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July 4, 2017

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Horn shrugs off backlash over Pacquiao decision

AUSTRALIA’S Jeff Horn brushed aside the outcry against his shock victory over Manny Pacquiao yesterday and said he hoped taking the Filipino’s WBO welterweight title would help reinvigorate boxing Down Under.

The 29-year-old ex-schoolteacher was awarded a unanimous 12-round decision over the eight-division world champion after a bloody battle in front of more than 51,000 fans at Brisbane’s Lang Park on Sunday.

Not everybody was happy with the victory, awarded with scores of 117-111, 115-113 and 115-113 by the three judges, and former undisputed world heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis was among those who disputed whether Horn should have won.

“There’s always going to be the backlash where people are going to say I was lucky, or whatever,” Horn, his right eye swollen shut, said yesterday.

“There’s always naysayers saying I didn’t win the fight. I think I won the fight, a lot of Queenslanders think I won the fight and people around the world. So you’ll always have the select few that are against you.”

Pacquiao, whose defeat was his first since his blockbuster clash with Floyd Mayweather Jr in 2005, indicated on Sunday that he would take up the option of a rematch and Horn said he would be delighted to face the 38-year-old in his first title defense.

“Manny Pacquiao is an absolute warrior, he’s a legend of this sport. He might have come in underdone, if we have a rematch, if he puts it all in, I don’t know...,” Horn added.

Horn, who improved to 17-0-1, said he would also like to have a crack at 40-year-old Mayweather, who has come out of retirement for a 12-round crossover bout against mixed martial arts champion Conor McGregor.

Horn, whose meeting with Pacquiao shattered the Australian attendance record for a fight, said he would prefer to defend his title on home soil and was hoping for a bit more recognition ahead of his next bout.

“It was, I guess, the Manny Show,” he said of Sunday’s fight. “My name wasn’t normally mentioned in those programs, but now hopefully I’m a bit more recognized and I’ve established myself in the boxing community a bit more.”

Horn said he hoped his victory would spark a renaissance Down Under. “It puts Australian boxing on the map, it’s what we’ve needed for a long time, it’s kind of died a bit in the past but hopefully this will invigorate it.”




 

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