The Herald (South Africa)

Floyd’s no people’s champion

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FOR all that Floyd Mayweather says it is not in his make-up to lose, there is one fight he just cannot seem to win. Mayweather burnished his perfect ring record and reputation as a consummate craftsman with a 12-round unanimous decision over Manny Pacquiao on Saturday only to depart the MGM Grand Garden Arena to a chorus of jeers.

It was an unequivoca­l victory that stamped the 48-0 American the best of his era.

But in the crowning moment of his career, the 38-year-old champion was defiant in the face of the evidence that his undeniable skills had not earned him a place in the hearts of boxing fans as greats like Muhammad Ali, Sugar Ray Robinson and Sugar Ray Leonard did. Mayweather professes not to care. “A 19-year career with no punishment on the body – and the money,” he said of what he considers the defining characteri­stics of his greatness. Those hallmarks, however, diminish him in the eyes of some.

Mayweather’s impressive CV lacks the kind of wars that make the greatest ring theatre: Ali versus Joe Frazier, Marvin Hagler versus Thomas Hearns.

Although he is ridden his perfect record to a reign as the highest-paid sportsman in the world, his insistence that the money is the goal makes him hard to root for.

Making it even harder is a string of incidents of violence against women -- including a two-month jail stint for assaulting the mother of three of his children. Perhaps it is no wonder Mayweather sounded tired of it all.

“At one particular time, I loved the sport of boxing,” he said. “I wanted to go to every fight. But I’ve just lost the love of the sport.

“My love and my passion for boxing is not the same, like it once was, but this is my job, to go out there and be at my best when doing my job.”

Mayweather insists that breaking Rocky Marciano’s 49-0 record is not a goal for him.

He says he will retire after one more fight in September – and it may not even be for a championsh­ip if he follows through with a plan to relinquish all of his title belts.

Who the opponent will be – and whether Pacquiao might get a re-match – was not a topic he cared to entertain immediatel­y after the fight.

But he did not mind looking ahead even further – to the time when the sport he took up as a toddler is behind him.

“I don’t think I’ll miss the sport of boxing,” Mayweather said. He will no doubt remain involved thanks to his Mayweather Promotions company and the young fighters who train at his Las Vegas gym.

“I don’t watch boxing any more, unless it’s someone coming to my gym,” he said. – AFP

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? MONEY TALKS: Floyd Mayweather poses with his title belts after defeating Manny Pacquiao in their welterweig­ht WBO, WBC and WBA (Super) title fight in Las Vegas at the weekend
Picture: REUTERS MONEY TALKS: Floyd Mayweather poses with his title belts after defeating Manny Pacquiao in their welterweig­ht WBO, WBC and WBA (Super) title fight in Las Vegas at the weekend

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