New Pacquiao article by Iole / Yahoo Sports

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    New Pacquiao article by Iole / Yahoo Sports



    LAS VEGAS – Manny Pacquiao was upstairs in the bedroom of his suite at the MGM Grand over the weekend, catching a nap after a long day of giving a deposition in a defamation lawsuit he filed in 2010 against fellow superstar boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr.

    A little after 5 p.m., his dinner of steak, rice and asparagus was delivered, where it sat, untouched, for nearly 90 minutes. Finally, Pacquiao slowly, sleepily made his way down the stairs. He greeted me with a wan smile and headed to the dining room table. He bowed his head in silent prayer, then poured steak sauce over his food.

    He didn’t dig in immediately, and was almost like a child forced by his parents to stay at the table until he cleared his plate. He ran his fork aimlessly through the rice, not seeming particularly hungry or eager to talk.

    It wasn’t until the subject of a potential bout with Mayweather came up – the topic that no one fails to raise with him – that he seemed to awaken. Suddenly, Pacquiao shook the sleep from his eyes to defend himself against an incessant Mayweather campaign that has painted him as a reluctant warrior.

    In the weeks before Mayweather announced Jan. 31 that he would fight Miguel Cotto at the MGM Grand Garden on May 5, Mayweather waged a public campaign for a bout with Pacquiao. He posted on Twitter and spoke at news conferences, using every opportunity to make it seem that Pacquiao was avoiding the big match.

    Mayweather, it was suggested to Pacquiao, is winning the public relations contest handily, at least in the U.S. At that, Pacquiao looked up from his plate and put down his fork. His eyes widened and he leaned forward, staring intently across the table.

    “He talks, he says all this, but you know what: He doesn’t want the fight,” Pacquiao firmly told Yahoo! Sports in an exclusive interview. “I want the fight. I’m the one who has wanted this fight all along.”

    Not long after he was granted a conditional boxing license by the Nevada Athletic Commission to fight Cotto, Mayweather made a big deal of Pacquiao turning down a $40 million guarantee to fight him.

    But Pacquiao said that was simply a bluff, a public relations stunt that didn’t bear any semblance to reality.

    “He offered me $40 million, and no pay-per-view [money],” Pacquiao said, breaking into a laugh. “No pay-per-view. Can you believe that? Would you do that? Come on. What would he say if I offered him $50 million – not $40 million, $50 million – and said ‘No pay-per-view. Take this money and be happy, but no pay-per-view.’ He wouldn’t do it, either.”

    The fight, if it ever happens, would pit the two best fighters and the two biggest draws in the sport against one another. It would likely generate more than $160 million in pay-per-view revenue in the U.S. alone.

    Mayweather phoned Pacquiao adviser Michael Koncz in the Philippines on Jan. 19 and asked to speak to Pacquiao. Mayweather then told Pacquiao he’d offer him $40 million, which Mayweather later told the media “is far more than he’s ever made.”

    Pacquiao said he wanted to fight, but that $40 million flat wasn’t nearly fair.

    “I told him, ‘OK, 50-50 [with the money] and I’ll agree to everything else,’ ” Pacquiao said. “I told him I would agree to all of the other things he was demanding. Everything. Even the blood testing he wanted, I would do it. But it had to be 50-50.”

    Pacquiao said he told Koncz to offer Mayweather a guarantee of $50 million with the rest of the revenue being split, with 55 percent going to the winner and 45 percent going to the loser.

    There was no response from Mayweather’s side, Pacquiao said.

    “Manny authorized me to do that and I went forward with it, but it went nowhere,” Koncz said. “That was it.”

    Mayweather’s manager, Leonard Ellerbe, denied such an offer was made and suggested it was a stunt dreamed up by Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum.

    Ellerbe said, “Pacquiao is lying” about the offer and said the conversation with Mayweather lasted only two minutes.

    “What Manny Pacquiao has to understand, and I don’t think he understands this part, is that if the fight ever comes off, he’ll never make the kind of money that Floyd makes,” Ellerbe said. “That’s simply because of the structure of his terrible deal with his promoter.

    “[Pacquiao] is a guy who doesn’t know what he makes fight to fight. He has no idea of where the revenue comes from. There’s no way he’s going to come up with something like that [offer] off the top of his dome.”

    Pacquiao said that once Mayweather came to an agreement to fight Cotto, he chose Bradley over Juan Manuel Marquez because he thought it would be better business.

    Pacquiao and Marquez have fought three times, most recently Nov. 12, with Pacquiao winning the last two after the first was a draw. Arum said after the Nov. 12 match, which many believe Marquez deserved to win, that he’d probably arrange a rematch.

    As Pacquiao considered his options for his next fight, he thought it would be best to put distance between the fights.

    “Would you want to see the same movie again?” he said.

    The movie may not have been the same had Pacquiao been at his best for Marquez. Pacquiao said Saturday that he “underestimated” Marquez and that he didn’t do plyometrics training.

    Pacquiao and Marquez fought to a draw at featherweight in 2004, then Pacquiao won a split decision in a super featherweight bout in 2008. Marquez had only moved up to lightweight since then, while Pacquiao became a full-fledged welterweight.

    In Marquez’s only fight above lightweight prior to meeting Pacquiao on Nov. 12, he was routed at welterweight by Mayweather. It was clear in the Mayweather fight that he was too small for the division.

    That clearly didn’t escape Pacquiao’s notice.

    “I underestimated him,” Pacquiao said. “I thought he was small, and that I would have no problems. It was a mistake. I shouldn’t have underestimated him.”
  • Bombs
    And down goes Mayweather
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    #2
    "He talks, he says all this, but you know what: He doesn’t want the fight,” Pacquiao firmly told Yahoo! Sports in an exclusive interview. “I want the fight. I’m the one who has wanted this fight all along."


    Truth right there. The media knows this as shown, the world knows it, the only people who don't recognize it are only seen in this forum and are *****s. But the sad truth is the world knows and recognizes this.

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    • Pocket Dogs!
      You want one?
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      #3
      Pacquiao and Mayweather are such divas.

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      • Kagami Taiga
        Generation of Miracles
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        #4
        nothin new in that whole article, konz said he made that offer, but he then went and said they never talked about the back end, either dude is a liar or he doesnt know what the back end means.

        anyways the most interesting thing in that article are the comments manny made about marquez:

        “I underestimated him,” Pacquiao said. “I thought he was small, and that I would have no problems. It was a mistake. I shouldn’t have underestimated him.”

        lol

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        • RoyJonesJrp4pno1
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          #5
          Pac says he fights for the people. $40m is way more than he will make for fighting Bradley.

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          • 22k
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            #6
            Originally posted by RoyJonesJrp4pno1
            Pac says he fights for the people. $40m is way more than he will make for fighting Bradley.
            True, but that doesn't mean that he should let Mayweather get like 75% of the total revenue if they fight. The only reason that event would be so special is because of what both of them bring to the table...one without the other is just another run of the mill, 1mil PPV buys.

            Mayweather is just as worried about winning the fight with Arum (getting more than 50% of revenue) as he is about winning the fight in the ring. They both should be happy with 50%, anything else is foolish.

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            • Kagami Taiga
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              #7
              Originally posted by 22k
              True, but that doesn't mean that he should let Mayweather get like 75% of the total revenue if they fight. The only reason that event would be so special is because of what both of them bring to the table...one without the other is just another run of the mill, 1mil PPV buys.

              Mayweather is just as worried about winning the fight with Arum (getting more than 50% of revenue) as he is about winning the fight in the ring. They both should be happy with 50%, anything else is foolish.
              sure mayweather did say he offered him 40mil. but mayweather also said that neither side ever talked about the back end, which means the ppv split and the gate, furthermore, koncz co-signed this later on. so to me, at least, it is clear that pac was lied to.

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              • The Gambler1981
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                #8
                I just find it hard to believe they really got into the weeds that much to really discuss back end and total purses~, there is a language barrier and Floyd is not great at english by any means so that there would be some misunderstanding between what was said should just be a given.

                I am sure both believe their stance based off that call though, it is why negotiations really should be done by the proper people and not fighters directly as misunderstandings only make it harder to work things out down the road.

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                • thuggery
                  proper rock slanga'
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                  #9
                  he thought it would be best to put distance between the fights.


                  The movie may not have been the same had Pacquiao been at his best for Marquez. Pacquiao said Saturday that he “underestimated” Marquez and that he didn’t do plyometrics training.
                  Honestly, the excuses coming out of the Pacquiao camp are just so annoying now. There are so many of them and they just keep on coming.

                  It's not that he "wasn't ready" for Marquez, it's simply that he doesn't have what it takes to learn to adapt to counterpunchers.

                  Or that Roach doesn't know how to train Pac properly for certain fights

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                  • Deevel916
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                    #10
                    For the 2yrs of back and forth negotiating between the 2, Floyd has always stated that the only thing preventing this fight from happening is the fact that Pac doesnt want to submit to OSDT. Its funny how now that Pac has agreed and it doesnt seem to be an issue anymore, Floyd throws up another road block by trying to cut Pac out of ppv revenue for what is perceived to be the highest grossing fight of all time. Never mind how much Pac has made in the past. Truth is, Floyd as well as Pac will make more than they've ever made fighting one another even with a 50/50 revenue split. A 50/50 split was fine with Floyd for the first 2 negotiations except now. Hmmmmm....

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