american fans sued pacquiao over injury
Two
Nevada men filed a class-action lawsuit against Manny Pacquiao on
Tuesday, seeking millions in damages because they say he fraudulently
concealed a shoulder injury before his defeat to Floyd Mayweather, AFP reports.
It is just the latest fallout from
Mayweather’s victory in Las Vegas on Saturday in a unanimous decision,
with Pacquiao saying afterwards that the shoulder complaint hampered his
performance in the welterweight world title showdown.
The plaintiffs argue that by failing to
go public with the injury before the feverishly anticipated bout, the
Philippine icon and his camp violated the Nevada Deceptive Trade
Practices Act.
The suit filed in a US District Court in
Las Vegas names Pacquiao, his manager Michael Koncz, promotional company
Top Rank and Top Rank chairman Bob Arum and president Todd duBoef.
According to court documents available
online, the lawsuit claims that when plaintiffs Stephane Vanel and Kami
Rahbaran – who bought tickets, forked out pay per view fees or bet on
the fight – the defendants “knew and had full knowledge and information
that defendant Pacquiao had been seriously injured and was suffering
from a torn rotator cuff.”
“Defendants further know that such injury would severely affect his performance,” the lawsuit says.
“None of the defendants informed or
apprised the public or even the Nevada Athletic Commission about the
injury to defendant Pacquiao.”
The clash between Pacquiao and Mayweather at the MGM Grand Garden Arena was billed as the “Fight of the Century.”
It’s certainly set to go down as the most lucrative bout in history, with possible revenue of $400m.
That could include as many as three million pay-per-view purchases, at about $100 each.
The bout went the full scheduled 12
rounds, Mayweather easily winning on the judges’ scorecards to take his
perfect record to 48-0.
After the fight, Pacquiao and Top Rank revealed the 36-year-old had been injured in training camp some three weeks earlier.
They said the boxer had been cleared by
doctors to fight, although they had expected him to be able to take an
anti-inflammatory injection on fight night, but the Nevada State
Athletic Commission ultimately denied him.
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