
Ex-Manny foe awaits Horn rematch
By Joaquin Henson
PhilBoxing.com
Tue, 18 Jul 2017

Nedal Hussein.
Nedal Hussein, the Australian who nearly knocked out Manny Pacquiao in 2000, said the other day there will be a rematch with Jeff Horn ?for sure? but advised the fighting Senator to retire after facing the newly-crowned WBO welterweight champion in a bid to regain the throne.
Hussein, 39, battled Pacquiao at the Ynares Center in Antipolo 17 years ago and came close to scoring a stoppage in the fourth round. Pacquiao went down hard from a left straight but recovered to halt Hussein when referee Sonny Padilla ruled the visitor unfit to continue because of a cut on his cheek in the 10th. Hussein?s cornerman and legendary Australian champion Jeff Fenech raised a howl to protest Padilla?s decision but nobody listened. Pacquiao was ahead on the three judges scorecards, including Australian Garry Dean?s, at the time of the stoppage.
Hussein said he scored the Pacquiao-Horn fight a draw, 114-114. ?I had Horn winning seven rounds with Pacquiao five and the ninth was 10-8,? said Hussein. If you assign points to score Hussein?s breakdown, it would be 114-113 for Horn. Hussein probably meant it could?ve gone either way. Before the fight, Hussein advised Horn to bully Pacquiao and brawl. Hussein heeded his advice. He also told Horn to be patient. ?Pacquiao likes to bring fighters onto his shots,? said Hussein, quoted in the Australian magazine Inside Sport. ?He likes to pick them off, he likes to hit them as they come in. I think patience is the key.?
Hussein said Horn ?fought a good fight? in an e-mail to this writer. ?The referee (Mark Nelson) let him off a lot and could have warned him more,? he said. ?There?s a rematch for sure. I think Pacquiao should retire after the rematch. I watched the fight (on TV) at home and the rematch as well, hopefully.?
Hussein said the Pacquiao-Horn fight was ?very good for Australian boxing? but ?I can?t put Horn on the level of other Aussie greats?----at least, not yet. Hussein said he?ll never forget his encounter with Pacquiao. ?Yah, I haven?t forgotten the Pacquiao fight,? he said. ?The ref wasn?t fair in that fight. I was in Las Vegas in 2005 for Pacquiao?s fight against (Erik) Morales. I saw him there. He?s a very nice guy.? Hussein said when they clashed in Antipolo, he already knew Pacquiao was headed for greatness. ?I knew he was going to be a world champ again,? said Hussein.
?But just not a superstar and a future Hall of Famer.?
Hussein said Pacquiao?s inability to score a knockout since 2009 is because he?s taken on bigger opponents. ?As he?s gone up in weight, Pacquiao?s power is not there,? he said. ?At featherweight, lightweight and lightwelterweight, he was knocking people out cold----Ricky Hatton, David Diaz, Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera.?
Reviewing his pro career, Hussein said his most memorable win was beating Brian Carr for the Commonwealth superbantamweight crown in Scotland in 2000. He singled out Mexico?s Oscar Larios as the opponent he respects the most. In 2004, Larios decisioned Hussein in a WBC superbantamweight title bout. Hussein retired from the ring in 2007 with a 43-5 record, including 27 KOs.
Today, Hussein is a successful car salesman. He?s been married 16 years with three children. ?I?ve had a car yard (Knockout Motors) since 2009 in Lansvale (a Sydney suburb) and it?s been doing good,? he said. ?I?ve just opened up a boxing gym doing fitness classes but no fighters.?
Hussein said he holds no grudge against Pacquiao. "Never would I say that had I won that fight, I would have had the same success as Manny," said Hussein, quoted by Jamie Pandaram of the Sydney Morning Herald. "What he has done is remarkable. No one has done it. It would have changed my life (if I beat Pacquiao). I don't know whether it was incompetence ? all I know is that (Padilla) never reffed again after my fight. I would have been ready for other titles. Barrera and Morales were champions at the time and I could have had them. I never looked at boxing the same after that.?
Click here to view a list of other articles written by Joaquin Henson.
Recent PhilBoxing.com In-House articles:
THE PAST WEEK IN ACTION 2 DECEMBER 2025: Kavaliauskas Wins by Split Decision Over Molina; Whittaker Stops Gavazi in 1; Malajika Wins by UD Over Paras
By Eric Armit, Wed, 03 Dec 2025WBC Strips Terence Crawford of Super Middle Title
By Gabriel F. Cordero, Wed, 03 Dec 2025Soledad wins WBC Asian Continental title
By Lito delos Reyes, Wed, 03 Dec 2025A night of power, legacy, and UAE pride: IBA Men’s World Boxing Championships opens in spectacular fashion in Dubai
Wed, 03 Dec 2025OKC Thunder is NBA 2025-2026 Strongest Team
By Gabriel F. Cordero, Wed, 03 Dec 2025Who was Clever Sison?
By Joaquin Henson, Wed, 03 Dec 2025MATCHROOM BOXING RETURNS TO FONTAINEBLEAU LAS VEGAS WITH MURATALLA-CRUZ FIGHT, JAN. 24, 2026
Wed, 03 Dec 2025TRAINING CAMP NOTES: Undefeated Featherweight Luis Nuñez Prepares for Hector Sosa Showdown on PBC on Prime Video
Wed, 03 Dec 2025Darry Bernardo, 4 other Pinoys in hot start in 3rd Asian Chess Championship 2025 for players with disabilities
By Marlon Bernardino, Wed, 03 Dec 2025Two Pacquiaos on same card?
By Joaquin Henson, Tue, 02 Dec 2025OLYMPIC BOXING 4: 1924 OLYMPICS AT PARIS, FRANCE
By Maloney L. Samaco, Tue, 02 Dec 2025Cebuana Lhuillier-Backed UTP National Team Shines at 40th Penang Open, Captures Multiple Titles
By Marlon Bernardino, Tue, 02 Dec 2025WBC 63th Annual Convention Opens in Bangkok
By Gabriel F. Cordero, Tue, 02 Dec 2025Undefeated Brooklyn heavyweight prospect Pryce Taylor closing out a strong 2026
Tue, 02 Dec 2025USA Boxing Announces Partnership with Xempower USA
Tue, 02 Dec 2025