Manny Pacquiao had just faced three rounds of a fiery rally by American rival Keith Thurman, who was deadset on changing judges’ minds after being floored in the first round.

Thurman hadn’t won a round until the sixth and was on the verge of taking the 10th when Pacquiao halted his foe’s momentum with a body shot that practically sealed the victory for the Filipino.

ADVERTISEMENT

READ: Manny Pacquiao likely to fight again next year

While going after Thurman’s body was the plan of Team Pacquiao all along, the Filipino’s corner got a reminder to stick to strategy from the unlikeliest source—according to corner chief Buboy Fernandez.

“Tao ni Mayweather, lumapit sa amin, alam ko na ang sinesenyas (Mayweather’s man, came to us and I knew what he was gesturing),” Fernandez said. “Katawanin daw (Hit the body).”

The revelation is expected to fuel even more speculation that the recent social media spat between American Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Pacquiao could be a means to generate buzz for a rematch between the noted boxing rivals.

READ: Mayweather ‘zero interest’ in Pacquiao rematch — report

It’s working: #MayPac2 has been trending since Mayweather accused Pacquiao of riding on the “Money” train for relevance.

Fernandez said the assist from Mayweather’s unidentified “messenger” came in the eighth round.

“Eh kasi alam na niya eh, kung paano tukuran si Manny (It’s because Thurman finally figured how to press down on Manny),” Fernandez added.

READ: Pacquiao to Mayweather: Want fans to stop asking for rematch? Then fight me again

ADVERTISEMENT

By Fernandez’s account, it appeared Mayweather was trying to make sure Pacquiao won the fight. Mayweather walked out of MGM Grand even before the winner was announced.

Mayweather later fired an opening salvo on Instagram by saying his name often dropped when Pacquiao’s name is mentioned in the news.

READ: Floyd Mayweather: Manny Pacquiao built his legacy off association with my name

Pacquiao begged to disagree, saying it was Mayweather who was in attendance in his past two fights. The Filipino senator then called Mayweather out for a rematch if he wants to “be relevant again.”

The American, who retired unbeaten after 50 fights, countered by saying he was there as “an employer” as he owns a stake in the promoting Premier Boxing Champions.

Subscribe to Inquirer Sports Newsletter

Read Next

EDITORS' PICK

MOST READ