Time for Mayweather to put up or shut up, says Roach

Boxing fans have long savoured the prospect of a  Mayweather-Pacquiao showdown, if only to decide the mythical  title of the world’s best pound-for-pound fighter.

“He (Mayweather) has got to do something,” Roach told  reporters after Filipino Pacquiao won an eighth world title in  an unprecedented eighth weight class by beating Mexico’s  Antonio Margarito.

“After this great performance by Manny, Mayweather just has  to put up or shut up now and move out of the country.

“Let’s face it. Manny’s way above him at this point because  I remember when he (Mayweather) was ducking Margarito and he  wouldn’t fight him either. If he doesn’t fight Manny now, we  know this guy should retire.”

Mayweather had been expected to meet Pacquiao earlier this  year until negotiations collapsed over the American’s demand  for random drug testing.

American Shane Mosley then stepped in to take the  Filipino’s place but he was outclassed by Mayweather in a  non-title welterweight bout in Las Vegas in May.

That left Mayweather with an unblemished career record of  41-0 with 25 knockouts but even then he was reluctant to commit  to a mega-fight with Pacquiao.

“I’m not going out chasing fighters,” said Mayweather, who  surrendered his tag as the best pound-for-pound boxer to the  Filipino during a 21-month retirement from the sport that ended  late last year.
Blood test
“If Manny takes the (blood) test, we can make the fight  happen. If he doesn’t, we don’t have a fight. If Manny Pacquaio  wants to fight, it is not hard to find me.”

Pacquiao deferred any talk of a Mayweather fight to the  promoters after improving his own career record to 52-3-2 with  38 knockouts after his unanimous points victory over Margarito  at Cowboys Stadium.

“I’m not going to fight anybody as long as there is a  problem with the decision of the promoter,” the 31-year-old  Filipino said. “That’s my promoter’s job. I’m just a fighter to  do my job and train hard for the fight.”

Whichever opponents are lined up going forward, Pacquiao  has indicated he will fight twice more before retiring from  boxing to focus on his burgeoning career in politics.

“I am really happy for what I’ve done in boxing, and I  don’t want to get too overwhelmed right now because you have to  balance responsibility,” he said after claiming the vacant WBC  super welterweight title.

“That’s why I enter (the ring), because I want to help  people by making good fights.”

Pacquiao’s fight on Saturday was certainly a good one, and  the most destructive performance by the Filipino Roach had ever  witnessed.

“It’s the worst beating I have ever seen (by Pacquiao),  accumulation-wise and the number of punches landed,” he said.  “Margarito is a very resilient guy, a tough guy and he has no  quit in him.

“His corner should have saved him. He took too much  unnecessary punishment to me. I would have stopped that fight.  After eight rounds, it was over and it was just a matter of  time.”