Pacquiao too fast, too strong for outgunned Barrera

By Dan Rafael
ESPN.com

                    LAS VEGAS -- Four years ago, Manny Pacquiao steamrolled Marco
                    Antonio Barrera en route to an 11th-round TKO victory. It wasn't
                    nearly as easy this time around, but Pacquiao still got the job
                    done in the rematch.

                    Landing harder punches and flurrying effectively, Pacquiao
                    controlled the action and won a unanimous decision in their junior lightweight fight
Saturday night before an excited crowd of 10,112 at the Mandalay Bay.

"It was different from our first fight," Pacquiao said. "He's a good, smart boxer. For me, I'm
satisfied with that win. I thought the people were happy with that fight. I'm trying to make
people happy, to give a good fight. I hope that people liked this fight tonight. We did our best."

It was the second consecutive defeat for Barrera, who lost his title to Juan Manuel Marquez in
March. Coming into the rematch with Pacquiao, Barrera said it would be his last "big fight."
Afterward, the Mexican legend said it was the last fight in his storied career, period.

"Honestly, this is my last fight," said Barrera, who in an 18-year professional career won world
titles at junior featherweight, featherweight and junior lightweight while engaging in many of
the era's most exciting fights. "He had very good defense and it was hard to break through."

After the first loss to Pacquiao, Barrera went on a six-fight winning streak before running into
Pacquiao again. And if this is indeed the last we see of Barrera in the ring -- he had mentioned
a possible farewell fight during the days before the fight he said he can live with the outcome.

"I'm sad because I lost, but he hit me with very few punches, very few combinations. I thought
I controlled him with my left hand all night," said Barrera, a lock first-ballot Hall of Famer. "I'm
happy we're finishing off the career with that."

After past losses, Barrera had confounded experts regularly by rebounding with an unexpected
victory. He couldn't do it Saturday.

At 33 and with many wars behind him, Barrera was just a step slower and punch late.

"I lost my head in a couple of the rounds," he said. "I think I got too caught up in things. I
shouldn't have stayed in those exchanges. I should have just kept boxing him. I thought I
boxed him really well."

Pacquiao (45-3-2, 35 KOs), of the Philippines, was getting the better of most of the exchanges
and was doing it again in the 11th when he knocked Barrera (63-5, 42 KOs) into the ropes.

Barrera, who got cut under the right eye in the round, came back and whacked Pacquiao across
the face with a right hand while referee Tony Weeks was breaking them.

The foul cost Barrera a point, but he was already far behind. Judges Jerry Roth and Glenn
Trowbridge each scored it 118-109 and Tom Schreck had it 115-112. ESPN.com had it 117-110
for Pacquiao.

Pacquiao, 28, said that just because he had beaten Barrera so easily on that November 2004
night in San Antonio that he was not expecting the same kind of fight this time.

"I was careful in this fight. He's still a good fighter," Pacquiao said. "I was just lucky in the first
fight that it happened like that."

Freddie Roach, Pacquiao's trainer, said thought Pacquiao would be able to knock out Barrera,
who was never close to going down.

"Barrera surprised me that he lasted as long as he did in the fight," Roach said. "He has a lot of
heart and guts and he fought a great fight. Manny boxed well. He showed good footwork.
When he cut him off and moved Barrera to the right, it was beautiful. I give Barrera a lot of
credit. I didn't like it when Manny followed Barrera around."

HBO will replay the fight next Saturday (11 p.m. ET) along with live coverage of the lightweight
unification bout between Juan Diaz and Julio Diaz.

Both fighters earned at least $2 million, but only Pacquiao will move on to greater paydays.

The victory also set up a possible rematch with Marquez. In their 2004 fight, he knocked
Marquez down three times in the first round but Marquez stormed back to gain a draw many
believed he won.

That fight, like Pacquiao-Barrera 2, is possible thanks to the summer truce between promotional
companies Top Rank and Golden Boy, who both claimed Pacquiao's promotional contract.

Dan Rafael is the boxing writer for ESPN.com.
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