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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Explaining Conor McGregor’s ‘I Turned Him into a Mexican’ Comments

It was a promotion chock-full of offensive moments.
And from the instant publicity-tour microphones went live in Los Angeles to the end of the final fight-week presser in Las Vegas, neither Floyd Mayweather Jr. nor Conor McGregor showed much regard for…

It was a promotion chock-full of offensive moments.

And from the instant publicity-tour microphones went live in Los Angeles to the end of the final fight-week presser in Las Vegas, neither Floyd Mayweather Jr. nor Conor McGregor showed much regard for the rules of decency and professional conduct as they sold their product.

Mayweather’s steady stream of F-bombs sent both censors and frazzled parents scrambling for mute-button cover, while the Irishman’s “dance for me, boy” taunt and subsequent “I’m half black from the belly button down” double-down won’t earn him awards from the NAACP any time soon.

But that doesn’t mean every syllable out of their mouths was worthy of angst.

Case in point: McGregor’s post-fight chat with Showtime’s Jim Gray, which prompted confusion and anger on social media thanks to the MMA star’s suggestions that he “turned [Mayweather] into a Mexican” and that the 40-year-old winner “fought like a Mexican” to beat him.

Gray’s initial reaction was a wide smile and hearty laugh, but within moments on Twitter and elsewhere came indignant claims that McGregor was yet again guilty of racism and insensitivity.

But, in this case at least, it could hardly be further from the truth.

As Gray or any other plugged-in boxing watcher will tell you, branding a fighter as “Mexican” is universally considered high praise and means that fighter eschews the hit-and-don’t-get-hit philosophy in favor of a rugged, come-forward approach in which seeking and destroying are the main objectives.

For much of the sport’s history, Mexican boxers have employed these entertaining, fan-friendly tactics, giving fighters from the country an admirable brand, similar to how Brazilian soccer players are known for their unparalleled skill and flair on the pitch.

Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. is widely considered the form’s modern standard-bearer thanks to a proclivity for vicious body punching, and others often mentioned among its recent best are fellow Hall of Famers like Ruben Olivares, Carlos Zarate and Marco Antonio Barrera and slam-dunk future inductee Erik Morales. Of their 381 career victories, 308 came by KO or TKO.

Meanwhile, Mayweather has forever been known as a defensive master and counterattacker, and, prior to Saturday, he hadn’t scored an undisputed stoppage in a fight since he waxed another tough-talking European import, Ricky Hatton, in December 2007.

But he was an all-out offensive force against McGregor, working the body early, becoming more aggressive as his foe grew fatigued and eventually landing 152 of 261 power punches, according to CompuBox—a super-efficient 58.2 percent—before the end came at 1:05 of Round 10.

It was a label well-earned.

And it’s not as if Mayweather’s the only one to whom it’s been non-ethnically affixed.

Popular multi-belt champ Gennady Golovkin—born and raised more than 6,000 miles away in Kazakhstan—has wholeheartedly embraced the “Mexican style” on the way to an imminent middleweight showdown with Guadalajara, Mexico, native and former 160-pound title claimant Canelo Alvarez.

He’s an aggressive stalker with power in both hands and walks opponents down with a violent intent that yielded 23 straight KOs from November 2008 to September 2016. In fact, over 37 pro fights since he won a silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics, he’s fought just 172 rounds—an average of 4.6 per fight.

The approach has made him one of HBO’s most marketable fighters. The cable giant will carry the Golovkin-Alvarez fight on its pay-per-view arm, and it’s expected to do big numbers.

“I train all of my fighters to fight in the Mexican style, to be assassins,” Golovkin’s Mexico-born trainer, Abel Sanchez, said via The Sweet Science. “It’s the only way you can protect yourself from bad decisions from the judges.”

And it’s not as if Golovkin is going it alone.

Another export from the ex-Soviet bloc, featherweight Evgeny Gradovich, won 19 straight fights, earned a 126-pound championship belt and was nicknamed the Mexican Russian after “stalking and battering [then-champ Billy Dib] with the ferocity of a feral animal” (via Maxim) in their first fight in March 2013.

Gradovich racked up four successful title defenses—including a TKO of Dib in a rematch—before losing his belt on a cut-induced technical decision. He’s won four of five fights since he was dethroned and remains a top-10 contender at 122 pounds, according to the IBF (No. 8), WBA (No. 6) and WBO (No. 5).

He was also included on the initial “Gatti List”—Jim Lampley’s rundown of the sport’s most entertaining fighters—on the inaugural episode of HBO’s The Fight Game.

The moral of the story: If it’s good for one tough guy, it’s good for another.

So even though McGregor’s track record is one of juvenile vulgarity, this time he deserves a pass because he was right.

For one farewell night in Las Vegas, Mayweather was “Mexican Money.”

 

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Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor Results: Boxing Is Megafight’s Big Winner

For the 50th time, Floyd Mayweather Jr. heard his name called, this time after swatting away Conor McGregor on Saturday night in Las Vegas after one of the most hyped fights of all time. 
Boxing, though, emerges as the biggest …

For the 50th time, Floyd Mayweather Jr. heard his name called, this time after swatting away Conor McGregor on Saturday night in Las Vegas after one of the most hyped fights of all time. 

Boxing, though, emerges as the biggest winner. 

At face value, Mayweather taking on a boxer without a round of significant boxing experience under his belt seemed like a recipe for disaster—no matter which way it turned out. Mayweather wins, the fight is a shrug-worthy affair. He loses to an opponent so green, it casts a shadow of skepticism on the sport itself. 

Other than a brief Showtime hiccup before walkouts, though, Mayweather-McGregor went off in the best possible way. 

Even the result being predictable doesn’t detract from the value of the fight for boxing as a whole. 

This was a typical Mayweather fight. He felt McGregor out for the first few rounds, sending social media into an uproar. Technically speaking, he “lost” the first two rounds while the energetic McGregor spammed the attack. 

Based on numbers from CompuBox, via ESPN.com’s Arash Markazi, McGregor took a few rounds before falling off significantly over the fight’s second half: 

Again, predictable. But few moments in sports as a whole can recreate the feeling of excitement over those first few rounds, the “Is this really happening or possible?” questions capable of making fans around the world feel like the $100 pay-per-view was money well spent. 

And it was. Mayweather did what he does, connecting on almost 60 percent of his 152 power punches. His opponent, like Manny Pacquiao and many before him, threw more trying to hit the elusive legend and missed more in the process, hitting on 25 percent of his more than 330. 

“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, according to ESPN.com’s Dan Rafael. “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.”

It’s not often sporting events live up to the hype. But after all the trash talk and pre-fight build, McGregor and Mayweather both come out of the bout with pristine legacies and having furthered the sport at a time it could have taken another hit. 

Few who watched the bout would throw criticism McGregor‘s way after going 10 rounds with a 49-0 modern legend firmly in the conversation for best of all time. Even fewer would throw some at Mayweather for fighting his fight, gassing an opponent while dissecting his plan, then going on an onslaught so brutal the referee had to stop a guy who looked out on his feet from taking even more damage. 

After the stoppage, Mayweather even copped to owing fans one after the borderline silly fight with Pacquiao. 

“I think we gave the fans what they wanted to see,” Mayweather said, per Rafael. “I owed them for the Pacquiao fight. I had to come straight ahead and give the fans a show. That’s what I gave them. He’s a lot better than I thought he’d be. He’s a tough competitor, but I was the better man tonight.”

Even if that wasn’t Mayweather’s goal or mindset when making the fight initially, a bout against McGregor might have been the only way to recoup the public’s trust in boxing after the Pacquiao debacle.

Boxing needed Mayweather-McGregor to succeed in the expectations department. The financial side of things was never in question. But burning fans again would have done irreparable damage—and as an aside, casual fans, MMA or otherwise, who hadn’t crossed over have now seen how exciting the sport of boxing can be. 

What started as a seemingly money-grabbing affair above all else delivered in a way capable of producing a trickle-down effect on the rest of boxing as it fights to fit into the mindshare of the modern sports fan.

In this way, the fight does more than prop up each man’s legacy by meeting expectations; it marks a potential rehabbing of sorts for the sport as a whole. Mayweather and McGregor both might be done with boxing, but the rest of the sport can now take the ball and run with it if done properly like Saturday’s event. 

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Mayweather vs. McGregor Results: Punch Stats, Prize Money Purse, Top Takeaways

Briefly, it looked like Conor McGregor had enough to take down Floyd Mayweather Jr. Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. 
Briefly. 
By design or not, McGregor came out firing on all cylinders and won a few rounds…

Briefly, it looked like Conor McGregor had enough to take down Floyd Mayweather Jr. Saturday night at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. 

Briefly. 

By design or not, McGregor came out firing on all cylinders and won a few rounds. A combination of Mayweather feeling him out and letting him gas himself out seemed likely, which wound up true as referee Robert Byrd stopped the fight early. 

The CompuBox numbers tell the whole story, provided by ESPN.com’s Arash Markazi

Even from a stat sheet alone, it isn’t hard to see why Mayweather earned the 10th-round TKO. McGregor outpointed him over the first five rounds, then lost the ensuing rounds in sheer punch totals by more than double. 

As is the case with any Mayweather fight, accuracy played the biggest role in McGregor needing a referee to step in and stop the onslaught: Money landed 58 percent of his 152 power punches, McGregor 25 percent of his 332. 

Predictable finish? Sure. But the fight did its job by entertaining fans, especially right after the opening bell, which showed more life than the hyped Mayweather-Manny Pacquiao fight ever did. 

And it made both guys droves of money. Scrooge McDuck’s pool level of cash. 

According to Dan Rafael of ESPN.com, Money secured a guaranteed figure of $100 million that would likely hit north of $200 million. McGregor only got $30 million as a minimum but would likely end up flirting with the $100 million mark. 

It was easy to scoff at similar numbers after the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight. For all the hype there, Mayweather toyed with another legend on the way to an easy win. Pre-fight expectations had presumed the fight would have more action (even after 50, folks still expect it with Money for some reason) and a thrilling finish. 

Low expectations providing a better reaction here or not, even someone like UFC President Dana White seemed happy with the final result, per Sports Illustrated

“I was happy with the stoppage,” White said. “Conor was tired, and I didn’t want to see two more rounds of that. This isn’t what he does. He came in; he fought Mayweather at his game.”

McGregor, as expected, didn’t necessarily agree with the early stoppage, yet tipped the hat to Mayweather’s prowess. Markazi provided the quotes: 

The takeaways here are simple. Mayweather, in an odd sort of way, was the perfect straight-up boxing opponent for McGregor because of his passive style. A more aggressive boxer might have ended the fight earlier. 

McGregor could easily keep working on his skill here and launch a solid career. But as White would probably attest, it is better for him to get back into the Octagon and continue his run there. And Mayweather? He now has his 50-0 record and can fully fade away if he wants, though the allure of a rematch won’t go away. 

Feel free to call Saturday the perfect storm. Mayweather and McGregor sat atop their respective sports, are experts in pre-fight trash talk, have rabid fanbases and provided a safe event exceeding expectations while entertaining on the way to a predictable finish. 

If viewers come away happy from the investment, even if the scorecard could’ve been predicted accurately beforehand, the event goes down as a success.

Everybody, McGregor included, scores a win in the legacy department for delivering on what seemed like unrealistic levels of hype. 

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Mayweather vs. McGregor: Highlights of Money’s Strategy to Beat Notorious

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is nothing if not a master of manipulation in the ring. He reminded spectators at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas and millions of viewers at home of his pugilistic puppeteering during his 10th-round technical knockout of UFC star …

Floyd Mayweather Jr. is nothing if not a master of manipulation in the ring. He reminded spectators at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas and millions of viewers at home of his pugilistic puppeteering during his 10th-round technical knockout of UFC star and boxing novice Conor McGregor Saturday night.

“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 after his latest win, per ESPN.com’s Arash Markazi. “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.”

Mayweather once again played it cool and methodical against an aggressive opponent en route to his 50th win in as many fights. McGregor was the aggressor from the get-go. He outpunched Mayweather through the first four rounds, 41-28. The early disparity between the two was even more apparent in total punches thrown, 180-59 in McGregor‘s favor.

Percentage-wise, though, Mayweather was much more efficient with his punches, landing 47.5 percent of his to 22.8 percent for McGregor. That economy of attack—along with plenty of time spent with his back turned to McGregor—allowed Mayweather to weather the storm while preserving his energy. By the end of the sixth round, McGregor was already visibly tired while Mayweather had barely broken a sweat.

With his wind intact, Mayweather went on to dominate McGregor from the fifth round until the 1:05 mark of the 10th. Over that span, the former landed (142) and attempted (261) far more total punches than McGregor did (69/250) and at more than twice the accuracy (54.4 percent to McGregor‘s 27.6 percent).

“Our game plan was to go straight ahead,” Mayweather said, per Markazi. “I said numerous times that I wouldn’t back down and that’s what I did.”

Round by round, Mayweather wore McGregor down, absorbing some of the MMA star’s swings but dodging most, until the newcomer was toast. Mayweather came at him hard in the ninth round and even harder in the 10th before referee Robert Byrd stepped in to stop the fight with just over a minute left in the round. Mayweather hadn’t yet knocked McGregor to the mat, but the 29-year-old Irishman went more than a minute without returning a punch, prompting Byrd to award Floyd the TKO—his first since beating Ricky Hatton in December 2007.

As McGregor said during his post-fight interview, per Markazi: “I thought it was close, though, and I thought it was a little early on the stoppage. I get a little wobbly when I’m tired. But get me in the corner and I’ll recover and I’ll come back. There’s a lot on the line here—he should have let me keep going until I hit the floor. I was just a little fatigued.”

Even if the fight had gone the distance, McGregor wouldn’t have won on the judges’ scorecards. Each of the three had Mayweather well ahead through the first nine rounds.

McGregor earned praise for putting up as much of a fight as he did against Mayweather.

He was a more accurate combatant than some of Mayweather’s more recent conquests…

…and even shattered Las Vegas’ expectations in at least one regard:

Still, just about everything went according to plan for Mayweather. He sized up McGregor early, bided his time through the middle rounds and toyed with the boxing debutant down the stretch. If there’s any surprise here, it’s that Mayweather didn’t finish him off earlier.

Then again, for a 40-year-old who hadn’t set foot in the ring in nearly two years, it’s hard to blame Mayweather for needing a little more time to find his groove again. After the fight, he made it abundantly clear that he would now return to retirement—and that the third one would stick.

“This was my last fight tonight,” he said, per Markazi. “For sure.”

That, too, went according to plan for Mayweather, whose massive payday has him poised to become just the third athlete ever to break $1 billion in career earnings.

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What Went Wrong for Conor McGregor Against Floyd Mayweather?

For a little while, it looked like he was going to pull it off. It really looked like Conor McGregor was poised to score an upset victory over Floyd Mayweather Jr. in The Money Fight.
For two rounds, McGregor looked completely at home in the ring. In a…

For a little while, it looked like he was going to pull it off. It really looked like Conor McGregor was poised to score an upset victory over Floyd Mayweather Jr. in The Money Fight.

For two rounds, McGregor looked completely at home in the ring. In a performance reminiscent of his UFC career, he stalked forward, slung heavy leather and clubbed Mayweather on a few occasions. Mayweather was never truly wounded by McGregor’s shots, but it wouldn’t have been a stretch to say he seemed rattled by the Irishman’s high-octane offense.

Then Mayweather started opening up in the third. Then he started landing in the fourth. Then he started landing a bunch in the fifth.

He was a snowball rolling downhill by the ninth round, when he staggered McGregor with a straight right to the teeth that McGregor never recovered from. The finish came in the 10th as Mayweather transformed his offense into a sustained blitzkrieg that didn’t afford McGregor the chance to return fire, resulting in a TKO victory for Money.

How did it happen? How did such a strong start by McGregor go so wrong so quickly? Bleacher Report is here to look over the bout and pinpoint what, exactly, led to his defeat.

   

The Quantitative Data

Arash Markazi of ESPN.com was kind enough to post CompuBox’s official statistics on Twitter. Check them out:

Obviously, numbers don’t tell the whole story of the fight, but there are some interesting nuances therein to discuss.

As stated, McGregor’s best rounds were the first three, and the statistics reflect that plainly. Mayweather threw a humble 28 punches in the first three rounds, landing 12, compared to McGregor’s 115 (he landed 26). Mayweather flipped the switch after that, however, with his output increasing from 31 punches thrown in the fourth to 68 by the ninth.

Worth noting, however, is that as Mayweather’s volume went up, McGregor’s did as well, with the mixed martial artist out-throwing Mayweather in seven of the first eight rounds. That said, the difference in accuracy was profound, with Mayweather landing a whopping 53.1 percent of his punches compared to McGregor’s 25.8 percent.

That difference in efficiency contributed to McGregor’s failing cardio down the stretch, and it likely was the culprit behind the dubiously lopsided score cards turned in by the judges.

   

The Qualitative Data

The numbers certainly favored Mayweather, but his advantages weren’t just on paper. Money, as he so often does, made the necessary adjustments to exploit McGregor’s established weaknesses.

Whether it’s in the cage or in the ring, McGregor is at his best in one specific situation: controlling the center of the stage with his opponent cornered. While he has some good tools to use when opponents don’t fall in line with that strategy, he isn’t nearly as effective. Patrick Wyman of Deadspin discussed this in his preview of the fight:

“Confidence defines McGregor’s game, and when he’s pressuring, he feels confident. When he feels like he’s in control, he can push an incredible pace and bury his opponent in a steady stream of left hands.

“But that’s also McGregor’s downfall. If he feels like he’s not in control—that the range at which the fight’s being contested isn’t his range, he doesn’t have the timing and his opponent isn’t afraid of his power—he burns huge amounts of energy trying to explode and force the big shot.”

This breakdown was spot on and detailed what led to McGregor’s downfall.

Early on, McGregor was in his wheelhouse, circling Mayweather, landing counters and forcing him to the ropes on a few occasions. Toward the end of the third, however, Mayweather began finding success as the offensive lead, and by the end of the fourth, he was in complete control. McGregor, despite landing a handful of solid counterpunches, was backpedaling for the remainder of the fight.

So how did it happen? How did one of MMA’s most aggressive fighters get so easily corralled?

The answer, in large part, is footwork. Former McGregor training partner (and former IBO welterweight champion) Chris van Heerden pointed to that as a likely source of trouble for McGregor during an interview with MMAJunkie.

“His footwork is all over the place,” he said. “… When I wanted to put Conor on is back foot, it was too easy. It was really too easy. And Conor is bigger than me. Believe it or not, I was surprised at the size of Conor, him being that big, how easily I could put him on his back foot. Because I knew my footwork was in place, and his wasn’t.”

After giving McGregor room to work in the early goings of the fight, Mayweather turned the tables by playing the bull to McGregor’s matador. Sometimes he crowded him. Other times, he pressured from angles that neutralized that deadly straight left.

In both cases, McGregor wasn’t given the opportunity to regain his momentum and didn’t have the tools to create his own openings. By the fifth round, he was trying to juke his way around Mayweather, and when that failed, he pinned all his hopes on landing one big counterpunch.

That’s not a good position to be in against one of the greatest defensive boxers of all time, and the result, of course, was a late technical knockout.

   

What Could Have Been Done?

While this piece is inherently going to be a negative one, make no mistake: McGregor looked surprisingly good against Mayweather and received praise from a number of past and present pugilists. He put on a performance that was far beyond what he should be capable of, and asking more of him would have been unreasonable.

The bottom line with this fight is that McGregor didn’t have the pure boxing fundamentals and expansive arsenal to remain competitive with Mayweather for 12 full rounds. He looked good in Rounds 1-3. He had his moments in Rounds 4-6. But with every tick of the clock, Mayweather became more and more comfortable working around McGregor’s attacks, which allowed him to do whatever he wished by the end of the contest.

There’s no shame in that. Those two paragraphs could have been written about Andre Berto, Shane Mosley or any of the other 47 men that appeared on the losing side of Mayweather’s pro ledger. McGregor took on a mission that nobody has accomplished and walked away with a massive check and bigger fanbase.

He may have lost the contest, but, in many ways, he still won the night.

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