Las Vegas Review-Journal

Son evicted father from house after 2000 dispute

-

planet. This is the biggest fight ever.”

Asked what he would have thought if someone told him Mayweather Jr. would one day earn a record $180 million for one fight while he served his own time in the mid-1990s, Mayweather Sr. stepped back and smiled.

“I’d have broke out,” he deadpanned.

Mayweather Sr. said it was a desire to provide for his family that landed him a five-year federal prison sentence in Milan, Mich., when Mayweather Jr. was 15 years old. Convicted of drug traffickin­g involving cocaine, Mayweather Sr. missed the apex of Mayweather Jr.’s amateur career and the beginning of his foray into profession­al fighting.

Mayweather Jr. unsuccessf­ully lobbied then-President Bill Clinton for a pardon of his father during the 1996 Olympics, where Mayweather Jr. ultimately took home bronze. Mayweather Jr. would often make the two-hour trek from his hometown of Grand Rapids, Mich., to Milan to visit Mayweather Sr., who lamented all that he missed.

“My life really changed since I went to the penitentia­ry,” Mayweather Sr. said. “When I came out of the penitentia­ry, I wanted no more of that.”

As they would continue to do whenever Mayweather Sr. was out of the picture, Mayweather Jr.’s uncles Roger Mayweather and Jeff Mayweather trained the young phenom during the incarcerat­ion.

Mayweather Sr. reconnecte­d upon his release and guided Mayweather Jr. to his first title, a WBC super featherwei­ght crown earned by beating Genaro Hernandez by unani- mous decision in October 1998 at what was known then as the Las Vegas Hilton.

Mayweather Sr. wouldn’t be present for the first time Mayweather Jr. won belts in any of the other four weight classes in which he became a champion. The two had a falling out in 2000 that infamously included Mayweather Jr. evicting Mayweather Sr. from the house he was living in and repossessi­ng his vehicle.

Roger Mayweather would oversee Mayweather Jr.’s developmen­t into the world’s richest athlete. Mayweather Sr. was relegated to the fringes at best, though often excommunic­ated altogether.

It was during that 12-year span that Mayweather Jr. renounced his father with words he now regrets.

“The world can say anything as long as he knows that I love him and I went out there and when I fought, I didn’t do it just for myself. I did it for the both of us,” Mayweather Jr. said. “He should be happy with that.”

During Mayweather Jr.’s televised tirade in 2011, he mocked Mayweather Sr. for being both a subpar trainer and boxer. The cheap shots sounded similar to the ones opposing trainer Freddie Roach is making ahead of the Pacquiao fight.

But Mayweather Jr. now characteri­zes the criticisms as baseless. He offers himself as living proof.

“One fight doesn’t have to validate my father being a great trainer,” Mayweather Jr. said. “What about his son being champion for 18 years? That doesn’t validate nothing?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States