television Monday, saying he had let his country down in his devastating knockout loss to his great Mexican rival Juan Manuel Marquez.

“The low morale, the sadness, I accept that. This is my job…. But the reaction of the Filipinos, the many who cried, especially my family, it really hurts me,” he said in an interview on the GMA network.

The former eight-division world champion wiped tears from his eyes listening to his wife, Jinkee, make a tearful appeal on camera for her husband, who turns 34 next week, to hang up his gloves.

“When you see your husband get hurt, you cannot even sleep,” she said in the interview, conducted in the United States after Saturday’s Las Vegas bout.

Manny Pacquiao

Graphic profile of Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao, who was knocked out by Juan Manuel Marquez in their non-title welterweight fight on December 8.

Asked if she wanted her husband to retire from boxing, she said: “You know the answer to that. He knows what I am asking him”.

Pacquiao’s mother Dionisia made a separate appeal on the same station.

“I have long asked you son, it is time to retire because you started boxing at such a young age. I always pray that he will stop. I asked God to tell my son to stop,” she said.

She said she was alarmed by her son’s knock-out at the hands of Marquez in the sixth round of their non-title fight Saturday night local time in Las Vegas.

The loss stunned a huge Philippine audience watching the fight live on television on Sunday.

“I was shocked yesterday. The way he suddenly fell,” said Pacquiao’s mother, who added that, like in previous bouts, she had only watched a recording because she could not bear to watch her son’s fights live.

Jinkee, Manny Pacquiao’s wife, at the official weigh-in for her husband’s bout against Juan Manuel Marquez in November 2011. She make a tearful appeal on camera Monday for her husband, who turns 34 next week, to hang up his gloves.

But while moved by the women’s entreaties, Pacquiao remained non-committal on calls for his retirement.

“I don’t want to hurt my family and the people who support them,” was all he would say about his future plans.

“I am OK. I just got overconfident in this fight. That is part of the game — sometimes you win, sometimes you lose.”

Pacquiao said immediately after the loss that he intends to fight again.

The Filipino fighter who has won world titles in an unprecedented eight weight divisions has extended his boxing success into election to parliament, a career in show business and commercial endorsements.

But there have been questions about Pacquiao’s focus on his boxing in recent years as he has had to deal with his duties as a congressman, host of a television game show and as pitchman for various products.

In the past year he has also become a Bible preacher, though he insists his religion has not dulled his killer instinct in the ring.

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