This topic contains 5 replies, has 4 voices, and was last updated by  IndianaBasketball 15 years, 3 months ago.

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  • #11754

    NBATalk20098
    Participant

    The much-anticipated showdown between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather, tentatively scheduled for March 13 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, has collapsed, Top Rank promoter Bob Arum told ESPN.com on Wednesday night.

    “The fight’s off,” Arum, who promotes Pacquiao, said from Las Vegas.

    The fight died after a last-ditch attempt at mediation failed in an effort to determine the drug testing protocol.

    Pacquiao had agreed to move off his hard-line stance of refusing a blood test inside 30 days before the fight, but Mayweather wouldn’t budge off his desire for random testing all the way until the fight, Arum said. Nor would Mayweather agree to a public apology for remarks he made accusing Pacquiao of using performance-enhancing drugs, Arum said.

    Arum said Pacquiao would move on and likely fight junior middleweight titlist Yuri Foreman on March 13 or March 20.

    The fight was to have been on HBO PPV, a sure blockbuster many believed would break the all-time pay-per-view record of 2.44 million buys set by Mayweather’s 2007 fight with Oscar De La Hoya, who owns Golden Boy Promotions. But Arum said he had informed HBO PPV boss Mark Taffet that the fight was off.

    Arum Manny accepted what was on the table and Mayweather rejected it. Haymon and Schaefer tired to convince Floyd all [Tuesday night] and [Wednesday] and he wouldn’t agree to it. He didn’t want the fight. He never wanted the fight. I always knew the fight wouldn’t happen.
    ” — Top Rank chief and
    Manny Pacquiao promotor Bob Arum

    Had the fight done the monster numbers organizers expected, it would have likely generated in the neighborhood of $200 million with the fighters receiving in roughly $40 million apiece.

    Richard Schaefer, the CEO of Golden Boy and the point person for the company on the negotiations, did not return multiple messages.

    The sides had negotiated every point of the deal except for the drug testing procedures. The fighters agreed to unlimited random urine testing, but Mayweather insisted on random blood testing as well, even though the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which would regulate the fight, requires only urine testing.

    Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 KOs) didn’t want any blood testing but had agreed to take three blood tests: one during the week of the kickoff news conference, which would have taken place next week, one random test to be conducted no later than 30 days before the fight and a final test in his dressing room after the fight. Mayweather (40-0, 25 KOs) would have been subject to the same testing procedures.

    When they could not come to an agreement on the drug testing, they enlisted the aid of a mediator, retired judge Daniel Weinstein, who successfully mediated a series of disputes between Top Rank and Golden Boy, which represents Mayweather, in June of 2007. At the center of the problem was ownership of the promotional rights to Pacquiao, who had signed contracts with both companies before eventually pledging his loyalty to Top Rank. Under the settlement, Top Rank got Pacquiao’s contract with Golden Boy retaining a small percentage.

    With lawyers at their side, Top Rank’s Arum, company president Todd duBoef, Golden Boy’s Schaefer and De La Hoya, along with Mayweather adviser Al Haymon, spent nine hours in mediation on Tuesday in Santa Monica, Calif.

    The sides struck a deal during the marathon session Tuesday, but it was contingent on getting the fighters to sign off, Arum said.

    On Wednesday, they were back in their offices — Golden Boy in Los Angeles and Top Rank in Las Vegas — and worked the phones with their clients while still under Weinstein’s gag order not to talk to the media.

    Arum said Pacquiao agreed to ease his demands on the drug testing window but Mayweather wouldn’t.

    Arum said Pacquiao agreed to shorten the window for a blood test to 24 days before the fight. In order to receive a Nevada boxing license, Pacquiao took the standard annual blood test 24 days before his May 2009 fight with Ricky Hatton.

    “Manny accepted what was on the table and Mayweather rejected it,” Arum said. “Haymon and Schaefer tired to convince Floyd all [Tuesday night] and [Wednesday] and he wouldn’t agree to it. He didn’t want the fight. He never wanted the fight. I always knew the fight wouldn’t happen.”

    The drug testing became a major issue when Floyd Mayweather Sr., the father of the fighter, made several public remarks accusing Pacquiao of using performance-enhancing drugs without a shred of proof. Mayweather Jr. later made similar remarks about him using PEDs, even though Pacquiao denies it and has never failed a drug test.

    The accusations led Pacquiao to file a defamation lawsuit last week in Nevada U.S. District Court against Mayweather Jr., Schaefer, Golden Boy president De La Hoya, Floyd Mayweather Sr., Roger Mayweather and Mayweather Promotions.

    “The guys who should be most disappointed in the fight being off are Schaefer and De La Hoya because they went along with this guy [Mayweather] and ended up with gatz and a big lawsuit,” Arum said.

    They also risk losing their share in Pacquiao’s contract, Arum said.

    “There’s an arbitration which calls for them to lose any percentage of Manny’s promotional contract, something we asked for and had postponed, but now it will go forward,” Arum said. “We did that two weeks ago before Manny filed his lawsuit. It’s binding arbitration. Our request was for Golden Boy to forfeit its interest in Pacquiao’s contract based on the fact that they had demeaned Pacquiao with their remarks [alleging he used PEDs] and that it violated the [2007] agreement between Pacquiao, Top Rank and Golden Boy.”

    Arum now plans on moving forward with Pacquiao facing Foreman, who won his 154-pound title on the Nov. 14 undercard of Pacquiao’s 12th-round knockout of Miguel Cotto to win a welterweight belt. Pacquiao would move up in weight to try to win a title in his eighth division. Pacquiao already holds the record, having won titles in seven divisions.

    Mayweather could also still fight on another date in March, potentially against former junior welterweight titlist Paulie Malignaggi.

    “We’re going to talk to the MGM because they’re out of a fight,” Arum said.

    Arum added that the fight could also wind up at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas or perhaps in Dallas, where Cowboys owner Jerry Jones made a strong pitch to bring Pacquiao-Mayweather to his new stadium.

  • #245339

    gatorheels
    Participant

    PacMan is so weak for this.  All he had to do was accept the random testing & try to get his revenge in the ring.  

    Mayweather straight up called Pac out & clowned him.  

    This makes PacMan look scared.  

    Who cares is someone accuses you of using steroids?!  Stop crying about it like a big baby.  Take the test & prove them wrong. 

  • #245354

    llperez

    i agree with gatorheels. I’m a huge fight fan(mma) and i hate the thought of guys using steroids. I think if I was a fighter, I would step up and let them test whenever just to show the world I was clean. I’m not sure why Pac would not be open to that if he was clean. At the same time, the state athletic commissions have the say and it kinda looks weak for mayweather to demand more then the normal policies from the commission.

  • #245356

    NBATalk20098
    Participant

    i think PacMan not ready to fight Floyd Mayweather

  • #245361

    llperez

    i have no idea who would win because i don’t watch boxing, but even i’m curious to see this fight. I guess i would pull for whoever was bringing it early.

  • #245723

    IndianaBasketball
    Participant

    I’m not falling for it. Both fighters and their camps are just doing this to attract more of an audience. The more they hype this up… The more people will purchase payper view lol. Do you really think Pac-Man would pass up on this fight and how much money comes along with it? I doubt it. Watch… This fight will be back on. Boxing is a dying sport and their promoters are doing what they do best… Promote.

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