World boxing champion Manny Pacquiao expressed confidence of winning a new title as the Philippine elections opened on Monday - congressman in the House of Representatives. "Today is the day, the judgement day," Pacquiao said in a television interview as he waited to vote in the southern province of Sarangani that he hopes to represent.
10/05/2010
AFP
World boxing champion Manny Pacquiao expressed confidence of winning a new title as the Philippine elections opened on Monday -- congressman in the House of Representatives.
"Today is the day, the judgement day," Pacquiao, sporting a red polo shirt and flashing his bright-eyed smile, said in a television interview as he waited to vote in the southern province of Sarangani that he hopes to represent.
"Of course I'm very confident to win the election."
Pacquiao said he received no VIP treatment at his polling station in Kiamba town, close to the city where he spent his early years in abject poverty before rising to global fame through his golden gloves.
"We have to queue up and wait for our number," the 31-year-old welterweight champion, one of the world's highest-paid athletes, told national broadcaster ABS-CBN.
It is his second attempt to run for public office since 2007, when voters in General Santos city supported his rival, which was seen then as a sign that fans wanted him to remain a boxer and stay off the tainted world of politics.
Pacquiao is now running in another district against a local businessman. He is again regarded as the underdog because his rival comes from a powerful clan that has ruled the area for many years.
Experts say Pacquiao, who is regarded as the world's greatest active boxer, pound for pound, has only a few more years -- even bouts -- of peak form before he risks losing to younger boxers or severe injury.
Pacquiao has said that public office would be his way of paying society back by helping poor Filipinos after his fighting career is over.
He is regarded as a national treasure in the impoverished Philippines, where even Muslim extremists and soldiers silence their guns during his fights.
Pacquiao is the only boxer in history to have won seven world championship belts in as many weight divisions.
He defeated Ghana's Joshua Clottey to retain his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight belt in the United States in March.
He has now won 12 consecutive fights, eight by knockout.
"Today is the day, the judgement day," Pacquiao, sporting a red polo shirt and flashing his bright-eyed smile, said in a television interview as he waited to vote in the southern province of Sarangani that he hopes to represent.
"Of course I'm very confident to win the election."
Pacquiao said he received no VIP treatment at his polling station in Kiamba town, close to the city where he spent his early years in abject poverty before rising to global fame through his golden gloves.
"We have to queue up and wait for our number," the 31-year-old welterweight champion, one of the world's highest-paid athletes, told national broadcaster ABS-CBN.
It is his second attempt to run for public office since 2007, when voters in General Santos city supported his rival, which was seen then as a sign that fans wanted him to remain a boxer and stay off the tainted world of politics.
Pacquiao is now running in another district against a local businessman. He is again regarded as the underdog because his rival comes from a powerful clan that has ruled the area for many years.
Experts say Pacquiao, who is regarded as the world's greatest active boxer, pound for pound, has only a few more years -- even bouts -- of peak form before he risks losing to younger boxers or severe injury.
Pacquiao has said that public office would be his way of paying society back by helping poor Filipinos after his fighting career is over.
He is regarded as a national treasure in the impoverished Philippines, where even Muslim extremists and soldiers silence their guns during his fights.
Pacquiao is the only boxer in history to have won seven world championship belts in as many weight divisions.
He defeated Ghana's Joshua Clottey to retain his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight belt in the United States in March.
He has now won 12 consecutive fights, eight by knockout.
1 comment:
Study before to be MP, Paquao,
you should remember, in USA, Minnesota governor, a wresling man, elected, some years after, he retired..
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