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Pacquiao vs Mayweather Update

The Pacquiao vs Mayweather maybe in doom with some issues concerning some agreements of the fight...

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Lawsuit Could be Arum’s Tactic to Save Pacquiao vs Mayweather Match

5:40 PM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
By Leo Reyes – In the wake of the stalled Pacquiao-Mayweather negotiations, promoter Bob Arum had to find a way to neutralized the offensive posture of the Mayweather negotiating team on the issue of of blood testing.

As a lawyer, Arum knew that once a case in filed in court, the opposing parties may not comment on the merits or demerits of the case as they may be violating some rules on sub judice, which could weaken the case either way.

Under the sub judice rule, it is generally considered inappropriate to comment publicly on cases sub judice, which can be an offense in itself, leading to contempt of court proceedings. This is particularly true in criminal cases, where publicly discussing cases sub judice may constitute interference with due process.

In the case of the stalled negotiations for the Pacquiao-Mayweather match, both parties were expected not to discuss or talk about the merits of the case.

In effect Arum was able to neutralize the media hype created by the blood testing controversy which was damaging Pacquiao’s clean-cut image. At the same time, the case placed the Mayweather camp on a defensive mode being the respondent or the accused in the lawsuit.

Arum’s perceived strategy could lead to possible out-of-court settlement as both camps have agreed to meet Tuesday in the presence of a mediator who is a retired judge known to both parties.

Boxing fans believe that the Arum legal strategy worked in favor of Pacquiao camp and they predict that the resumption of negotiations after the mediation meeting will follow.

The Pacquiao-Mayweather boxing match is tentatively scheduled for March 13 and considered to be this year’s biggest boxing event. Both boxers are expected to earn over US$40 million each.

Pacquiao is the current WBO welterweight champion and current pound-for pound king while Floyd Mayweather, Jr. is an undefeated American boxer who came back from retirement two years ago to return to active professional boxing. He recently fought and won over Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez in what appears to be his tune-up fight against the popular Filipino boxing superstar.


source: digitaljournal

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Reps for Pacquiao, Mayweather mum on mediation session

6:55 AM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Representatives for Manny Pacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. wrapped up a lengthy mediation session on Tuesday with no word on any progress on the drug-testing issues endangering the boxers' prospective March 13 bout.

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum and Mayweather's promotional team all said they had been told to make no public comments after their meeting in Santa Monica. The mediation finished nearly nine hours after it began in front of Daniel Weinstein, a retired federal judge.

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Boxer Manny Pacquiao's defamation lawsuit vs. Floyd Mayweather Jr. on doping is no laughing matter

5:27 AM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
Cynics might say it's all merely an elaborate escalation of boxing's ritual of prefight trash-talk, but the defamation lawsuit Manny Pacquiao filed Wednesday against Floyd Mayweather Jr. and his supporters is a bit more serious than the customary name-calling and bombast.

The suit alleges Mayweather and his reps maliciously, knowingly, publicly, and wrongly accused Pacquiao of doping. But the complaint's press-release tone - "blessed with an unmatched combination of speed, power, skill, and guile," the lawsuit reads - doesn't mean Mayweather (or Pacquiao himself, for that matter) can treat it like a PR release.

Why? Because if the litigation-rich recent history of professional sports is any guide, defamation suits can take on a life of their own, particularly when they involve the murky topic of performance-enhancing drug use, as this one does.

Such suits can backfire spectacularly. Just ask Roger Clemens, whose defamation complaint against Brian McNamee put Clemens' reputation on an examination table, where it didn't sit comfortably. Or consider boxer Shane Mosley, whose suit against BALCO founder Victor Conte has dragged on for nearly two years - generating awkward depositions, expensive venue changes, and the publication of Mosley's 2003 grand jury testimony, in which he described injecting himself with endurance-boosting EPO.

Now Pacquiao has joined Clemens, Mosley, Lance Armstrong, Marion Jones, and swimmer Ian Thorpe in the pantheon of athletes who have responded to doping allegations with defamation suits. While none of them ever came close to winning a jury trial, some lost more than they and their lawyers likely ever expected.

Nevertheless, Dan Petrocelli, a Los Angeles-based attorney representing Pacquiao, told the Daily News that those other lawsuits have no bearing on the case put forward by the Philippine boxing sensation.

"If you know anything about Manny Pacquiao, he doesn't have that risk," said Petrocelli. "With lot of these cases, there's some sort of corroboration of the statements - a witness, a prescription, a trainer, a Jose Canseco. Here there's nothing."

Besides Mayweather, the defendants in the suit include the boxer's father, Floyd Sr., his trainer and uncle, Roger, as well as Mayweather Promotions. Also named are Golden Boy Promotions executives Richard Schaefer and Oscar De La Hoya.

New York attorney Judd Burstein, who has represented Golden Boy in other litigation, including Mosley's long-running suit against Conte (Mosley is in the Golden Boy stable of fighters), called Pacquiao's new complaint "frivolous." Burstein says the comments identified in the complaint are statements of opinion and therefore legally protected. In the Mosley suit, he argues the opposite, saying that Conte's statements were not opinion, but that he made them as statements of fact.

Some of the offending comments cited in the Pacquiao complaint were made as recently as last week, when reps for the two sides argued over what sort of drug testing should accompany the March 13 fight. Mayweather's backers launched an intense public campaign for testing that would go beyond that required by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, including blood tests. When Pacquiao balked, Mayweather's crew raised the notion that Pacquiao wasn't clean, the lawsuit claims, setting out on "a course designed to destroy Pacquiao's career, reputation, honor, and legacy, and jeopardize his ability to earn the highest levels of compensation."

A national hero in his native land, Pacquiao hasn't lost a fight since March of 2005, and has packed on at least 15 pounds of muscle since then. He also hasn't been afraid to climb into the legal ring, suing Golden Boy in 2006 in a contract matter.

The new lawsuit suggests that the contract suit, as well as Pacquiao's defeat of De La Hoya in 2008, have left the defendants motivated by "ill-will, spite, malice, envy and revenge."

Should the suit go forward, Pacquiao and the defendants, can probably look forward to the kind of commentary the Mosley suit has produced. In an interview posted on the fight site Fighthype.com on Wednesday, Mayweather was quoted saying "you must realize this, Shane Mosley took steroids his whole career."

Mosley has admitted to getting steroids and other injectible drugs from Conte at BALCO, but claims he didn't know they were banned substances. He first sued Conte in federal court in California in the spring of 2008 after Conte stated that Mosley knew the drugs were banned. In August of that year, after Mosley's former trainer corroborated Conte's account, Mosley withdrew the lawsuit in California and immediately re-filed it in the Supreme Court of the State of New York.

In December of that year, U.S. District Court Judge Susan Illston unsealed grand jury testimony from the BALCO investigation and transcripts of Shane Mosley's testimony were publicly released, showing that Mosley had admitted under oath to using BALCO products and never attempted to characterize the drugs as legal substances.

In most circumstances, grand jury testimony remains strictly confidential, and Mosley's defamation suit was likely filed with the expectation that his testimony would not become public. Pacquiao can now hope that no unexpected surprises put him on the defensive legally. Conte and Mosley were deposed in Manhattan in October, and Mosley once again admitted to using steroids and performance-enhancing drugs as he prepared for his Sept. 2003 fight against Oscar De La Hoya.

"Would it be fair, as we sit here today, to say that in the weeks before your fight with Oscar De La Hoya...that you took steroids?" Conte's lawyer asked Mosley.

"Yes," Mosley replied.

"Would it be fair to say you took performance-enhancing drugs in the weeks prior to the fight with Oscar De La Hoya in 2003?"

"Yes," Mosley said.

Conte's lawyers will file a motion to dismiss in January, at about the same time the court process will begin to kick in in the Pacquiao case.

"Manny doesn't really relish being in litigation," said Petrocelli, "but he's worked very hard and he can't let somebody make an accusation like this."


Source: sports.yahoo.com

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Pacquiao says he plans to sue Mayweather

6:35 AM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
SARANGANI, PHILIPPINES(AP) —Manny Pacquiao says he is planning to file a defamation lawsuit against Floyd Mayweather Jr., the fighter’s father, and Golden Boy Promotions

In a statement posted Friday on his Web site, Pacquiao claims that his character has been damaged and tarnished by accusations he says are untrue.

“Enough is enough,” Pacquiao said in the statement. “These people, Mayweather Sr., Jr., and Golden Boy Promotions, think it is a joke and a right to accuse someone wrongly of using steroids or other performance-enhancing drugs. I have tried to just brush it off as a mere pre-fight ploy but I think they have gone overboard.”

The proposed megafight between Pacquiao and Mayweather is in danger because the sides have failed to find a compromise to a dispute over blood testing. Promoter Bob Arum declared the bout dead Thursday.

Arum had set a Thursday deadline for an agreement on testing, the only issue not resolved for the planned March 13 fight. But with the Mayweather camp still insisting on using the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to conduct the tests, Arum said there wasn’t much left to discuss.

“These people think they are doing the sport a great service. They are not,” Pacquiao added. “To Floyd, despite all these accusations, may your Christmas be merry and I will see you in court, soon, too.”

At the core of the dispute is the insistence of the Mayweather camp of using Olympic-style drug testing for the fight, even though both fighters have never been linked to any performance-enhancing substances. Under Nevada regulations, boxers are generally only tested just before the fight and in the dressing room afterward, and only urine is given.

“I have instructed my promoter, Bob Arum, head of Top Rank Inc., to help me out in the filing of the case as soon as possible because I have had people coming over to me now asking if I really take performance-enhancing drugs and I have cheated my way into becoming the No. 1 boxer in the world,” Pacquiao said.

Mayweather’s camp wants blood tests that can find things urine tests can’t, such as use of human growth hormone, and they want them done by USADA from the time the fight is signed until the fight is held. Pacquiao’s side has agreed to both urine and blood testing, but doesn’t want testing immediately before the fight because Pacquiao believes giving blood so soon before a fight will weaken him.

Pacquiao’s Web site states that Mayweather’s camp is “asking too many unrealistic and unprecedented items on the bargaining table, including that of an Olympic-style drug testing.”

“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’s statement said. “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.”


Source: sports.yahoo.com

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Testing issues could derail Mayweather-Pacquiao

11:42 PM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
Nearly every detail is finalized for Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao to fight on March 13 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas but one. That one detail, though, may kill the fight.

Negotiations are at an impasse over Pacquiao’s failure to agree to random Olympic-style drug testing, said Leonard Ellerbe, the CEO of Mayweather Promotions, on Tuesday.

Pacquiao trainer Freddie Roach said his fighter is willing to comply with strict drug-testing standards, but Roach won’t allow Pacquiao to have blood drawn 48 hours before the fight.

Ellerbe said he would not let Mayweather enter the ring unless Pacquiao agreed to it.

Both sides agreed that the drug testing issue is the only hurdle preventing the fight from being finished. Earlier Tuesday, Golden Boy Promotions officially requested March 13 from the Nevada State Athletic Commission to host the show.

“As Floyd’s management, we are insistent that there be a level playing field,” Ellerbe said. “This is in the best interests of the fighters, the fans and the sport. If you want a level playing field, the best way to do it is to have Olympic-style, random drug testing administered by the premier agency in the world, the [United States Anti-Doping Agency].”

Pacquiao promoter Bob Arum said the demand is “absolutely crazy,” done simply to harass Pacquiao, who is squeamish about needles, and is proof that Mayweather doesn’t really want the fight.

Arum said the request has been an unsettled issue since the first day of negotiations last month.

“We’re not going to agree to have Manny give blood in training, because that’s stupid,” Arum said. “Every doctor in the world will tell you that is stupid. He’ll give his blood at the beginning of the year and he’s willing to be urine-tested 24/7, but blood doesn’t show [expletive] and he’s not going to do it.”

Michael Koncz, Pacquiao’s adviser and de facto manager, said Pacquiao believes drawing blood so close to a competition harms the body, but the boxer is willing to have his blood drawn a month away from the fight as a compromise.

Koncz said Pacquiao was willing to pass on the fight if it came to that.

“Manny has a lot more options than Mayweather does,” Koncz said. “Manny is clean and he’s never done a thing, and he’s willing to go to great lengths to prove it. It’s my understanding that this stuff doesn’t just leave your system overnight.

“He’ll take a blood test immediately after the fight, if that’s what they insist upon. But Manny believes very strongly that it would be harmful to him to draw blood that soon before the fight and he plain and simple isn’t going to do it.”

In a statement released by his publicist, Mayweather said he is willing to submit to the testing. There was never any suspicion that Pacquiao had ever taken banned substances until earlier this year, when Floyd Mayweather Sr. suggested he was on steroids.

Pacquiao has passed every urine test he’s been given in connection with boxing matches.

“I understand Pacquiao not liking having his blood taken, because frankly I don’t know anyone who really does,” Mayweather said in his statement. “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.”

Blood tests for illegal drugs and banned substances are not required by the Nevada State Athletic Commission, which would have regulatory control of the bout if it is held in Las Vegas.

In Nevada, a fighter is required to submit to a blood test that screens for HIV and Hepatitis B and C, as well as other blood-borne diseases, as part of the requirement to gain a license.

A license in Nevada is good for one year. In Pacquiao’s case, he received his 2009 license shortly before he fought Ricky Hatton in May. He submitted his blood to the commission between April 5 and April 20, said Keith Kizer, the commission’s executive director.

Kizer said all fighters who fight in Nevada are subject to random urine tests as well as any other medical tests, such as an MRI or a CAT scan, that the commission deems necessary. Arum said Pacquiao is willing to submit to testing by an outside agency but won’t give his blood. Roach said it’s an issue because Mayweather’s side has been insisting Pacquiao give blood as close as 48 hours within the fight.

“We’ll accommodate their requests and do urine testing up the wazoo and we’ll agree to have them done by an outside agency,” Arum said. “Manny has nothing to hide. But he’s not going to give blood because that’s crazy. He’ll do it at the beginning and he’ll do it at the end. That’s how it is done. Ask some former Olympic boxers how many times they give blood.”

Ellerbe said having the testing administered by USADA would quell suspicions about the procedures or the result.

“This is no rooty toot organization,” said Ellerbe, who noted that such testing was accepted by elite athletes such as LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Michael Phelps and Lance Armstrong.

Roach scoffed at such talk and said it won’t matter to him if the fight is not held.

“I really don’t care, because Manny doesn’t need Floyd Mayweather,” Roach said. “The tests he’s requesting are not commission tests, they’re not boxing tests and this is not an Olympic sport. A urine test is just as qualified as a blood test. [Human growth hormone] is not detected by blood or urine.”

The World Anti-Doping Agency successfully used blood testing at the 2004 Olympics in Athens to test for HGH.


Source: sports.yahoo.com

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Welcome to Pacquiao-Mayweather fight

6:42 AM Reporter: Admin 0 Responses
It is Pacquiao-Mayweather time! These two fighters has finally have a deal to meet in the same ring to clash and fight for the pride. Pride of being the champion! Both are still claiming to be the real champions! But only one should remain the true and real number one pound-for-pound king.

This blog will give you updates, photos, and videos on the upcoming Pacquiao-Mayweather fight coming this March 2010. This event will be the biggest in 2010 in the field of boxing.

You are welcome to have suggestions and comments regarding this match. The long wait is over. Let us all together wait and see the clash of the year 2010.


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