[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 5]
[Senate]
[Page 5938]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                       PACQUIAO-MAYWEATHER FIGHT

  Mr. REID. Mr. President, as some know, I fought a little bit. I was 
in the minor leagues for a couple of years.
  As the Presiding Officer knows, in Nevada, on Saturday night, in Las 
Vegas, there is going to be a stunning athletic event, one of the most 
significant athletic events, actually, in the last 50 years. It is a 
wonderful occasion for Nevada to host the fight between Manny 
Pacquiao--I should say Congressman Pacquiao, who is a member of the 
Philippine Congress--and Floyd Mayweather. They will be battling for 
three separate titles. They are fighting for the 147-pound weight 
class--for all the people who think that is small, that is the class 
that--we have had some of our great fighters of all time who have 
fought that same weight level.
  These are two great athletes. The winner of the match will be crowned 
as the greatest pound for pound fighter in the world, and they will go 
down as two of the finest fighters ever in the history of the world. So 
regardless of who wins, this bout is projected to shatter boxing 
records for not only being a significant boxing match--the focus of the 
world will be on this fight. People all over the world will be watching 
this fight.
  They don't really know how many pay-per-view purchases are expected, 
but I made one last night. I was planning on going to the fight, but, 
as my friend the Presiding Officer knows, things have changed over the 
years. If we want to get one of those good seats, we have to pay for 
it. I have been willing to do that in the past, but the traffic was a 
little too heavy there, so I decided to watch it here with some of my 
family. But I am so happy that the pay-per-view purchases are expected 
to exceed 3 million people, and they won't get it any cheaper than I 
did--$99.95. So it is wonderful that all previous records will be 
broken as to revenue.
  The only thing I don't like about it is the fight doesn't start back 
here until 9 o'clock and usually they don't end until midnight. I wish 
they would start a little earlier, but, as I have learned with my 
baseball, they just start them later back here.
  I am very excited about this unforgettable fight. There is nothing 
like a championship fight. There is nothing like one that has all this 
attention.
  After I started practicing law, I started judging fights. I was on 
the Nevada fight commission, and I judged fights. I judged lots of 
fights. I can remember the first big fight I went to. Oh, it was a big 
fight. I walked in there, and I couldn't imagine there would be that 
much attention on anything. Of course, there were thousands of people 
there. I was excited. I was going to judge one of the preliminary 
fights. It was stunning. You see ringside all of these glamorous, 
important people. These fights catch the enthusiasm of sports fans all 
over the world.
  The eagerness that I have of watching this fight goes far beyond the 
sport of boxing or the spectacle of a marquis matchup. I am thrilled 
for Nevada. This fight will inject hundreds of millions of dollars into 
the State's economy. It will benefit Nevadans all--fighters and their 
teams, of course, hotels, restaurants, cab drivers, limousine drivers, 
parking valets, maids will get bigger tips than they usually get. It 
will be a great time for Nevada.
  So I have done everything I can within my power here as a Member of 
the legislature to help in any way that I can. I have interceded on a 
couple of occasions to help make this fight move forward, and I was 
very happy to do so.
  I love this sport. Some of my most prized possessions in my home are 
fight pictures. I have one picture of the great Joe Louis and Max 
Schmeling, and they both signed that picture before they died. I had 
the good fortune, when Joe Louis spent so much time at Caesars Palace, 
to have met him. I have pictures hanging on my wall of my dear father-
in-law, who worked with fighters. I have a picture on the wall--they 
are all together--of him with Jack Dempsey, with Primo Carnera, who was 
6 foot 7, a huge man--my father-in-law was about 5 foot 5--Sugar Ray 
Robinson. All these--not all of them, but many great fighters are there 
with my father-in-law. I love that picture, and it reminds me of my 
minor league experience in boxing.
  I am very excited about watching this fight.
  Las Vegas has been the entertainment capital of the world for a long 
time, and we are happy that, in fact, is the case. But a few short 
years ago, as the Presiding Officer knows, we were hit very hard. The 
debacle that took place on Wall Street hurt Nevada more than any other 
place. We have been recovering. We haven't recovered totally, but we 
have recovered significantly.
  The 2008 economic collapse took a heavy toll on Nevada. A quarter of 
Nevadans are employed in the tourism and hospitality industry, and when 
the recession hit, they got hurt, as did all working classes--
construction workers; everybody got hurt--but we fought our way back.
  Last year, we welcomed to Las Vegas 41 million people--little Las 
Vegas, 41 million people. It is not so little, but the Presiding 
Officer and I remember when it was a little place. But now it is a 
community with a metropolitan area of over 2 million people. Forty-one 
million people have come to Las Vegas and produced an economic impact 
of more than $50 billion. We shattered previous records by attracting 
1.4 million more visitors than we did in 2014. So it is only going to 
get better, and the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight will keep that momentum 
going for Nevada.
  I am not picking a winner. I wish both men the best of luck. But, 
admittedly, I am a little biased because of my relationship with Manny 
Pacquiao.
  As the Presiding Officer will remember, one of my real campaigners in 
one of my difficult races was Manny Pacquiao. He campaigned for me. He 
broke training to come out of L.A., flew in for a big event I had one 
night. So you have to remember that kind of stuff. So I have a very 
good relationship with Manny Pacquiao. Certainly, I don't have a bad 
one with Floyd Mayweather, but I know Manny Pacquiao much better than I 
know Floyd Mayweather. He stood in my corner in the past, and he will 
always have my support.
  Regardless, though, of which fighter reigns supreme on that Saturday 
night--and one of them will. They are alone. Nobody is there with them. 
Regardless of who leaves the arena with that big belt, Nevada's hard-
working economy will have won the fight.

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