Floyd Mayweather‘s 50-0 record is the stuff of boxing legend-15 world titles across five weight classes, a 2021 International Boxing Hall of Fame nod, and wins over icons like Manny Pacquiao and Canelo Alvarez. But who gave “Money” his toughest night? Not the megastars you’d expect.
Mayweather’s tapped Emanuel Augustus-aka “The Drunken Master“-as the guy who pushed him hardest, way back on October 21, 2000. “Emanuel Augustus was my toughest opponent,” he told FightHype in a reflective chat, spotlighting a scrap that tested his grit early in his unbeaten run. That ninth-round TKO win still echoes as a career-defining battle for the champ.
Augustus wasn’t a household name-his record sat at 22-16-4 when they clashed-but his wild, unorthodox style made him a nightmare. Picture this: a 23-year-old Mayweather, already 23-0, stepping into the ring in Detroit against a journeyman known for taunting, dancing, and throwing punches from angles that defy logic.
“He’s a true warrior, a true champion,” Mayweather said post-fight, panting to his corner, “Good fight. He’s a tough motherf*****. I had to dig deep.” X fans still rave about it: “Augustus made Floyd work like nobody else!” one posted-while others marvel at how the underdog’s flair turned a routine bout into a slugfest.
Mayweather’s hardest night: A 2000 throwdown you missed
Mayweather’s career sparkles with big names-Pacquiao’s movement dazzled him in 2015, Cotto’s strength rocked him in 2012-but Augustus stands out for the sheer grind. “His record didn’t show his skill-set, but the guy was unbelievable,” Floyd recalled, nodding to how Emanuel’s 38-34-6 final tally hid his ring savvy.
That night, Mayweather landed his 18th career stoppage, but not without a war-Augustus took him nine rounds deep, a rare stretch for a fighter who’d later make PPV history with 24 million buys and $1.67 billion in revenue.
The nod to Augustus isn’t just nostalgia-it’s a peek into Floyd’s respect for the unsung. “Before the fight, I heard he had got robbed [by bad decisions] a lot of times-and I believe that’s true,” he said, tipping his hat to a guy who retired in 2011 after facing Vernon Paris. X buzzes with takes: “Floyd vs. Augustus is underrated fire!“-and it’s no shock why. From “Pretty Boy” to “Money,” Mayweather’s faced the best, but this Hall of Famer says a quirky underdog left the biggest mark.
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