It’s Official: Floyd Mayweather, Jr. has reached Christian Laettner…
Article #20: Sports
We have to completely agree with Floyd Mayweather, Jr.
He’s the best fighter, ever.
Now, I’m a huge Floyd Mayweather, Jr. fan. We don’t hide that at all. However…
…I’m a much bigger fan of the truth, and whether his opponents were bigger or smaller, faster or slower, younger or older, more experienced or less experienced, champions or contenders, he not only beat them, but he beat them with an almost +30% average connect percentage.
That’s unprecedented truth.
Half the time, after the fight, he didn’t even look like he’d just been in a professional boxing match! That’s because, simply put, he was better than everyone who entered the ring to fight him, period.
He was so much better to where out of 69 judges’ scorecards, he only ever lost on one (1).
That’s more unprecedented truth.
Look at his ‘loss, draw, no contest’ record in comparison to these current and future Hall of Famers:
Floyd Mayweather, Jr. – 0 losses, 0 draws, 0 no contests
-
Sonny Liston – 4 losses
-
Robert Duran – 16 losses
-
Muhammad Ali – 5 losses
-
Diego Corrales – 5 losses
-
George Foreman – 5 losses
-
Félix Trinidad, Jr. – 3 losses
-
Oscar Dela Hoya – 6 losses
-
Joe Frazier – 4 losses, 1 draw
-
Ray Leonard – 3 losses, 1 draw
-
Lennox Lewis – 2 losses, 1 draw
-
Floyd Patterson – 8 losses, 1 draw
-
Miguel Cotto – 4 losses (still fighting)
-
Hector Camacho – 6 losses, 3 draws
-
Mike Tyson – 6 losses, 2 no contests
-
Genaro Hernández – 2 losses, 1 draw
-
Julio César Chávez, Sr. – 6 losses, 2 draws
-
Jack Dempsy – 6 losses, 11 draws, 1 no contest
-
Pernell Whitaker – 4 losses, 1 draw, 1 no contest
-
James Toney – 10 losses, 3 draws, 3 no contests
-
Manny Pacquiao – 6 losses, 2 draws (still fighting)
-
Ray Robinson – 19 losses, 6 draws, 2 no contests
-
Rocky Marciano – 0 losses, 0 draws, 0 no contests
-
Jack Johnson – 13 losses, 10 draws, 5 no contests
-
Evander Holyfield – 10 losses, 2 draws, 1 no contest
-
Juan Manuel Marquez – 7 losses, 1 draw (still fighting)
-
Roy Jones, Jr. – 8 losses, 1 disqualification (still fighting)
-
Shane Mosley – 9 losses, 1 draw, 1 no contest (still fighting)
-
Bernard Hopkins – 7 losses, 2 draws, 2 no contests (still fighting)
As you can see, Rocky Marciano is the only universally considered ‘great fighter’ to hold the exact same record as Mayweather (49 wins, 0 losses, 0 draws, 0 no contests), but with one significant difference.
Marciano got routinely pummeled in the ring, whereas Mayweather will probably go on to be universally considered the best defensive fighter of all time.
But he’s more than that.
In the age of constant entertainment, Mayweather has the top four (4) highest grossing pay-per-view boxing matches in history.
He is the first boxer to ever make over 9 figures in one fight in history.
He secured the most lucrative deal in boxing history.
He has made over $700M in his boxing career, more than any other boxer in history, and is the highest paid athlete in the world three (3) years running.
But he’s more than that. Much more.
We all know that greatness in boxing is more than your record, more than those statistics above, and more than money. However, if Floyd Mayweather, Jr….
-
Has been in the sport of boxing professionally for 19 years and has been World Champion 18 of them…
-
Has beaten more world champions than anyone else…
-
Has tied the best professional record of all time…
-
Has the highest hitting to the lowest getting-hit percentage in boxing history…
-
Has the highest accuracy percentage in the biggest career fights in history (which means he gets better as the competition gets stronger)…
…then it’s pretty hard to argue against those historical facts and statistics. Yet, we don’t think casual boxing fans care about that, and that has led us to one conclusion:
We are now convinced that Floyd Mayweather, Jr. has reached Christian Laettner levels of hate. And the $3.5M Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse he just bought simply added fuel to the hatred fire.
If you don’t know who Christian Laettner is, then you’re probably not a college basketball fan, at least not a Duke University one (or one of its rivals).
Christian Laettner was so hated by the fans that it was scary. Why he was hated was not scary. It was Mayweather-ish, at least record-wise:
-
His freshman year, Laettner took his team to the Final Four®.
-
His sophomore year, his team went farther and finished as the runner up.
-
His junior year, they won the NCAA® Championship.
-
His senior year, they became repeat champions.
So, out of 24 total NCAA® Tournament games, he played in 23 of them and won 21 of them. Those are both NCAA® records.
Oh, you think that’s all? Not even close. Just look at his college basketball statistics from his Wikipedia page:
“For his career Laettner averaged 16.6 points and 7.8 rebounds per game while making almost half of his three-pointers. He scored 21.5 points per game his senior season, garnering every major national player of the year award; Duke retired his No. 32 jersey later that year. His career is widely regarded among the best in college history, and he is enshrined in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.”
On top of that, he looked like the quintessential All-American:
-
Extremely handsome kid.
-
Looked like he was from a financially-privileged background (even though he is from a working-class background, but perception trumped reality).
-
All of the women on campus absolutely adored him, he just knew that he was the best in the college basketball game.
-
And he had probably the most successful college basketball career of all time.