Manny Pacquiao continues to reap international recognition, with  CNNGo.com, CNN’s Asian travel guide website, including his congressional  win in last May’s Philippine presidential elections among the 20  stories that changed our world in 2010.
Pacquiao placed 19th in a list that included the India cricket scandal,  the Hong Kong tourists killed in the Manila bus tragedy, the  Commonwealth Games failure in New Delhi, Korea military hostilities, and  the almost year-long Red Shirts protest in Thailand.
"The fighter of the last decade could be the politician of the next," it said in the story. 
Pacquiao, in his second run at public office, knocked out Roy  Chiongbian, the candidate that the powerful Chiongbian political clan  chose to match up against the Filipino boxing legend for the lone  congressional seat in Sarangani province in the May 2010 elections.
Pacquiao began his congressional duties in June, but requested for a  two-month-long leave to train for his fight against Antonio Margarito  last November.
The eight-division world champion also topped SportsIllustrated.com’s top boxing stories of 2010.
"Already boxing's most exciting fighter, Pacquiao became a global  phenomeon in 2010, penetrating the American sporting mainstream like no  Asian-born athlete in history," wrote Bryan Armen Graham.
Graham said that aside from winning nearly half of boxing’s 17 weight  divisions, Pacquiao was also featured in 60 Minutes almost a year after  being included in Time magazine’s 100 most influential people.
Pacquiao also earned the Boxing Writers Association of America (BWAA)  2009 Fighter of the Year and Fighter of the Decade awards, and scored  dominating victories against Joshua Clottey and Antonio Margarito this  year.
For winning the 154-pound World Boxing Council (WBC) super welterweight  strap, Pacquiao became the first boxer ever to win eight world titles in  eight different weight classes.
His other titles are 112 lbs (WBC flyweight), 122 (International Boxing  Federation junior featherweight); 126 (The Ring featherweight), 130 (WBC  super featherweight), 135 (WBC lightweight), 140 (The Ring junior  welterweight) and 147 (WBO welterweight).
He is scheduled to defend his WBO welterweight title against former three-time world champion Shane Mosley on May 7.
 
– Jon Perez, KY, GMANews.TV
 
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