Otago Daily Times

Life in the ring brought titles, champions and controvers­y

- ROGER MAYWEATHER Boxer and trainer

ROGER Mayweather, a former twodivisio­n champion and uncle and trainer to Floyd Mayweather jun, died last month after battling declining health for years and several known medical issues, including a long battle with diabetes. He was 58.

Mayweather compiled a profession­al record of 59 wins, 25 of those victories via knockout, and also had 13 losses in a career that spanned from 1981 through 1999 before he moved on as a fulltime trainer to his nephew.

“My uncle was one of the most important people in my life inside and outside of the ring,” Floyd said.

“Roger was a great champion and one of the best trainers in boxing. Unfortunat­ely, his health was failing him for several years and now he can finally rest in peace. Roger meant the world to me, my father Floyd sen, my uncle Jeff, our whole family, everyone in and around the Mayweather Boxing Gym and the entire boxing world. It is a terrible loss for all of us.”

Roger Mayweather was born

April 24, 1961, in Grand Rapids, in the state of Michigan.

He first became a champion in 1983 with a technical knockout over Samuel Serrano for the World Boxing Associatio­n superfeath­erweight title in Serrano’s home country of Puerto Rico. He defended the title twice before suffering his first loss, in his 18th fight, to Rocky Lockridge in 1984.

In 1985, Mayweather met Julio Cesar Chavez for the World Boxing Council superfeath­erweight title but was stopped in the second round. He went on to become a champion again in 1987 with a TKO against Rene Arredondo at the Sports Arena to win the WBC superlight­weight title. He defended the belt four times before losing to Chavez in 1989 at the Forum on a 10thround TKO.

“An opponent in the ring, a great friend, coach and person outside of it. I regret the loss of one of boxing’s greats. I will always have you in my heart,” Chavez said on Twitter.

Mayweather was seemingly a Southern California staple during his heyday, fighting 11 times in Los Angeles. He headlined events at the Olympic Auditorium, Reseda Country

Club and Hollywood Palladium.

The selfanoint­ed “Black Mamba” also defeated the likes of former champion Vinny Pazienza, but lost unanimous decisions to Hall of Famers fighters Pernell Whitaker and Kostya Tszyu.

“One day when I was flipping through channels and I came upon this channel showing different reptiles, and they were showing the black mamba,” Mayweather said in 2006.

“I loved the way the mamba attacked so quietly, but when he hit you he just hit you one time and the poison was in you. That reminded me of myself right there.”

Roger was the most successful slugger among his siblings. Brother Jeff was 32105 from 1988 to 1997, and Floyd sen was 2861 from 1974 to 1990.

When Floyd sen was in prison, Roger partly put his career on pause and helped guide Floyd jun’s pro career from 1996 to

1998. After Floyd jun fired Floyd sen as his trainer, Roger resumed duties and directed Floyd jun as head trainer in 2000, shaping him into one of the great boxers.

Roger was no stranger to controvers­y. In 2006, he started a riot in the ring in the middle of a fight when opponent Zab Juddah hit Floyd jun with a low blow. He was banned by the Nevada State Athletic Commission for a year and fined $200,000. In 2009, he was arrested on charges of coercion with force and battery strangulat­ion on Melissa St Vil, a female boxer he trained.

Floyd jun finished 500, but towards the end, he reunited with his father, just as Roger’s health was beginning to fail.

Floyd jun blamed boxing for damaging his uncle’s brain.

“My uncle Roger Mayweather has lost a lot of memory from the sport of boxing,” he said.

“He’s only in his 50s, but it seems like he’s an old man in his 80s.”

Floyd jun, whose uncle’s death came less than a week after Josie Harris, the mother of three of Floyd jun’s children, was found dead just outside Santa Clarita, said he was thankful for all the love and goodwishes he and his family had received.

“It helps me to see that he was able to touch so many people through [Roger’s] life in boxing, because he gave so much to the sport which was his first and longtime love,” he said. — Los Angeles Times

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Training hard . . . Roger Mayweather (right) puts WBC welterweig­ht champion Floyd Mayweather through his paces at the Mayweather Boxing Club in Las Vegas, Nevada.
PHOTO: REUTERS Training hard . . . Roger Mayweather (right) puts WBC welterweig­ht champion Floyd Mayweather through his paces at the Mayweather Boxing Club in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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