
Manny Pacquiao eyes astonishing comeback: 'He still has two or three fights in him'
Manny Pacquiao is closing in on a return to boxing and hopes to fight two or three more times before hanging up his gloves once and for all. The Filipino legend, who will be inducted into the hall of fame next month as boxing's only eight-division champion, has an agreement in place to challenge Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title in Las Vegas on July 19. It is understood terms were agreed following face to face talks between Pacquiao, representatives of Barrios and promoters Premier Boxing Champions (PBC) in the Philippines last week. WBC president Mauricio Sulaiman gave the bout his blessing while attending the Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez-William Scull event in Saudi Arabia at the weekend, describing it as a 'great fight'. The T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas has been lined up as a venue, but Pacquiao wants to wait until after the upcoming elections in his homeland before making a final decision and announcing his plans. The 46-year-old, who has not fought since defeat to Yordenis Ugas in August 2021, is in a tight race for a seat in the Senate of the Philippines, with voters going to the polls on May 12. 'Manny feels good and that he still has it in him to compete at that level. He feels he can still fight two or three more times, this year, next year and maybe even into 2027,' a source close to Pacquiao told The National. It is understood Pacquiao is already in training and is not fazed by the short turnaround between the elections and a potential July 19 bout. He insists he needs only a 30-day camp and sparring to be ready and would travel to the US and reunite with long-time trainer Freddie Roach at the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles. A bout against Barrios has been discussed for some time and Pacquiao had been keen to bring it to the UAE. He considers Dubai his second home, possesses a golden visa and held talks with the Abu Dhabi Sports Council about staging the Barrios fight in the UAE capital. Last November he put on a show for thousands of fans at Global Village before returning to take in the New Year celebrations at Burj Khalifa. He has numerous business dealings in the UAE and plans to open both a boxing museum and academy in Dubai. 'We are working right now, probably after this week we can finalise everything for the fight here in Abu Dhabi,' Pacquiao told The National back in January. 'We are still negotiating. We were planning to fight in the United States in July but why not here? Bring [Barrios] here. It's going to be the third week of July in Abu Dhabi for a world championship. We have had talks with his promoter.' As Pacquiao revealed then, the fight is indeed slated for the third week of July, but the venue will be in Las Vegas with the PBC eager to stage the event stateside. Should he return to the ring for the first time since 2021 then it would take his record-breaking career into a 30th year having debuted, aged 16, back in 1995. Pacquiao is the holder of several world records, including being the only boxer to lift a world title in four different decades. He previously served as a senator of the Philippines from 2016 to 2022.
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The National
2 hours ago
- The National
Asia Rugby Championship: Can UAE qualify for the 2027 Rugby World Cup?
The leading rugby players of the UAE return to national duty this weekend when they host Hong Kong at The Sevens, Dubai. It is the opening fixture of the 2025 Asia Rugby Championship (ARC), which carries with it a direct qualification place at the Rugby World Cup. Expansion The next World Cup, to be played in Australia in October and November 2027, will involve 24 teams, up from 20 last time. The first three World Cups featured 16 teams, while all those from 1999 till the last one, in France in 2023, have had 20. The new format will feature six pools of four teams, with a round of 16 added before the quarter-finals. The tournament duration is reduced from seven to six weeks. For the first time, there will also be a guaranteed participant from Asia other than Japan. Qualifying Twelve teams gained automatic qualification for the tournament by finishing in the top three of their pool at the 2023 World Cup. Four teams have qualified from Europe. Three will qualify from the Pacific – which includes Japan - plus one each from Africa, Asia and South America. There will be an additional qualifier from a South America/Pacific play-off. The final team will be decided via a four-team repechage tournament, to be played in Dubai in November. Asian representation Japan are one of only 10 sides to have played at every Rugby World Cup. No other Asian side has ever played in rugby's showpiece tournament. That is guaranteed to change this time. The winners of the 2025 ARC will qualify directly, while the runners-up will be entered into a repechage system. Play-offs The second-placed side in the Asia Rugby Championship will face a play-off against the second-best side from the corresponding competition in Africa. The losers will be eliminated, while the winners will advance to the last-chance, four-team final qualification tournament. If the UAE do finish second in the ARC, it will be tough. They have played Zimbabwe and Kenya in recent times – each potential opponents in the play-off – and have been soundly beaten. If they were to make it through, though, there would be a significant incentive for them. Home advantage The final qualification tournament will be a four-team round-robin tournament, and is to be played at The Sevens, Dubai – even if the UAE aren't involved. The participating teams will include Belgium, the fifth-placed team from the European section of qualifying, plus the third-placed team from South America. They will be joined by the loser of the play-off series between South America and the Pacific sections, plus the winner of the African/Asia play-off. The winner of the tournament, which will be played from November 8-18, will advance to the World Cup. 2025 ARC fixtures Friday, June 13, Colombo: Sri Lanka v South Korea Saturday, June 14, Dubai: UAE v Hong Kong Saturday, June 21, Incheon: South Korea v UAE Sunday June 22, Hong Kong: Hong Kong China v Sri Lanka Friday, July 4, Colombo: Sri Lanka v UAE Saturday, July 5, Incheon: South Korea v Hong Kong China UAE's form The national team's hopes of featuring in the qualification shake-up soared when they achieved a historic second-place finish in the ARC last year. They managed that by claiming a thrilling comeback win against South Korea in the heat of the Dubai summer, t hen by dispatching Malaysia. If they are to go one better this year, and claim that automatic qualifying berth, they will likely have to do something they have never managed before. Since replacing the Arabian Gulf in the World Rugby competition structure in 2011, the UAE have yet to beat Hong Kong. The UAE's opening day visitors have won the ARC for each other past five years. What the UAE do have in their favour, though, is that they are hosting Hong Kong in the heat of summer. The national team then have away fixtures against South Korea and Sri Lanka.


The National
4 hours ago
- The National
Club World Cup: Al Ain carry UAE flag against Europe's elite with knowledge they have beaten Juventus before
While all the sides at the Fifa Club World Cup are – by dint of the fact they qualified in the first place – champions in their own right, some champions are more equal than others. Take Sunday's Group C opener between Bayern Munich and Auckland City FC. The forward line for the German giants will be led by the €95 million England captain Harry Kane, with an array of household name teammates beside him. By contrast, one of the main goal threats for their opposition is a refugee-turned-car mechanic who commutes 90 minutes each way to get to Auckland City's twice-weekly training sessions. That might be an extreme case. Not all disparities are quite so significant, but they do exist elsewhere in the competition, too. For the UAE's entrant, Al Ain, the opening two matches in particular, are the stuff of dreams: Juventus and Manchester City. The prospect of lining up against the gilded names of European football's elite might be simultaneously thrilling and daunting. But Al Ain have something to lean on from the past, which shows success is achievable. Beating Juventus? They have been there, done that, got the YouTube footage. There might be some cyber dust on it. But the grainy clip shows Mohammed Omar, the former UAE captain, rampaging past the Juventus defence and firing a shot past the great Gianluigi Buffon. It happened in the seventh minute of a mid-season friendly between Al Ain and Juventus in January 2003. And for the remainder of the game, the Marcelo Lippi-coached side of such stars as Pavel Nedved, Alessandro Del Piero, Edgar Davids, David Trezeguet and Antonio Conte could find no way past Al Ain. That might have predated the involvement of any of the current vintage. But the lessons of history have been passed down to Al Ain's Class of 2025. 'I think we have an opportunity to win against Juventus,' said Kaku, Al Ain's Paraguayan playmaker. 'Twenty years ago, Al Ain won against Juventus and I hope, again, we can take three points.' Al Ain's No 10 says there is no reason for the players to fear what they are going to be faced with when the competition starts. Rather, they should see it as an opportunity. 'When you play against big teams, your motivation is different,' Kaku said. 'The mentality of the team changes, and I think we have opportunities. For me, I have played against Brazil and Argentina, so I don't have to be scared about Juventus or City. I'm confident in myself.' It does stand to reason, though, that the players could be starry-eyed. For example, Park Yong-woo, Al Ain's South Korean midfielder, might conceivably take his autograph book to the City game, given his reverence of Pep Guardiola, the opposition manager. 'I love Guardiola,' Park said. 'I love his style, his philosophy. I love all of him. 'Maybe we will play all defenders against them! If we defend very well, then create two or three chances of our own, I believe we can score against them.' Al Ain are giants of UAE football, and have twice been Asia's best side. They took several significant scalps on their way to becoming the first Emirati participants in this new event. Their extraordinary journey to AFC Champions League glory last season included wins over the Al Nassr of Cristiano Ronaldo, and the Al Hilal of – the albeit injured – Neymar. In the final, they demolished a Yokohama F Marinos side who were coached by Harry Kewell, and not so long ago by Ange Postecoglou. They are no respecters of reputations. In fact, the bigger the names, generally the better they have performed. 'Last season, when we played big games we were different,' Park said. 'Our spirit was different, our attitude was different, and maybe at the Club World Cup we will be different, too. If we show our best, nobody knows what will happen.' They are going to need to revive the spirit of last season if they are to make a mark in the United States, as this campaign has been deeply troubled. Vladimir Ivic, who is overseeing their Club World Cup challenge, was Al Ain's third coach in a campaign in which their Champions League defence faltered without even a whimper. Hernan Crespo paid for a torrid start to the campaign as he was axed in November. Leonardo Jardim lasted 14 games before departing in February. Now Ivic has been tasked with raising the misfiring side. They finished fifth in the UAE Pro League, but Ivic was satisfied they have improved on his watch, and suggested they could have been as high as second if refereeing decisions hadn't counted against them. 'From the moment we started to play after Ramadan, we played good in all the games and we deserved to win the games,' Ivic said. 'It is frustrating. When you work, and you have players who fight, when you lose the game and it is not your fault, it is hard to take. 'I have seen the players adapt. They have had good performances and played good football, and created a lot of chances.' Ivic has coached in Greece, Israel and Russia, as well as briefly with Watford in England, before he arrived in the UAE. Such diverse experience will be useful given what lies ahead. The style of play his side will have to employ in the US will likely be a marked difference to how they play usually. As one of the dominant forces of the Pro League, with an enviable following, Al Ain are expected to be on the front foot, playing attacking football. Trying to do the same against the likes of Juve and City could be folly. 'It is a totally different competition,' Ivic said. 'We respect all of our opponents that we will face in our group. 'We will work and do our best to show our best face, and all of the players will be extra motivated. 'It is a World Cup. It is the best teams in the world. We believe we can show our best there and we will fight.'


The National
17 hours ago
- The National
Victor Nunes and Muhidin Abubakar face off for UAE Warriors interim flyweight crown
After five years of waiting, Victor Nunes finally has the opportunity to win an MMA belt when he takes on Somali British fighter Muhidin Abubakar in the interim flyweight championship at the UAE Warriors 60 this weekend. The Abu Dhabi promotion is staging their second back-to-back fight cards with Arabia versus Africa on Thursday and the international card on Friday, both at the Space 42 Arena in Abu Dhabi. Nunes, 33 and who has lived in Abu Dhabi for the past seven years, arrives on the back of a 6-1 (win/loss) record in the promotion and 11-5 overall tally. The Brazilian won his last three fights quite impressively, with a unanimous decision over Aaron Aby of Wales followed by two first round stoppages of Jordanian Nawras Abzakh and Genil Francisco of the Philippines. 'I'm very happy for this moment which I have been waiting for the last five years – to fight for a title in front of my family, friends and colleagues,' Nunes told The National at the pre-fight media day on Wednesday. 'I had a great camp for this fight and I'm more than ready to get this belt. Abu Dhabi is one of the best places to train and have a pre-fight camp in the best facilities and with so many of my colleagues around.' With the title at stake, Nunes is confident ahead of the biggest fight night of his career. 'I have never been in a title fight, but I have been working hard to get there, and now that I have earned it, there's no stopping me from going on to get the belt,' he said. 'I don't know how tough my opponent is going to be. I can only know when I actually take him on. He has fought in many promotions and in different countries, but I have been working in all areas and more than ready for a win on the night.' His opponent Abubakar's debut in Abu Dhabi ended in defeat to South African Luthando Biko back in September 2023. That was his only loss, and he's since bounced back with six straight wins. The last two were in the UAE Warriors – a unanimous decision over South African Gift Walker and Chilean Alfredo Muaiad in round one. Abubakar's overall record of 9-1 looks pretty good and the 26-year-old is equally confident of walking away with the interim championship. 'For me, it's another fight and another opponent. My preparations have been like any other, but I feel at the top of my game for a championship contest,' he said. 'I have proved that in my last two visits to Abu Dhabi. Obviously, I have earned this moment and I'm ready and confident to achieve what I have been working for.' Aside from the main card, another interesting contest is the co-main event between Brazilian Vinicius Moreira and Canadian Tanner Boser in the 265lbs division that also includes ten other contests. The interim title belt is a new addition to the promotion after existing belt holders moved on to bigger international events and institutions. 'The UFC is the biggest. They stand at the helm of the MMA world, and we have lost a few fighters to them,' Fouad Darwish, chief executive of Palms Sports, said. 'But I don't consider this loss. They have moved and we are very cognizant of where we stand. I'm not saying we compete with them. 'On the contrary, we like to be the funnel that sends fighters to them. It gives me pride and pleasure that many of our fighters are going there. So, we have lost people with titles. 'It was difficult for us to continue seeing titles being lost for those who would come and fight with us one or two fights and they leave. So, we had to create something that would create more time and give a twist for getting an undisputed belt.' The action begins with the 13-fight Arabia versus Africa card, highlighted by the bantamweight contest between Abdul Hussein and Sami Yahia and the co-main fight of Islem Masraf and Diego Bandu.