Emmanuel Dapidran Pacquiao vs. Acasio Simbajon

Discussion in 'World Boxing Forum' started by IntentionalButt, Aug 20, 2018.


  1. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

    400,818
    82,540
    Nov 30, 2006
    IB Funfact: Emanuel Dapidran Pacquiao has fought just once in the month of August in his 24-year, 69-bout career.

    It was his sixth pro fight and third ever 6-rounder, and with this match his KO ratio plummeted to a mere 20% - a low it would never again reach (in fact, by the conclusion of his 1995 campaign, it would never again dip below thirty percent) - and its 23rd anniversary was 2½ weeks ago.

    This content is protected


    Couple of stray observations:

    • That ring is quite literally a broom closet. In fact, I've seen more spacious broom closets.
    • Simbajon worked the body very effectively, although it required walking through hellfire to deliver them. Some of those flurries downstairs visibly bothered young Pacquiao and there were moments where, if you were viewing it live it would be forgivable if you suspected they could end up influencing the outcome.
    • Dude was always fast AF, especially in the fly range.
    • Those itty-bitty scrawny little toothpick arms, OMG!
    • Kind of a forgotten gem of a war, here. Very nice little domestic prospect rumble, kind of lost in the shuffle with the victor obviously going on to have dozens more significant evenings while his opponent faded into obscurity.
    • Simbajon continuing to load up an uppercut after having the wind-up interrupted by Pacquiao landing a flush max-power counter 1-2 bang on the kisser, leaving him momentarily dazed before picking up where he left off ...and then finding the mark on the underside of Pacquiao's chin and landing his uppercut, with authority = boss level ****.
    • It was actually super classy and mature of the adolescent Pacman to embrace the Flash after the scorecards were read in a show of respect and sportsmanship, and then further to give him the space he obviously needed when Simbajon proved too distraught by the disappointment to reciprocate, and even holding the ropes apart for him. That was an unexpectedly really sweet moment.
     
    tinman, pincai, PinoyProdigy and 3 others like this.
  2. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

    400,818
    82,540
    Nov 30, 2006
    1995 was also the last year that Simbajon would finish with an overall record in the positive.

    His final mark was 13-38-6 (3), hanging up the gloves in 2007 (right around when Pacquiao was knee-deep in carving out his ATG legacy at super feather, coming fresh off the rubber match kayo of Érik Morales) having never ventured above super bantam. Shame, because as we see in this early battle he wasn't a shabby fighter. Complete lack of power is probably what cursed him. To his credit, with all those defeats he was only stopped eight times...and he suffered tons of fight-ending cuts & took lots of short-notice assignments. His path may have diverged to almost polar extremes from his fellow prospect 23 years ago, but he was a brave little journeyman.
     
    PinoyProdigy, BoyBato and WhataRock like this.
  3. SweetScience

    SweetScience Accuracy is the key! Full Member

    3,403
    5
    Mar 25, 2007
    Hi IB,

    Simbajon became my trainer from 2008 to 2012. And I can tell you that he is a crafty guy. I used to spar with him and he is very difficult to hit. He also has punches that are sneaky. But if there is one thing against him, its his lack of power.

    And his resume is not an indicator of how he is a fighter. He is very good. Do not let the record deceive you. And you were right about one thing, he would take fights on 2 weeks notice. He would also drop some fights (mostly in Japan) for his safety.

    Hopefully this guy gets more credit than what his record says.
     
    Badbot, pincai, PinoyProdigy and 2 others like this.
  4. IntentionalButt

    IntentionalButt Guy wants to name his çock 'macho' that's ok by me

    400,818
    82,540
    Nov 30, 2006
    Cool insights, thanks for sharing! :thumbsup:
     
  5. FrankinDallas

    FrankinDallas FRANKINAUSTIN

    29,873
    36,620
    Jul 24, 2004
    Very informative post!

    Please explain , if you will do so in a public forum , what you mean he dropped fights in Japan "for his safety"? And what does that mean with respect to Floyd's recently announced fight in Japan?
     
  6. SweetScience

    SweetScience Accuracy is the key! Full Member

    3,403
    5
    Mar 25, 2007
    I guess it would have something to do with up and coming boxers. Managers/Promoters would give him money to drop fights. This guy grew up in extreme poverty and at that time, his family was growing. Hence, he needed the money more than anything.
     
  7. tinman

    tinman Loyal Member Full Member

    36,368
    28,911
    Feb 25, 2015
    Pacquiao was a pure brawler at 112. I dont know how won so many of his fights there. In his very early days he actually didn't carry much power. He telegraphs every punch, loads up on every punch, no head movement, footwork or defense. And he a was malnourished teenager fighting more physically and psychologically developed opposition.

    It's like he got by entirely on sheer heart, aggression and self determination. Quite an admirable little fellow here.

    No doubt this helped him throughout his career ascended up the weights. Nearly always giving up size. And giving up technical adavatages to guys like Morales, Barrera, Cotto and Marquez.

    Pacquiaos sheer heart is really underrated. You dont see it praised much which is a shame.
     
  8. tinman

    tinman Loyal Member Full Member

    36,368
    28,911
    Feb 25, 2015
    Awesome post.