Jake Paul’s first vacation in half a decade won’t be all fun and games.

The YouTube influencer is coming off a picture-perfect knockout of Tyrone Woodley last Saturday at the Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida and is now ready to step away from the ring for seven months, in what he says would be the first vacation he has taken in six years, according to the Mirror.

But while Paul (5-0, 4 KOs) won’t necessarily be throwing any sanctioned punches during that time, the Mirror reports he will be busy in the back room trying to consummate the much talked-about blockbuster fight between his friend and client Amanda Serrano and Katie Taylor.

Serrano, a multi-division champion from Puerto Rico based in New York, signed with Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions label earlier this fall and has appeared as the chief support of Paul’s last couple of fights. Taylor, the reigning undisputed lightweight champion from Ireland, has long been one of the faces of women’s boxing. Given that both fighters came out victorious in their recent outings, with Serrano (42-1-1, 30 KOs) defeating Miriam Gutierrez and Taylor (20-0, 6 KOs) outpointing Firuza Sharipova, there seems to be nothing more than to swap and sign contracts.

The two were originally scheduled to face each other in 2020, but Serrano pulled out of the fight citing a disagreement over the purse and date and location of the fight.

Eddie Hearn, who promotes Taylor, has been optimistic that the fight gets over the line this time around, telling the Mirror recently, “[Team Serrano has] made a request for a purse for that fight and I'm confident that we can get there.”

Paul, whose chief adviser is Nakisa Bidarian, who oversees Most Valuable Promotions, has been adamant that Serrano will net the biggest payday of his career against Taylor.

“She’s put in thousands and hundreds of hours in the gym and she deserves the big payday that she’s going to get," Paul said recently on his brother Logan Paul’s Impaulsive podcast. “She deserves to be able to retire from boxing and not work again. That hasn’t been the case for women’s boxing, they’ve been underpaid and taken advantage of.”