Even Manny Pacquiao is uncertain whether his 26-year professional boxing career is ending on Saturday night when he faces Yordenis Ugás for the WBA welterweight title. (More Sports News)
Pacquiao has plans and ambitions reaching far beyond the fight game at this point in his wild life, and that's why he might be saying goodbye at T-Mobile Arena. If he enters the presidential race in his native Philippines a few weeks after this bout, as nearly everyone expects, he will be running for a job that would effectively prevent him from fighting again.
While the 42-year-old Pacquiao has said nothing official, his fans around the globe realise it's at least one of the final chapters in a boxing story with few equals.
"I never imagined what I would have accomplished in boxing from the beginning of my career leading up to now," Pacquiao said.
"I went from nothing to something in order to be an inspiration for people both inside and outside of the ring."
Almost nobody in the history of boxing could do what Pacquiao intends to accomplish over the next year — although that's been true for pretty much every year of the Filipino senator's time in the professional fight game. If being an eight-division world champion was an achievable goal, plenty of boxers would have a collection like Pacquiao's closet full of belts.
Pacquiao (62-7-2, 39 KOs) is returning to the ring after a two-year absence — the longest of his career — to fight for another world title in front of a big Vegas crowd and a pay-per-view audience.
In the next few weeks, almost everyone in the Philippines expects him to declare his candidacy ahead of the May 2022 presidential election.
A presidential campaign would be longer and more grueling than any training camp in Los Angeles, where he teamed up again with Freddie Roach to prepare for one more title challenge.
"The thing about Manny is he's almost always been prepared when it's time to start," Roach said recently at the Wild Card Gym.