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Malignaggi EMPHATICALLY re-asserts the Pacquiao steroid allegations.

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  • Originally posted by IMDAZED View Post
    They all have agendas. Primarily jealousy.


    Jealousy over another man's success is childish, seriously. Kills when I listen to that ****. Maybe it's because that emotion is almost non-existent to me. I could care less what anyone else has.

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    • Originally posted by Roger Mellie View Post
      You are being a ****.
      Possibly. Or maybe it bothers you to hear this about a fighter that you like. If it was a certain fighter you detested? Ummmm, not so much.

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      • Originally posted by GG Marquez View Post
        BTW, Paulie picked Pac to beat hatton. And picked Cotto to beat Pac

        And Cintron, and Berto? What axe do they have to grind?
        You can take Berto off that list. The quote I know you are referring to wasn't meant in a derogatory way. It wasn't meant as the euphemism you are implying. He was praising Pac with that quote actually. Its a fairly common saying; something to the effect of"Damn! That boy on somethin! He an animal!", he just didn't stop to think it would be twisted around by people. Berto likes Pac.

        As for Cintron and Malignaggi. Comparative weaklings. They don't understand power, or how it is derived. Hence, it must be foul play in their minds. Especially Malignaggi. LOL. Dude couldn't knock his way out of a paper bag. Cintron had to run around the ring and box Angulo, so he's not exactly a slugger either.

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        • Originally posted by Dominicano Soy! View Post
          Jealousy over another man's success is childish, seriously. Kills when I listen to that ****. Maybe it's because that emotion is almost non-existent to me. I could care less what anyone else has.
          If you seriously think they're saying this stuff because they're jealous, I can't help you.

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          • Originally posted by IMDAZED View Post
            If you seriously think they're saying this stuff because they're jealous, I can't help you.
            Agree man

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            • Originally posted by Dominicano Soy! View Post
              Jealousy over another man's success is childish, seriously. Kills when I listen to that ****. Maybe it's because that emotion is almost non-existent to me. I could care less what anyone else has.
              I guess I'm having a hard time understanding how/why Lou DiBella is jealous of Manny Pacquiao.

              Wasn't Lou instrumental in putting Pac on TV?

              Does Lou wish that he can fight like Pac? Um, what?

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              • Originally posted by Shadows View Post
                Paulie's certainly entitled to his opinion
                He is entitled to his opinion, but he's not entitled to spout off defamatory comments. It's getting very close to slander, and I suspect if this keeps up there'll be legal action to follow.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by GG Marquez View Post
                  I guess I'm having a hard time understanding how/why Lou DiBella is jealous of Manny Pacquiao.

                  Wasn't Lou instrumental in putting Pac on TV?

                  Does Lou wish that he can fight like Pac? Um, what?
                  Exactly and there is no benefiting from this. Even Paulie said, "I know I'm gonna get alot of hate for this". How does this help Berto, Paulie, Lou to do business with Top Rank?
                  Last edited by Doctor_Tenma; 12-07-2009, 04:25 PM.

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                  • Legal Dictionary

                    Slander

                    1 : defamation of a person by unprivileged oral communication made to a third party; also : defamatory oral statements
                    2 : the tort of oral defamation slander> —compare DEFAMATION, FALSE LIGHT, LIBEL

                    NOTE: An action for slander may be brought without alleging and proving special damages if the statements in question have a plainly harmful character, as by im*****g to the plaintiff criminal guilt, serious sexual misconduct, or conduct or a characteristic affecting his or her business or profession. —slan·der·ous /'slan-d&-r&s/ adjective —slan·der·ous·ly adverb —slan·der·ous·ness noun

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                    • Originally posted by jreckoning View Post
                      Swimmer Michael Phelps’s next career may be in competitive eating. Besides grabbing five gold medals at the Beijing Olympics so far, making him the winningest Olympic athlete ever, he’s got to be setting new marks on the chow line.
                      A New York Post account of Phelps’s… wait for it… 12,000-calorie-a-day diet, gave us a stomachache. Could one human being really consume that much and still be in Phelps’s shape? And could this possibly be healthy for Phelps, even considering his five-hours-a-day, six-days-a-week exercise regimen?
                      Here’s Phelps’s typical menu. (No, he doesn’t choose among these options. He eats them all, according to the Post.)
                      Breakfast: Three fried-egg sandwiches loaded with cheese, lettuce, tomatoes, fried onions and mayonnaise. Two cups of coffee. One five-egg omelet. One bowl of grits. Three slices of French toast topped with powdered sugar. Three chocolate-chip pancakes.
                      Lunch: One pound of enriched pasta. Two large ham and cheese sandwiches with mayo on white bread. Energy drinks packing 1,000 calories.
                      Dinner: One pound of pasta. An entire pizza. More energy drinks.
                      Does a diet like this make sense even for a calorie-incinerating human swimming machine? We checked in with Mark Klion, a sports medicine doc and orthopedic surgeon at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York. He reminded us that the eating game all comes down to basic math.
                      If you eat fewer calories than you burn exercising, you lose weight. But an athlete like Phelps, who exercises up a storm, has to worry about eating enough to replenish the scads of calories he’s burned. If he doesn’t, Klion explains, his “body won’t recover, the muscles will not recover, there will not be adequate energy stored for him to compete in his next event.”
                      But what about the choice of foods? All those eggs and ham and cheese can’t possibly be good for him, can they? Says Klion, “I think for him, because of his caloric demands, he can probably eat whatever he wants to.” And besides, Klion says, if you’ve got to eat that much, it better be enjoyable, or you won’t be able to keep up. Phelps might not be so eager to shovel down a pound of tofu in a sitting, Klion points out.
                      Still, Klion cautions that he knows plenty of athletes who’ve been training for marathons and have gained weight because they thought they could eat whatever they wanted. So it really does take some planning. Some resources on the Web might help, such as this calorie-use chart from the American Heart Association and a calorie calculator from Runner’s World magazine. This calculator from the Calorie Control Council includes a bunch of different activities, from dusting to playing ice hockey.
                      But these kinds of calculators don’t really apply to a someone like Phelps, who exercises way more vigorously than the typical person, says Kathleen Laquale, an athletic trainer and nutritionist who teaches at Bridgewater State College in Massachusetts. Even by athletic standards, Phelps is in his own league. Laquale says cyclists in the Tour de France commonly consume a paltry 8,000 to 10,000 calories a day.
                      At least your argument contains facts backing up your opinion.

                      Concerning 95% of all other posters please stop with the Paulie was jealous, everyone recognized this after it was said the first thousand times. It is obvious if Pac is on anything it is a performance enhancer like EPO substance and or a HGH like substance. Apparently roids is a slang now for all of that. There some interesting circumstances around pacs ascension but he should be considered clean until the **** hits the fan in the way of proof! it is an interesting topic but it seems very few here can discuss without turning into 3rd graders who mysteriously have an Uncle Manny or an Uncle Miguel. Just be objective people, damn!

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