Retired boxing superstar Floyd Mayweather Jr on Thursday hinted he may be coming out of retirement and take part in a mixed martial arts (MMA) event. 
The 42-year-old former world champion posted on Instagram an image of himself wearing only boxing shorts and with his hands wrapped in white tape with the caption “Coming out of retirement in 2020.”
The first of two posts on Thursday evening shows Mayweather sitting with Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) president Dana White at what appears to be a Boston Celtics basketball match. The caption reads: “@danawhite and I working together again to bring the world another spectacular event in 2020.”
The American former champion competed in just one exhibition bout at the end of December 2018 in Japan since defeating then UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor by technical knockout in Las Vegas in August 2017. McGregor famously took a break from MMA to compete in the boxing match.


Unhappy fans cannot sue over Mayweather-Pacquiao bout: US court
A US appeals court on Thursday said boxing fans who felt cheated after learning that Manny Pacquiao had been injured before fighting Mayweather Jr. cannot pursue class-action litigation because the 2015 welterweight bout dubbed the “Fight of the Century” proved to be a letdown. The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 3-0 that fans and pay-per-view subscribers who paid hundreds of millions of dollars to watch a “yawner” of a fight “got what they paid for” when Mayweather and Pacquiao stepped into a Las Vegas ring, with Mayweather winning a unanimous 12-round decision.
Circuit Judge Jacqueline Nguyen said the plaintiffs suffered no legal injury from Pacquiao’s failure to reveal a four-week-old injury to his right shoulder until three hours before the May 2, 2015, fight started. She said letting the case proceed could fundamentally alter professional sports by requiring athletes to disclose minor injuries, which opponents could use to their advantage, or risk a slew of lawsuits.
“Although the match may have lacked the drama worthy of the pre-fight hype, Pacquiao’s shoulder condition did not prevent him from going the full 12 rounds,” Nguyen wrote. “Plaintiffs therefore essentially got what they paid for — a full-length regulation fight between these two boxing legends.”
Nguyen also noted a New York state appeals court had dismissed fraud claims when Mike Tyson was disqualified for biting off part of Evander Holyfield’s ear in a 1997 heavyweight bout, because fans had paid to see “whatever event transpired.”
Mayweather-Pacquiao tickets started at $1,500 and fetched up to $231,000 on the secondary market. Commercial subscribers paid up to $10,000 for pay-per-view access. Hart Robinovitch, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, did not respond to requests for comment.
Defendants included Mayweather and Pacquiao, AT&T Inc’s HBO unit, which co-produced the fight, and promoters Top Rank and Bob Arum. “We are very pleased,” Daniel Petrocelli, a lawyer for Top Rank and Arum, said in an interview. “The court established the very important principle that while sports fans may be zealous and passionate they do not have the right to sue because they are disappointed in how a contest was conducted, or in the outcome.”
Mayweather’s lawyer Mark Tratos said the decision shows that ticketholders get “no guarantee” they will like what they watch. HBO did not respond to requests for comment. It decided in September 2018 to stop televising boxing.
The Pasadena, California-based appeals court’s decision upheld an August 2017 dismissal by US District Judge Gary Klausner in Los Angeles.
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