LAS VEGAS – Floyd Mayweather Jr. definitively answered the question that has consumed boxing for more than five years.
Yes,
Mayweather is indeed the greatest fighter of this generation, proving
so Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena by masterfully outboxing
Manny Pacquiao over 12 rounds to prevail via unanimous decision in the
so-called “Fight of the Century.”
Judge Dave Moretti scored it 118-110, while Burt Clements and Glenn Feldman had it 116-112.
The
bout between two of the greatest fighters of all time was in play since
late 2009 and was originally being discussed for a March 2010 date.
Mayweather had just ended a brief retirement with a shutout victory over
Pacquiao rival Juan Manuel Marquez that September. Pacquiao responded
two months later with one of the biggest victories of his career, a
stoppage of Miguel Cotto.
It was a rarity – the recognized
pound-for-pound best fighters in the world competing in the same weight
class while in their primes. However, the proposed matchup fell apart at
the negotiating table after Pacquiao refused to undergo Olympic-style
drug testing, scuttling the super fight.
After that, there was
always talk of the pair coming together for the big fight but it never
came to fruition. Many reasons were given: the split of purses,
drug-testing procedures, who would be the A-side, location, date, etc.
And, of course, matters became much more complicated when Mayweather
fled HBO for rival network Showtime in 2013.
That made the deal
all the more complicated to put together, and both Pacquaio’s promoter
Top Rank and Showtime Sports president Stephen Espinoza credited CBS
president/CEO Les Moonves as the key to finalizing the fight (CBS is
Showtime’s parent company).
The commentary team was shared between
HBO and Showtime on the second-ever joint PPV telecast between the
networks, as were the ring announcing duties. The Lennox Lewis-Mike
Tyson fight in 2002 was the first.
The event is expected to
shatter every revenue and pay-per-view buy rate record, with upward of
$300 million and 3 million buys in play. The event cost a record $99.99
in high definition and ringside tickets were sold for $10,000, although
none of those seats were open to the public.
Mayweather, who
prides himself on his undefeated record, said in the lead-up he plans to
fight in September and call it a career. He has one fight remaining on
his six-bout deal with Showtime.