Two fans filed a class action lawsuit against Manny Pacquiao and his
team for failing to disclose a serious shoulder injury prior to the
fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. last weekend.
After losing to
Mayweather by unanimous decision, Pacquiao’s camp said the fighter was
trying to compete despite a severe shoulder injury. They blamed the
Nevada Athletic Commission for denying him a painkilling injection prior
to the fight.
The severity of Pacquiao’s
injury seemed to be confirmed when it was reported Monday he would
undergo surgery to repair a tear in his shoulder. But what doesn’t add
up is that Pacquiao’s team, namely adviser Michael Koncz, checked “no”
on a box from the commission asking whether Pacquiao had a shoulder
injury.
“Number one, Manny didn’t check the box,” Koncz told the
New York Daily News. “I checked it. It was just an inadvertent mistake.
If I was trying to hide anything, would I have listed all the
medications on the sheet that he intended to use? We weren’t trying to
hide anything. I just don’t think I read the questionnaire correctly.”
Pacquiao
is now facing possible sanctions from the Nevada commission over his
failure to disclose the injury. And that brings us back to the fan class
action suit.
The fans filed suit against Pacquiao, Koncz, and
Pacquiao’s promoter Top Rank for hiding the injury and not disclosing
it, letting Pacquiao carry on with the fight as damaged goods.
“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 reads via ESPN. “Defendants further know
that such injury would severely affect his performance.”
A Top
Rank attorney says the claims are false, explaining that on his medical
form for the commission Koncz listed all the medications Pacquiao
required.
Look, we all know that promoters hide injuries all the
time in order to keep fights on schedule as planned. They can’t cancel
shows given all the hype and promoting they do. The problem is that
Pacquiao’s team wanted it both ways; you can’t blame the commission for
denying your fighter a shot when you were trying to hide an injury from
them.
And the fans aren’t about to win this suit because you
cannot guarantee the health of a fighter going into a fight, and paying
to watch it comes with inherent risks that the show may be a dud."
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