The fight of the century came and went, and in the end, nothing changed. Floyd Mayweather Jr. defeated Manny Pacquiao to stay unbeaten on Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, NV, seizing control of the latter stages of the fight to claim a unanimous decision on the judges’ scorecards.
Judges Burt Clements and Glenn Feldman scored the contest 116-112, while judge Dave Moretti scored it 118-110, all in favor of Mayweather.
“He’s a hell of a fighter,” Mayweather said afterward of the rival he struggled to reach terms with for over half a decade. “I take my hat off to Manny Pacquiao. Now I see why he’s one of the guys who is at the pinnacle of the sport of boxing.”
In a fight that will likely go down as the most lucrative combat sports event ever, Mayweather battled through an usually shaky start to seize control of momentum and sweep the scorecards from round seven onwards. Pacquiao wanted to make it the contest a dogfight, and he did so with some success early, stalking Mayweather into the ropes and unloading his trademark punching flurries while cutting off the ring to great effect.
The punching totals for both fighters were virtually identical by the start of the eighth round, but then Mayweather took over. “Money” went back to his jab and proved once again why he’s the greatest defensive fighter of our era, lulling Pacquiao’s offense into a standstill and outlanding the legendarily aggressive Filipino by a mark of 148 to 81 by the fight’s end.
“I knew he was going to push me,” Mayweather said. “I knew he was going to win some rounds. He had moments in the fight, but I kept him on the outside. I was the smarter fighter. I outboxed him.”
Pacquiao (57-6-2), for his part, believed he won the fight, claiming that Mayweather “did nothing” and was largely running away throughout the contest. The judges disagreed though, and according to official fight statistics, Pacquiao landed double-digit punch totals just twice over the course of 12 rounds, with Mayweather’s movement and defense proving too stifling for Pacquiao to overcome.
Mayweather (48-0) now moves into the final fight of the massively lucrative contract he signed with Showtime. And with Rocky Marciano’s hallowed record of 49-0 within sight, the next time we see “Money” Mayweather may very well be the last.
“My last fight is in September, then it’s time for me to hang it up,” he said. “I’m almost 40 years old. I’ve been in the sport 19 years, I’ve been world champion 18 years. I’m truly thankful and I’m blessed.”