The bout is expected to stream on Netflix and be sanctioned as a professional contest, meaning the result would officially count toward the records of both fighters.

“It made no sense to put it at The Sphere. It’s not connected to a casino,” the official said to Boxingscene, describing the reasoning behind the move. MGM’s model relies on integrating major fights with its network of Strip properties, including high-roller packages and week-long promotional events that drive revenue beyond ticket sales.

That structure has been central to its recent fight-week rollouts, including Cinco de Mayo weekend cards at T-Mobile Arena. The Sphere, owned by Madison Square Garden Entertainment, does not offer that same ecosystem.

The scheduling shift also reflects practical constraints. T-Mobile Arena is booked on September 19 but remains available in mid-August, aligning with the revised timeline under discussion.

The same official cautioned buyers against purchasing secondary-market tickets tied to The Sphere location, stating the fight is “one million percent not happening there.”

The move to the MGM properties (T-Mobile or MGM Grand) is a sign that organizers are trying to save the event. By shifting to a venue with casino economics, they can generate the kind of site fee and high-roller revenue needed to satisfy Floyd’s price tag, even if the professional vs. exhibition argument isn’t fully settled yet.

Mayweather (50-0) won their 2015 meeting by unanimous decision. Pacquiao (62-8-3) last fought to a draw against Mario Barrios for the WBC welterweight title, while Mayweather is set for an exhibition appearance on June 27.

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