Mayweather Leaves No Doubt After Another Huge Victory

LAS VEGAS (AP): Two years. Four more fights.

The end of Floyd Mayweather Jr’s career is in sight, because even the best fighter of his era can’t beat Father Time. He’ll be 38 and another $150 million or so richer when his lucrative contract with Showtime ends; and by then, even the fighter raised from birth to be in the ring will likely have had his fill.

Appreciate his spectacular skills while you can. After what Mayweather did on Saturday night to Canelo Alvarez, it’s hard to argue when he proclaims himself as one of the greatest ever to lace on the gloves.

The only real question now is, can anyone give him a legitimate fight?

“I don’t know what the future holds now,” Mayweather said. “I’m not psychic.”

Maybe not, but Mayweather knows this: he’ll fight next May (Cinco de Mayweather he calls it) against someone and he’ll make another huge purse to fund his ever-growing collection of exotic cars and his six-figure bets on football and basketball games. After that, there will be three more fights; and then Mayweather plans to retire to his Big Boy mansion on a golf course near the Las Vegas Strip.

“I’ve only got 24 months left,” he said.

Whether he sticks to that plan remains to be seen, of course. Fighters can be their own worst enemies when it comes time to calling it quits and Mayweather by then would likely be 49-0 and one fight away from breaking the unbeaten mark set by Rocky Marciano before he retired.

TOO GOOD

Mayweather’s problem right now is he might be too good. Alvarez was supposed to be the one fighter who could give him a tussle, but the Mexican champion spent all night punching at air as Mayweather put on a virtuoso performance that had everyone raving except the one ringside judge who somehow found a way to score the fight even.

The 114-114 scorecard of C.J. Ross was as bizarre as Justin Bieber walking into the ring with Mayweather, with rapper Lil’ Wayne on the other side. Two other judges had Mayweather an easy winner, while The Associated Press had him winning all but one round, 119-109.

Mayweather raised his impeccable record to 45-0 in what may have been the richest fight of all time. The live gate itself was a record $20 million and promoters will find out in the coming weeks if the fight generated the 2 million or so pay-per-view buys that could add several more millions to the $41.5 million purse Mayweather was guaranteed.

Mayweather’s dominance was reflected in ringside punch stats that showed him landing twice the number of punches as Alvarez, but even that didn’t reflect how lopsided the fight was. Mayweather took a young and highly regarded champion and gave him a boxing lesson the likes of which he’ll never experience again.

“Obviously I didn’t want to lose,” the 23-year-old said. “It hurts.”

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