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Analysis: Floyd Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao II? Mayweather advisor says Floyd’s retired

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao trade blows.
Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao trade blows.
(John Locher / Associated Press)
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To talk to Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s advisor, Leonard Ellerbe, is to be reminded of the superiority complex that has defined that camp for years.

Logic would have most assume that, on the heels of Manny Pacquiao’s two-knockdown, unanimous-decision triumph over Timothy Bradley on Saturday in Las Vegas, Mayweather might be intrigued by the possibility of a rematch. After all, Mayweather’s victory over Pacquiao last May generated a record 4.6 million pay-per-view buys and $437 million in sales.

Here’s what Ellerbe told The Times on Wednesday about the reaction to Pacquiao’s victory:

“Doesn’t mean anything as far as I’m concerned,” Ellerbe said. “Floyd’s retired. He’s been very adamant about that, and there’s been zero discussions about coming out of retirement and I hope he stays retired. We haven’t had one conversation about Manny Pacquiao. [Mayweather’s] retired. There’s nothing to talk about.”

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Nothing to talk abut … save this.

Because this type of “disinterest” is old hat to Ellerbe and Mayweather. Ellerbe told me they didn’t really know who Miguel Cotto was, less than two years before Mayweather fought him in 2012.

Ellerbe said Mayweather is “100%” content promoting his fighters, including Ashley Theophane, who was beaten by Adrien Broner earlier this month.

Sorry, we’ve seen this act, and don’t believe this is anything more than posturing by Mayweather’s camp.

Of course, Pacquiao announced his retirement Saturday, and with an approaching May 9 election for a Senate seat in the Philippines, perhaps he will find the public-service work so inspirational he won’t fight again.

But at least his promoter, Bob Arum, has said the success of the first Mayweather-Pacquiao fight deserves further conversation about whether a rematch is possible. The first fight grossed more than $600 million, the largest revenue-generating one-day event in sports history.

After Pacquiao’s loss, he blamed a right shoulder injury he sustained in training camp for an uncharacteristically poor performance.

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Showtime Executive Vice President Stephen Espinoza, who is close to Mayweather and whose network had a six-fight deal with him from 2013-15, said, “There aren’t any conversations or negotiations ongoing and there won’t be any conversations or negotiations unless Floyd decides he’s coming out of retirement.

“If Floyd decides he’s going to un-retire, he’ll let us know and he’ll let us know who he wants to consider as his opponents, but unless that happens, he’s retired and there’s no conversations to be had.”

Espinoza added, “We’d be silly not to want more Mayweather fights, but in the seven months since he retired, he’s really never said anything that he’s contemplating coming back. … And the last time I saw him, he seemed very engaged in the promotion business. I didn’t get the sense at all that he was itching to come back.”

Still, Mayweather is 49-0, and the opportunity to pass Rocky Marciano’s mark at the new $375-million, 20,000-seat T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas would likely stoke any superior athlete’s competitive vigor.

And Pacquiao’s strong Saturday showing, a 116-110 victory on all three judges’ scorecards, revives some interest in how a fully healthy challenge would be met by Mayweather.

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“My personal opinion is that Manny did look pretty good, and was very effective against Bradley,” Espinoza said. “Whether that means he would perform better a second time against Floyd is an open question. Unless Floyd decides he wants to come back, it’s a lot of hubbub and speculation over nothing.”

Follow Lance Pugmire on Twitter: @latimespugmire

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