Showing posts with label Macau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Macau. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

Jollibee to open stores in UK, Macau, Manhattan and New York


MANILA - The Philippines' largest food operator Jollibee Food Corp. (JFC) on Wednesday said it would open its first stores in the United Kingdom, Manhattan (USA), and Macau (China) as part of its overseas expansion plans. 

The first Jollibee store in the UK will open on Oct. 20, the outlet in Macau will open on Sept. 28, while branches in Manhattan and in New York will open in a few months, JFC said in a statement. 

"JFC is bringing the company’s well-loved brand to Filipinos abroad to give them a taste of home," JFC said. 

Aside from serving Filipinos overseas, Jollibee said it has "seen success" in serving locals, especially in Vietnam and Brunei where most of their customers are locals. 

In Singapore, more than half of its customers are locals, JFC said. 

"JFC envisions to continue replicating its success in the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Hong Kong and Singapore in other markets soon," it said. 

The company hopes to be among the world's top 5 largest restaurant companies in terms of market capitalization. To do that, JFC is focusing on the two largest economies, namely China and the US, while sustaining growth in the country. 

JFC recently announced its plans to build a "significant" Mexican food business in the US. It also recently raised its stake in Smashburger to 85 percent for $100 million.

The company in March also opened a Jollibee branch in Milan, Italy its first in Europe.

source: news.abs-cbn.com

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Donaire defeats Settoul via TKO


Nonito ''The Filipino Flash'' Donaire defeats French boxer Anthony Settoul in their super bantamweight fight.

It was an easy win for Donaire via TKO, with the fight ending in just the second round.

Donaire has been hoping for a win so he could get a world title fight before the year ends. But he says, he's open to fight anyone who's ready for him.

Donaire's non-title fight will be aired on ABS-CBN Channel 2 on Sunday morning.

– ANC, The World Tonight, 18 July 2015

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Donaire demolishes Frenchman in 2 rounds


Nonito ''The Filipino Flash'' Donaire made short work of his French opponent, stopping Anthony Settoul in just two rounds of their 10-round bout at the Cotai Arena in Macau Saturday.

The former five-division champion showed up with a much improved boxing style, utilizing right straights and body shots instead of just relying on his devastating left hook.

This allowed Donaire to knock down Settoul twice in the first round and one last time during the second stanza.

In the first round, the Filipino Flash timed the Frenchman with a short stab to the liver while dodging Settoul's looping shots. The painful shot to the body forced Settoul to take a knee, while referee Danrex Tapdasan was giving him the mandatory count.

The French boxer was able to stand up but was again met with another combination capped with another left hook to the body. This led to Settoul's second knockdown.

In the third round, Donaire smashed Settoul with a right straight that decked the Frenchman. Settoul stood up on wobbly knees, forcing his corner to throw in the towel.

Tapdasan halted the fight at 1:41 of the second round.

''We did well here. Hopefully you guys enjoyed the fight,'' said Donaire while addressing the crowd at the Cotai Arena.

The Filipino Flash said he trained hard to improve his other punches so he would not rely too much on his left hook.

''We worked really hard for it. We did everything with the body shots, set up the punches and of course the counter punches,'' said Donaire.

''Not everybody's gonna look just for the left hook now. I have more than one weapon and that's everything else,'' added the beaming Filipino-American.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Algieri hopes Pacquiao fight is start of his legacy


American boxer Chris Algieri believes the time has come for his to step into the spotlight and become a star in the sport. But it all hinges on his performance against Filipino legend Manny Pacquiao on November 23.

"I'm a student of the sport, I'm a fan of the sport," said Algieri, who will challenge the "Pacman" for the WBO welterweight belt at the Cotai Arena in Macau. "I've been watching for years, and I've seen how other fighters careers have come from nothing and exploded."

"That's just kind of the nature of the game. You come out of nowhere, and boom. Look at Manny Pacquiao – he came out of nowhere, came to America, and had a breakout fight, and now, he's one of the best fighters that ever lived."

"He is literally a living legend. That's just how the sport works. So I'm hoping that this is the beginning of my legacy."

Algieri earned a shot at Pacquiao after beating Russia's Ruslan Provodnikov in a light-welterweight title fight last June, and he has been the underdog ever since the fight was announced.

Yet the tag has never fazed Algieri, who has been the picture of confidence all throughout the lead-up to the match, and has never wavered in his belief that he can beat the "Pacman."

"This is the way I feel," Algieri said when asked if he was simply trying to psych himself up, or if he was sincerely confident. "I know when I look in the mirror and I look myself in the eyes, that I've done all the hard work."

"I don't cut corners. I know that. So I have that belief in myself that I am ready," he stressed.

Algieri said he has prepared very well for the fight, and has spent training camp perfecting a strategy.

"We gotta go out there and do what we've been doing," said Algieri, who also acknowledged that Pacquiao has been "preparing very well" for the showdown as well.

"He's incredibly experienced, he's one of the best fighters that ever lived," said the American. "It's a tall task for myself, and my team, but we feel like we're ready."

"We've done everything necessary, (taken) all the proper steps leading up to this. I have the talent and the skills, and we just gotta go up there and perform," he said.

Algieri guaranteed that he was in his best condition of his career and is 100% ready for fight night.

"I'm still learning," he said. "But we're getting closer to matching my potential, and I think we'll do some great things on Saturday night." -- From a report by Dyan Castillejo, ABS-CBN News

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, November 17, 2014

Roach, Buboy see easy fight for Pacquiao vs Algieri


MANILA, Philippines – Hall-of-Fame trainer Freddie Roach is anticipating a sensational performance from Filipino legend Manny Pacquiao when he faces off against American boxer Chris Algieri on November 23 at the Cotai Arena in Macau.

Pacquiao has been tabbed as the favorite to retain his WBO welterweight belt against Algieri, but the American has been the picture of confidence during the lead-up to the bout.

Algieri's height and reach are his greatest physical advantages over Pacquiao, but Roach is expecting his fighter to neutralize these fairly easily and quickly.

"When you have a reach advantage? How hard is that to take away?" said the trainer, as quoted by Boxing Scene. "If you have a boxer like Manny, that's not so difficult."

"Just because he's taller doesn't make him better. We're faster, better. We're going to take him to school," he guaranteed.

Assistant trainer Buboy Fernandez, who was in charge of the early weeks of Pacquiao's training camp, is similarly confident that his longtime friend will have no trouble against Algieri.

"Asahan niyo na uuwi tayo ng maaga," said Fernandez ahead of Team Pacquiao's flight to Macau.

"Wala naman kasi 'yung height. Hindi problema 'yung height," added Fernandez, echoing Roach's sentiments. "Kung ikaw mismo na fighter, kulang ka sa training mo, doon ka matakot. Pero kung pataasan lang ng height, hindi tayo dapat matakot."

"Walang problema 'yan kahit matangkad 'yung kalaba. Sa aking, lang tatamaan at tatamaan," he added.

Pacquiao's strength and conditioning trainer, Justine Fortune, said the "Pacman" was in fantastic shape already and the only concern now was maintaining that and not over-training.

"He's in a hundred percent shape. He's ready for the fight," said Fortune. "He's in great shape for the fight, because we'll have to chase (Algieri) all night."

Pacquiao's team is anticipating that Algieri will run from Pacquiao once he feels the Filipino boxer's power, and both Roach and Fortune have warned that if Algieri chooses to stand and trade instead, then he will kiss the canvas.

"Pacquiao will outscore him if he does run," said Roach. "But if he has any guts at all, and he wants to fight a little bit and go for the world title, I think we'll knock him out."

"If Algieri engages, he's knocked out, simple as that," said Fortune.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, September 4, 2014

No trash talk as Pacquiao, Algieri face off in LA


LOS ANGELES –- It was a friendly face off between opponents as boxers Manny Pacquiao and Chris Algieri spoke to Los Angeles media about their upcoming welterweight showdown on November 22 at the Cotai Arena in Macau.

There was no trash talk as Pacquiao and Algieri only talked about putting on a good fight. The unbeaten American, who holds a master's degree in nutrition, even gave a bloodstone – believed to have health benefits – as a present to Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, who suffers from Parkinson's Disease.

It was a sign of gratitude for Roach's hospitality throughout the 27,000-mile press tour.

"My coach believes in the healing powers more than I do, but I believe in positive energy," said Algieri. "I believe physics is about energy. Everything is about energy for me."

"These stones, whether they affect my body or blood or whatever, but I think when I look at them, I think of a positive person who has presented them to me or made these for me," he added. "They're reminders of positivity, positive energy, and I'm a positive person."

While the 5-foot-10 Algieri towers over the 5-foot-6 Pacquiao, the New Yorker still comes in as a heavy underdog against the former pound-for-pound king.

"Another day in the office for me," Algieri said. "I've been a big underdog in my last couple of fights and many other fights in my career, so it's nothing new for me."

"I'm ready to go out there. I got the world's attention in the Ruslan (Provodnikov) fight, and I'm looking to shock the world again," he added.

Pacquiao, for his part, shrugged off Algieri's height and reach advantage.

"Hindi ako worried sa advantage niya, 'yung tangkad niya, dahil hindi lang ito ang first time na lumaban ako ng (mas) matangkad," he said. "Alam ko na ang gagawin sa taas ng ring."

The undefeated Algieri is fresh off a stunning upset, surviving two first-round knockdowns against Provodnikov and winning as 12-round decision.

Although he has only fought as a professional 20 times, Algieri has had his fair share of battles, having been a kickboxing champion while also serving as a sparring partner for the likes of Argentine brawler Marcos Maidana.

"I have been on an accelerated stage and route, but that's the way I want it," said Algieri. "I did the same thing in my kickboxing career. I won the fight for a world title in my fourth professional fight as a kickboxer."

"So here we are, it's my 21st fight. I'm already a world champion, but I want bigger and better things, and you don't get much bigger than Manny Pacquiao."

Pacquiao and Algieri left for New York shortly after their press conference for the final media stop of their 27,000-mile journey.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Roach compares Algieri to De La Hoya


American boxer Chris Algieri claims he is a different fighter than the other men that Filipino ring icon Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao has fought and beaten, and insists his style will pose problems for the former pound-for-pound king.

Algieri is the underdog against Pacquiao in their November 22 showdown for the WBO welterweight championship in Macau, despite his considerable size and reach advantage over the "Pacman."

"The physical advantages are obvious," Algieri told Tha Boxing Voice recently, but he quickly added that this would not be his only edge over Pacquiao.

"The biggest advantage that I don't think they have given a thought about is that I'm an athlete," he said. "I'm different than the other big guys that Manny has fought. I'm an athletic guy, and I am a smart guy in the way that I fight."

"I think of all these things that are going to play a huge role in this fight," he added.

Pacquiao made a name for himself by beating – and indeed dominating – much bigger opponents, including Oscar De La Hoya and Antonio Margarito.

Algieri is confident that his fight against Pacquiao will play out in a different way, however.

"Night and day in terms of styles," he said when comparing himself against the other "big men" that Pacquiao fought. "Those guys stand right in front of you, and will take three punches to land one."

"They have to be set and fight you and look to get into exchanges and scraps. I'm a master boxer. I'm going to be out there using my length and my size and my range and my foot work," he added.

Pacquiao's own trainer, Freddie Roach, had made a comparison between Algieri and De La Hoya in a separate interview with Tha Boxing Voice, and insisted that the former "Golden Boy" was a "much better fighter."

"Algieri is still young and he has a long way to go," said Roach. "They both have good left hands. Oscar was left-handed, and he had a great jab and a great hook."

"This guy (Algieri) has a good jab and his hook is okay, but he has some similarities. They are about the same height," he added.

Pacquiao thoroughly dominated De La Hoya when they fought in December 2008, battering the former world champion for eight rounds and forcing De La Hoya to quit on his stool before the start of the ninth round.

Against Algieri, Pacquiao will defend the WBO welterweight belt that he won from Timothy Bradley last April.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, August 25, 2014

Pacquiao dismisses Algieri threat in Macau


MACAU -- Filipino boxing legend Manny Pacquiao on Monday dismissed his next opponent, undefeated American Chris Algieri, as merely an "okay" fighter as the build-up began to their upcoming contest.

Pacquiao (56-5-2) will put his World Boxing Organization (WBO) welterweight title on the line against 30-year-old former kickboxer Algieri (20-0) on November 23 when the Filipino icon returns for his second fight in the southern Chinese gambling haven of Macau.

Despite Algieri wresting the WBO light welterweight title in a big upset against the tough Russian Ruslan Provodnikov in a controversial split decision in June, it was clear that Pacquiao does not feel his opponent can cause another shock.

"I saw his fight with Ruslan," Pacquiao told reporters at a press conference to announce the November card. "He took a lot of bad punches from Ruslan but he's tough.

"He can box. I'm not saying he's really good but he's not bad. He's okay," Pacquiao added.

Pacquiao and Algieri were in Macau on the first date of a whirlwind six-city promotional tour that will move on to Shanghai, San Francisco, Las Vegas, Los Angeles and New York.

Pacquiao's trainer Freddie Roach said he had concerns over Algieri's height and reach -- he is 5-foot-10 compared to Pacquiao's diminutive 5-foot-6 -- but little else, believing that Provodnikov had beaten the New Yorker in June.

"It surprised me because I actually think Ruslan won that fight. (Algieri) got beat up a little bit," said Roach.

"Algieri has a good reach advantage and we're going to have to get past that and his jab. That will be our biggest problem. We have ways to do that."

Pacquiao admitted the lithe, athletic Algieri would be a different prospect to slower, but durable, Brandon Rios, whom 'Pac-Man' comprehensively outpointed in the same Cotai Arena venue in November last year.

"The biggest challenge for me is to fight another tall guy. I have to use my speed and footwork for this fight," said Pacquiao.

Algieri admitted he blundered in getting caught early in the fight against the Russian, but said he would learn from it.

"First round I made a mistake," said the New Yorker. "Paid for it for the next 11-and-a-half rounds. Got a little too aggressive too early against a very dangerous guy."

Meanwhile, Roach seemed a little worried by Pacquiao's many distractions out of the ring -- he is a politician and congressman, and also is embroiled with a long-running dispute with the Philippines tax man.

And now the latest extra-curricular activity is becoming player-coach for expansion team Kia Motors in the Philippines Basketball Association (PBA).

On Sunday Pacquiao, at 35, became the oldest player to be drafted in the PBA, when Kia picked him in 11th spot.

Roach said he just had to accept it, but that when it comes to the serious end of training for the next fight, he had made a deal with the hoops-mad Pacquiao.

"We came to an agreement that four weeks before a fight he will stop playing because of injuries. We negotiated that deal a long time ago.

"He's always busy. I don't think it's a problem."

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Saturday, March 15, 2014

How China's official bank card is used to smuggle money


MACAU - Growing numbers of Chinese are using the country's state-backed bankcards to illegally spirit billions of dollars abroad, a Reuters examination has found.

This underground money is flowing across the border into the gambling hub of Macau, a former Portuguese colony that like Hong Kong is an autonomous region of China. And the conduit for the cash is the Chinese government-supported payment card network, China UnionPay.

In a warren of gritty streets around Macau’s ritzy casino resorts, hundreds of neon-lit jewellery, watch and pawn shops are doing a brisk business giving mainland Chinese customers cash by allowing them to use UnionPay cards to make fake purchases - a way of evading China’s strict currency-export controls.

On a recent day at the Choi Seng Jewellery and Watches company, a middle-aged woman strode to the counter past dusty shelves of watches. She handed the clerk her UnionPay card and received HK$300,000 ($50,000) in cash. She signed a credit card receipt describing the transaction as a "general sale", stuffed the cash into her handbag and strolled over to the Ponte 16 casino next door.

The withdrawal far exceeded the daily limit of 20,000 yuan, or $3,200, in cash that individual Chinese can legally move out of the mainland. “Don’t worry,” said a store clerk when asked about the legality of the transaction. “Everyone does this."

Internal discussion documents prepared by UnionPay and by financial authorities in Macau and China show these fake sale cash-backs are widespread in such retail stores. The practice violates China's anti-money-laundering regulations as well as restrictions on currency exports, according to Chinese central bank documents reviewed by Reuters. Chinese authorities also fear the UnionPay conduit is being used by corrupt officials and business people to send money out of the country.

It's unclear why the central bank, the Peoples Bank of China (PBOC), hasn't cracked down harder on the practice, although the documents Reuters reviewed show the bank was aware it had become a growing problem.

Industry experts point to a weak enforcement culture in China, a reluctance to hurt Macau financially with 80 percent of the city’s revenues drawn from gambling, and a willingness to tolerate some capital flight - especially if it can be tracked through names on bank cards. Moreover, the rapid growth of UnionPay, including the spread of its terminals at retail stores across the world, is playing a key role in China's strategy for making the yuan a global currency.

No one knows for sure how much Chinese money is being channelled illegally into Macau. Tam Chi Keong, an assistant professor at the Macau University of Science and Technology, puts the total at HK$1.57 trillion ($202 billion) a year through various channels.. Tam says his estimate is based on his analysis of Macau's finances and interviews with gambling industry participants.

A senior UnionPay executive said the Shanghai-based company has long been aware of the payment card abuse in Macau and elsewhere, but was limited in its ability to act. That's because the primary responsibility lies with authorities in Macau or any other country where the fraud is taking place, he said.

"The problem you are talking about has existed for several years," said the executive, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We have continuously taken measures."

THE GOVERNMENT'S SON


Though relatively unknown in the West, UnionPay has quietly grown to become one of the biggest card brands and payment networks in the world, accepted in 142 countries. There are more UnionPay cards in circulation now than any other brand - 3.53 billion, or nearly a quarter of the world's total, according to the industry newsletter, the Nilson Report. Visa remains the world leader by transaction value with $4.6 trillion in card transactions in the first half of 2013; UnionPay was second with $2.5 trillion.

If UnionPay poses a problem for Chinese authorities, it is a problem of their own making. The card brand is often seen as an arm of Chinese state policy.

UnionPay was established in 2002 by the PBOC and the State Council or Cabinet. Its founding shareholders were 85 Chinese banks, led by the five biggest state-owned banks. Former senior PBOC officials still fill the company's top ranks, including UnionPay's current chairman, Su Ning, and its former president, Xu Luode. They declined requests to be interviewed.

UnionPay dominates the card market in China thanks to a central bank decree that requires all card issuers, including foreign ones, to process their yuan-based transactions through UnionPay’s electronic payment network. All Chinese merchants and automated teller machines are required to process their yuan transactions through UnionPay. The World Trade Organization in July 2012 ruled that China was discriminating against foreign card brands, but it made no specific recommendations. Foreign card brands still have to use UnionPay for settlements in China.

UnionPay's increasing use overseas is part of Beijing's multi-pronged strategy to eventually open up China's capital account and internationalize the yuan, which is formally known as the renminbi or yuan. Beijing also eased restrictions on many kinds of capital transfers as it gradually loosens up control over the currency, making it easier for money to leave China’s borders. The efforts have paid dividends. The renminbi has already overtaken the euro to become the second-most used currency in trade finance, according to data from global transaction services organisation SWIFT.

"(China) may be happy to see UnionPay sweeping different markets across the world in different countries and territories," said Yan Lixin, head of Fudan University's China Centre for Anti-Money Laundering Studies in Shanghai. "It is backed up by the government. It is the real son of the government."

At the same time, these changes have vastly complicated the compliance challenges for UnionPay. While the card system is helping monetary authorities open up the capital account, it is also enabling people to funnel their ill-gotten gains out of China, said Yan. "It's not the only tool” for money laundering, Yan says, “but it's a major tool.”

Macau is a prime gateway for this activity. It is the only place in China where casino gambling is legal, and so Chinese gamblers bring vast sums of money here. Because Macau is administered separately from the mainland, there are restrictions on how much currency mainland Chinese can take into the gambling haven. But gamblers find ways of skirting currency controls when they cross into Macau. And much of the money these mainlanders ostensibly take to Macau for gambling, Chinese authorities believe, is actually going abroad into bank accounts.

Any steps to clamp down on UnionPay cashback transactions would likely rattle Macau, because the cash also feeds the casino sector on which the territory’s $43.6 billion economy overwhelmingly depends. Macau is now the world’s biggest gambling hub, with revenues seven times those of Las Vegas. Last year, gambling revenue rose 19 percent to $45.2 billion. Nearly 40 percent of that went to the government in taxes.

Beijing is particularly concerned about the role of this capital flight in the country's endemic government corruption scandals. An internal research report in 2008 by the PBOC identified UnionPay cards as one of the main tools for corrupt individuals to facilitate cross-border transfer of funds. The central bank report said the practice was growing rapidly.

Many card users follow their money abroad. Since the mid-1990s, an estimated 16,000 to 18,000 Communist party officials, businessmen, CEOs and other individuals have "disappeared" from China, according to a separate PBOC report prepared in 2008 – taking with them some 800 billion yuan ($133 billion).

But the practice isn’t limited to corrupt officials. The ubiquitous UnionPay card, with its instant access to piles of cash, has made the task of whisking money out of China far easier for ordinary Chinese.

CAPITAL FLIGHT

Today, the outflow is gathering pace.

In Macau, UnionPay card transactions reached 130 billion Macau patacas ($16.77 billion) in just the first four months of 2012, up from 88.1 billion patacas in all of 2011, according to a confidential report by Macau's banking regulator, the Macau Monetary Authority reviewed by Reuters. Around 90 percent of those transactions were "highly concentrated in jewellery, ornament and luxury watch sales", the report said.

If that rate persisted for the full year, UnionPay sales in Macau for all of 2012 would have reached nearly $50 billion - nearly $45 billion of it for jewellery-related sales, a figure exceeding even Macau’s total gambling revenues that year.

"Are these actual transactions? Where does this money come from?" the deputy head of the Monetary Authority, Wan Sin Long, asked in the document.

"Banks have not carried out good monitoring, nor earnestly handled the situation,” Wan was cited as saying in the document. “If this continues, this could affect the question of the further opening up of the yuan."

All the counter-parties involved benefit from these cashback transactions, an industry source said. The retail merchant makes money on the exchange rate, the way a currency trader would. The Macau banks overseeing the merchant charge 1 percent to 2 percent on the transaction. And the UnionPay card-issuing bank back in China will generally charge around 1 percent on the transaction, the source said.

The cashback activity is spreading beyond Macau to other Chinese tourist destinations, including Taiwan, Japan and South Korea, people in the credit-card industry say.

UnionPay cashback transactions reached 9.78 billion yuan ($1.59 billion) in 2012 in Taiwan, almost doubling from the year before, according to a report by Taiwan's government investigation agency. Taiwan authorities said in January, given the abnormal UnionPay transactions they found, they would consider setting up a cross-straits mechanism to ensure timely information exchange and prevent illegal money laundering, according to CNA, its semi-official news agency. Taiwan’s cabinet is considering the proposal.

China isn’t standing still. A decade ago, the government began trying to rein in money laundering, and since then it has amended criminal laws and strengthened commercial banking rules.

UnionPay officials say they are trying to stamp out the illicit transfers. One of the main steps the company took came in June of 2012, when it required UnionPay card-issuing banks to put a 1 million yuan ($166,000) daily limit on any transaction in Macau, down from 5 million to 10 million yuan previously. That limit applies to actual sale transactions.

UnionPay’s rivals, meanwhile, don’t appear to be playing the cashback game. Macau jewellery stores visited for this article said Visa and Mastercard were not generally used for cashback transactions.

A senior executive with a rival card brand said his company had "zero tolerance" for the kind of cashbacks allowed by UnionPay. "We don't allow jewellery stores to give any form of cash whatsoever,” this person said. "That's completely illegal... Both as a bank and a (card) network, we're supposed to close it down immediately."

LOCAL AUTHORITIES RESPONSIBLE


In a written response to questions for this article, UnionPay said it "has always strictly prohibited the swiping of cards for cash without any goods being purchased and has collaborated from many sides to boost the investigation of such risks."

According to UnionPay's "Operating Regulations," overseas banks participating in the UnionPay system are required to close the accounts of merchants found to be engaged in fraudulent transactions.

But local authorities such as the Macau Monetary Authority have the primary responsibility for investigating suspicious cross-border transactions, the company says.

The Macau Monetary Authority said in a written response that bank card-related businesses in Macau have "been subject to very stringent ongoing supervision."

The authority noted it has "come across a couple of cases of supervisory concerns, and legal proceedings were taken against the parties concerned, including merchants." It didn’t elaborate.

Deborah Ng, head of Macau's Financial Intelligence Office, said UnionPay has tried to take a more active role recently to "take care of whether there are some irregular activities involved.”

But the card company can do more, she said in an interview. "They need to have some monitoring of abnormally large transactions, (and) frequent transactions from some commercial merchants," Ng said.

NO LIMITS

Despite the professed intensity in scrutiny, the practice continues openly.

At a jewellery outlet run by Hong Kong-listed Chow Tai Fook 1929.HK in the Grand Lisboa casino, staff said customers could swipe UnionPay cards to buy gold bullion of up to 10 million yuan ($1.5 million) - then sell it straight back for hard cash.

A Chow Tai Fook spokesman confirmed that. He said the store had "no specific limits on the amount that our customers can buy using any form of payment, as long as the payment is approved by the bank when we swipe the card."

At a jewellery store inside the Venetian Macau casino run by Las Vegas Sands LVS.N, a manager said card cashbacks constituted most of the shop's business. The shop was run by the owner of a VIP room or "junket" operator, which brings in big gamblers from the mainland.

"I would say there's no upper limit for UnionPay," said the black-suited manager, who spoke on the condition he not be identified. "The credit limits aren't enforced at all."

An executive at Las Vegas Sands, speaking on condition of anonymity, said vendors with UnionPay card-swiping machines have been caught wandering around the casino.

"People walk around with mobile union pay card machines on the gaming floor," the executive said. "They are linked to China (computer) servers, not (ones in) Macau. So it is like they are getting cash out in China. When we see them on the floor we kick them out."

That practice also exists outside the casinos, too. Macau's merchants lately have tried to better disguise the UnionPay transactions by routing transactions electronically across the border to China to escape the scrutiny of Macau authorities, a banker in Macau said.

"They closed the Macau tap, but they’ve opened an even larger China tap," said the Macau banker with direct knowledge of the practice. "The merchants are always cunning."

A UnionPay memo to banks and counterparties in Macau, dated Oct. 29 and reviewed by Reuters, said the company was aware of these practices and had initiated steps to stop it. It urged Macau banks and UnionPay counterparties to crack down by blacklisting such retailers and fining them.

UnionPay said in the memo it hoped that all parties with UnionPay linked business would make a “concerted effort to rectify Macau’s UnionPay card transaction market discipline and sustain its stable longer term development.”

A visit to Macau since the memo was issued, however, found cashback services to be flourishing.

Inside seven such stores, customers were observed swiping UnionPay cards at glass counters and receiving wads of cash without actually buying anything.

"We can remit as much money as you like with your UnionPay card," said a red-haired man surnamed Lai at one jewellery shop. A yellow sign carried the slogan: "Welcome Renminbi. Welcome UnionPay cards."

"You don't actually buy anything," said Lai, standing near a half-empty display case containing a messy spread of watches and jewellery. "We just help people get money out of China so they can gamble more."

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

A taste of authentic Macanese cuisine


The Portuguese have played a huge role in shaping the cuisine of Macau, one of China’s special administrative regions.

Similar to the Philippines which was colonized by Spain, Macau was ruled by Portugal in the 16th century. Wives of Portuguese sailors used cooking techniques from back home and incorporated Chinese ingredients and spices, resulting in many unique dishes. It is, as most people say, a great blend of East and West.

Interestingly though, Macanese food is not the dominant cuisine of Macau. Cantonese food dominates the culinary scene here with restaurants scattered around the area, even in the big casino hotels.

Still, there are quite a number of dining spots dedicated to Macanese cuisine, and one of them is Café Litoral, a branch of the award-winning Restaurante Litoral in Macau’s inner harbor. The small, quaint café is part of a row of restaurants at the end of Taipa’s food street, Rua do Cunha, and is right across the Cotai Strip.

Since it opened a few years ago, Café Litoral has been the go-to place for authentic Macanese food, noted Sindy Hoi of the Macau Government Tourist Office. The restaurant has been attracting both locals and tourists for its heirloom dishes served in a relaxed atmosphere.

Reservations are encouraged here as the place easily gets packed, especially on weekends. We dined here on a Saturday night as part of a tour organized by the Macau Government Tourist Office and the budget carrier Air Asia Zest, which recently launched flights to the special administrative region.

The food

The dishes served at Café Litoral are nothing fancy, but these hit the spot with their home-cooked feel.

Our meal started with a plate of chorizo and ham – which were finished immediately – and golden brown codfish cakes. The croquettes had a delightful crunch, and the creamy cod filling did not disappoint.




Next came a very simple serving of clams simmered in white wine, olive oil and lemon, a clear example of how a few fresh ingredients can make a great dish.





Several other dishes followed, from salad to steak and fries, but two items particularly stood out. One is fried rice topped with the delectably sinful suckling pig, and the African chicken, another Macanese staple.

Barbecued and covered with a slightly spicy sauce made of coconut milk, garlic, butter and paprika, the African chicken is moist and rich in flavor.

For dessert, we had Serradura or sawdust pudding, which is made of vanilla whipped cream and crushed biscuits. It is not too sweet, with the crushed biscuits adding a nice layer of texture to the creamy concoction. We also tried a chocolate version, which may be more appealing to those who have a sweet tooth.



All in all, Café Litoral offers a good introduction to Macanese food, having been recommended by both locals and the Macau Government Tourist Office. If you are planning to visit Macau, make sure to drop by this restaurant.

CAFÉ LITORAL
Rua do Regedor, Bloco 4
Wai Chik Kok No 53-57, Taipa, Macau
Open from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m, and 5:30 p.m. to 10 p.m.
For reservations, e-mail cafelitoral@macau.ctm.net.




source: www.abs-cbnnews.com


Monday, November 25, 2013

Pacquiao 'saw stars' after hard blow from Rios


MANILA, Philippines – Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao may have battered Brandon Rios in their welterweight showdown in Macau on Sunday, but the Pacman admitted that “Bam Bam” managed to sneak in a blow that stunned him hard.

Pacquiao set the tone right in the opening round, overwhelming Rios with multi-punch combinations and keeping his foe off-balance with his constant lateral movement.

Although he cruised to a unanimous decision victory, Pacquiao revealed that there was a moment in the fight when Rios caught him.

“May round doon na nasaktan ako ng left hook niya, at talagang biglang maraming star,” Pacquiao said on ANC's "Headstart" on Monday. “Tinamaan ako, tapos biglang may star.”

The blow – Rios’ best of the night – happened in the fifth round, Pacquiao revealed in the post-fight press conference. He shrugged it off, however, and stuck to his game plan.

“Sandali lang,” Pacquiao answered when asked how long he saw stars.

Rios was bleeding from a cut above his eye by the sixth round and his face was well-marked by the end of the fight, but he maintained that he was not fazed by Pacquiao’s power. Indeed, even after Pacquiao clearly snapped his head back with a straight, Rios smiled, stuck out his tongue and egged the Filipino on.

“I was never hurt,” Rios said in the post-fight press conference. “What got me was the awkwardness and speed. I haven’t fought a southpaw in a long time.”

“He got me a couple of times with the straight left,” Rios said, but also claimed that Pacquiao’s best punch was his quickness.

Pacquiao is convinced, however, that he hurt Rios repeatedly, even as he was impressed with the younger fighter’s toughness.

“Bilib ako sa tibay niya, kasi ang dami kong power punch na tumama sa mukha. Alam ko nasaktan siya, pero magaling siya magdala,” Pacquiao said.

“Alam ko nasaktan naman siya, kasi ‘yung kamay ko sumakit, ‘yun pa kayang mukha niya?” he added. “Magaling lang siya magdala. Kahit nasaktan siya, hindi siya nagpapahalata.”

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Boxing pundits convinced Pacquiao has plenty left


MANILA, Philippines – Filipino boxer Manny Pacquiao marked his return to the win column with an impressive performance against Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios Sunday in Macau, and the victory showed that the “Pacman” still has plenty left in the tank.

Coming off back-to-back losses – including a knockout at the hands of Mexican rival Juan Manuel Marquez – Pacquiao faced tremendous questions entering his fight against the hard-hitting Rios. But he let his fists do the talking in their 12-round fight, which he won via unanimous decision.

“In the aftermath of a horrifying knockout loss to Juan Manule Marquez last December, questions about whether Pacquiao would be the same fighter lingered,” Chris Mannix of Sports Illustrated wrote after the “Clash in Cotai.”

“But while Pacquiao is not the same human wrecking ball he was through 2009, he proved against Rios that, at 34, he still has plenty left,” he added. “Boxing brilliantly, Pacquiao moved in, out and around Rios, peppering him with combinations, bruising his face with thudding power shots. It was an easy fight to score… with little controversy.”

Brian Campbell of ESPN wrote: “With the alternative being a third straight loss and possible retirement, it wouldn’t be a stretch to say that Manny Pacquiao is back following his 12-round whitewash of hard-charging Brandon Rios.”

Like Mannix, Campbell noted that Pacquiao may not have been as destructive as he was in 2009, when he routinely beat up bigger opponents, but it was still an impressive performance considering the stakes.

“In his first fight following a scary, one-punch knockout against Juan Manuel Marquez last December, coming off the longest layoff of his career, it wasn’t too shabby,” wrote Campbell.

“Pacquiao simply had his way with the one-dimensional Rios, establishing himself early to the body before continuously peppering the Mexican-American fighter with combinations upstairs en route to an easy, unanimous decision win,” he added.

Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, said prior to the fight that he will advise the Filipino to retire should he lose to Rios, was satisfied with his prized ward’s performance, saying the Pacman fought a “perfect” fight.

Even Rios’ trainer, Robert Garcia, who got into an altercation with Roach prior to Sunday's showdown, acknowledged that Pacquiao was far from done.

“Pacquiao still has it. He has quickness and great speed. He’ll be around for a long time,” said Garcia.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Beckham roots for 'inspirational' Pacquiao


MACAO - Asian boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao will not only have the support of a Filipino-packed crowd when he fights Brandon Rios on Sunday, but also a phalanx of celebrity cheerleaders, led by David Beckham.

The former England football captain will be joined at the Macau ringside by a number of celebrity guests for the fight, including Oscar-wining actor and director George Clooney, Sands China CEO Ed Tracy confirmed.

Reality TV star Paris Hilton and Daniel Wu and Eddie Peng will also be at ringside, while American rap superstar 50 Cent is also strongly rumoured to be flying in to see "Pac-Man's" comeback fight.

Singing star Alicia Keys, who has been performing concerts at the Venetian Resort where the bout will take place, is also expected to attend.

Beckham jetted in to the southern Chinese city on Friday and immediately declared himself to be a "huge fan" of eight-weight world champion Pacquiao.

Beckham arrived to announce a commercial partnership with the resort's owners, Sands Las Vegas, but then let slip the real reason why he had decided to travel to the the semi-autonomous Chinese region this weekend.

"(Pacquiao) is obviously one of the reasons why I'm here and why I'm really excited," said the former Manchester United and Real Madrid star at a press conference.

"I'm a huge fan of Manny's. I met him a couple of years ago in the Philippines, when I was on tour there with the LA Galaxy and also there with UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund).

"He really is a truly inspirational person."

Beckham also had a message for the people of the Philippines as they attempt to rebuild their towns and lives after the devastation wreaked by Super Typhoon Haiyan on November 8, which has left nearly 7,000 people dead or missing.

"The eyes of the world have been on the Philippines the last couple of weeks," said Beckham.

"This fight will mean so much to Manny because, for a slight moment, it's going to put a smile on the people's faces in the Philippines.

"And we all send out love and our hopes to the people in that part of the world."

Pacquiao, coming off back-to-back defeats for the first time in his glittering career, takes on Rios in a "must-win" bout for the World Boxing Organization international welterweight championship in Macau on Sunday morning (Saturday night in the US).

The boxers are expected to touch gloves for the main event around 11:30 am (0330 GMT).

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Pacquiao dominates Rios in inspired comeback


Filipino boxing superstar Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao snapped a two-fight losing streak – and lifted the spirits of his countrymen – in a brilliant performance against Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios in their welterweight showdown at the Cotai Arena in Macau on Sunday.

Pacquiao was in control from start to finish, constantly keeping Rios off-balanced with his movement and footwork, while finding a target for his right straight and left hook early and often. He repeatedly landed multi-punch combinations, although Rios proved his toughness by lasting the distance despite taking stunning punishment.

The Filipino went on to win by unanimous decision, with scores of 120-108, 119-109, and 118-110, adding the World Boxing Organization (WBO) international welterweight belt to his collection.

“I did not consider Rios as an easy opponent,” said Pacquiao after the bout. “He’s tough, he’s a very tough boxer. But he’s a little slower. I’m faster than him.”

The tone of the fight was set early and remained the same for all 12 rounds. Rios (31-2-1, 22 KOs) put his gloves high in front of his face in an attempt to block Pacquiao's blows, but the eight-time world champion threw so many punches that quite a few broke through to leave their marks on the American's face.

Showing deft footwork, Pacquiao would jab, turn swiftly to one side, land another punch and turn again.

On several occasions, one straight left would be followed by another, and then, having pierced Rios' defence, Pacquiao would open up with a barrage of four or five punches, to the delight of the more than 13,000 in attendance at the Cotai Arena in the Venetian.

Speed and experience

Pacquiao’s speed and experience spelled the difference as Rios – who made a name for himself as a come-forward fighter who likes to keep pressure on his opponent – could not find his rhythm at all during the fight. Pacquiao repeatedly turned him to the middle of the ring, while slipping and evading Rios’ punches with seeming ease.

Rios’ vaunted punching power rarely came into play as well, as he only landed shots while clinching against Pacquiao. The Filipino champ, meanwhile, showed he had fully recovered from his knockout against Marquez, as well as his controversial decision loss against Timothy Bradley in June 2012.

“Recovering from the knockout and giving a good show, like the young Manny Pacquiao, that’s what I’m trying to show tonight,” said Pacquiao, who improved his boxing record to 55 wins against five losses and two draws.

In contrast, Rios was in constant danger during the fight, yet smiled nearly every time he absorbed a combination from Pacquiao and egged the Filipino on. Despite his toughness, Rios’ eyes and cheeks were swollen after the fight, and he had begun to bleed from a cut on his left eye as early as the sixth round.

“I got beaten by one of the best fighters in the world,” a gracious Rios said after the fight. “He came with a game plan and he executed it. He’s very fast, and he throws punches from different a lot of different angles. He’s hard to fight against.”

Lessons from Marquez

When asked about not winning by knockout, Pacquiao said he had learned his lesson from his loss to Marquez last year.

“I’m very careful. I learned in the last fight, you know. If the knockout comes, it will come. But I’m very careful in throwing punches and counter-punches. That’s what I did in this fight,” he said.






Statistics showed after the fight that Pacquiao landed 36% of his punches (281 of 790). Rios landed 27% (138 of 502).

Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, who got into an altercation with members of Rios’ training team in the days leading up to the fight, was ecstatic with his prized ward’s performance.

“All I can say is, many Manny punches. He fought the perfect fight,” said Roach, noting that Pacquiao let Rios "off the hook.” “I wanted him to knock him out, but I was very happy with his performance.”

Rios’ trainer, Robert Garcia, had questioned whether Pacquiao could still fight at an elite level going into the bout and believed that his fighter’s youth can spell the difference against the Filipino. He was singing a different tune once the final bell rang, however.

“Pacquiao still has it,” Garcia said. “He has quickness and great speed. He’ll be around for a long time.”

Pacquiao dedicates win to Yolanda victims

Pacquiao, who was guaranteed $18 million in the fight, was inspired by the plight of his countrymen, who are still reeling from the devastation of Super Typhoon “Yolanda” (international name: Haiyan). He dedicated his victory to the typhoon victims and vowed to return home soon to help.

“It’s really important to me to bring this honor to my country, especially to the people affected by the typhoon,” said Pacquiao. “I’m pretty sure that they’re so happy right now because I won the fight.”

“To all the people and the families affected by the typhoon, I will see you there. I love you so much,” he said.

"This isn't about my comeback. My victory is a symbol of my people's comeback from a natural disaster, a national tragedy," he stressed.

The victory – and Pacquiao’s impressive, clinical performance – may help revive talks of a potential mega-bout against unbeaten American Floyd Mayweather Jr., while also keeping alive hopes of rematches against Marquez and American Timothy Bradley Jr, who controversially out-pointed Pacquiao in June 2012.

The Filipino, however, refused to take the bait when asked about his next fight.

“I don’t have an idea,” he told HBO’s Larry Merchant. “It depends on my promoter, (Top Rank chief executive) Bob Arum.”

What’s for sure is that for all the hype that surrounded the bout in Macau – it was billed as the biggest fight in Asia since “The Thrilla in Manila” – Pacquiao still wants to once again fight in the United States.

“That’s what I want,” he said. “I miss fighting in Las Vegas.”

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Friday, November 22, 2013

David Beckham looks forward to Pacquiao fight


MACAU - Retired soccer star David Beckham declared himself "a huge fan" of boxer Manny Pacquiao on Friday and said he was excited at the prospect of the Pacquiao versus Brandon Rios fight on Sunday.

Beckham is one of a number of celebrity guests in Macau for the fight, at the invitation of the casino where the bout is taking place. Former England captain Beckham is collaborating on community projects with the casino owner, U.S. billionaire Sheldon Adelson.

"It's obviously one of the reasons why I'm here and why I'm really excited being here. I'm a huge fan of Manny's. I met him a couple of years ago in the Philippines with, when I was on tour there with the Galaxy and also there with UNICEF. And he truly is an inspirational person," said Beckham.

Beckham, who moved to USA and the Major League Soccer (MLS) after his glory days in European soccer, has already confirmed rumours that he is planning to start a new soccer team with MLS, based in Miami. But it has become evident that a formal announcement will come later.

The league has confirmed it is in discussions with Beckham but is awaiting a formal bid, including details of the city, the ownership group, and a stadium plan, which is expected before the end of the year.

"It's something that I want to achieve," said Beckham. "I want to continue to be successful and I want to continue to be successful in America. And owning a team is something I'm really excited about. Like I said, I've looked at different places in America. Miami is something that really excited me because I think there's a great energy down there. I've been to the heat games, I've seen excitement of the people, and I think they're ready for a football team in that part of the world. You know, like I said. It's not been announced yet but at some point we'll have some very good news," said Beckham.

The Pacquiao fight is a coup for Macau, a former Portuguese colony and now a special administrative region of China, like neighbouring Hong Kong.

Its 35 gaming houses are the only places where Chinese nationals are allowed to gamble in casinos, and revenues are soaring with Macau gaming revenues expected to be seven times those of Las Vegas this year.

Now China's central government is calling for Macau to attract more tourists, not just hardcore gamblers, and hosting sports events is a direct way of doing this.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Pacquiao may earn up to $30M in Rios fight


MANILA, Philippines – Filipino boxing superstar Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao is guaranteed to earn $18 million for his non-title welterweight showdown against Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios, his promoter confirmed on Wednesday.

Top Rank chief executive Bob Arum told Yahoo! Sports reporter Kevin Iole that Pacquiao was guaranteed $18 million, but that number can rise significantly once the pay-per-view revenue is factored in.

Pacquiao can end up earning as much as $30 million for the fight, which will be his first in nearly a year.

Meanwhile, Rios is guaranteed $4 million.

Pacquiao is seeking to bounce back from back-to-back losses in 2012, having lost to Timothy Bradley controversially in June before getting knocked out by rival Juan Manuel Marquez in December.

Rios is also coming off a loss – the first of his career – when he was outpointed by Mike Alvarado in their rematch last March.

The Pacquiao-Rios showdown, billed the "Clash in Cotai," will be held in Macau on November 24 (Manila time).

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Rios plans to negate Pacquiao's speed


MANILA – Brandon Rios said he plans to take away Manny Pacquiao's speed which will be the Filipino’s biggest advantage when they fight on November 24.

In an interview on Hustle Boss, Rios said he’s aware that he will need to catch up with the fleet-footed Filipino once they square off at the Cotai Arena in Macau.

“The other guy is quicker than me, so all I gotta do is neutralize his speed,” said the 24-year-old Mexican-American.

To do that, Rios will be banking on his youth and stamina as he battles the fighting congressman.

He said the constant pressure will eventually break down Pacquiao.

“[I’ll beat him with] the pressure that I put on him, I throw punches in bunches, too,” said Rios.

The Mexican-American said he’s fought quicker boxers before and was able to handle them well.

One of them was Venezuelan Miguel Acosta, whom Rios halted in 10 rounds to win the WBC lightweight crown.

“That's what I did with Acosta, I neutralized his speed, he's very fast and I neutralized him,” said Rios.

He added that a victory over Pacquiao will be huge for his career. A dominant win would mean that “he has already arrived.”

“It's just my time now, and I'll be ready.”

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, November 4, 2013

It's do-or-die for Pacquiao


LOS ANGELES – Bob Arum didn’t mince words when he talked about the importance of Manny Pacquiao’s coming fight against Brandon Rios.

“This is a very important fight for him to win,” the legendary promoter told The STAR from his Las Vegas home the other night.

Arum said Pacquiao, coming off back-to-back losses, really can’t afford a third straight.

Arum said it could mean everything for the Filipino boxing icon.

“It will certainly hurt him if he loses this fight,” said Arum of the welterweight showdown set Nov. 23 (Nov. 24 in Manila) at The Venetian Hotel in Macau.

And what if Pacquiao does?

“It may signify the end. It will be very devastating for him,” Arum, in his slow, familiar voice added.

Pacquiao is not too old at 34 but has gone through a lot inside the ring. He has fought guys much bigger and heavier than him and took their best shots.

But it’s the knockout loss to Juan Manuel Marquez last December that may have inflicted the biggest damage – if it really did.

Pacquiao went down in the third round after taking a sweeping right to the side of the head and sent Marquez down in the fifth.

He had Marquez in deep trouble in the sixth. And as Pacquiao went for the kill in the closing seconds of the round he ran smack into the Mexican’s big right.

He was knocked out and lay motionless on the canvas. It was a pretty scary sight.

Arum said the fight against Rios gives Pacquiao the opportunity to prove that his loss to Marquez is just a loss, a result of a lucky punch and a thing of the past.

And it’s not going to be easy.

“Brandon Rios is a very, very tough kid. And he’s very confident he can beat Manny,” said Arum from the other end of the line.

“Manny has to fight a good, intelligent and hard fight like when he fought (Miguel) Cotto and (Oscar dela Hoya) Dela Hoya and (Antonio) Margarito,” he added.

That’s what Arum wants.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Friday, July 19, 2013

UFC back in Macau, set for Singapore debut


SINGAPORE - The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) announced on Thursday it has signed a multi-year deal with venues in Macau and Singapore to stage mixed martial arts events in the region from next year.

The UFC said it would hold events at The Venetian resort hotel in Macau and Singapore's Marina Bay Sands from 2014, and produce a Chinese version of its reality show The Ultimate Fighter.

The organisation made its first foray into Greater China last year with a glitzy event in Macau and Mark Fischer, the UFC's Asia chief, told Reuters the success of that event had been a springboard to their latest expansion plans.

"The event in Macau was a tremendous success and I think it was an eye-opener for both the fans and the UFC," Fischer told Reuters by telephone from Beijing.

"We'll be bringing at least one live fight event to the Singapore Marina Bay Sands, with the first one coming early first quarter next year.

"We'll have well-known fighters on the main card but we want to fill the card with more Asian fighters. We really want to build a base and... create more relevance with local audiences."

Fischer, who was one of the driving forces behind the National Basketball Association's growth in China, said The Ultimate Fighter (TUF) reality show could be key in cracking the Chinese market.

"We are still at the investment stage but we do see tremendous long-term potential here. TUF China is a watershed, we believe it's going to do more for growing the brand and the sport of MMA among the Greater China audience than any other programme to date.

"In terms of making money, I'm sure Asia is going to be very fruitful but right now we still consider it a building phase, but this is a huge step in that build."

Asia spread

One of the fastest-growing sports in the world, MMA is a full contact combat sport that allows fighters to utilize techniques from both striking and grappling martial arts such as boxing, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, muay Thai, wrestling and judo.

Already hugely popular in mature MMA markets such as the United States, Brazil, Japan and Canada, the UFC is looking to extend its reach throughout Asia.

Clearly looking to hook Chinese viewers, the UFC statement said applicants for The Ultimate Fighter show must "speak Mandarin, be of Chinese decent and able to compete as a featherweight, lightweight or welterweight".

The show features up-and-coming mixed martial artists living and training together, and competing with each other for a UFC contract. The U.S. version catapulted the UFC, and the sport, into the mainstream in 2005.

"It's definitely a series targeted at a Chinese audience," said Fischer, adding that the sport's following there had so far been built on provincial television channels and on Internet streaming sites.

"But it's been relatively niche, and we think this series is going to spread that niche following to more of a mainstream one."

As to when the UFC would hold events on the Chinese mainland, Fischer said they first had to reach a critical mass.

"It's a question of strategy and how aggressive we want to get. We've had a very deliberate and patient strategy to date, and TUF is a very big step in the middle of that strategy.

"Certainly in the longer term we want to hold regular events here, but we need to do it at the right time. We want to build up demand, build up a very strong understanding of the sport, before we bring the live events here."

With the growing popularity of Asian fighters such as the "Korean Zombie" Jung Chan-sung, Kim Dong-hyun and Yushin Okami, Fischer said the UFC was looking at several other cities in the region to host events.

"Seoul and Jakarta, no firm plans yet but we are in discussions in both of those cities," he added.

"Manila is in our sights, we're in advanced talks with Tokyo and I guess to round it out would be Bangkok. There's lots of interest throughout the region but those are the key cities for 2014." (Editing by John O'Brien)

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com

Monday, May 13, 2013

Pacquiao made a mistake in picking me, says Rios


MANILA, Philippines – Former lightweight champion Brandon “Bam Bam” Rios says Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao made a mistake in choosing to fight him, and guarantees the Filipino ring icon will realize this once they touch gloves on November 24 in Macau.

It was announced last week that Pacquiao will be making his ring return against Rios, a hard-hitting brawler who has only lost one fight in his professional career.

In an interview with Boxing Scene, Rios said the Pacquiao camp likely picked him because he was coming off his first professional loss.


“He picked me because I lost,” Rios said, referring to his unanimous decision setback against budding rival Mike Alvarado late in March.

“They probably think, ‘Brandon is easy to hit. Brandon gets hit all the time’,” he added. “But it’s a very different story when you get in the ring with me.”

Rios is determined not only to bounce back from his first career loss, but also to show that he has what it takes to keep up with a fighter of Pacquiao’s caliber.

“I’ve been waiting for this fight all my life,” he said. “They made a mistake picking me. This is my chance to show what I can do with a great fighter in front of me.”

But in order to beat Pacquiao, an eight-division world champion and a former pound-for-pound king, Rios acknowledged that he may have to change his tactics.

“I gotta come out in a smarter way. I’ve got to fight different that I usually do, because Pacquiao can hurt you,” he said. “He’s got a good knockout percentage.”

At the same time, Rios is positive that he can force the “Pacman” to fight his fight.

“When I’m inside the pocket, that’s my game. I can fight very well. I’ve proven it,” Rios said.

The November bout against Rios will be Pacquiao’s first since getting knocked out by Mexican rival Juan Manuel Marquez in the sixth round of their fourth bout last December 2012 in Las Vegas.

source: www.abs-cbnnews.com