Mayweather team rejects ultimatum

Talks between Arum’s Top Rank and Mayweather’s Golden Boy promoters have stalled over the issue of random blood testing, demanded by Mayweather’s team and rejected by Pacquiao.

Arum set a yesterday deadline for Golden Boy to accept a  “final offer” in which both sides let the Nevada State Athletic  Commission make the final decision on testing.

Leonard Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions, said that there was no question of accepting that proposal.

“Random is random. We are not backing off and the ball is  in their court,” he told Reuters.

Arum said if that was the stance of the Mayweather team  then he would announce another opponent for March.

“If that is the case then tomorrow morning we will announce  who Manny will fight on March 13 and it won’t be Floyd  Mayweather,” Arum told Reuters.

Arum has previously identified former junior welterweight  champion Paulie Malignaggi as the likely replacement for  Mayweather but said it would be a blow to the sport not to have  the bout take place.

“It’s terrible. Mayweather and his people have never cared  about the good of boxing and it is Manny that has brought  boxing back. Is this a loss for boxing? Is this a missed  opportunity? Of course it is.”

Following the promoter’s comments, the Mayweather camp  issued a statement placing the blame for the lack of a deal on  Arum and Pacquiao.

“Let the record be clear: Manny Pacquiao and his promoter  Bob Arum are threatening to walk away from the largest fight in  history,” the statement said.

But the Mayweather camp also left the door open for further  talks.

“Team Mayweather and Golden Boy Promotions is still open to  the earlier discussions of having both parties work out a  mutually agreeable understanding of the testing, which would be  conducted by a mutually agreed upon agency,” the statement  added.

Pacquiao won the WBO title in November by stopping holder  Miguel Cotto in the 12th round in Las Vegas.

The Filipino (50-3-2) won an unprecedented seventh title in  seven weight classes to set up the best pound-for-pound  showdown against unbeaten Mayweather (40-0) in what was  expected to be among boxing’s biggest earning fights.

Arum said that Pacquiao had no objection to random urine  testing and blood tests up to 30 days before or after a fight,  adding that he believed the Mayweather camp had ulterior  motives.

“This is a false issue that is being raised for maybe three  reasons. One, an attempt to smear Pacquiao and those people  that have done that will pay the price because litigation is  going to proceed.

“Number two because it is convenient way for Mayweather to  not fight Paquiao who he knows he can’t beat.

“Number three there is the possibility it is a way to  disconcert Pacquiao who they know doesn’t like to give  blood immediately in the weeks prior to a fight when he is in  training because he believes, rightly or wrongly, that it saps  his strength.

“The reason they know this is that Pacquiao’s last defeat  was to Erik Morales and he had been directed to give a blood  test that the state commission required, that he needed for a  license, for HIV and hepatitis. He did it, they took his blood  test 10 days before the fight, he claims that it sapped his  strength and he lost to Morales.”

Pacquiao said on Christmas Day that he intended to sue the  Mayweather camp claiming they had insinuated he had been using  performance enhancing drugs.