Manny Pacquiao has always believed he can do what 47 other fighters before him have failed to do — beat Floyd Mayweather Jr in the ring.
It turns out a lot of other people are believers, too — and they are backing their opinions with real money.
A flurry of early action on Pacquiao has already narrowed the odds for the big fight in Las Vegas’ legal sports books. By the time they get into the ring on May 2, it is conceivable that Mayweather might not be favored at all.
Photo: AFP
“I’ve never seen Mayweather this low eight weeks out before the fight,” said Jimmy Vaccaro, who has booked money on every big fight for the past four decades in Las Vegas. “This is as close as we get to a legitimate pick ’em fight since Mayweather fought [Oscar] De La Hoya.”
Mayweather opened as a 2.5-to-1 favorite in most sports books when the fight was announced, and at that price Pacquiao backers could not wait to get their bets down. At Vaccaro’s South Point hotel sports book, there were 150 tickets written on Pacquiao in the days after the fight was announced to just 10 on the favored Mayweather.
Over the weekend, Vaccaro said his book took a couple of US$10,000 bets on Pacquiao, which prompted him to move the betting line closer to try and draw more action on Mayweather.
“It’s a one-way attack on Pacquiao,” Vaccaro said. “We’re well into a six-figure loss right now if Pacquiao wins.”
That could change when the so-called “smarts” start weighing in on a fight that is still two months away. Both Pacquiao and Mayweather began training camps this week, giving bettors plenty of time to form their opinions, as more news circulates about their training status.
Vaccaro actually saw an influx of Pacquiao money first in October last year when he put up a line on the fight before it was made, making Mayweather a minus-300 favorite and Pacquiao a plus-250 underdog.
That meant a bettor had to wager US$300 to win US$100 on Mayweather, while Pacquiao paid US$250 for every US$100 bet. Vaccaro had barely posted the line when he got a US$3,000 bet on Pacquiao, and the trend has continued unabated.
“The smarts really aren’t jumping in yet, they’re going to wait to see how low it goes,” Vaccaro said. “They’re telling you that they think it will get much lower.”
The latest odds at the South Point still favored Mayweather, but now at minus-200. Pacquiao has gone to plus-170, meaning Mayweather is now less than a 2-to-1 favorite in man-to-man betting. At the Westgate Las Vegas Superbook, Mayweather was minus-210, while Pacquiao was plus-180.
So far, at least, the betting pattern looks much like it did in 2007, when Mayweather began as a 2-to-1 pick over De La Hoya in the fight that catapulted him to pay-per-view stardom. While boxing insiders liked Mayweather in the fight, the betting public was infatuated with De La Hoya, and he would eventually go into the ring as a slight favorite.
No matter who ends up favored, the legal bookies figure to be winners. Already, Vaccaro said he has seen more betting on the fight than he ever has two months out, and some in the betting industry are predicting legal wagering of up to US$50 million on the bout. The betting handle will be helped by a number of different proposition bets, and the fact tens of thousands of college basketball fans can bet while in town for the start of the National Collegiate Athletic Association basketball tournament.
The fight will cap a huge day in sports that includes the Kentucky Derby, the NBA and NHL playoffs, and a full slate of baseball.
A runner who stopped during a marathon in China to pose doing the splits and another who hoarded energy gels have been banned for two years, the local athletics association said yesterday. The incidents happened during Sunday’s marathon in Sichuan Province’s Chengdu and were widely shared online. Videos showed a female runner stopping suddenly and dropping to the ground in the splits position, holding up her arms in a heart shape as she apparently posed for a photograph. She “committed obstructive fouls during the race, affecting the safe participation of other runners,” the Sichuan Athletics Association said in a statement, which identified
Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli yesterday vowed to “keep raising the bar” after winning the Japanese Grand Prix to become the youngest driver in Formula One history to lead the championship standings. The 19-year-old Italian took advantage of a mid-race safety car to jump into the lead after a dreadful start from pole position, crossing the line ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. Antonelli’s Suzuka victory came two weeks after the first grand prix win of his career in China, and sent him top of the championship standings after three races, nine points ahead of team-mate George Russell. Mercedes are struggling to
Teng Kai-wei, the only Taiwanese player on an opening-day roster in this year’s Major League Baseball (MLB) season, took his first win of the year with the Houston Astros in his season debut. Teng entered in relief in the top of the fifth inning against the Los Angeles Angels on Saturday, with the Astros trailing 5-0. He pitched 2-1/3 scoreless innings with two strikeouts, as Houston scored 11 runs during his outing to snatch an 11-9 comeback victory. The win is the Astros’ first of the season and the third of Teng’s MLB career. “It’s my first time pitching for the Astros, so
Workers are hammering, cranes are swinging and seats are being bolted into place — but the clock is ticking. Mexico City’s famous Azteca stadium, reborn as Estadio Banorte, is in a frantic race to be ready for its grand reopening on Saturday. Drone footage showed crews installing seats and attaching the new stadium name to the facade, with cranes looming overhead 48 hours before the gates are due to open for a high-profile friendly between Mexico and Portugal. For residents, the breakneck pace of construction has done little to inspire confidence. “I know they are working practically seven days a week, 24 hours