Boxing fans sued Manny Pacquiao for $5m after failing to disclose shoulder injury ahead of Floyd Mayweather fight
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Boxing fans sued Manny Pacquiao for $5m after failing to disclose shoulder injury ahead of Floyd Mayweather fight
Two boxing
fans have filed a class-action lawsuit against Manny Pacquiao for
failing to disclose a shoulder injury before his defeat by Floyd
Mayweather.
The
36-year-old will spend up to a year on the sidelines as he prepares to
undergo surgery on his torn rotator cuff - an injury that he failed to
disclose before his mega-fight with Mayweather on May 2 in Las Vegas.
ESPN
reports that Nevada residents Stephane Vanel and Kami Rahbaran are
suing on behalf of 'all persons who purchased tickets; purchased the
pay-per-view event; or who wagered money on the event'.
Manny Pacquiao pictured on Monday with his arm in a sling as he prepares to undergo surgery
Pacquiao's pre-fight questionnaire which shows he did not disclose his shoulder injury
Prior to his bout with Mayweather, Pacquiao signed a pre-fight questionnaire without revealing his injury.
Earlier on Tuesday, Sportsmail obtained
a copy of the document and although it shows that Pacquiao was taking
several painkillers, the word 'No' is marked next to the question: 'Have
you had any injury to your shoulders, elbows, or hands that needed
evaluation or examination?
Subsequently,
Vanel and Rahbaran are seeking more than $5m (£3.2m) from Pacquiao, his
manager Michael Koncz and his promoters Top Rank for fraudulently
concealing his injury before the big fight.
'Defendants
prior to and at the time the plaintiffs and the class decided to
purchase tickets; purchase pay per view showings or wagered on the event
the defendants knew and had full knowledge and information that
defendant Pacquiao had been seriously injured and was suffering from a
torn rotator cuff,' the lawsuit states.
'Defendants further know that such injury would severely affect his performance.'
It was a boxing masterclass from Floyd Mayweather as he beat his great pound-for-pound rival in Las Vegas
Pacquiao was adamant that he deserved to win the fight and said Mayweather 'didn't do anything'
Mayweather swings back towards the ropes to avoid a shot during the bout in Las Vegas
Mayweather is still unbeaten and takes his record to 48-0 after the win on points
Mayweather celebrates his victory over Pacquiao in the so-called 'Fight of the Century'
Pay-per-view
revenues could top $300m (£197m) while ticket revenues for the 'Fight
of the Century' have been estimated at around $72m (£47m) - even though
only roughly 500 tickets went on general sale for the 16,500 capacity
MGM Grand venue.
After
12 rounds of action, Pacquiao lost out to Mayweather with the Money Man
winning by unanimous points decision but the Las Vegas pair argue it
was not a fair contest due to the concealed injury.
'The allegations in this lawsuit are demonstrably false,' attorney Daniel Petrocelli, who represents Top Rank, told ESPN.
'There are documents that explicitly show the medications that Manny
was using to treat his shoulder and it was fully disclosed with USADA,
which we contracted for this fight.'
'This is a frivolous lawsuit and we are confident it will be dismissed,' he added.
The belt Mayweather won for this glitzy and glamorous event is worth $1m
Pacquiao's
promoter, Bob Arum, said earlier the injury suffered four weeks before
the fight appeared to have sufficiently healed, but Pacquiao's handlers
still unsuccessfully sought to get a pain-killing shot in the shoulder
in the dressing room before the fight.
Pacquiao said he reinjured the shoulder in the fourth round when he landed his best punches of the night against Mayweather.
Meanwhile, Mayweather said in a text to ESPN personality Stephen A. Smith that he would welcome a rematch with Pacquiao.
'I will fight him in a year after his surgery,' the text read.
Credit: Mail online
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