Dailymaverick logo

Newsdeck

This article is more than 4 years old

World

Boxing-'This is not a real fight for me': Mayweather sees little threat in Paul

June 3 (Reuters) - Floyd Mayweather's exhibition match against YouTube star-turned-amateur boxer Logan Paul on Sunday could amount to little more than an easy paycheck for the undefeated former world champion, who leveled a withering assessment of his opponent's odds on Thursday.
Reuters
Undefeated boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. of the U.S. attends a news conference at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas

By Amy Tennery

"I'm fighting a YouTuber who thinks he's a real fighter and I'm getting crazy money for it," Mayweather told reporters at Versace Mansion in Miami Beach, adding he had already made $30 million in the leadup to the fight.

"This is not a real fight for me. It's a real fight for him."

Mayweather, who was world champion in five weight divisions, last came out of retirement in 2017, when he defeated mixed martial arts competitor Conor McGregor.

"I retired from boxing but I didn't retire from entertainment and I didn't retire from making money," said Mayweather.

The eight-round fight at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, where tickets were being offered for well into the five figures on the online resale market StubHub, will have no judges and no official winner but a knockout is allowed.

A defiant Paul, 26, told reporters that he could hold his own against 44-year-old Mayweather, who boasts a pristine 50-0 record in his 25 years of professional boxing.

He is the brother of fellow YouTube figure and boxer Jake Paul.

"There's a moment that goes through every fighter's mind, everyone we spar, everyone Jake's beaten, when we hit them and they realize 'Oh, he might not just do YouTube,'" said Logan Paul. "I think we're going to see Floyd's eyes light up the first time I hit him."

Paul's record stands at 0-1 after losing an exhibition fight to a fellow YouTube personality.

"For Floyd's sake let's hope it doesn't get physical," said Paul, who at 6 feet, 2 inches (1.88 m), has repeatedly touted his size advantage over the 5-foot, 8-inch (1.73 m) Mayweather. (Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Comments

Loading your account…
Carsten Rasch 4 June 2021 07:58 AM

He thought his nose was bleeding but its snot...