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Showing posts with label Floyd Mayweather Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Floyd Mayweather Jr.. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Jail for boxer Mayweather delayed so he can fight

(Reuters) - A judge granted a request from boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr to postpone until June his three-month jail sentence for domestic battery so he can compete in an upcoming bout, prosecutors said.

The ruling by Las Vegas Judge Melissa Saragosa on Friday came on the same day Mayweather was originally scheduled to turn himself in and begin serving his term.

"We opposed the request and felt he should surrender as originally planned," said Tess Driver, a spokeswoman for the Clark County District Attorney's Office, which prosecuted the case.

Mayweather, 34, a flamboyant boxer regarded as the best defensive fighter of his generation, is scheduled to battle an undetermined opponent on May 5 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

An attorney for World Boxing Council welterweight champion Mayweather asked the judge to postpone the sentence so he could train and compete for that May 5 fight, Driver said.

Some in the boxing world have speculated the bout could pit Mayweather against World Boxing Organization welterweight champion Manny Pacquiao, which would be the most highly anticipated fight in years.

But the Filipino Pacquiao's promoter has made comments to the media casting doubt on whether that match-up will occur.

The jail sentence Mayweather faces stems from a case in which he pleaded guilty last month to one charge of felony battery and no contest to two counts of harassment stemming from a 2010 attack on his ex-girlfriend Josie Harris and verbal threats against two of his children with Harris.

Mayweather was sentenced to six months for that outburst, but the judge suspended half the jail term.

The judge's decision was also expected to benefit hotels and businesses that typically profit from a major prize fight, which can generate $10 million to $15 million in non-gambling revenue, said Jeremy Handel, spokesman for the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

An attorney for Mayweather declined to comment on the postponement.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Mayweather's new Pacman shield: Guaranteed $100-M purse

(AP/INQUIRER) BAGUIO CITY—Floyd Mayweather Jr. may have found a $100-million reason to shelve a fight with Manny Pacquiao.

Top Rank chief Bob Arum revealed to journalists here yesterday that he and fellow Hall of Fame promoter Don King tried to put together the showdown that the boxing universe is dreaming about  “after a group came in wanting to put [the fight] in a particular country.”

But Mayweather, who deflected two previous attempts by promoters to put the fight together using overly stringent dope testing procedures, found a new way to thwart negotiations: He priced himself out of the bargaining table.

Arum, who’ll be staying in the Philippines to monitor Pacquiao's training camp until Thursday, said Mayweather asked for a ludicrous guarantee worth $100 million for himself.

Blurting out an expletive, Arum said that the number “indicated that he (Mayweather) didn't want to fight.”

“Who's going to pay him 100 million? I mean, unless Manny fights for nothing.”

The consensus by boxing's prime movers is that both Pacquiao and Mayweather stand to earn between $40 and $50 million, including pay-per-view shares, if ever the super fight pushes through.

It would have happened as early as 2009, but Mayweather shielded himself with demands for an Olympic-style drug-testing protocols, which isn't the norm for professional fights.

In the second round of negotiations, Pacquiao relented a bit, agreeing to having a doping control body to draw blood for testing up to two weeks before the fight.

Inexplicably, Mayweather's camp again balked, insisting that no talks ever took place—a claim eventually proven to be false.

Now, Mayweather, who has dropped to No. 3 in credible pound-for-pound rankings behind Pacquiao and rising middleweight superstar and WBC champion Sergio Martinez, shielded himself from having to agree to a fight with his asking price.

Mayweather last fought in May 2010 when he beat Mosley by unanimous decision.

Neither Arum or Pacquiao delved too much in Mayweather’s latest demands, focusing instead on the eight-division champion’s welterweight showdown against Shane Mosley on May 7 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Even if their ring showdown doesn't push through, however, Pacquiao and Mayweather are likely to tangle in court.

According to an AP report Tuesday, United States District Judge Larry Hicks of Nevada has ruled that Pacquiao's defamation lawsuit against the Mayweathers (Floyd Jr. and Sr. and Roger), Oscar De La Hoya and Golden Boy Promotions' Richard Schaefer, rests on firm allegations and has sufficient evidence to continue.

In the lawsuit filed in 2009, Pacquiao averred that the respondents have besmirched his untarnished reputation (he hasn't failed any drug test) with constant allegations that he'd been using performance enhancing drugs.