
It is February 25, 2026, and the boxing world is officially in the middle of a collective “Wait, what?” moment. News broke this week that Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao have signed the papers for a professional rematch at the Sphere in Las Vegas on September 19.
Eleven years after the “Fight of the Century” underwhelmed an entire planet, these two legends—with a combined age pushing 100—are rolling it back.
The Odds: Why “Money” is Still the Favorite
The current lines at BetOnline have Mayweather at -275 and Pacquiao at +205.
From a professional handicapper’s view, that -275 price on Floyd is as much about his “0” as it is about his skill. Floyd is the ultimate tactician. Even at 49 years old, his shoulder roll and ring IQ are lightyears ahead of anyone else in the sport. He doesn’t need to be fast anymore; he just needs to be smarter than Manny, which—in his eyes—he has always been.
The Case for the “Pac-Man” (+205)
If you’re looking to back Manny, you aren’t betting on his 2015 form. You’re betting on activity. Pacquiao has been consistently training and fighting in the lead-up to 2026, including a recent professional draw against Mario Barrios. Floyd, conversely, has been living the exhibition life, dancing with influencers and celebrities.
Manny’s aggression is his best asset here. If he can turn this into a messy, high-volume brawl early, he forces Floyd to actually box rather than just survive. At +205, you are getting a massive discount on a fighter who is arguably the only one of the two who has been taking “real” rounds in the last five years.
The Verdict: It’s Nostalgia vs. Geometry
Let’s be honest: this isn’t a fight about rankings; it’s a fight about Netflix subscribers and Sphere ticket sales.
- The Safe Bet: Mayweather by Decision. Floyd’s style is built to age gracefully. He will likely spend 12 rounds making Manny miss, landing just enough jabs to keep the judges happy, and walking away with his legacy—and his bank account—intact.
- The “Sharp” Play: Manny Pacquiao +205. In a sport defined by “who has lost the most,” Floyd has been out of the professional fire for nine years. If there is a chink in the armor, it’s going to be Floyd’s timing after nearly a decade of retirement.
Final Take: Don’t bet the house. This is a “fun” fight, a nostalgic spectacle that belongs on your “watch” list, not your “mortgage” list. But if you’re forcing me to choose, I’m taking the plus-money on Pacquiao (+205). In a rematch this far past their prime, I’d rather bet on the guy who stayed busy than the guy who just came off the couch.





