Floyd Mayweather is undoubtedly one of the best boxers of all time. However, before his death, Roger Mayweather revealed that there was one man he put above his nephew.
Floyd retired with an undefeated record of 50-0 in 2017, but has recently been linked to a return to the pro ranks and a potential rematch with forceful rival Manny Pacquiao.
While a second victory over “Pac Man” will do little for his legacy, the return of “TBE” could ultimately mean Mayweather breaking Bernard Hopkins’ record as the oldest world champion in history if he manages to defeat his Filipino foe and then win the belt.
Even if Mayweather added this historic record to his extensive collection of feats in the sport, it’s tough to imagine it would be enough to change the minds of his slow uncle and former trainer.
In a 2012 interview with Boxing Scene, Roger Mayweather admitted that Floyd was second in his all-time rankings, believing that Sugar Ray Robinson would be almost impossible to dislodge from the top spot.
“[Floyd] he ranks right behind Sugar Ray Robinson. He won seven world titles, right? He beat everyone from 130 to 154. Where would you put him? Ray Robinson was the greatest era in history. No matter what the circumstances, Ray Robinson is the greatest fighter in boxing history.
“You know what his record was? 127-1. Do you know any other fighter with a record of 127-1? And the fighter who beat him, [Robinson] he was beaten six times by Jake LaMotta.
“The only reason he beat Robinson was because he weighed over 50 pounds. Ray Robinson wasn’t even a middleweight, but he slowly started gaining weight and then smoked [LaMotta] every time.
“There is no fighter in the history of boxing who could have done what Ray Robinson did. But fighters don’t fight that often anymore, [every] two weeks, three weeks, four weeks. Now they have all this medical crap. “Fighters can’t fight as often as they did back then.”
Robinson is widely considered the greatest of all time, winning world titles at both welterweight and middleweight, and amassing an incredible record in his legendary career of 174 wins, 19 losses and 6 draws.
As for Mayweather, he may be looking to break his own record of 51 fights. Pacquiao is currently believed to fight in January possible fights with Amir Khan and WBA welterweight champion Rolando Romero still incomparable to the interest that a second mega-fight with his former rival would generate.