The Question: Why Did It Take Floyd Mayweather so Long to Stop Conor McGregor?

It was supposed to be a mismatch.
But there was Conor McGregor on Saturday night at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, peppering Floyd Mayweather’s head and body with punches—outboxing the best boxer of a generation over the first three rou…

It was supposed to be a mismatch.

But there was Conor McGregor on Saturday night at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, peppering Floyd Mayweather‘s head and body with punches—outboxing the best boxer of a generation over the first three rounds in their boxing vs. MMA superstars pay-per-view megafight.

What had McGregor’s prefight mind games done to Mayweather?

McGregor agreed to a match versus Mayweather using Mayweather’s rules. He had conceded all that he knew before to have a chance at trading leather with the preeminent boxer of this era. It was Mayweather, the undefeated boxing great and winner of 49 consecutive fights, versus McGregor, a man competing in his first-ever professional boxing match.

Why did it take so long for Mayweather to finish him off?

      

Formulating the Plan

Despite giving away the first three rounds of the fight, it’s likely Mayweather was never in any real trouble on fight night. Yes, McGregor’s oddball southpaw stance and decidedly un-boxing-like punching angles were new data sets for Mayweather to process.

But Mayweather notoriously skips the prefight ritual of watching film of the opponent before fights, so using the first few rounds as a study course on McGregor was a given heading into things. Still, no matter how many different boxing styles Mayweather had faced before, and he probably thought he had faced them all, he had never encountered one quite like McGregor’s.

Heck, no one had. If one had never seen an MMA fighter try to box before, McGregor’s unorthodox striking tactics looked like something from Invasion of the Body Snatchers. McGregor sure looked like a regular dude on the outside, but his moves made him look like some kind of alien just pretending to be human.

But the truth of the matter is that Mayweather was so confident in his ability to dominate McGregor over the longer stretch of the fight that he conceded the early rounds, particularly Rounds 1 through 3, so that he could measure McGregor’s skill set.

Maybe Mayweather wanted to put on a show. After all, he had promised fans a knockout victory in the fight, and the way he strutted toward McGregor from the opening bell indicates Mayweather was absolutely certain the MMA star wouldn’t be able to land any meaningful punches clean.

And McGregor didn’t. Even early on, when McGregor was still fresh and strong, most of McGregor’s punches were either blocked by Mayweather’s arms and gloves or he was able to slip them just enough to minimize the potential knockout force behind them.

So while it may have looked like Mayweather was in trouble during the first quarter of the fight, there was a reason he was smiling at McGregor when the bell sounded to end Round 3.

Mayweather had formulated the plan to defeat McGregor.

     

Execution of the Plan

Mayweather’s masterful execution and dismantling of McGregor began in Round 4. Where the previous three rounds of the fight saw Mayweather simply walking toward McGregor with his arms guarding his face and body, in Round 4 we saw Mayweather establish his lead right hand and begin to create effective punching angles.

The idea behind creating a punching angle is this: A fighter wants to have his feet and body positioned so that it is easy for him to land punches while his opponent cannot. Call it Advance Boxing Geometry, and Mayweather is as good at it as any fighter in history.

One wonders what ran through McGregor’s mind the very first time his head was snapped back by the force of that patented Mayweather punch. Historically, the rear hand power shot had been Mayweather’s most devastating weapon, and it would play a heavy factor in this fight, too. How many times had McGregor seen clips of Mayweather landing this punch on other fighters? How many times did he tell himself it would be easy to get out of the way?

Whatever the answers, Round 4 marked the beginning of reality in the fight. This was Mayweather’s ring and McGregor was simply a guest. The bill was due now and eviction was coming.

Mayweather had begun the bout with a special emphasis on throwing punches to McGregor’s body. The reason a fighter wants to do this, especially during the early rounds, is that it can pay dividends later in the fight. Body punches don’t often stop a fighter the round in which they are thrown. They wear on an opponent over time so that, as minutes pass, the recipient’s feet start feeling heavy as lead and his torso begins throbbing with the phantom pain of punches that have come but are long gone by now.

Mayweather really turned up the pressure beginning in Round 4, and in each round after, he dialed it up a little more. His steady walk forward was now augmented by short bursts of explosive quickness.

Like any good professional boxer, Mayweather never kept his head in one place for too long, so while McGregor was huffing and puffing to blow Mayweather’s house down, Mayweather was gliding forward with a full amount of air in his lungs hurling lefts and rights at McGregor’s larger but consistently more stationary frame.

McGregor did his best to keep Mayweather at a long enough punching distance but couldn’t overcome Mayweather’s pristine footwork. The hardest thing to do in boxing is fight well on the inside where a puncher’s power can be smothered by his own body, especially for the larger fighter.

Mayweather knew it, and he probably suspected McGregor had done nothing in his life to prepare for just how long a 12-round fight with three-minute rounds actually feels. By Round 5, McGregor couldn’t keep his mouth closed from tiredness. Mayweather, meanwhile, continued to amp up the pressure as he pursued McGregor every second, sometimes throwing combination punches in bursts but sometimes content just to let McGregor punch himself out of the fight.

At the end of Round 5, Mayweather shoved McGregor as the two were set to depart back to their corners. “Show me that power!” he exclaimed, knowing full well McGregor would be incapable of doing it.

The next two rounds would play out the exact same script only with Mayweather increasing his pace by a degree or two here and there until, by the end of Round 7, McGregor started to get that bewildered look a fighter gets in his eyes when he knows he’s about to lose the fight.

That was the beginning of Conor McGregor’s end.

     

The End of McGregor

Mayweather isn’t a knockout puncher. He is the type of fighter who hits just hard enough.

He hits just hard enough to keep his opponents wary of his power. He hits just hard enough to keep them from foolhardily rushing forward the whole fight. He hits just hard enough to knock a fighter out from an accumulation of punches over the course of the bout.

And no one in the sport is as solid a performer as Mayweather on fight night.

“He’s composed, he’s not that fast, he’s not that powerful, but boy is he composed in there,” McGregor would say immediately after the fight. “I thought it was close though, and I thought it was a bit of an early stoppage. I was just a little fatigued. He was just a lot more composed with his shots.”

Mayweather’s level of composure is what separates him from the rest of the boxing world. The entire world could be falling into chaos around him and he’d still be rock steady ready to win a boxing match.

When Round 8 began, McGregor’s world was falling into pieces. He could hardly hold his arms up anymore and Mayweather was there smirking at him as the round began.

If nothing else a game fighter, McGregor kept throwing punches and moving backward to give him his best chance to get some leverage on his shots. But Mayweather was smarter and faster like Mayweather always is in a boxing ring, and he kept closing the distance under McGregor’s longer reach to land a frighteningly increased number of potshots.

The last two rounds of the fight, in which referee Robert Byrd could honestly have stopped the bout in either, was simply Mayweather’s formulated plan at full throttle. Mayweather had secured McGregor to the bottom of the pool. He had filled it up with enough water to cover McGregor’s entire body, and now all he had to do in order to drown him completely was cover McGregor’s head with the water.

McGregor was visibly shaken by Mayweather’s punches in Round 9. He did his best to play coy, but Round 9 marked the first time McGregor had to grab and hold Mayweather to get his wits about him.

In Round 10, Mayweather closed the show. McGregor was beat before the bell signified a beginning of action, and Mayweather knew it. He marched forward like an army of avalanches, overwhelming McGregor with clean, hard punches that rocked McGregor’s head around as if it was on a swivel.

McGregor may not have wanted to be saved by the referee to end the fight, but he sure needed it.

“This is my last fight, ladies and gentlemen,” Mayweather said after the bout. “For sure. This is my last fight. Tonight, I chose the right dance partner to dance.”

Mayweather went on to praise McGregor’s effort and rightly so. What was supposed to be a boring, one-sided squash match instead turned into must-watch television.

McGregor enjoyed enough moments early to make the bout entertaining to watch, and while Mayweather probably could have won the fight in 50 other different ways, the fact that he chose the one that would be the most fun to watch will leave a lasting impression for years to come.

So, why did it take so long for Mayweather to stop McGregor? That’s easy. It’s because he wanted it to.

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Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor: Results, Breakdown of Historic Fight

Proving a predictable fight can still entertain and exceed expectations, Floyd Mayweather moved to 50-0 on Saturday with a dismissal of Conor McGregor at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. 
Other than the historic hype, the fight panned o…

Proving a predictable fight can still entertain and exceed expectations, Floyd Mayweather moved to 50-0 on Saturday with a dismissal of Conor McGregor at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. 

Other than the historic hype, the fight panned out as a typical Mayweather affair, with his elusive ways gassing McGregor after a few surprising opening rounds and eventually causing the referee to waive the fight off.

The 10th-round technical knockout was scored at 87-83, 89-82, 89-81 for Mayweather before the stoppage, per MMAjunkie

If McGregor seeming out on his feet didn’t convince viewers this one got lopsided after the halfway mark, if not a little earlier, take a look at the fight metrics provided by CompuBox, via ESPN.com’s Arash Markazi:

Major names and perhaps the most lucrative fight in history aside, the breakdown sure seems familiar: Mayweather feels out the competition, Mayweather adapts and whips the competition while being more accurate on fewer punches. Result? Early stoppage or a serious disparity on the scorecards. 

Here we go again, right? McGregor outpaced Mayweather on power punches by more than half and only hit on a fourth of them compared to Mayweather’s 58 percent. The only thing in major favor of McGregor in the numbers above were the first few rounds. 

ESPN Stats & Info illustrated Mayweather’s measured start: 

Go figure—Mayweather takes his time figuring out McGregor while hoping the UFC star accustomed to shorter bouts gasses himself. Ever the showman, Mayweather’s approach also stirs up the entertainment value for fans because it suggests there is a chance he leaves the building 49-1. 

Those first few rounds were, funnily enough, the most entertaining thing involving Mayweather in years, unlike the similarly hyped disappointment that was the fight with Pacquiao in May 2015.

McGregor looked like a natural for a few rounds, always pushing forward and peppering the gloves in a more-is-better approach. Mayweather wasn’t taking too many hits, as per the usual, but the quantity disparity was enough to skew the scorecards.  

But it all seemed by design, which Mayweather confirmed after the match, according to Mike Bohn of Rolling Stone.

“Our game plan was to take our time, go to him, let him shoot his shots early and then take him out down the stretch,” Mayweather said. “We know in MMA he fights for 25 minutes. After 25 minutes, he started to slow down. I guaranteed to everybody that this wouldn’t go the distance.”

Round 6 and beyond was a snowball McGregor couldn’t prevent from going downhill. Confidence and swagger while on the attack are one thing, but five rounds of whiffs and starting to catch counters in his first professional boxing match looking poised to go the distance had McGregor out of his comfort zone.

“He’s composed, he’s not that fast, he’s not that powerful, but boy, is he composed in there,” McGregor said, according to ESPN.com’s Dan Rafael. “I thought it was close, though, and I thought it was a bit of an early stoppage. I was just a little fatigued. He was just a lot more composed with his shots. I have to give it to him, that’s what 50 pro fights will do for you.”

By the end, the stoppage seemed justified, even if McGregor would never admit it (why would he?). He wasn’t defending himself before the referee stepped in and Mayweather was on an all-out assault path by that point, hunting for a knockout.  

While the breakdown here could be copied and pasted to most of Mayweather’s fights, the good news is McGregor fared better than Pacquiao and many others who have stepped in the ring with Money. Startup boxer or not, McGregor certainly has a viable career path here, should he choose to take it.  

While Mayweather likely sits on the coveted 50-0 mark and calls it a career, McGregor’s next move and the impact on this fight actually matching the hype will be an interesting bit of fallout to watch.   

For once, something pegged as historic before it happened met the hype, so it’s no wonder the general reaction to Mayweather-McGregor has been overwhelmingly positive.   

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Paulie, Canelo, Golovkin: Crossover Fights for Conor McGregor to Consider

Conor McGregor had the most lucrative boxing debut of all time.
It’s safe to say he has more opportunities than any 0-1 fighter coming off a TKO loss.
Given the skills and mettle he showed while surviving into Round 10 against Floyd Mayweather at the T…

Conor McGregor had the most lucrative boxing debut of all time.

It’s safe to say he has more opportunities than any 0-1 fighter coming off a TKO loss.

Given the skills and mettle he showed while surviving into Round 10 against Floyd Mayweather at the T-Mobile Arena, some of the most frequent themes at the post-fight press conference focused on whether the chatty Irishman would consider a part-time ring gig alongside his full-time MMA commitments.

UFC boss Dana White seemed less than enthralled with the idea his top seat-filler might have other combat sports possibilities, but McGregor himself left the locker room door wide open.

“I have many options in mixed martial arts. I’m sure there’s options that will present themselves in the boxing game,” he said at the post-fight press conference following his loss on Saturday. “But right now I’m a free agent. My name is on the ring. I am certainly open to all options. I am young, I’m fresh and I am ready.”

Given that reality and the number of boxers who’d surely like to deposit a seven-figure paycheck, we came up with a list of possible foes should the Notorious one indeed decide to give boxing another go.

Begin Slideshow

Ranking Floyd Mayweather’s Options for His Next Career Move

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vanquished Conor McGregor on Saturday night in the 10th round of a fight that somehow managed to exceed even the loftiest (and some say biased) expectations despite featuring one of the best boxers of all time and a newbi…

Floyd Mayweather Jr. vanquished Conor McGregor on Saturday night in the 10th round of a fight that somehow managed to exceed even the loftiest (and some say biased) expectations despite featuring one of the best boxers of all time and a newbie to the sport.

Whatever else you may think of it, the bout was a beautiful spectacle and full of the drama fans demand in a game where you’re always one punch from the end.

Mayweather, now 50-0, vowed to retire following the fight, per Lance Pugmire of the Los Angeles Times, comments he doubled down on once the dust settled at the T-Mobile Arena. 

But should he? And will he?

Or will the allure of hundreds of millions of dollars draw him back once again?

Let’s look at his five best options, including a couple of potential enticing matchups.

Begin Slideshow

After Loss to Floyd Mayweather, Who Should Conor McGregor Fight Next?

When a fight comes to a close, it doesn’t take long to ask the inevitable question: what’s next?
Floyd Mayweather Jr. is 50-0 and is headed back into retirement, but Conor McGregor is still in his prime as the UFC lightweight champion. However, his per…

When a fight comes to a close, it doesn’t take long to ask the inevitable question: what’s next?

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is 50-0 and is headed back into retirement, but Conor McGregor is still in his prime as the UFC lightweight champion. However, his performance against Mayweather—a competitive 10th-round TKO loss Saturday night in Las Vegasleaves options open in the boxing realm.

Steven Rondina, what should McGregor do for his next bout with the “Money Fight” now behind us?

First, here’s what MMAFighting.com’s Ariel Helwani noted:

            

Steven: McGregor will have been out of UFC competition for over a year by the time he returns to the Octagon.

On the one hand, that’s bad due to the noticeable dip in UFC pay-per-view sales and the glut of contenders in the lightweight and featherweight divisions. On the other hand, it’s great because there are so many prospective opponents for him.

If I’m in charge, I’m throwing McGregor a softball for his return. While he may have lost to Mayweather, the response to his performance has been resoundingly positive. There will be a lot of curious newcomers watching when McGregor next enters the cage, and it would be silly to put him in a position to lose.

Jeremy Stephens is a perfect opponent. The storyline of looking to get revenge for McGregor‘s epic diss (link NSFW) last year is easy to sell. While some MMA fans might harrumph about the matchup, it would soar over one million buys and would end with an impressive victory for McGregor.

Unfortunately for the entire combat sports world, I’m not in charge of the UFC. Sean Shelby and Dana White are, and they’re nothing if not shortsighted with their talent.

They’ll put together the biggest fight possible, no matter the risk involved. And the biggest fight possible is a rubber match with Nate Diaz.

           

Nathan: That’s the fight to make.

Any return fight for McGregor will do over a million buys, which has become the benchmark for UFC success. That’s the strength of McGregor‘s name. Still, it’s about making the biggest fight possible.

Diaz is that fight, as ESPN’s Pat Muldowney and MMAjunkie’s Chamatkar Sandhu tweeted:

Their rematch did 1.65 million buys (h/t MMA Payout), and following McGregor‘s boxing spectacle with Floyd, it will do no less than two million. No other fight touches that mark.

McGregor talks about money and paydays for a reason. That’s where his interest lies. The only other fight that would net him equal, if not more, dead presidents is a boxing tilt against Paulie Malignaggi, but it’s not a fight the combat sports world is clamoring for at the moment.

            

Steven: The McGregor vs. Malignaggi beef started out interesting but lost steam quickly. That said, if McGregor‘s next fight takes place in a ring (or if Malignaggi is willing to get into the cage), that’s the one to make.

While the discussion of training-partner etiquette is lost on most combat sports fans, this is still a bona fide grudge match in a way few fights are. Looking to get revenge against McGregor in the ring is a pay-per-view slam dunk, and so is turning the tables by facing a boxer in the cage.

Don’t get me wrong: I want to see McGregor vs. Diaz III. Their rivalry is one of the greatest in MMA history, and I could see that fight blowing away the UFC PPV buyrate record. But the reward isn’t worth the risk.

Of course, McGregor has plenty of suitors past Diaz and Malignaggi. Georges St-Pierre, Tyron Woodley, Max Holloway, Tony Ferguson, Kevin Lee and Khabib Nurmagomedov all make sense. Do any of those tickle your fancy more than the rubber match?

              

Nathan: No.

I don’t want to see McGregor even attempt to cut back to featherweight, and any lightweight or welterweight foe not named Nate Diaz doesn’t interest me at this juncture.

The Malignaggi fight doesn’t attract me in the slightest, but considering the economics of a non-MMA bout makes it a possibility. It’s not a stretch to imagine Zuffa with its boxing platform in association with McGregor Sports and Entertainment for that fight.

What should come next is simple. Any other opponent besides Diaz, and I’m buying the event simply to watch McGregor. No one else adds value. Diaz adds value and intrigue. That’s the fight to make.

Period.

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Don’t Shortchange Floyd Mayweather’s Legacy After Legendary Career Ends at 50-0

Floyd Mayweather ended his storied boxing career by knocking out the most feared MMA fighter on the planet. After defeating Conor McGregor on Saturday night in Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena, Mayweather rode off into the sunset holding the most pristi…

Floyd Mayweather ended his storied boxing career by knocking out the most feared MMA fighter on the planet. After defeating Conor McGregor on Saturday night in Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena, Mayweather rode off into the sunset holding the most pristine record in all of boxing history.

50-0.

It is no small feat in such a rough and tough sport, and it’s one that will likely go unmatched for decades—the same way former heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano’s 49-0 mark stood from 1955 until Mayweather’s win over McGregor. Whatever you think about the man outside of the ring, Mayweather, a fighter who was lineal champion in four different weight classes, has set boxing’s new benchmark of perfection.

Yet many in the boxing media seldom praise Mayweather’s legacy as a fighter. While pundits will begrudgingly tip their hats to him as the best of his time, Mayweather is often roasted in the peanut gallery as a cautionary tale rather than an example for young fighters to follow.

Sport’s Illustrated’s Chris Mannix summed the totality of such views before Mayweather’s last so-called retirement fight—a 12-round decision against Andre Berto in 2015:

“Mayweather could have been a legend, could have been, as he loves to say he is already, the best ever. If he fought the fights that were out there—if he had engaged Manny Pacquiao in a trilogy, if he had taken on Miguel Cotto earlier in his career, if he had picked apart Paul Williams, if he had challenged Tim Bradley—his resume would have be bulletproof. Instead, we spend too much time, waste too many column inches on the fights Mayweather didn’t fight, of his baseless defenses of opponents everyone knew were not worthy.”

Mayweather’s defeat of McGregor has probably done little to sway those with such a strong opinion on his resume. While McGregor is as feared a striker as exists in MMA, the reality of the situation is that he had competed in exactly zero professional boxing matches prior to facing Mayweather.

Other than knocking McGregor out, which Mayweather did by the way, there was really nothing more for him to do to stem the tide of such heavy criticism.

But in his last fight ever, Mayweather gave the public exactly what it wanted: the world’s best boxer versus the world’s best MMA fighter. The bout against McGregor was almost exclusively made to send Mayweather to retirement in style. Ever since McGregor began hemming and hawing about wanting to box him after Mayweather’s win over Berto nearly two years ago, the sports media world devoted it’s full attention to getting the fight made.

Mayweather made it. And once the bell rang on fight night, McGregor’s spirited effort helped Mayweather finalize his career in a spectacular way. He scored a sensational knockout against a household name and made millions of dollars doing it. There is no fighter in the history of boxing who could have finished his career in such a fitting manner.

Even if Mayweather’s last fight wasn’t his toughest test, his resume is littered with the names of men who were deemed at the time to be excellent competition. Jose Luis Castillo. Diego Corrales. Arturo Gatti. Oscar De La Hoya. Zab Judah. Shane Mosley. Miguel Cotto. Canelo Alvarez. Manny Pacquiao.

How many future Hall of Fame fighters are on that list? And how many great fighters must the greatest fighter of an era defeat to be worthy of praise?

Marciano, the only heavyweight to retire both champion and undefeated (and stay that way), did not suffer the same fate as Mayweather once he left boxing. He was lauded as an all-time great fighter the moment he left the ring and is still considered one of the greatest boxing champions ever.

What’s right praise for Marciano should be right praise for Mayweather, too.

If you think Pacquiao looked past his prime against Mayweather in 2015, you should have seen how old Joe Louis looked when he got knocked out by Marciano in 1951. And after he won the heavyweight crown the next year against Jersey Joe Walcott, Marciano only defended it six times before he retired, albeit against stalwart boxing legends such as Walcott, Ezzard Charles and Archie Moore. Mayweather, on the other hand, has defended his world title belts 21 different occasions.

Still, isn’t Mayweather’s resume at least equal or better in quantity and quality as the revered Marciano’s?

Perhaps it’s his persona that’s off-putting. Yahoo.com’s Kevin Iole detailed Mayweather’s rapid ascension as a household name starting with his 2007 bout against De La Hoya:

“When HBO created the preview series “24/7” to promote his May 5, 2007, bout with Oscar De La Hoya, Mayweather saw it as an opportunity.

“He portrayed himself as an over-the-top, ostentatious character who knew no bounds. He changed his nickname from “Pretty Boy” Floyd to “Money May,” and he’d boast incessantly about his wealth and what it did for him.

“It was a clever way to attract mainstream attention and expand beyond the comparatively small boxing audience.

“He became a celebrity much the way Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian became celebrities. It wasn’t so much for any particular talent, because the mainstream doesn’t care much for boxing talent. It was because of the opulent lifestyle he portrayed.”

Mayweather is criticized for his extreme existentialism. He defines himself publicly by whatever external measures he pleases, most often aggrandizing things like materialism and wealth while minimizing certain aspects of competition. Perhaps Mayweather’s definition of greatness has more to do with how much money he can retire with in his bank account than how great the fighters were that he defeated, and because of that, the people in the sport shun him for uprooting their own sense of boxing’s more traditional values.

Or maybe none of that is true and Mayweather is simply a product of his time. Fighters today do not treat their careers the same way old-timers did. Where 70 years ago boxers engaged in bouts every month and ran up careers that spanned 200-plus fights, today once a fighter reaches a certain level it is assumed he will carefully choose just two or three fights a year at the most.

Should Mayweather be blamed for that, especially considering all we know today about the physical damage that occurs to a boxer’s brain and body?

Losses on a fighter’s resume in the previous era of the sport meant he had put in work against the toughest competition available and that he was a seasoned professional. Today, one or two losses can send even the top fighters to the brink of irrelevancy. Look no further than formerly undefeated light heavyweight Sergey Kovalev, who is reportedly considering retirement at the age of 34 after being defeated twice by the pound-for-pound best fighter in the sport, Andre Ward.

Regardless, it’s difficult to gauge how much of Mayweather’s legacy has been defined by those who criticize the wrong aspects of his overall work.

In the end, perhaps it is as simple as this: Mayweather was as great a fighter as his time period allowed. He captured 15 world titles in five different weight classes. He fought and defeated the single greatest rival to his claim as the era’s best in Pacquiao, and he did so decisively. And at 40 years old in the final fight of his legendary career, he put on a spectacular show against the most feared fighter in the world today, knocking him out in Round 10 of perhaps the biggest pay-per-view event in boxing history.

 

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