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Reps for Pacquiao, Mayweather mum on mediation session

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Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Fans of Manny Pacquiao have spent the past year calling for Floyd Mayweather Jr., but their March 13 megafight remains in peril. |
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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.
Arum's Top Rank and Mayweather's representatives at Golden Boy Promotions
agreed to the mediation in an effort to resolve their dispute over the methods
and frequency of drug testing for the bout, which will be held at the MGM Grand
Garden in Las Vegas if a compromise is reached.
Although both fighters have agreed to extensive urine testing, Mayweather has
demanded random blood testing as well. Pacquiao has balked at unlimited blood
testing, instead proposing two blood tests before the fight and another
immediately afterward.
Pacquiao also complicated the negotiations by filing a lawsuit last week
alleging Mayweather and most of his camp's key players defamed him by falsely
accusing him of using performance-enhancing drugs.
Neither side would say whether more mediation will be held on Wednesday, but
the length of Tuesday's meeting appeared to be a positive development for the
potential fight. If little progress could be made, the session likely would
have been scrapped early, with the sport's top two fighters moving on to
replacement bouts instead of meeting in what's expected to be the richest fight
in boxing history.
After impressive pay-per-view numbers in their most recent bouts last year,
both fighters stand to make more than $25 million in their welterweight
meeting. Except for drug testing, the camps have settled every significant
detail of the fight, according to Arum and Golden Boy CEO Richard Schaefer.
If the fight falls through, Pacquiao is expected to attempt to win a title in a
record eighth weight division with a bout against 154-pound (70-kilogram)
champion Yuri Foreman in Las Vegas on March 20, while Mayweather could fight former
140-pound (63 1/2-kilogram) champion Paulie Malignaggi at the MGM Grand on
March 13.
Boxing's two most prominent promotional companies have appeared before
Weinstein in the past, including a session in 2007 in which they resolved the
promotional rights to Pacquiao, who had deals with both companies at one point. |