Oscar De La Hoya used Floyd Mayweather and Terence Crawford’s wins over Canelo Alvarez to point out who he thinks is the better fighter overall.
The last appearance came when Crawford, who announced his retirement last monthdethroned the Mexican with a clear unanimous decision victory in September 2025.
Entering the super middleweight bout as the consensus underdog, “Bud” showed that on a pure skill-for-skill level, he would never be beaten by his bigger opponent.
Size didn’t really come into play as Crawford, who moved up from 154 pounds, performed masterfully to become the undisputed three-division champion.
But while the 38-year-old certainly controlled the match from start to finish, so did Mayweather, who won a majority decision over Canelo in 2013.
Despite a ridiculous 114-114 score by CJ Ross, who hasn’t judged a professional fight since, Mayweather was able to dominate virtually every round.
For balance, however, it must be said that Canelo had no world championship experience at this stage of his career and was most likely hampered by the catchweight limit of 152 pounds. However, it can also be argued that by the time of the Crawford fight, Alvarez was no longer the formidable force he had become about five years earlier.
Either way, De La Hoya strongly hinted in an interview with Fighting the noise that Mayweather, his former opponent, was the better technician.
“Floyd Mayweather was toying with Canelo, like he was literally toying with him, he wasn’t hit at all, not once. And Crawford, yes, he’s more of a fighter-boxer – Mayweather is more of a boxer – but I have to disagree with that [that Crawford was better].
“I think Mayweather is a lot better than Crawford, not just because he beat me and it was a close fight or because I got in the ring with Mayweather, but I really feel like technically Mayweather is the better fighter.”
Given that De La Hoya fought Mayweather and not Crawford in 2007 – he lost via split decision – it’s perhaps natural that he would side with the pound-for-pound legend.
The debate over Mayweather and Crawford – and even the fantasy fight – will continue, especially now that both men boast a professional campaign in which they suffered no losses when all is said and done.