Manny Pacquiao believes that training excessively may have played a huge role on his stagnant footwork when he lost to Cuban foe Yordenis Ugas in their super WBA welterweight title bout at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Aug 21. Saturday there (Sunday in Manila).

Pacquiao started training camp right away in the Philippines after his supposed mega-bout with Errol Spence Jr. last May under the guidance of head trainer Buboy Fernandez.
At that time though, the fighting senator was only exposed to light training such as jogging, workouts, and mitt work.
When he moved to the Wild Card Gym in Los Angeles, California, legendary trainer Freddie Roach helped in Pacquiao's overall preparation which spanned for three months heading into the last-minute replacement against Ugas.
"I think too much hard work, training. I ran in the mountain and also doing a 32 -round every day," explained Pacquiao during the post-fight press conference. "So I don't know but we're not young anymore," he added with a chuckle.
Pacquiao, 42, however, said he wasn't able to unleash his hundred percent against Ugas due to leg cramps, which explained why he remained flat-footed compared to his usual speedy footwork in the heydays.
Did age contributed to his loss and did Father Time finally caught up with Pacquiao?
The fighting senator has an answer to that.
"It happened that second round, third round, I have cramps in my both legs so I cannot move. I think if my legs do not hurt I can outbox him by moving past, side-by-side but it happened that my legs stuck," he said in an interview with ESPN's Bernardo Osuna.
" a big factor but y'know, it just happened my legs are cramping tight. I have no regrets. That's boxing. I'm a fighter. So that's boxing. It happened that way," said Pacquiao, who now holds a 62-8-2 record with 39 knockouts.