Manny Pacquiao’s MP Promotions and Araneta City on Wednesday celebrated the 50th anniversary of the epic ‘Thrilla in Manila’ – one of the greatest boxing fights ever recorded on Earth at the heart of the Philippines – to also kick off a month-long countdown to a loaded world championship fight card on October 29 to further immortalize the duel’s legend.
MP Promotions, led by former senator, eight-division world champion and world boxing Hall of Famer Pacquiao and Irene Jose, COO of Uniprom as the entertainment arm of Araneta City, unveiled an exhibit featuring memorabilia from the classic heavyweight duel between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier at the Araneta Coliseum, now known as the Smart Araneta Coliseum.
With Ali and Frazier on the canvas, the Big Dome – at that time was one of the world’s largest indoor arenas – made the world stand still on Oct. 1, 1975, watched by more than 20,000 fans live and over a billion on TV and pay-per-view from all parts of the world.
Fifty years later, on October 29, the Philippines will commemorate that one-of-a-kind battle with a stacked card that includes Ali’s grand son Nico Ali Walsh.
Ali Walsh will clash with Thailand’s Patumpong Saengarun in a middleweight undercard bout, as WBC mininumweight champion Melvin Jerusalem stakes his belt against No. 2 contender Siyakholwa Kuse of South Africa in the main event. Other Filipino standouts like Olympic bronze medalist Eumir Marcial, former unified world champion Marlon Tapales and rising star Carl Jammes Martin are also in the fray of a super card featuring 11 fights so far.
VIPs, including the families of Ali and Frazier and current world champions, have also been invited to grace the event.
“We honor the moment that forever changed the Philippine sporting landscape and global culture. The world stood still in what became one of the most iconic battles in boxing history. It was more than just a fight. It was a poetry in motion. Two giants of the sport stepped into the ring not as opponents but as symbols of pride, determination and will to win,” said Jose.
“Under the blazing heat of Manila, Ali and Frazier gave everything they had for 14 unforgettable rounds and as we make the golden anniversary of this bout, we remember the night and we honor a generation who rewrote history. Let this milestone remind us that great moments in history never fade. They echo and stood through time.”
Pacquiao, born in 1978, wasn’t alive just yet back then but is taking pride and honor of organizing and leading the commemoration of Thrilla in Manila for its golden anniversary with a full backing from President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr., and Philippine Sports Commission (PSC) led by Chairman Patrick “Pato” Gregorio.
Malacañang has released a memorandum circular order for all agencies to highlight a sporting and cultural milestone that ‘placed the Philippines on the global stage’ for this month.
“Kinuwento lang sa akin at napaood ko lang sa replay ang Thrilla in Manila but now I’m blessed and happy na ako naman ngayon ang nagdala ng celebration of the 50th anniversaty nito. Honored and thankful to God for this blessing kasi alam naman natin na sa ang ating bansa ay nakilala sa sports, especially boxing. Nagkaroon tayo ng respeto mula sa buong mundo because of this sport,’ beamed Pacquiao, unarguably the greatest Filipino boxer in history.
“Dati, ako lang ang lumalaban dito sa Araneta pero ngayon, nagpo-promote na rin tayo ng big fights. I’m happy na kahit hindi pa tayo ipinapanganak noong time na ‘yun at kumbaga, tayo ang nagdala dito ngayon ng laban.”
Pacquiao, now 46 but has just unretired with a majority draw against Mario Barrios last July, once fought and won at the Big Dome in 2006 against Oscar Larios for the WBC title. Now coming back to the iconic venue as also a promoter, he’s hoping to produce the next world champions like him, Ali and Frazier.