Pacquiao vs Clottey - The animosity that exists between  Manny Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, and Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s camp  extends to MGM/Mirage, the company that operates the MGM Grand Garden  Arena in Las Vegas. That arena will be dark Saturday night, when it  could have been the site of Pacquiao's world welterweight title defense  against Joshua Clottey. In an interesting column Thursday by The Times'  Bill Dwyre, Arum addressed his anger at Mayweather promoter Golden Boy  Promotions and at MGM/Mirage, which has staged several of Oscar De La  Hoya's bouts as a fighter and as a promoter, including the upcoming  April 3 fight between Bernard Hopkins and Roy Jones Jr. and the May 1 Mayweather  vs Mosley bout.
In January, Arum said he extended  MGM/Mirage the opportunity to host Pacquiao vs  Clottey, while Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones bid to do the same.  During that period, Arum said he had a discouraging conversation with  MGM/Mirage President Richard Sturm, while checking to see if Pacquiao  could fight at the MGM Grand for a fourth consecutive time, after bouts  against De La Hoya, Ricky Hatton and Miguel Cotto.
“They said the  date’s booked,” Arum said, referring to a prior request filed to the  Nevada State Athletic Commission by Golden Boy Chief Executive Richard  Schaefer to keep the March 13 date open for Jones-Hopkins first, then  Mayweather-Pacquiao.
"Golden Boy had told me at the time that  they planned to bring in Mayweather versus another opponent -- [Paulie]  Malignaggi at the time," Sturm told The Times on Thursday. "It's  industry practice to honor whoever has the first hold on the date. Bob  called me, I explained that situation, and the rest is history."
When  Mayweather ultimately opted to fight Mosley May 1 at MGM Grand, the  March 13 request was dropped. The MGM explanation, as Arum said he  interpreted it, was that the company had more loyalty to Golden Boy  fighters than Arum’s. Last week, at a lunch with The Times, Arum said  this: “We’ll never have Manny fight at MGM again. Manny brings in more  business to Las Vegas than any other boxer, more than anyone since  [Mike] Tyson. Manny’s a boon to the gaming tables. A casino guy once  told me, ‘Manny’s Frank Sinatra times 20.’ So MGM just [hurt]  themselves, and all the other casinos in Vegas.”
Sturm said he  hopes that's not true.
"We had no idea March 13 was going to  open," Sturm said. "Had I known, I'd be more than excited to have Manny  come back here, and I'd love to have him back."
Sturm said he  plays no favorites among promoters.
"We don't book promoters; we  book fights," he said. "Bob is entirely wrong to say there's anything  more to our relationship with Golden Boy than that."
For now,  however, Arum is talking of taking his business elsewhere.
After  Dallas, Arum said he is going to stage light-middleweight world champion  Yuri Foreman’s first title defense against ex-welterweight champ Miguel  Cotto June 5 at the new Yankee Stadium, and he’s promising another  Dallas show later this year, along with a spring 2011 event at the new  Meadowlands in New Jersey.
On Thursday, Arum mildly softened his  stance to say he'd "never say never" to another Pacquiao fight at the  MGM Grand.
"But Pacquiao is disillusioned after the way they  disrespected him," Arum said.
Sturm said he's willing to extend  an olive branch.
"I wouldn't have a problem picking up the phone  and expressing my interest in having Manny back here soon," Sturm said.
--  Lance Pugmire
Source: latimesblogs.latimes.com

 
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