LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Jr. got his license to fight Manny Pacquiao, along with a question about domestic abuse. Veteran referee Kenny Bayless got a spot in boxing's richest fight ever.
Meanwhile, all anyone looking for a ticket to the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight got on Tuesday was the runaround.
On a day Mayweather got his license and Bayless was picked by Nevada boxing commissioners to be the third man in the ring, there was still no announcement of ticket sales for a fight now less than two weeks away. Though many of the tickets have long been spoken for, the MGM Grand hotel has repeatedly promised a public sale of at least a token amount of seats for the May 2 fight.
Promoter Bob Arum charged that the tickets are being held up because the MGM and Mayweather's camp are trying to get both more tickets and better seats from the allotment given to Pacquiao.
"What's happening now is a scandal," said Arum, who promotes Pacquiao "Customers of various hotels are cancelling their reservations, including big high rollers. Nobody could tell them if they have tickets."
The MGM has been tight-lipped about the tickets, which originally were supposed to go on sale weeks ago. A hotel spokesman said Tuesday he was trying to find out more information about them, but otherwise had no comment.
Mayweather confidant Leonard Ellerbe also did not return calls, and his manager, Al Haymon, doesn't talk to the media. Arum, though, had plenty to say, charging that MGM executives were conspiring with Mayweather's camp to take the best seats despite an agreement calling for the Mayweather and Pacquiao camps to get equal shares of tickets after the MGM takes care of its customers.
The tickets represent millions of dollars for both sides, especially in the secondary market where they are expected to sell between two and three times the face value of $1,500 and up.