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Thursday, December 31, 2009

Pacquiao sues Mayweather for defamation

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Online Live Streaming
LAS VEGAS, Nevada (AFP) – Manny Pacquiao is fighting mad, and taking on Floyd Mayweather jnr in court even as a potential blockbuster bout between the two is on the ropes.

Filipino hero Pacquiao filed a lawsuit in federal court in Las Vegas on Wednesday alleging that Mayweather and others defamed him by falsely saying Pacquiao used performance-enhancing drugs.

"Calling a professional athlete a cheater is the most serious charge one can make," the lawsuit says, "and in today's world, accusing an athlete of using performance-enhancing drugs - however baseless and lacking in evidence - is toxic."

Pacquiao has been angered by the Mayweather camp's insistence on doping control blood tests in the buildup to their welterweight showdown - a demand that has the March 13 fight in doubt.

Mayweather has said the blood tests, which could detect substances not found by urine tests, are vital to ensure a fair fight, although blood tests are not routinely used in boxing.

Pacquiao - who says he fears having blood drawn less than 30 days before the fight would 'weaken' him - has taken exception to the demand and to comments made by the Mayweather camp in media interviews.

His lawsuit asks for damages in excess of 75,000 dollars and names Mayweather, his father, Floyd snr, and uncle Roger Mayweather as defendants. Oscar De La Hoya and Richard Schaefer, who operate Golden Boy Promotions and are promoting Mayweather, are also named as having "stated publicly that Pacquiao has used and is using performance-enhancing drugs, including steroids."

The lawsuit cites several interviews given by the Mayweather camp, including the unbeaten US boxer's comments in a radio interview in October about Pacquiao's physical development, when he said: "cause we know the Philippines got the best enhancing drugs."

Also quoted in the suit were Mayweather's remarks published in the british newspaper The Guardian, in which Mayweather said he had "great doubt as to the level of fairness I would be facing in the ring that night."

"The truth did not stop Mayweather and the others," the suit alleges. "That is because they are motivated by ill will, spite, malice, revenge and envy."

Pacquiao, who has supplanted Mayweather in the estimation of many as boxing's best pound-for-pound fighter, has earned titles in seven weight classes.

Their fight could bring each as much as 40 million dollars, and it had appeared to be virtually set after squabbles were settled over issues including the division of the purse and the type of gloves to be used.

The dope test procedures, however, have proved a sticking point.

The Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday that Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum is preparing to open negotiations with World Boxing Association super welterweight champion Yuri Foreman as talks with Mayweather falter.

Arum, contacted by the newspaper while on vacation in Mexico, sounded pessimistic that Pacquaio-Mayweather would happen on March 13.

"This is only my opinion, but I don't see the fight happening now," he told the Times. "Positions are hardening ... Manny's fit to be tied. He's very angry."

Arum acknowledged there could still be a breakthrough, but said: "It might be best to visit this fight later in 2010."

Source: Yahoo! News

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The Manny Pacquiao v Floyd Mayweather fight will happen

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Updates
Rather like some of Naseem Hamed's ring entrances the lead-up to Pacquiao-Mayweather is turning into a prologue disproportionate to the event itself, grand as that potentially is.

Even the Greatest Show On Earth, as it will no doubt eventually be billed, could do without the posturing that the fighters and their agents have shown the past week or so.

Believe this: the fight will happen. Already there are signs that Floyd Mayweather Jr is softening his stance about Manny Pacquiao having Olympic-style drug testing. Pacquiao's threat to sue him might have had something to do with that. Expect a late compromise there, too.

From the off it has been a mix of clumsy brinkmanship and hype. Mayweather is disingenuous in the extreme in even hinting that Pacquiao has had chemical assistance in growing through the weights – because "Money" himself has tracked him almost identically since they both fought at 106lbs when 16-year-olds. Pacquiao has seven versions of world titles at seven weights, Mayweather at five weights. What is the difference?

Arum has stoked the row brilliantly. Having scheduled the fight for 13 March, he knows the promoters have a desperately short lead-time to maximise pay-per-view sales, which are predicted to top three million.

Consider how quickly two of the most notoriously difficult fighters in the business agreed on what were considered time-bomb difficulties: a split of the $50m purse, the weight, the venue and even a financial penalty if Mayweather came in over 147lbs. Those details were settled in record time.

So, surprise of all surprises, we were then visited by controversy, seemingly though not actually out of the blue. Mayweather, like Arum no fool, picked up on the baseless steroids sniping of his father, Floyd Sr, and the media coverage in what had been disturbingly quiet early days of the promotion kicked into overdrive.

Now everyone is talking about it. This really is the fight you cannot miss. Get on the phone and pay for that view.

The latest (at time of writing in this tiresome melodrama) is that Richard Schaefer, chief executive of Mayweather's promotional partners, Golden Boy Promotions, has told ESPN they are no longer insisting on "Olympic-style" testing.

Hurray. Grow up. Get on with it.

Talk by Arum that he had lined up Paulie Malignaggi as an alternative opponent if Mayweather pulled out has been one of the most laughable smokescreens in the whole episode. Did Arum really think he could build up hopes of the biggest fight in the history of boxing, then substitute one of the players with a second-tier, punchless runner like Malignaggi, a fancy-Dan illusionist who could not keep Ricky Hatton off him? Pacquiao would murder him – in the nicest possible way.

The other option, according to Freddie Roach, was for his little champion to take on the new light-middleweight title-holder Yuri Foreman. The trainee rabbi cannot punch either – but it would at least have given Pacquiao an eighth title, which would be amazing in its own statistical way.

No, forget all of those dumb stories. Pacquiao fights Mayweather, probably on 13 March, almost certainly at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. If not in March, in May. Which is pretty much where we left it before this exaggerated ring walk started.
GOOD TIMES AHEAD

Boxing has had much to celebrate in 2009, even more to look forward to in 2010.

A few predictions

• David Haye to beat John Ruiz after a real struggle as he worries about his right hand and then to wrangle for months with Vitaly Klitschko. That is still too tough to call from this far out. Whether they take it to Gabon, their own Rumble in the Jungle, as reported yesterday, I very much doubt. But it will happen.

• Floyd Mayweather's suspect hands to give up on him against Manny Pacquiao, who walks through him to win by late stoppage.

• Amir Khan to defend his light-welter title against Paulie Malignaggi in the week before Pacquiao-Mayweather, whenever that is, and belt him into retirement.

• Ricky Hatton to come back – first against Juan Manuel Marquez, negotiations for which are well advanced, then in a co-promotion with Khan against the Bolton man – and lose bravely.

• Carl Froch to have an absolute war with Mikkel Kessler and win on cuts.

• Kevin Mitchell, Matthew Macklin, Nathan Cleverly and Rendall Monroe to get world-title shots; Ryan Rhodes and Jason Booth to be in there trying.

• John Murray and Kell Brook to fight for European titles.

• Sam Sexton to beat Danny Williams and be called out by Tyson Fury, Derek Chisora and Uncle Tom Cobbleigh but settle for a third go with Martin Rogan. Fury to fight John McDermott again.

•Frankie Gavin to make bigger strides than the other Olympians.

• And Liam Walsh to confirm what a sublime talent he is.
QUOTE OF THE WEEKEND

"As far as I'm concerned, the fight is over. O-V-E-R." Bob "that-was-yesterday" Arum.

Source: bleacherreport.com

Key to super fight could be '24/7' testing

By Dan Rafael
ESPN.com
Archive

With the proposed March 13 Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather Jr. super fight hanging in the balance as the camps continued to slug it out over drug-testing protocol Monday, Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said he was open to talking to his fighter again about the timing of the prefight blood test.

Top Rank's Arum had set a Monday deadline to finalize a deal.

When HBO televised "Pacquiao/Hatton 24/7," it aired footage of Pacquiao taking a routine blood test as part of his prefight medical exam. The blood test was conducted approximately 14 days before the fight; it punches holes in Pacquiao's argument that giving blood inside 30 days of a fight negatively impacts his performance.

Also Monday, the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which would oversee the fight because it is due to take place at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, set in motion plans to randomly test the urine of both fighters regardless of whether the fight takes place.

Throughout negotiations over the drug testing -- the final point the sides need to agree on -- Pacquiao has said he would submit to unlimited random urine tests. However, he refused Mayweather's demand to have random blood testing. Instead, Pacquiao agreed to take three tests, one during the week of the kickoff news conference in early January, 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 would be subject to the same testing.

However, Pacquiao's past actions might help Arum convince him to tighten the window for the final random blood test.

When HBO televised "Pacquiao/Hatton 24/7" -- the four-part series that followed the buildup to Pacquiao's second-round knockout of Ricky Hatton to win the junior welterweight title in Las Vegas last May -- it aired footage of Pacquiao taking a routine blood test as part of his prefight medical exam in Los Angeles.

The blood test was conducted approximately 14 days before the fight; it punches holes in Pacquiao's argument that giving blood inside 30 days of a fight negatively impacts his performance.

Arum was intrigued by the "24/7" scenario. He told Reuters on Monday that he was ready to move away from Mayweather and announce a new opponent on Tuesday for Pacquiao, but that was before the "24/7" scenario was brought to his attention.

"I will transmit it [word of Pacquiao's '24/7' test] to Manny once [HBO Sports president] Ross Greenburg establishes the actual date of the test in '24/7' and [the Mayweather camp] makes a proposal based on what Ross has come up with," Arum told ESPN.com from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. "If that happens, I am sure I can convince Manny" to tighten the testing window.

Richard Schaefer of Golden Boy, which is promoting Mayweather for the fight, was also made aware of the "24/7" footage, telling ESPN.com, "I need to discuss it with Team Mayweather. We need to find out what it means if you cut off testing 14 days before the fight. I want to talk to [Mayweather advisers] Al Haymon and Leonard [Ellerbe]."

Although talks had broken down on Sunday, the camps were at least talking again on Monday afternoon after they learned of the "24/7" scenario.

"It's a very good point to point out that Manny was tested so close to the [Hatton] fight," Arum said. "I'm not going to suggest anything to him though, until I hear from the other guys. They have to say, 'This is what Manny did. Here is what we propose.' Then I will bring it to Manny and say, 'Manny, look, you took this test however many days before the fight and it didn't affect you. Hey, you knocked him out in two rounds.'

"What will Manny do? I assume he will listen to me, but I can't promise anything. But I want [Mayweather's camp] to make a formal proposal that this is the outside date for the blood testing based on Manny's prior test in '24/7' and then I will move mountains."

Prior to discussing the "24/7" scenario, the camps were looking at alternative March fights. Both camps had reached out to former junior welterweight titlist Paulie Malignaggi. Arum was also prepared to have Pacquiao challenge for a title in a record-extending eighth weight class against Yuri Foreman, a Top Rank junior middleweight who won a belt on the Pacquiao-Miguel Cotto undercard on Nov. 14.

"We'll ask the MGM which fight they want [Pacquiao's or Mayweather's] and the MGM will then pick the fight and alienate one of the fighters forever," Arum said. "We have another date [of March 20] that we can go on outside of the MGM and we will do that if we have to. If HBO takes sides, which they're free to do, we have discussed alternatives."

Meanwhile, in Las Vegas, the Nevada commission held its final meeting of 2009. At the conclusion of the 25-minute meeting, chairwoman Pat Lundvall closed by invoking the commission's right to conduct random urine tests on Pacquiao and Mayweather.

"The Nevada administrative code obligates any unarmed combatant to submit to tests if they're directed to do so by a member of the commission for prohibited substances," Lundvall said at the public meeting. "And it was in 2007 that we amended our regulations to ensure we were following the World Anti-Doping Agency's prohibited list. ... That is the list we adhere to for the purposes of the testing that is conducted through the athletic commission. We determined that those provisions applied not only immediately before and after a fight, but also to random testing during training, and that any member of the commission can request such a random test."

Lundvall asked commission executive director Keith Kizer to employ the commission's random testing procedure and "request a urine sample from Floyd Mayweather as well as Manny Pacquiao. They're both licensees and they are subject to these kinds of exams whether the proposed fight goes forward or not.

"Random testing is the best way to evaluate the compliance with our rules and regulations against prohibited substances and the primary reason for that is that an athlete doesn't have time to cycle out or flush out any prohibited substances, and therefore random testing is the best thing to employ, which is why I thought it was a good idea for Keith to inform these fighters that we would like to have a sample and move forward with our random testing."

Commissioner Bill Brady added that he supported the request to ensure the safety of the fighters as well as to "reassure the public worldwide that when anyone fights in Nevada that they can count on those fights being fair, above board and on a level playing field. I think it's important that the public knows the commission takes their responsibility seriously."

Pacquiao and Mayweather must submit to the tests within 48 hours or face possible fines or suspension by the Nevada Athletic commission.

"That at least starts the ball rolling," Kizer said.

Mayweather lives in Las Vegas, so that should not be an issue. But even with Pacquiao in the Philippines, Kizer said the commission has labs it works with worldwide.

Kizer said the results would likely be back within a week of the test.

"That's fine, no problem at all," Arum said when told of Nevada's ruling. "We are absolutely in favor of it. That's what they should be doing. That's what they do in other sports. I see no reason why they shouldn't do it here. We support it 100 percent. I really applaud the way the Nevada commission has acted.

"I will check with Mayweather," Schaefer said, reacting to Nevada's request. "Right now, I need to focus on getting the fight done."

Dan Rafael is the boxing writer for ESPN.com. Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: bleacherreport.com

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Spat before fight is odd, even for boxing

 Pacquiao vs Mayweather
By Tim Sullivan, UNION-TRIBUNE COLUMNIST
Sunday, December 27, 2009 at 2:43 a.m.

File this latest boxing flap under the head-scratching heading of Man Bites Dog.

Prefight controversies designed to expand pugilism’s narrow niche audience are predictable, transparent and generally tedious. Yet when a match as compelling and potentially lucrative as Manny Pacquiao vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. founders on matters of integrity and principle, well, that’s startling stuff.

This is, remember, boxing.

Mayweather’s insistence on stringent Olympic-style drug testing and his corner’s presumption of Pacquiao’s chemical culpability have clouded their scheduled March 13 megabout and, theoretically, could lead to its cancellation.

Maybe it’s all hype. Maybe the issue is being aired as advertising, as goading gamesmanship or as a calculated effort by Camp Mayweather to establish an excuse for backing out and/or getting beat.

Given boxing’s historic corruption, prevailing anarchy and eroding share of the market for vicarious violence, arched eyebrows are certainly warranted. But with accusations flying like so many left jabs, with Pacquiao threatening a defamation suit and with promoter Bob Arum purportedly exploring alternative matchups, it’s conceivable that the combatants are prepared to leave many millions on the table rather than concede this sticky bargaining point.

Instinct says the two sides will settle, that there’s too much money at stake (perhaps more than $30 million per man) for this deal to die over drug-testing protocols. Moreover, having already scored some points by painting Pacquiao into a guilty-until-proven-innocent corner, Mayweather can now retreat to his corner with a ready-made alibi.

The situation remains fluid. Yesterday, ESPN.com reported the Mayweather camp dropped its demand that the testing be administered by USADA. Meanwhile, Top Rank’s Arum indicated Pacquiao would only agree to blood tests at the unlikely request of the Nevada Athletic Commission.

Stay tuned. Which, of course, is exactly what the promoters want you to do.

Despite an appalling lack of evidence, Mayweather has planted the idea that Pacquiao’s brilliant career has been a fraud, and he has left his opponent with a ponderous burden of proof. If Pacquiao does not consent to Olympic-style testing, which could involve drawing blood on the day of the fight, he will create doubt about all he has done. If Pacquiao backs down, he will do so while playing Mayweather’s game.

Given their ability, egos and financial incentives, it is hard to imagine that the two men who have agreed to fight at 147 pounds won’t eventually do so in the ring rather than the courtroom. Still, this impasse illustrates boxing’s need for a central regulatory body that establishes and enforces the rules of engagement for all contestants.

Individual boxers should not be negotiating drug-testing standards on a bout-to-bout basis, no more than they should be dickering over the dimensions of the ring, the weight of their gloves or the number of rounds. Yet in the absence of any sanctioning body that can be taken seriously, boxing negotiations are inevitably about leverage rather than creating a level punching field.

Anyone who climbs into the ring at the risk of being beaten senseless is entitled to neutral conditions, consistent standards, an unbiased application of the rules and impartial enforcement of policy.

Boxing, however, operates on the premise that everything is negotiable and that most things can be manipulated.

Absent an evenhanded administration, challengers are often compelled to confront champions at financial and strategic disadvantages. Perhaps the champion deserves a bigger share of the purse for putting his title in play, but allowing him to impose competitive conditions runs counter to the basic concept of fair competition.

Distasteful and distrustful as it is, drug testing has become a vital interest of professional sports, and I’m not referring to the comparatively cursory form that exists in Major League Baseball and the National Football League. Absent a reliable urine test for Human Growth Hormone, the primary values of big-league drug tests are appearances and deniability.

Yet that doesn’t mean Olympic-style scrutiny, which entails random, unannounced blood testing, should be enacted on the arbitrary, ad hoc basis Mayweather has demanded. A fighter should enter the ring with a reasonable expectation that his opponent is clean, but drug testing should not be conducted on the vigilante or tactical basis being sought here.

Pacquiao’s problem is how to avoid it now without giving the appearance of guilt.

“I maintain and assure everyone that I have not used any form or kind of steroids and that my way to the top is a result of hard work, hard work, hard work and a lot of blood spilled from my past battles in the ring, not outside of it,” Pacquiao said in a statement posted on his Web site. “I have no idea what steroids look like, and my fear in God has kept me safe and victorious through all these years.

“Now, I say to Floyd Mayweather Jr., don’t be a coward and face me in the ring, mano-a-mano, and shut your big, pretty mouth so we can show the world who is the true king of the ring.”

Because this is boxing, the default expectation is that if cooler heads cannot prevail, cold cash can. Ultimately, Pacquiao and Mayweather must weigh their positions against the largest payday of their careers.

If the money doesn’t win out, file that, too, under Man Bites Dog.

Source: signonsandiego.com

Has Floyd Mayweather trapped himself over drug testing demands?

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Online Live Streaming
Pittsburgh Fight Sports Examiner | Scott Heritage

Between making a concession, backing out of the fight completely and being sued, Floyd Mayweather may be in for a tough time of it in the new year.

Swathes of the media and fans are already down on Floyd since he came back from retirement because of his weight tricks against Juan Manuel Marquez, and the so called blood gate isn't helping any.


Floyd might still be the best fighter of his generation as he keeps telling everyone, but sooner or later he's going to need to start fighting relevant tough fighters to keep his name out there.

Obviously they don't come any tougher than Manny Pacquiao at the moment, but with that fight hanging by a thread it seems Floyd has backed himself into a corner. There are options for other top fighters Floyd could take on, but if his first choice if the Manny fight is off is Matthew Hatton, then it doesn't look likely that a true test will be forthcoming.

On the one hand he could drop the drug testing issue completely, or make some sort of compromise with Top Rank and Pacquiao, which the latter have been trying to do for several days now. This at least guarantees him a $40 million plus pay check in March and could put him back at the top of the pound for pound rankings should he win. At the same time though a fight against Manny could be the breaking of his career, and a loss would no could be difficult to overcome no matter what he does afterward.

The other option for Floyd is seemingly to leave his testing demands intact and let the fight slip away over the next few days. From there he will probably make chump change against the decent but beneath him Matthew Hatton, which few people want to see.

He also faces the prospect of being dragged through the courts by Pacquiao, who intends to sue him for slander/defamation of character or some similar legal term which will only take up time and cost both of the money. If Floyd loses, then he may well even end up paying out more than he can make against the likes of the younger Hatton.

If Floyd is really just stalling for time, and wants a tune up fight before taking on Pacquiao later on in the year, he should just come out and say it, and clear the air about the implied steroid accusations. There isn't any reason the fight still can't be signed and sealed for a later date if both parties can get past all the problems and agree to keep the more opinionated from either camp quiet with their thoughts about either fighter.

Source: Examiner.com

IS SHANE MOSLEY NEXT TO GET THE PACQUIAO TREATMENT?

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Updates
By G. Leon

Even though Golden Boy Promotions still has a contractual interest in Manny Pacquiao, they have dilligently been working on behalf of Floyd Mayweather Jr demanding that Pacquiao undergo PED testing not normally required by the Nevada State Athletic Commission. Although it's not the steak and potatoes of this piece, it is ironic that some of the involved parties wanted this fight to take place in Las Vegas so badly that they dusted off Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and his $25M offer to host the fight in his state of the art stadium that can comfortably hold more than 100,000 people. Then before you can say steroids, the Mayweather camp virtually dubs the Vegas Commission a bunch of inept cavemen with prehistoric testing methods. Is Sugar Shane Mosley, a partner of Golden Boy Promotions the next in house target? Based on how well Schaefer has followed Mayweather's marching orders on the Pacquiao fight, are we nuts for thinking, he'd instruct Mosley that in order for him to fight Mayweather additional "random" testing would be necessary? If that's the case, it might be a while before we see Floyd in a fight we care about.

Will Al Haymon give Andre Berto the Mayweather treatment and advise him that requesting addition PED testing would be in his best interest? Don't hold your breath. After all, HBO has guaranteed Berto a Urango like comeback fight should he lose to Mosley, so I guess there's no rush to red-flag Mosley.

Coming Soon: Boxing's R&R Program. Not rest and relaxation, RUINED AND RECYCLED, starring nearly all of the talent HBO dubbed the next generation.

Source: boxingtalk.com

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

YOU BLOODY MORONS: THIS IS BIGGER THAN MAYWEATHER-PACQUIAO

Pacquiao Mayweather 24/7
By G. Leon

Is Manny Pacquiao's decision not to partake in the rigorous drug test that Team Mayweather is requesting suspicious? Absolutely. There isn't a fighter who would risk $30M+ for bloodwork, but there is much more to this than meets than eye. Floyd Mayweather Jr is not bigger than boxing. His ego might be, but he is not. Like Pacquiao, Mayweather rapidly achieved success in multiple weight classes (140-154). Had Mayweather's lone opponent at 154, Oscar De La Hoya, demanded that Mayweather take additional drug tests not MANDATED by the commission, following his expeditious leap from lightweight to junior middleweight title challenger, is this something Floyd would have welcomed with open arms? (Of course, this might be an unfair comparison since De La Hoya has promoted every Mayweather fight since then.) To me Mayweather's demands imply that he feels every Manny Pacquiao fight that takes place in his hometown, Las Vegas, Nevada, the boxing capitol of the world, isn't happening on the level.

Have you ever seen an unsigned fight appear on SportsCenter more than than Mayweather-Pacquiao? Having this fight come to fruition without any implications of corruption would help take out sport to new heights.

And then what happens? Information is leaked about Pacquiao's unwillingness to take additional testing that is not required by the Nevada State Athletic Commission.

Mayweather's official statement was a joke. Anybody who has ever heard him talk knows he didn't write it. I mean "Frankly." PLEASE. Maybe Mayweather knows someone back in Grand Rapids named Frank Lee, but frankly Pacquiao shouldn't have to go above and beyond the NSAC requirements because Mayweather says so. The fact that he's already agreed to take additional tests twice is more than any fighter on the top level would have and should have conceded to. Can you really picture a Klitschko allowing David Haye to make such a demand for a fight?

Floyd Mayweather's decision to retire enabled Pacquiao, via the excitement he brings to the ring to become the pound for pound upgrade in his absence, something that can't sit well with Mayweather, or his ego.

Team Mayweather should leave well enough alone, especially considering that Pacquiao would have no problem waiting until the summer or September for this fight to happen since he's looking foward to running for congress in the Philippines, a move that would likely cause Mayweather to once again seek advance money from Al Haymon and Oscar De La Hoya.

Regardless of how this plays out, now Mayweather and Pacquiao will be asked countless questions of alleged malfeasance taking place in what could become the highest grossing fight ever, and no matter how you slice it, that's not good for our sport.

These are the best two fighters in the world. One is a master boxer and the other one is a beast the likes of which I've never seen. That needs to be the story, not additional drug testing which isn't required by one of the most respected commissions in boxing.

If Mayweather's attitude towards what this fight means to boxing doesn't chage soon, I might regret his ever going broke forcing him to come back. By the time everyone involved was paid back, Mayweather wasn't Scrooge McDuckin it after the Marquez fight. And of course the fact that Mayweather and his braintrust also know that there are likely no more $30M, $20M or $10M fights out there for him if he loses, has absolutely nothing to do with their current concerns.

Source: boxingtalk.com

Will Bad Blood Scuttle the Pacquiao-Mayweather Fight?

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Updates
By Gary Andrew Poole Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2009

The talk of the fight world has been the March welterweight title clash between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. Superlatives have been thrown around, including the likelihood of it being the most lucrative boxing match ever. But it may now well be the greatest fight that never was.

Pacquiao, the world's best pound-for-pound boxer, has a reputation for leaving his opponents in a bloody pulp, but his refusal to provide a blood sample before the bout — as demanded by the Mayweather camp — has led to an abrupt end to planning for the mega-matchup. The Filipino boxer, who has become an international sports icon, doesn't want his blood drawn within 30 days of the contest. Mayweather's team says the test is standard for Olympic athletes. However, Pacquiao and his trainer Freddie Roach believe any blood test close to the opening bell will weaken him. "We will abide by the [boxing] commission rules on a blood test after the fight and urine tests anytime," says Roach. He adds that Mayweather, who used to be the world's best pound-for-pound boxer, knows Pacquiao is very superstitious and doesn't like having his blood drawn close to fight night. A statement from Pacquiao's promoters specified that the Filipino fighter has already agreed to take blood tests as prescribed, including one in January when the fight was to have been officially announced; and one no later than Feb. 13, which is 30 days before the match. The additional blood test request, Roach claims, is as an excuse to scuttle the fight. "Mayweather doesn't dictate the rules, boxing commissions do; this is not something required in boxing," says Roach. "We're gonna knock this bum out, he knows it, and he is scared." (See pictures of the rise of Manny Pacquiao.)

The American boxer professed disappointment in a statement. "I understand Pacquiao not liking having his blood taken, because frankly I don't know anyone who really does," said Mayweather. "But in a fight of this magnitude, I think it is our responsibility to subject ourselves to sportsmanship at the highest level. I have already agreed to the testing and it is a shame that he is not willing to do the same. It leaves me with great doubt as to the level of fairness I would be facing in the ring that night."

But Mayweather is known to relish in getting under his opponent's skin. And, apart from the blowup on the part of Pacquiao's promoters, what Mayweather has done is inject an accusatory undertone of doping that is bound to irritate the Pacquiao camp, because it potentially tarnishes the seven-time champion's dramatic victories. "Mayweather is using this to harass Manny," says Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter. "This fight is down the drain. It makes no sense at all. My kid is clean as a whistle." (See the top 10 sports moments of 2009.)

Pacquiao has been called a once-in-a-lifetime fighter, and he has stolen much of the limelight from Mayweather. The Mayweather camp has been incredulous about Pacquiao's record. Pacquiao started his career at 106 lbs and has won seven championship belts in seven weight classes; he now fights at 144 lbs, almost a 40-lb swing. He is known for his ring artistry, in which he slips and slides in the ring like a ghost, strikes his opponent at so many angles and lands punches with concussive force.(See the meaning and mythos of Manny Pacquiao.)

But Mayweather is one of the smartest boxers around. "He is brilliant at draining the drama from a fight, but he also wins," says Larry Merchant, the HBO boxing analyst. By making a request that he expected Pacquiao to turn down, he may have proven that he is just as good a tactician outside the ring as in it. Or as Pacquiao enthusiasts may add, Mayweather is good at getting out of the ring as well.

If Pacquiao and Mayweather never meet in the fight, it will be a major body blow to boxing, a sport that seemed to gain mainstream momentum this year, mostly because of charismatic Pacquiao's rags-to-riches story. His November fight in Las Vegas against Miguel Cotto brought worldwide, and more importantly American, attention back to the fight game. After Pacquiao defeated Cotto there was immediate talk of a bout with Mayweather. The crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas chanted, "We want Floyd! We want Floyd!" (See the rise of mixed martial arts: the new rules of fight club.)

It is difficult to imagine the two fighters, and particularly their promoters, walking away from a fight that could be the biggest payday of their careers, which Arum, the promoter, estimates could bring each fighter $40 million. The fight can be salvaged, Arum says, if a drug-testing compromise can be made between both camps. Arum says that in addition to boxing commission drug testing, Pacquiao is willing to have his urine examined by drug testing agencies that evaluate NBA, MLB and NFL players.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1949885,00.html#ixzz0ad1GmORAThe talk of the fight world has been the March welterweight title clash between Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. Superlatives have been thrown around, including the likelihood of it being the most lucrative boxing match ever. But it may now well be the greatest fight that never was.

Pacquiao, the world's best pound-for-pound boxer, has a reputation for leaving his opponents in a bloody pulp, but his refusal to provide a blood sample before the bout — as demanded by the Mayweather camp — has led to an abrupt end to planning for the mega-matchup. The Filipino boxer, who has become an international sports icon, doesn't want his blood drawn within 30 days of the contest. Mayweather's team says the test is standard for Olympic athletes. However, Pacquiao and his trainer Freddie Roach believe any blood test close to the opening bell will weaken him. "We will abide by the [boxing] commission rules on a blood test after the fight and urine tests anytime," says Roach. He adds that Mayweather, who used to be the world's best pound-for-pound boxer, knows Pacquiao is very superstitious and doesn't like having his blood drawn close to fight night. A statement from Pacquiao's promoters specified that the Filipino fighter has already agreed to take blood tests as prescribed, including one in January when the fight was to have been officially announced; and one no later than Feb. 13, which is 30 days before the match. The additional blood test request, Roach claims, is as an excuse to scuttle the fight. "Mayweather doesn't dictate the rules, boxing commissions do; this is not something required in boxing," says Roach. "We're gonna knock this bum out, he knows it, and he is scared." (See pictures of the rise of Manny Pacquiao.)

The American boxer professed disappointment in a statement. "I understand Pacquiao not liking having his blood taken, because frankly I don't know anyone who really does," said Mayweather. "But in a fight of this magnitude, I think it is our responsibility to subject ourselves to sportsmanship at the highest level. I have already agreed to the testing and it is a shame that he is not willing to do the same. It leaves me with great doubt as to the level of fairness I would be facing in the ring that night."

But Mayweather is known to relish in getting under his opponent's skin. And, apart from the blowup on the part of Pacquiao's promoters, what Mayweather has done is inject an accusatory undertone of doping that is bound to irritate the Pacquiao camp, because it potentially tarnishes the seven-time champion's dramatic victories. "Mayweather is using this to harass Manny," says Bob Arum, Pacquiao's promoter. "This fight is down the drain. It makes no sense at all. My kid is clean as a whistle." (See the top 10 sports moments of 2009.)

Pacquiao has been called a once-in-a-lifetime fighter, and he has stolen much of the limelight from Mayweather. The Mayweather camp has been incredulous about Pacquiao's record. Pacquiao started his career at 106 lbs and has won seven championship belts in seven weight classes; he now fights at 144 lbs, almost a 40-lb swing. He is known for his ring artistry, in which he slips and slides in the ring like a ghost, strikes his opponent at so many angles and lands punches with concussive force.(See the meaning and mythos of Manny Pacquiao.)

But Mayweather is one of the smartest boxers around. "He is brilliant at draining the drama from a fight, but he also wins," says Larry Merchant, the HBO boxing analyst. By making a request that he expected Pacquiao to turn down, he may have proven that he is just as good a tactician outside the ring as in it. Or as Pacquiao enthusiasts may add, Mayweather is good at getting out of the ring as well.

If Pacquiao and Mayweather never meet in the fight, it will be a major body blow to boxing, a sport that seemed to gain mainstream momentum this year, mostly because of charismatic Pacquiao's rags-to-riches story. His November fight in Las Vegas against Miguel Cotto brought worldwide, and more importantly American, attention back to the fight game. After Pacquiao defeated Cotto there was immediate talk of a bout with Mayweather. The crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas chanted, "We want Floyd! We want Floyd!" (See the rise of mixed martial arts: the new rules of fight club.)

It is difficult to imagine the two fighters, and particularly their promoters, walking away from a fight that could be the biggest payday of their careers, which Arum, the promoter, estimates could bring each fighter $40 million. The fight can be salvaged, Arum says, if a drug-testing compromise can be made between both camps. Arum says that in addition to boxing commission drug testing, Pacquiao is willing to have his urine examined by drug testing agencies that evaluate NBA, MLB and NFL players.

Source: time.com

BOB ARUM: MAYWEATHER JUST DOESN'T WANT TO FIGHT PACQUIAO

Pacquiao vs Mayweather News
By G. Leon

GL: Why is Manny Pacquiao opposed to the Olympic style drug testing? "Don't give me this nonsese about the Olympic style drug testing. The Nevada Commission has drug testing prodcedures, and Mayweather, in order to find a way out of this fight, started this nonsense about having other tests taken. He is not the commissioner, the commission is the Nevada commission and they have jurisdiction over the fight. I pulled out of these negotiations three weeks ago becuase I wasn't going to put up with it, but Todd said that he would find a solution. First they agreed that Manny would do urine analysis until he couldn't piss anymore. Whenever they wanted he would piss, they agreed to take his blood before the press conference and after the fight. Then they appeased the little rascal even more by saying they would take it 30 days before. But nothing is good for Mayweather because he doesn't want the fight.

He knows that Manny has a phobia of putting needles in and extracting blood when it got close to the fight. He Knew that Pacquiao would't do it and he kept on insisting on it, but Pacquiao just won't do it. If you check with any boxing drug testing specialist.

"Len Satterfield quoted one of the biggest experts in the field, who has 800 football players, who said that sophisticated urine analysis is better than blood testing to detect steroids or anything else. This is just a nonsense issue raised by Mayweather in order to get into the fight."

GL: The whole superstition that Pacquiao has about..

Bob Arum: (cutting in) "It's not a superstition."

GL: That's what ESPN is saying.

BA: "I don't care what they call it. He feels that taking blood from him immediately beofre the fight or a few weeks before the fight. This is what he believes and this is what Freddie believe and we're not going to do it. End of story, case closed and we're going to be moving on to another opponent."

GL: My two part question is this, first off how soon before a fight would Pacquiao give his bloodwork for the HIV test and whatever medicals need to be conducted, and seconldy, what's the problem if the test is conducted after the fight?

BA: "We would agree to that, there isn't any. You're absolutely correct. HE would agree to the test immediately after the fight and he would give blood to the commission in the beginning of the year at the press conference, which had been scheduled for January 6. Even though we believe blood testing determines nothing, we would agree to do it after the fight, of course."

GL: And how soon before the fight would he normally get the bloodwork done for his medicals?

BA: "It depends on when he applied for the license. So in this case he would apply in January and do it in January."

GL: So none of this has anything to do with Manny's desire to run for congress.

BA: "Absolutely not. It won't interfere with the promotion, that was the point of doing it in March, but the point is, Floyd Mayweather is not the commission of boxing. Floyd Mayweather is under the jurisdiction, if we fight in Nevada, which I'm sure we would. To appease him we agreed to urine analysis and the blood test before the fight and after."

GL: Is now until March 13 enough time to promote what could be the biggest fight in boxing history?

BA: "I think it's a short window and I agree with you Greg. The biggest fight in boxing history was the first Ali-Frazier fight and that wasn't signed until the end of December and it happened on March 8. It's much more difficult to promote fights and get info out in those days, so the answer is it can be done, but moments are ticking off and the more this goes on, it's appearing less and less likely."

GL: You said that you're sure the fight would take place in Vegas. Does that mean they're offering more than the $25M Jerry Jones is offering to make the fight?

BA: "I don't want to get into it, but I think before this issue came to a head, I think both sides had agreed to do the fight at the MGM Grand."

GL: Can you give us some thoughts on Kelly's peformance?

BA: "I think everybody loved the show. Kelly needed a test like Espino because he had so much rust. Given the rust he had and the fact that Espino came out like a real warrior, I think he did really well."

GL: I spoke with Jack Loew and he made it clear that Pavlik will stay at middleweight and he wants to fight Paul Williams. Is that a realistic option?

BA: "FOr me it is. We had a contract on December 5, and it didn't happen because of Kelly's hand. We're willing to do it on HBO on the earliest possible opportunity, all they have to do is initial the old contract and it's done."

GL: Since Kelly's hand is healed, other than a serious fluke, you have no doubt the fight would come off?

BA: "Let me assure you Greg that Kelly was seriously injured. It sounds ridiculous that a finger could do this, but it was a staph infection and he nearly died. If you want to inspect the records from the Cleveland clinic, which is one of the foremost hospitals in the country we'll arrange for it.

GL: I think the issue people have has more to do with the fight being scheduled for December 5, it didn't happen on December 5. We watch Williams fight somebody else on December 5 and then Pavlik is back in the ring two weeks later.

BA: "That's right, because Kelly even on December 19 only had a month to prepare. He couldn't fight Williams on a two week training period, that would have been crazy."

GL: Unless a resolution is reached and agree to let Pacquiao take the tests when he's willing to take the tests, will there be a fight on March 13?

BA: "No. No. No. No. I think that's not in the cards."

GL: Closing thoughts?

BA: "Mayweather never had any intetion to fight Pacquiao and this demonstrates it.

Source: boxingtalk.com

Mayweather-Pacquiao appears dead over drug testing issue, and there's blame to go around

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Online Live Streaming
By David Mayo | The Grand Rapids Press
December 23, 2009, 12:05PM

Mayo-column-mug.jpgYou might think someone will blink, and that either Floyd Mayweather's camp will relent on this blood feud, or Manny Pacquiao's camp will relent and allow a few pinpricks so everyone can bleed money.

Of course, that assumes common sense prevails, which isn't always the case in boxing.

Money usually does prevail, however, and if Mayweather-Pacquiao actually does disintegrate over a disagreement in how to administer random drug tests, it would be a bigger upset than the night Buster Douglas knocked out Mike Tyson.

Happy Holidays, sports fans. The prettiest package under your tree just got smashed to smithereens.

And the discussion of who did the smashing is well under way.

At issue is that the Mayweather wanted to ensure that Pacquiao doesn't use performance-enhancing drugs via Olympic-style, random blood testing, administered by either the U.S. Anti-Doping Association, or an independent laboratory using the same technology.

Pacquiao agreed to three blood tests, according to his promoter, Bob Arum -- one at the beginning of training camp in January; another no later than Feb. 13, or 30 days before the fight; and a final test after the fight -- and random urine sampling in between.

When neither side would budge, the accusations flew. Arum and Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, claim Mayweather is looking for a way out of the fight. Mayweather, in a statement, said he merely wants to ensure a level playing field, while his adviser, Leonard Ellerbe, said he can't believe Pacquiao would let the fight fall apart over blood testing, and his father, Floyd Mayweather Sr., said this validates his performance-enhancing charges against Pacquiao.

At the core of this fallout were two egregious demands, one by each side, that were the final sticking points in a fight which had an agreed-upon date (March 13), site (MGM Grand in Las Vegas), weight limit (147 pounds) and financial split (50-50):

• One, Pacquiao demanded a usurious $10 million payment to the offended fighter if either man came in even a fraction heavier than 147 pounds. That demand was based on Mayweather paying $600,000 to Juan Manuel Marquez after weighing 146 pounds for a September fight.

Of course, that ignores that the real weight limit for Mayweather-Marquez was, in fact, 147, but with a contractual stipulation for a $300,000 payment for each pound heavier than 144. Mayweather abided by the weight restrictions in a screwball contract, just as he has for all his professional fights. Faced with Pacquiao's enormous penalty requirement, Mayweather agreed.

Two, Mayweather demanded both fighters submit to USADA-style random blood testing, obviously based on the performance-enhancement charges first raised by his father.

Pacquiao has passed urine screens -- including for steroids -- in all previous post-fight testing in Nevada. Keith Kizer, the state commission’s executive director, said that body would continue to enforce its own testing, but that additional testing could be negotiated by the parties.

Faced with Mayweather's over-the-top drug-testing demand, Pacquiao refused and, as of now, the fight will not happen.

The concern in the Mayweather camp is that if Pacquiao only submits to blood testing three times, he would have time to engorge performance-enhancers which can be masked from urine detection -- primarily HGH and the synthetic blood-boosting hormone EPO -- but easily detected by blood sampling.

The concern on Pacquiao's side is that Mayweather's demand is nothing but a way to "harass" its fighter, Arum said. Roach claimed Pacquiao would feel "weakened" by frequent blood testing.

Both concerns can be dismissed as absolutely ludicrous: Pacquiao supporters say Mayweather is trying to weasel out of the fight or create a built-in excuse if he loses; Mayweather supporters say it's absurd to think a little drawn blood would weaken anyone and non-compliance merely heightens speculation.

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Whether the fight can be pulled back together will require concession, although this issue has been on the table two weeks, and neither side has blinked.

Time is running out.

The fight looks dead. And regardless whom you support, you can find plenty of blame to spread around.

Source: mlive.com

The Rules Regarding Blood That May Put Mayweather-Pacquiao in the Crypt

Paul Haberman Esq.

A Look at the Anti-Doping Regulations That May Kill Boxing’s Mega- Fight of 2010 and How They Would be Adopted for The Mayweather-Pacquiao Bout


It is being widely reported this week that the proposed mega-fight between the two best fighters in professional boxing today, Filipino sensation Manny (Pac Man) Pacquiao and the undefeated Floyd (Money) Mayweather, Jr., tentatively scheduled for March 13, 2010, may now be in serious jeopardy. The reason: Pacquiao does not wish to contractually consent to Olympic-style drug testing procedures. According to Dan Rafael of ESPN.com:


“Olympic style drug testing is more rigorous than the drug testing performed by the Nevada State Athletic Commission [the commission with jurisdiction over Las Vegas’ MGM Grand, where the fight is reportedly now scheduled to be held] and other state commissions. It would involve random blood and urine testing before and after the fight. Nevada commission testing only tests urine for banned substances, only just before the fight and once immediately following the fight.”1


Mayweather, whose father has been quoted in the press since after Pacquiao’s November 14, 2009 bout with Miguel Cotto as saying that he believed that Pacquiao uses performance enhancing drugs, reportedly wants a provision for random drug testing in their bout agreement “to ensure fair play and sportsmanship by both fighters.”2 The Pacquiao camp, in turn, has reportedly stated that Pacquiao has difficulties with taking blood and does not wish to do so in close proximity to the fight.3 Regardless of the rationale, two of the many questions that arise are where exactly does this request find its origin, and what are some of the possible implications and extensions of contracting to Olympic-style drug testing? A quick analysis of each question follows.


The Regulatory Origins of Olympic-Style Drug Testing


2009 World Doping Code


The 2009 World Doping Code (“WDC”), as instituted by the World Anti-Doping Agency (“WADA”), the international anti-doping governing body for amateur sports, mandates that a given nation’s anti-doping agency “[p]lan and conduct an effective number of In-Competition and Out-of-Competition tests on Athletes over whom they have jurisdiction[.]” WDC Article 5.1. All such athletes shall be subject to the “whereabouts requirement” of WADA’s “International Standard for Testing.” Id. The “whereabouts requirement” mandates that an athlete that is selected for out-of-competition drug testing “shall provide accurate, current location information” such that they may be subjected to drug testing at all times prior to a competition.4 This requirement is in place so that a given agency knows where to find an athlete at all times for drug test administration. All such out-of-competition testing “shall be initiated and directed by both international and national organizations.” WDC Article 5.2.5


United States Olympic Committee National Anti-Doping Policies


As inferred above, WADA delegates some of its out-of-competition drug testing to an individual nation’s anti-doping agency. In the United States, the agencies that share that responsibility are the United States Olympic Committee (“USOC”) and the United States Anti-Doping Agency (“USADA”). Under the USOC’s National Anti-Doping Policies, effective January 1, 2009, all athletes that are eligible for inclusion on the United States Olympic or Paralympic Teams shall participate in a “registered testing pool”6 organized by USADA “for a period of at least 12 months before the commencement of the Games, provided, however, in exceptional circumstances, for good cause shown in writing, the USOC CEO may waive a portion of this 12 month period.” USOC National Anti-Doping Policies (“NADP”) at 4. During that 12 month period, their eligibility for participation in a given international competition can be revoked if they test positive for any number of a myriad of banned substances. USADA carves out an exception for “therapeutic use” that includes situations where “emergency treatment or treatment of an acute medical condition was necessary.” 7 While other exceptions exist as well, this particular one could prove relevant to the discussion below, as there has been some history in boxing of “therapeutic use” claims in connection with positive drug testing.


Possible Implications and Extensions of Employing Olympic-Style Drug Testing Before Mayweather-Pacquiao


Despite the fairly long-winded summary of the regulatory foundation of Olympic-style drug testing above, its application in Mayweather-Pacquiao simply means that each boxer would be subject to random drug testing throughout the course of their respective training camps. WADA and USADA would be replaced in this instance by a neutral outside laboratory or agency selected by the camps to conduct the random testing. If the camps fully embrace the rules summarized above, both Mayweather and Pacquiao will be mandated to report where they are at all times to the selected outside laboratory or agency so that the laboratory or agency knows where to send its people for conduction of the random tests. Since this testing requirement would come about by contract and not by any governing law, it could theoretically be up to the camps whether or not to allow for a “therapeutic use” exception.”


If Pacquiao employs a similar training camp as he did for his bout with Cotto, a “whereabouts requirement” would mandate that Pacquiao had to report each and every time that he left Los Angeles, home of the Wild Card Gym, the base of operations for his lead trainer, Freddie Roach, and went over to his training facilities in Philippines, and vice versa. Likewise, should Mayweather decide to train outside of his home base in Las Vegas, at altitude in Big Bear, California, for example, he too would be responsible for immediately informing the designated laboratory or agency. Of these possible scenarios, the trickiest for random testing purposes would be when Pacquiao trains in the Philippines, which could result in sizeable expenses for the promoters if they have to pay to send the testing personnel overseas. However, if Pacquiao were not to be tested during any stay in the Philippines, it would be as if he had his own personal exception to the random drug testing rule for as long as he stayed there.


The possibility of employing the “therapeutic use” exception could potentially open the door to controversy, and indeed has throughout recent boxing history. Notably, former multi-division world champion James (Lights Out) Toney tested positive for the anabolic steroid nandrolone following his unanimous decision win over John (The Quiet Man) Ruiz for the World Boxing Association heavyweight championship in 2005. Toney vehemently denied using steroids for performance enhancement purposes. Instead, Toney alleged that he ingested nandrolone for therapeutic purposes, as it assisted in the recovery from an earlier biceps and triceps surgery. Nonetheless, Toney was stripped of the WBA title and his decision win was changed to a “no-contest” by the New York State Athletic Commission.


Here, a “therapeutic use” exception could prove useful to both boxers. As documented on the HBO Series “24/7” during Mayweather’s preparation for his bout for Britain’s Ricky Hatton, Mayweather’s body apparently requires a host of therapeutic treatments as a result of the wear and tear of his many years of being a top-shelf athlete. It certainly would not surprise anyone if Pacquiao had similar physical ailments, though they have not been documented in any of the “24/7” programs on his bouts. Regardless, if either one sustained an appreciable training injury that could either result in the fight being postponed or the use of an ordinarily banned substance to expedite treatment and preserve the date, Mayweather and Pacquiao would have some decisions to make.


One possible solution would be to incorporate a “therapeutic use” exception alongside a provision for submission to an independent medical examination after or just before the use of a banned substance, so that a neutral outside doctor selected by the aggrieved camp could evaluate the boxer at issue as to the severity of his injury and provide an opinion as to whether they is any alternative to using the banned substance to timely and effectively treat the alleged injury. This could get messy, however, as one party could theoretically then request a second examination by another outside doctor if they do not hear the answer they want. It may also end up being moot, since if the substance at issue is banned in Nevada and shows up during Nevada’s mandatory testing, the fight could be off or the decision changed to a no-contest anyway. More generally, such an examination could be disruptive to a training camp. Nonetheless, if the camps wanted safeguards in place in exchange for allowing a “therapeutic use” exception, and to minimize the controversy generated by any such use, an independent medical examination would be one avenue to consider.


In the end, whether Olympic-style drug testing of any form, or the bout as a whole, takes place in 2010 will come down to no more than whether Mayweather and Pacquiao’s people can iron out this difference over testing, and any others outstanding, in the coming weeks. As it is, the March 13, 2010 date cannot undergo much more delay in being made official, as press conferences have to be commenced, television production organized, and training camps formulated and begun. For the good of boxing’s continued climb back into the mainstream, here’s hoping they work this out soon and that Mayweather-Pacquiao does not get sent to the crypt over blood.

Source: 8countnews.com

Blood feud: Mayweather, Pacquiao may both cheat (smartly)

Pacquiao vs Mayweather News
NY Boxing Examiner | Michael Marley

(Warning: There are absolutely zero jokes, puns or even Marley sarcasm in this column. To be forewarned is to be forearmed.)

Floyd Mayweather Jr. has accomplished one despicable thing with this late in the negotiations demand for random drug testing for Manny Pacquiao.

By agreeing to subject himself to random testing, Mayweather portrays himself as the clean guy, the surely drug free guy.

Simultaneously, if Manny doesn’t roll over to his demands, Pacman is portrayed as the athlete who must have something to hide, a highly suspected drug cheater whose glorious victories over Oscar de la Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto must be viewed with some skepticism as to their honesty.

Further, even if Pacquiao can upset the odds by handing Mayweather his first pro ring defeat, there will be a drug cloud of suspicion hanging over him if he continues to refuse the random testing.

Frankly, I don’t know if Megamanny cheats and neither do you or anyone named Mayweather, Schaefer or Haymon.

Ditto for Mayweather.

The thought that occurs that both might be cheating, as so many other world class jocks have done and are doing, by using something like HGH which cannot be detected by either bloor or urine samples.

If they were, would either gain an advantage over the other? I’ll leave that you chemists out there in Pacland and Mayweatherville.

If either or both are using something undetectable, the secret will stay secret, I suppose.

Now, with all this money in the $30 million range for both camps, I want to see Manny and Floyd do the sensible thing, the businesslike thing.

Floyd needs to drop this 11th hour demand and he and Manny need to put their John Hancocks on the contracts.

Then we can look forward to a good, clean (as far as we will ever know) fight come March 13.

Given human nature and their competitive fires, I’d put my money on both fighters doing whatever they can do (without getting caught) to win.

Those competitive fires are a big reason of how they reached the mountaintop where they are today.
There’s nothing sacrosanct or holier than thou about either boxer.

Anyone who thinks otherwise has his head stuck in sand a long way from the land of common sense.

Source: Examiner.com

Pacquiao can’t afford to pass on megafight

By Dan Wetzel, Yahoo! Sports

The request by Floyd Mayweather for both he and Manny Pacquiao to potentially be blood tested as close as 48 hours from their possible March superfight is both unprecedented and unnecessary.

Pacquiao’s de facto manager told Yahoo! Sports’ Kevin Iole that Pacman will be blood tested one month out and just after the possible March 13 fight in (likely) Las Vegas. That schedule should answer any possible doping questions about Pacquiao (or Mayweather). The 48-hour deadline is a classic Mayweather psychological ploy, a little edge designed to get into his opponent’s head.

That said, at this point, with the debate this far along, Pacquiao should just suck it up and agree to it.
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Mayweather is a master at putting opponents in bad positions, both inside and outside the ring. Pacquiao is in one now, outfoxed by Mayweather in the fight negotiations. There’s no way Pacquiao can explain walking away from one of the biggest bouts in boxing history because, as his promoter suggests, he’s afraid of needles.

Do that and it isn’t just the game of boxing that takes a beating – it’s also Pacquiao’s reputation. The semantics about boxing standards or steroid cycles or unfair negotiations won’t break through what would, no doubt, be a vocal hammering from critics, none louder than from the Mayweathers.

“For that kind of money, how could you not take a test?” Floyd’s father, Floyd Mayweather Sr., has already crowed to the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press.

Indeed, how do you not take a test?

The Mayweather camp has been outspoken in its suspicions about Pacquiao and performance-enhancing drugs. So it demanded that both fighters possibly submit blood samples to the United States Anti-Doping Agency in the days before and after the fight. When to test would be up to USADA. Pacquiao’s promoter, Bob Arum, said they’d stick to State of Nevada regulations, although Pacquiao’s adviser, Michael Koncz, said they’d do blood samples, just not that close to the fight.

That isn’t good enough, so far, for the Mayweather camp. If no one budges, boxing may be in the process of shooting itself in the foot, walking away from an event that already has fans worldwide buzzing in anticipation. More likely: Something gets worked out in time for a fight announcement in early January.

“In a fight of this magnitude, I think it is our responsibility to subject ourselves to sportsmanship at the highest level,” Mayweather Jr. said in a statement.

“We’re going in a different direction,” Arum told the Grand Rapids Press. “What I believe is that Floyd never really wanted the fight and this is just harassment of Pacquiao.”

There’s little doubt this is harassment of Pacquiao. What else would you expect from Floyd Mayweather? He’s the master at screwing with opponents. Making Pacquiao discuss PEDs in the run up to the fight is a potential distraction – even if he’s clean. That was, no doubt, a goal when his camp requested aggressive doping standards.

This isn’t Mayweather’s normal bluster, though. He’s on the moral high ground here. The Pacquiao camp can hate the situation it finds itself in and may be correct that the requests are mostly ridiculous. It doesn’t change the reality of the debate.

If Pacman pulls out of the fight because of the timetable for doping tests, he’ll have a near-impossible challenge proving he isn’t trying to hide something.

Arum isn’t doing Pacquiao any favors with some of his silly excuses. He said Pacquiao is squeamish about needles, which is a heck of a thing to blow up a contest to determine the toughest pound-for-pound fighter on the planet.

He added that Pacquiao thinks a blood test within 48 hours of the fight might drain him, although most such tests take very little actual blood. Then there’s Arum’s claim that every doctor in the world would say doing such a thing is “stupid” and blood tests don’t “prove anything.” That’s hyperbole.

“Manny Pacquiao doesn’t know anything about drugs,” Arum told the Grand Rapids paper. “This is just typical nastiness by wise guys like [Mayweather Promotions CEO Leonard] Ellerbe and Mayweather.”

Nastiness? Sure. Wise guys? Absolutely. The Mayweather camp doesn’t play around. However, to say we have to just take Arum’s word that Pacquiao doesn’t know anything about drugs is absurd. There hasn’t been a reason to believe anything or anyone in sports on this topic in years. PED scandals in baseball, football, cycling, track, swimming and so on aren’t Pacquiao’s fault, but that’s the sporting reality he lives in.

He can’t just pretend fan suspicion isn’t reasonable.

Pacquiao has been a breath of fresh air for boxing and he’s never failed a drug test in his 50-3-2 career. The chance to see a man of similar speed and skill finally challenge the unbeaten Mayweather (40-0) has reenergized the sport.

Which doesn’t mean either fighter is above reproach. The Mayweathers have had no problem voicing their concerns about Pacman’s ability to maintain punching power and punch-taking ability as he has climbed through weight classes (even as Mayweather has made a similar journey).

Regardless, in one of their typically deft maneuvers, they demanded extreme testing standards that left the Pacquiao camp backpedaling and debating an issue they can’t win.

What Mayweather is calling for may be unfair, but is Pacquiao going to give up tens of millions of dollars and a chance to cement his legacy as one of the all-time greatest fighters out of principle?

Is he going to bail knowing that he opens himself up to questions about PEDs because, despite being tough enough to let Miguel Cotto unload on him, he’s scared of a needle?

Floyd Mayweather has cornered him on this one, doing what he does best, making the fight get fought on his terms. The way to stop Mayweather, though, has always been to punch back – hard.

Instead, Manny Pacquiao is going to walk away?

Source: Yahoo! Sports

Bob Arum: Mayweather-Pacquiao Fight 'Dead'

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Updates
12/23/2009 12:11 PM ET By Lem Satterfield

Top Rank promoter, Bob Arum, said that the Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight scheduled for March 13 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas "in my mind, is dead as a door nail," adding that, "we're starting to look, today, for other opponents" for Pacquiao.

At the center of the negotiating impasse is the Mayweather camp's insistence on Olympic-style drug-testing, specifically, in taking blood samples, randomly "up to and including the weigh-in the day before the fight," said Arum.

Pacquiao had agreed to random urinalysis testing at any time, said Arum. But the seven-division champion from the Philippines, believing that giving blood so close to fight time would weaken him, would supply blood only 30 days out from the fight or directly after the fight, Arum said.

"As far as I can see, nothing is going on with the fight. I really believe that this exposes the fact that Mayweather never had any intentions to do the fight," said Arum. "I don't think that I can salvage this fight because Mayweather -- the fighter on the other side -- does not want to fight, he never wanted to fight Manny Pacquiao, and he's afraid to lose."

Arum noted that Pacquiao has fought nearly a dozen times in Las Vegas, including his past six fights -- decisions over Marco Antonio Barrera and Juan Manuel Marquez, as well as knockouts of David Diaz, Oscar De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Cotto.

"He's passed every test that they've given. And if the extensive testing of the kind that is done in Nevada has been good enough for everybody in Nevada for 40 years, I don't see why it should change now," said Arum. "Floyd Mayweather's being coddled by sycophants like [Golden Boy Promotions CEO] Richard Schaefer, who ought to be ashamed of himself for the statements that he's made."

Pacquiao (50-3-2, 38 knockouts) earned an unprecedented seventh crown in as many different weight classes when he took Miguel Cotto's WBO welerweight (147 pounds) title with a 12th-round knockout on Nov. 14.

Arum said that Pacquiao could go after an unprecedented eighth crown in as many weight divisions against New York's newly-crowned WBA titlist Yuri Foreman (28-0, eight KOs), or he could fight Mexican great Juan Manuel Marquez (50-5-1, 37 KOs) at 140 pounds, against whom Pacquiao has fought to a disputed draw and earned a disputed decision, respectively.

Another opponent, said Arum, is New York's Paulie Malignaggi (27-3, five KOs), another 140 pounder.

Source: boxing.fanhouse.com

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: MAYWEATHER VS. PACQUIAO IN JEOPARDY AS PACQUIAO REFUSES TO COMPLY WITH UNITED STATES ANTI DOPING DRUG TESTING PROCEDURES

PhilBoxing.com
Wed, 23 Dec 2009

LOS ANGELES, CA (December 22, 2009) . . . The mega-fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao is now in jeopardy after Golden Boy Promotions, on behalf of Mayweather Promotions, learned today that Manny Pacquiao is refusing to comply with Olympic style drug testing as outlined and mandated by the United States Anti Doping Agency (USADA) and as requested by Mayweather's management to ensure fair play and sportsmanship by both fighters.

Early today Richard Schaefer, CEO of Golden Boy Promotions, was contacted by Top Rank President Todd duBoef, who informed Schaefer that Pacquiao would not agree to have his blood taken within 30-days of the bout based on the fighter's superstition of testing so close to a fight.

Schaefer commented, "Todd told me that Pacquiao has difficulty with taking blood and doesn't want to do it so close to the fight. He, Pacquiao, would only agree to have blood drawn before the kick-off press conference and after the fight."

Olympic style drug testing involves random sampling of the athlete's blood and urine prior to and after the fight. The USADA procedure includes both blood and urine sampling so that all banned substances, some of which do not show up in urine alone, are tested for thoroughly.

"It is unfortunate to hear this from Manny Pacquiao's representatives, particularly since, as of today, both parties had worked out all other issues related to this fight," said Schaefer. "Team Mayweather is certainly surprised that an elite athlete like Manny Pacquiao would refuse drug testing procedures which Floyd has already agreed to and have been agreed to by many other top athletes such as Lance Armstrong, and Olympians Michael Phelps, LeBron James and Kobe Bryant."

Mayweather, who was informed of Pacquiao's reluctance shortly after Schaefer received word of the impasse, feels Pacquiao has to explain himself immediately or be faced with accusations from the media and the public regarding his own status as a clean and drug free athlete.

"I understand Pacquiao not liking having his blood taken, because frankly I don't know anyone who really does," said Mayweather. "But in a fight of this magnitude, I think it is our responsibility to subject ourselves to sportsmanship at the highest level. I have already agreed to the testing and it is a shame that he is not willing to do the same. It leaves me with great doubt as to the level of fairness I would be facing in the ring that night. I hope that this is either some miscommunication or that Manny will change his mind and step up and allow these tests, which were good enough for all these other great athletes, to be performed by USADA."

Leonard Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions said, "We hope that Manny will do the right thing and agree to the testing as it is an egregious act to deny the testing and hence, deny the millions of fans the right to see this amazing fight. We just want to make sure there is a level playing field in a sport that is a man-to-man contest that relies on strength and ability. I still hope this decision is coming from someone in Pacquiao's camp and not Manny himself as it would be a shame that an athlete of his stature and who represents his whole country would not be able to show the public or his fellow athletes that he agrees to the highest standards in sports competition."

Source: PhilBoxing.com

Pac/May - Psychological Warfare - 10 Million Dollar Penalty For Weight?

Pacquiao vs Mayweather News
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Posted By Avi "Shoefly" Korine 2:35 PM

Fightnews is reporting that Manny Pacquiao wants a ten million dollar penalty per pound over the 147 pound welterweight limit for his March 13 fight with Floyd Mayweather. While the penalty would apply to either fighter who missed weight it would clearly be an attempt to ensure that Mayweather doesn't come in above the agreed upon limit as he did in his fight with Juan Manual Marquez earlier this year.

In that fight Mayweather missed the catchweight limit of 144 pounds and had to pay 600,000 dollars in penalties. While that is an enormous amount of money, it is negligible compared to the guaranteed minimum 25 million both Pacquiao and Mayweather will get for their March fight.

It is extremely unlikely that Mayweather will have trouble making the 147 pound limit, but it is telling that Pacquiao is making such an enormous demand; more than 30 times more severe than the penalty for the Mayweather/Marquez fight. On one hand you could say that Pacquiao is just trying to protect himself from any Mayweather hijinks, but I think the more interesting take on the situation is that it's a measure of vengeance for Mayweather's insistence on Olympic-style drug testing.

Pacquiao had no problems agreeing to the more rigorous drug testing, but one can't help but think he is secretly fuming over the public questioning of the Mayweather camp. Pacquiao is a prideful and outwardly generous individual, and it's not hard to imagine he takes the Mayweather camp's public accusations personally. Mayweather's insistence is unprecedented in boxing history and it must gall the proud champion.

Pacquiao's equally unprecedented desire for such a giant penalty based on weight strikes me as a way of turning the tables and pointing out Mayweather's previous bad behavior. I doubt that Pacquiao is seriously concerned Mayweather will miss weight, but such an exorbitant penalty will serve as a counterbalance to the scrutiny Pacquiao will likely be taking for his drug testing.

For every question Manny will have to answer about drug testing, Mayweather will have to respond to an equally uncomfortable question about his ability to make weight.

It's a savvy move from Manny Pacquiao, and one of the first of what I'm sure will be many more psychological bombs exchanged between the two camps in the build-up to their fight

Source: sportingnews.com

FLOYD MAYWEATHER SR.: "I DEFINITELY WANT PACQUIAO TO GIVE BLOOD!"

Pacquiao vs Mayweather
By Percy Crawford | December 22, 2009

"Yeah, I definitely want Pacquiao to give blood. How is that going to affect him mentally? You could give blood a day before the fight and it wouldn't affect you, let alone 3 weeks out. Something isn't right man and we're going to make sure everything is copacetic," stated world-class trainer Floyd Mayweather Sr. as he shared his thoughts on the Olympic-style drug testing that both fighters have agreed to undertake leading up to their highly-anticipated showdown. Although Pacquiao's trainer, Freddie Roach, said he had no problems whatsoever with the testing, he did admit to having an issue with blood being drawn from his fighter six weeks prior to the fight. According to Roach, that could affect Pacquiao mentally. Mayweather Sr., however, strongly disagrees.

"He didn't even say Manny would be too drained if he gave blood; he said it would affect him mentally, so unless he has something to hide, it shouldn't affect him mentally," he continued. Mayweather also responded to Roach's suggestion that he has no knowledge of performance enhancing drugs due to the fact that he dropped out of high school. "You don't have to finish high school to know about performance enhancing drugs. We train world class athletes every day. Shows you how much Freddie Roach knows," he added.

Naturally, Mayweather feels his knowledge of boxing and fighters is far beyond anything he could learn in high school and the success he's had in the sport is a testament to that. "I went up to the 11th grade and said I had enough; that's it! It's not what I did or didn't finish, it's where I am now and not to brag, because I am very blessed, but I have more money now than the teachers that taught me in high school, so what is Roach talking," Mayweather stated. He also found some of Roach's recent threats regarding his brother, Roger Mayweather, to be comical. "I see where he said he would kick Roger ass," he laughed. "Roach is lucky that Pacquiao worked out because other than that, what fighter has he made a champion that hadn't already had success?"

Source: fighthype.com

With Pacquiao on the way out, "Who's got next?!"

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Updates
Indianapolis Fight Sports Examiner | Dennis "dSource" Guillermo

Unless he loses to Floyd Mayweather Jr. and/or a rematch clause is in his contract, his proposed bout against "Money" on March 13 may very well be Manny Pacquiao's last fight. It may be too premature but it's fair for any fan to speculate and with Pacquiao himself expressing the desire to hang the gloves up after one last fight, one has to wonder the aftermath.

Lets say Pacquiao beats Mayweather convincingly by KO and decides to ride into the sunset as one of the greatest ever, who will take over boxing's top spot? Also, what becomes of Philippine boxing, a franchise Pacquiao singlehandedly built up?

In the words of hoopheads and basketball's blacktops, "Who's got next?!"

Losing to Pacquiao will definitely almost disqualify Mayweather to even contend for boxing's top spot. Much of his mystique is built on his undefeated record and his antics outside the ring. Despite being one of the sweetest scientist the sport has ever seen, his fights have failed to captivate fans the way Pacquiao's fights have. So is anybody really fit to carry boxing's mantle after Pacquiao leaves?

Lets run through a quick-list. You got Sugar "Shane" Mosley who is pretty much on his last leg and is set to retire soon, so forget about making him the face of boxing. Same goes with Bernard Hopkins and the rest of the older fighters out there like Juan Manuel Marquez. There's a lot of promise with the younger core though and allow me to throw Andre Ward's name in the mix. He still has a lot to prove, but I think he has the charisma and skill to crossover into being one of the marquee names of the sport. Some other promising youngins although on the rebound trail are Victor Ortiz, Kelly Pavlik and you can say Paul Williams after a close call with Sergio Martinez a couple of weeks ago. With that said, I don't see anybody who can take over Pacquiao instantly the way he took over from De la Hoya and wowed boxing fans almost dispatching The Golden Boy's memory quickly. Perhaps, 2010 will not only be the year when the fight of this era takes place, it also begins the search for next era's boxing superstar.

And what happens to Philippine boxing? The franchise that Pacquiao himself singlehandedly built and made the world notice. Who's going to take over Pacquiao's spot? Luckily, they might not have to look too far. Just around the corner, Ring Magazine's #6 best Pound for Pound fighter in the world Nonito Donaire Jr. is chomping at the bit for his turn to put his country on his back. Now, don't get me wrong, there will never be another Manny Pacquiao, just like there will never be another Michael Jordan, but Donaire provides promise for a bright future ahead the way rising stars such as Kobe Bryant and Grant Hill did when Jordan left the game. Donaire's talent is on swine flu- it's sick! He can counter, he can move his feet, he can bang and also has knockout power for his division. The only problem is, how compelling can he really be with the lack of marquee names in his division? And as it is, his promoter Bob Arum may be sleeping on his career just a tad bit. That might change though when Pacquiao leaves.

One thing is certain, Philippine boxing will never have a shortage for talent. You have Rodel Mayol, Marvin Sonsona, AJ Banal, Milan Melindo, Donnie Nietes and recently crowned WBO Interim light flyweight champ Johnriel Casimero among a long list of world class fighters. As for the fans, they're here to stay as well. It's not like they ever left, since the country has followed boxing for as long as I can remember. It's no accident why there's so many Filipino fighters ready and capable to fight and win on US soil- they've been there, nobody just paid them any mind in the past. Pacquiao simply focused the spotlight on them and now they're getting opportunities they only wished they did a decade ago.

Plus, it's the internet age. All these fans that have been drawn in by Pacquiao will remain fans even at a casual level since access to the sport ins't as hard as it used to be. The reason why boxing went down is because they stopped televising the big fights on network TV and even on newspapers and network news like ESPN. Thanks to the internet, the word is being spread once again. If only boxing can fully embrace this new media and realize the true value of internet media and perhaps start catering to a younger crowd as well, then the sport will flourish once again. It'll be easier for Filipino boxing fans to keep tabs with boxing since you can see fights through streams online and discuss it on forums on top of getting all the news online. The fans have always been there, so to say they will leave with Pacquiao, is damn straight ignorant.

Source: Examiner.com

Can Freddie Roach cancel if Mayweather comes in over?

Pacquiao vs Mayweather Online Live Streaming
Pittsburgh Fight Sports Examiner | Scott Heritage

Freddie Roach is a man who always has a lot on his mind, and leading up to the Mayweather vs. Pacquiao fight this has been especially true. There are sparring partners to arrange, training sessions with the various fighters he trains and also upcoming legal trouble with the reporter he shoved.

One of the biggest worries on Roach's mind though is probably what will happen if Floyd Mayweather comes in over weight for his fight with Roach's fighter Manny Pacquiao.

Roach has said several times in the past the he will not let the fight go ahead if the weight isn't met, and doesn't want any 'wiggle room' for Mayweather to come in over weight and be penalized a small amount of money. (Not small to you and me, but small in terms of a $40 million dollar pay day)

The real question though is whether Roach has the influence and power to actually make good on his threats if the unthinkable happens. Supposing Floyd does come in over and can't cut the remaining weight in time on the day of the weigh in, will the fight still go ahead?

The answer is probably yes, despite what Roach thinks about it. Pacquiao himself will have the final say, but won't be eager to waste months of training and build up. Not to mention he is a fight all comers kind of champion, and won't be intimidated by a few extra pounds, even if they could make the difference between a win and a loss. As much as he obviously respects Roach, pressure from others in his team as well as from Top Rank will encourage Pac-man to take the fight anyway.

Not to mention that Manny wont want to lose a $40 million pay day with all the expenses he has with his political campaign, large team and family and friends he helps out.

As things stand at the moment, the remaining point to be agreed upon for the contract is the weight. Mayweather and his team want some leeway over the 147lb welterweight limit. Pacquiao and Roach want the limit to be strictly enforced, and aren't willing to let Mayweather come in over and simply have to pay Pacquiao for an unfair advantage.

Mayweather himself is remaining quiet about this sticking point in the contract, but other than an advantage there doesn't seem to be any other reason for wanting the stipulation. It isn't as if Mayweather, who trains harder than most boxers out there will have trouble making 147lbs if he really wants to. Floyd is a great fighter and knows the boxing game inside out, and these kinds of things are often used in contract negotiations. In most fights these kinds of things aren't ever heard about because the contracts are usually completed quickly and the fights aren't as prestigious.

Of course the truth of the matter is that Roach should have the power to veto if the conditions of the contract aren't met. After all Roach is only looking out for the best interests of his fighter and isn't worried about the money or promoters. He only wants what's best for Manny, and if he thinks that calling off the fight is the best thing to do for both of them, then that's what he will try to to.

The worry is that he might not have enough influence over Manny if everyone else is calling for the fight to go ahead despite whatever Floyd might do. If the fight were smaller or there were less money at stake then this wouldn't be an issue, and Roach would be the first man satisfied with everything for the fight to go ahead.

This whole issue might well just be a ploy on the part of the Mayweather's to get other concessions added to the fight contract. They might want Mayweather to be the first name on the posters and promotional material. Similarly they might already have used the weight issue to choose where the fight takes place. Either way the ball probably wont be in Roach's court when the weigh in takes place, which is a worry he will have to deal with when and if it happens.

Source: Examiner.com