Floyd Mayweather sets $100m as pay-day for Conor McGregor fight

Unbeaten boxing legend offers Irish MMA star $15m and cut of PPV

Floyd Mayweather is willing to offer  Conor McGregor $15m for a fight with the boxer pocketing $100m. Photograph: Michael Reaves/Getty Images
Floyd Mayweather is willing to offer Conor McGregor $15m for a fight with the boxer pocketing $100m. Photograph: Michael Reaves/Getty Images

Floyd Mayweather has said he will come out of retirement to fight Conor McGregor but only if he gets paid $100 million (€94.6 million) and the Irish UFC star is prepared to take a career-high $15 million (€14.2 million), plus a minor slice of the pay-per-view revenue.

Meanwhile, the 38-year-old Manny Pacquiao, who had been hoping for a rematch with Mayweather, has agreed to defend his WBO welterweight title against a little-known Queensland schoolteacher, Jeff Horn, in Brisbane in April, according to unconfirmed reports in Australia. It is part of a three-fight farewell Pacquiao's promoter, Bob Arum, is organising for the Filipino senator.

It is the Mayweather-McGregor fight that would create the substantially bigger buzz, however, which says much about the state of boxing and the rise of mixed martial arts. Regardless of the fact it would be a mismatch, it still might be the richest fight in either fighting discipline in 2017.

Mayweather, who turns 40 next month and retired undefeated in September 2015, has teased his fans for months with the prospect of having one more fight to match the 50-0 record of Rocky Marciano.

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In an exclusive interview with ESPN, the American said: “I’m saying right here: Conor McGregor keeps telling everybody he wants the fight – let’s make it happen.

“We tried to make the fight. They know what my number is. My number was a guaranteed $100 million. We’re the A-side and I don’t know how much money he has made? I’m pretty sure he hasn’t even made $10 million from an MMA bout. But we are willing to give him $15 million and then we can talk about splitting the percentage, the back-end percentage on pay-per-view.

“But of course we’re the A-side. How can a guy talk about $20 million or $30 million if he’s never even made $8 million or $9 million [for one fight]?”

In his penultimate appearance in May 2015, Mayweather split a record $340 million purse 60/40 with Pacquiao and boosted his take to an estimated $300 million with his share of the pay-per-view.

However, the cachet of both champions has faded and Mayweather has little or no interest in a rematch. Given the reaction to a bout that inevitably disappointed after serial postponements over five years, neither is there a great hunger for it among boxing fans.

“The only thing I’m probably interested in,” Mayweather added, “is the Conor McGregor fight. I’m a businessman, and it makes more business sense.”

(Guardian service)