Tuesday, October 09, 2007 Pages: Prayers by many help lift Manny By John Pages Match Point
DIDN’T your hands feel clammy?
Didn’t your heart pump thrice as fast? Didn’t your legs shake and feet stomp the floor and fist clench your knuckles?
I did. You did. My father-in-law Jack Mendez did. So did my companions that morning, Dr. Ronnie Medalle and my Sun.Star acting sports editor Mike Limpag. Every single Filipino who sat to watch from 11:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. two days ago prayed for Manny Pacquaio. My mother-in-law Malu Mendez, too nervous to sit, instead prepared kinilaw at the kitchen and did what she does best when in times of need: pray.
She prayed for Manny. Many prayed for Manny.
Manny prayed for Manny. With a rosary hung around his neck, he made the sign-of-the-cross each time the bell sounded to start the round. Do you recall him, midway through, looking up to the ceiling? He wasn’t staring at the scoreboard—this wasn’t the NBA—but looked up...To pray.
The day before the fight, when we watched the news that Manny was four pounds overweight when he awoke that morning and had to run on a treadmill and squeeze out the extra poundage just to make weight—didn’t we all pray? Didn’t we all uplift Manny’s ordeal? For him to have strength 30 hours later to last the full 12 rounds?
Manny also heard mass at his Mandalay Bay suite—as he always does—and invited all to attend. Plus, didn’t Manny kneel down after the fight? To thank God?
He did. He always does.
I’m sure Marco Antonio Barrera prayed, too. He wore the same rosary entering the arena. But herein lies the difference: While the two warriors prayed, while their entourages held masses, and while the Filipinos and Mexicans both said their “Our Fathers,” Manny and Marco were two contrasting Catholics on the ring.
Manny was good. Marco was bad.
And, of course, we know who God looks favorably upon, right?
Marco was dirty. His split-second stab while Manny had his arms down and the referee stood in the middle reinforced what plenty suspected: Barrera was a dirty fighter.
The knockout punch we all awaited from Pacman? That KO win thousands bet on Manny to produce? It happened in the 11th round. It should have. I watched the replay at YouTube (just type “Pacquiao 11th round”) and, after a barrage of rapid-fire shots from Manny with 49 seconds left on Round 11, Barrera backtracked and wobbled. With 49 ticks left, Manny had time for a KO.
Until Barrera did the un-Christian act.
No wonder he lost.
UAAP A few hours after Manny’s victory, the headline read: “ 2-0 is better than 14-0.”
How is that possible? It’s not.
But it did happen. At the UAAP championships held at the Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, the winner wasn’t the team that won 14-0—it was the one who scored 2-0.
De La Salle University (DLSU), which struggled past Ateneo De Manila University (ADMU) last week before entering the finals against the University of the East (UE), was the underdog against the only team that scored a 14-0 regular season record. But last Sunday—as the Cebuanos watched at Hola España—La Salle beat UE, 73-64.
Tony Atayde of www.inboundpass.com, the best writer of La Salle UAAP basketball, said it best in his article entitled, “May I Offer You Some Cake?” He wrote: “La Salle wins 7th title in the 7th decade of the UAAP on the 7th day of October 2007...
“This is a UAAP season that would drive a mathematician crazy. The equations are not right. The team that should, didn’t and the team that shouldn’t, did. Beating Ateneo twice in five games, the Green Archers get to the finals. Today, 2 straight was far better than 14 straight. La Salle had an overall record of 19-6 while UE had 14-2 but La Salle wins the most coveted prize in Philippine college basketball, the UAAP Men’s Senior Basketball Crown...
“It is the sweetest championship for the Green Archers. From suspension to champion. From being doubted to being validated as the best team in the league.”