FLOYD MAYWEATHER IN "OFFICIAL BREACH" OF CONTRACT FOR PACQUIAO PRO REMATCH, SAYS CEO
Floyd Mayweather faces "breach of contract" as Pacquiao Promotions demands a sanctioned pro fight in Las Vegas
Looks like Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao are really gearing up for that rematch, even with all the back-and-forth talk. Fans were shocked earlier this year when word came out that they’d be squaring off at The Las Vegas Sphere on September 19, over ten years after their first fight. That first showdown back in 2015? Mayweather pretty much ran the show and scored a win on points.
But now, things feel a little fuzzy because Mayweather started hinting this wasn’t a full-on pro fight, just an exhibition. Chatting with Vegas Sports Today, he said, "As of right now, we don’t actually know where the fight is going to be at," and doubled down: "This is not actually a fight; it’s an exhibition, so we’re going to do it again, and hopefully we'll entertain the people. We’re both winners; it's an exhibition, so we’re both winners.”
On the flip side, Pacquiao’s camp isn’t budging; they want a real sanctioned bout. Pacquiao jumped back into action last year, fighting Mario Barrios to a draw. His team made it clear he’d only fight Mayweather in a legit pro match. Jas Mathur, CEO of Manny Pacquiao Promotions, pushed back hard against Mayweather’s latest comments.
Speaking to ESPN, Mathur insisted that the match is happening and is purely professional. “As of right now, the fight is still on. There is no termination of any sort, and he has signed for a professional fight," he said. Mathur didn’t mince words, either: “He's been in breach since he went out and said what he said on Saturday, and he's officially in breach as of yesterday.
"Mayweather signed three separate agreements on three different days with two different groups, all tying back together in January. It’s all about his return to pro boxing. First was October 24, then November 6, and again on December 14. He received payment when he signed each agreement, and he even took an advance on his purse for fighting Pacquiao.
"Nobody has brought up anything about the venue or whether the fight isn’t a pro match. His team has the contracts; he signed them, and we’ve got DocuSign records, wet signatures, device ID, IP address, everything.
"If Floyd’s afraid of Manny and isn’t willing to risk his record in a real match, he shouldn’t have signed anything in the first place. He should just come out and say it, because Manny’s definitely not scared.”
Mayweather walked away from pro boxing in 2017 after beating McGregor, but kept busy fighting exhibition matches against guys like Logan Paul, Deji, Aaron Chalmers, and John Gotti III. Pacquiao stepped away about five years ago to focus on politics in the Philippines, but the itch brought him back to the ring last year. Now, both seem ready or at least Pacquiao has settled the rivalry once and for all.McGregor but
WHY DID OLEKSANDR USYK STOP WATCHING FURY VS MAKHMUDOV DURING THE SIXTH ROUND?
Oleksandr Usyk ignores Tyson Fury’s win to pray, while Anthony Joshua brands Fury a "clout-chaser" in a ringside row.
Oleksandr Usyk didn’t bother finishing Tyson Fury’s fight with Arslanbek Makhmudov on Saturday. After six rounds, he switched off the TV and went to pray. He’s not thinking about fighting Fury again anytime soon either.
Fury stepped back into the ring after a year away, squaring up with Makhmudov at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. The fight went the full twelve rounds, and Fury took home a unanimous decision win. It streamed live on Netflix, so fans everywhere got to watch.
But Usyk caught half the fight before leaving. He told the Mail, “I got a bunch of messages like, ‘Did you see my friend winning?’ I said, ‘Yeah, great,’ but honestly, I only watched the first six rounds. Then I left for church to pray. In rounds three and four, I got a little worried Makhmudov started landing, and I thought, ‘Come on, keep your hands up.’”
As for facing Fury for a third time, Usyk shot down the idea. After beating Fury twice in 2024, he’s ready to move on. “My plan’s the same. I’ve got three fights lined up, I know what I want. If Fury fits in, fine, but things are more complicated now.”
Back in May 2024, Fury put his WBC heavyweight belt on the line, dreaming of undisputed glory, while Usyk brought his WBA (Super), IBF, WBO, and IBO titles. Usyk edged out Fury on a split decision. They ran it back in December, and it wasn’t as close Usyk dominated and hit a clean 23-0 record with another unanimous points victory.
Next, Usyk is set to face Rico Verhoeven, the Glory heavyweight kickboxing champ, on May 23 at the Pyramids of Giza. Not your average boxing event.
Meanwhile, Fury wasted no time calling out Anthony Joshua, who was ringside for his win over Makhmudov. Fury wanted to make the fight happen right then and there, but Joshua didn’t commit. That annoyed fans in the stadium and at home.
Joshua’s response? He wasn’t impressed. “Tyson, you’re clout-chasing,” he shot back. “I’ve never had a problem getting in the ring with you. I punched you up when we were kids, and after watching you tonight, I’ll do it again. You don’t tell me what to do.”
He doubled down. “I’ve been chasing you for ten years. When you’re ready, come see me. I’m the boss you work for me. I’m the landlord, remember that.”
ANTHONY JOSHUA REJECTS POST-FIGHT RING FACE-OFF DESPITE FURY’S DECISIVE WIN OVER MAKHMUDOV
Eddie Hearn explains Anthony Joshua’s ring snub. Is the Fury vs AJ fight actually signed for this autumn?
Eddie Hearn laid it out pretty clearly: Anthony Joshua stayed out of the ring Saturday night and didn’t square off with Tyson Fury, even though Fury and Turki Alalshikh were both pushing hard for that dramatic moment to sell their big all-British fight for later this year.
Tyson Fury came back for yet another post-retirement bout at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, picking up a decisive win over Russian Arslanbek Makhmudov. It wasn’t much of a contest, really. Fury dominated, collected a unanimous decision, and then instantly shifted his attention to Anthony Joshua sitting at ringside. At one point, Joshua even whipped out his phone to record the fight.
Naturally, Fury grabbed the mic and did what he does best: he hyped up the idea of fighting Joshua next, telling the crowd (and Joshua himself) that this was the battle fans have been waiting for. He even called AJ into the ring on the spot.
But Joshua didn’t bite. He stayed put, calmly telling the crowd he’s ready to fight Fury and has been chasing it for a decade. No drama. No face-off.
Later, Fury and his camp went public. They said their side had signed the contracts weeks ago and put the blame for the holdup squarely on Joshua.
“We brought him here tonight to make this fight a done deal,” Fury said. “I’ve already signed. No idea if he has.”
Netflix, broadcasting the fight, amped things up even more by teasing that the huge British showdown would happen this autumn. But Fury’s promoter, Frank Warren, pushed the decision back onto Joshua. “The only one who can confirm it is AJ,” he said. “It’s one man holding things up.”
Fury himself doubled down: “If it isn’t Anthony Joshua next, I’m done with boxing. It’s him, or I’m gone.”
On the other side, Joshua’s team fired back against any claims that AJ was running from the fight. Eddie Hearn, his promoter, explained why Joshua didn’t step into the ring: “He’s not interested in the theatrics if there’s no deal done. How many times has this fight supposedly been on? Years go by, nothing happens. Until something’s signed, it’s all just talk. AJ knows it’s Fury who really needs this, and he’ll fight him. We’re confident it happens, but right now, nothing is signed.”
And as for the talk about Joshua being scared? Hearn shut that down: “Scared of what, of that? Even Fury’s own fans feel the energy is different now. We don’t see anything other than an AJ win.”