Boxer Floyd Mayweather, fresh off
his lopsided victory over Marcos Maidana, denied he is trying to safeguard his
undefeated record by avoiding Filipino superstar Manny Pacquiao.
Mayweather has admitted he
handpicked opponents in the past but says there is nothing unscrupulous about
not fighting Pacquiao, one of the few fighters who can match the American’s
hand speed.
“I am not ducking or dodging no
opponent,” said Mayweather, who turns 38 in February. “If a
Pacquiao fight presents itself then let’s make it happen.”
Mayweather said Saturday after
beating Maidana for the second time in four months that he is open to a fight
against Pacquiao, but it would have to be on Mayweather’s terms.
Mayweather is in the middle of a
six-fight deal with Showtime.
In the past, Mayweather (47-0)
has always tried to sidestep questions about facing Pacquiao, who is getting
set to fight in Macau in November against Chris Algieri.

“Pacquiao needs to focus on the
guy in front of him. Then we’ll see what the future holds,” Mayweather
said.
Pacquiao and Mayweather have held
talks about staging a mega-fight before but they always broke down before a
deal could be signed.
It is unlikely Pacquiao would
agree to the terms that Maidana did for his rematch, allowing Mayweather to
handpick his referee, Kenny Bayless, and change two of the three judges from
the first fight.
Mayweather says Pacquiao is too
worried about fighting him and forgets to train for his regular fights.
“In the past, if you look at
Pacquiao when he fought (Juan Manuel) Marquez, he was too focused on Floyd
Mayweather instead of the guy in front of him and you saw what happened,”
he said, recalling Pacquiao’s knockout defeat.
(YahooNews)
(YahooNews)
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