With everything going his way again, Manny Pacquiao is like a man on a mission, as he sounds confident that he will conquer everything that comes his way. Following a unanimous decision win against Timothy Bradley, he said he's ready any time to negotiate the bout with Floyd Mayweather that fight fans crave.
"The line is open 24 hours, seven days a week," the Filipino ring icon said after his 12-round unanimous decision over the previously unbeaten Bradley on Saturday.
The win mended and proved that the 2012 fight against Bradley was a miscarriage, when Bradley was awarded a split decision win and the World Boxing Organization welterweight belt.
It was clear that Pacquiao's energy and precision are still packed in his punches and it is also clear that the 35-year-old's boxing journey is far from over. As many would said, Pacquiao should strike while the iron is hot and he is doing just that.
"If he wants to fight, the fight will be on," Pacquiao said, although history has shown it's not that easy.
In late 2009 and early 2010, Pacquiao and Mayweather were considered the world's top pound-for-pound fighters and record profits were expected from a showdown.
But a disagreement over pre-fight blood testing scuttled talks already complicated by the need to satisfy rival pay-per-view outlets HBO and Showtime, as Mayweather wants an Olympic type of drug testing and Pacquiao did not agree.
Other negotiations broke down over the division of the money, and the superseding years have brought a further decline to relations between Bob Arum's Top Rank Promotions and Oscar de la Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions.
"It's really hard to talk about that," Pacquiao said. "How many years have we talked about it and it hasn't happened?"
Trainer Freddie Roach seems to flip-flop as to whether the bout will ever take place, saying earlier this month he thought it would if only because the pool of potential opponents for both Pacquiao and Mayweather is so small.
In the days before the Bradley fight, he seemed less optimistic, but said if it does happen it could be as a career finale for both men.
"On our side, I think Bob wants that fight to be our last fight," Roach said.
Pacquiao looks set to clash later this year with the Juan Manuel Marquez after a unanimous decision victory over Max Alvarado.
Pacquiao has fought Marquez four times, and was brutally knocked out by the Mexican star in their last encounter in December of 2012.
Mayweather, 37, is now 46-0 after defeating Argentina's Marcos Maidana on May 3 in a welterweight world title clash.
According to Yahoo! Sports, Prominent advertising for Mayweather-Maidana at the MGM Grand during the week of the Pacquiao-Bradley fight incensed Arum, who went so far as to threaten never to have Pacquiao fight there again.
He mocked the Mayweather-Maidana match-up as a no-bearing fight, which further provoked Golden Boy and Mayweather Promotions' decision to make Maidana available to the media at the MGM Grand just hours before Pacquiao-Bradley on Saturday.
Leonard Ellerbe, chief executive of Mayweather Promotions, took the opportunity to take a poke at Arum's card, saying the projected gate receipts of about $8 million -- later confirmed by Arum -- would be dwarfed by Mayweather-Maidana, which had already sold $14 million worth of tickets.
"People come to see Floyd Mayweather fight in big events," Ellerbe said. "That's why we do the kind of numbers that we do."
Despite the war of words, Arum insisted Saturday night that he was ready to try again.
"If they want to operate in good faith and want to get something done, everything is possible," Arum said. "Any excuse for it not happening is just posturing."