Pound-for-pound king Floyd Mayweather, four months removed from his 
historic victory against Manny Pacquiao in the richest fight in boxing 
history, said Tuesday he will return to defend his welterweight world 
titles against Andre Berto on Sept. 12 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.
Mayweather
 (48-0, 26 KOs), who will be fighting at the MGM Grand for the 12th 
consecutive time, has repeatedly said the fight, which will be televised
 on Showtime PPV (8 p.m. ET), will be the final fight of his brilliant, 
19-year career.
The bout is the last on a six-fight deal he signed
 with Showtime/CBS in 2013. With a victory, Mayweather can tie the 
milestone 49-0 record of the great heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano.
"I'm
 ready to get back in the ring on Sept. 12 and prove again to the whole 
world why I'm the best ever," Mayweather said. "I always bring my 
A-game, and this fight against Andre Berto is no exception. He's a 
young, strong fighter who is hungry to take down the best. Forty-eight 
have tried before, and on Sept. 12, I'm going to make it 49."
Berto
 (30-3, 23 KOs), a two-time welterweight world titleholder who currently
 holds an interim belt, is just 3-3 in his past six bouts and viewed by 
many as an easy mark for Mayweather.
He is a massive underdog but said he plans to knock Mayweather off his undefeated perch.
"I'm
 coming to kick Floyd's ass on Sept. 12," Berto said. "Best believe that
 I plan to bring it to Floyd and I'm not concerned about what 48 other 
fighters have been unable to do. Somebody is getting knocked out, and it
 won't be me. You don't want to miss this."
A news conference is 
scheduled to take place at 3 p.m. PT Thursday in downtown Los Angeles. 
The event will be closed to the public.
On May 2, Mayweather won a
 unanimous decision in a welterweight title unification fight against 
Pacquiao, a long-awaited fight five years in the making. It shattered 
every conceivable revenue record.
The fight generated more than 
$500 million and crushed the all-time pay-per-view record, selling 4.4 
million subscriptions at a record price of around $100.
Mayweather earned around $220 million.
Yet
 Mayweather, for all of the success and money and a victory over 
Pacquiao in his legacy fight, still had the hunger to go back into 
training camp last month to prepare for a September fight, even if few 
expect Berto to give him nothing more than a good workout.
Leonard Ellerbe, CEO of Mayweather Promotions, said Mayweather will not have a letdown against Berto.
"One
 thing we know about Floyd is that he always comes prepared," Ellerbe 
told ESPN.com. "Floyd Mayweather has never been in a fight where he's 
not prepared. He always comes ready to do his job each and every time he
 comes to the ring. He never overlooks anyone.
"We know Berto is 
coming in looking to knock Floyd's head off. Floyd just has to be 
prepared. We know Berto is very motivated. He's had ups and downs in his
 career, but he has been able to bounce back and show the fans he's 
never in a dull fight. Berto is coming with the mentality of 'I'm gonna 
get him or he's gonna get me.'"
In electing to fight Berto, 
Mayweather passed over other more deserving opponents, including 
titleholder Keith Thurman; top contender Amir Khan, a former unified 
junior welterweight titlist; and former welterweight titlist Shawn 
Porter.
All three are coming off recent victories against better opposition than Berto has faced in the past two years.
In
 late June, when Mayweather, 38, of Las Vegas, met the media while 
promoting the Porter-Adrien Broner fight at the MGM Grand, he made it 
clear that he thought he deserved to be able to pick a lesser opponent 
for his final bout.
That is what he has in Berto, 31, of Winter 
Haven, Florida, who has won two fights in a row, albeit against lesser 
opponents. He defeated Josesito Lopez by sixth-round knockout on March 
13 to claim a vacant interim belt and Steve Upsher Chambers by a 
lopsided 10-round decision last September.
Selling a match with 
Berto -- for a likely price tag of $64.95 (more for HD) -- probably will
 be very difficult, especially considering how many people remain upset 
and disappointed over the Pacquiao fight.
Ellerbe said he and Mayweather are not concerned about that.
"We
 don't worry about things like that," Ellerbe said. "One thing we do 
know is Berto is always in an exciting fight. He's been in two fight of 
the year (candidates) against Victor Ortiz and Robert Guerrero. With 
that being said, we know it's going to be guaranteed excitement.
"And this will definitely be Floyd's last fight, and the fans will get a chance to witness history."
Sports
 Book William Hill, which originally opened Mayweather as a minus-1,600 
favorite two weeks ago, had odds of Mayweather -2,400 and Berto +1,200 
on Tuesday after the announcement of the fight. William Hill reported 
early action was one-sided, in favor of Mayweather.
The Westgate SuperBook made Mayweather an even bigger favorite, opening the champ at -4,000.
Mayweather's
 six-fight deal with Showtime/CBS will have included fights with 
Guerrero; Canelo Alvarez (2.2 million pay-per-view buys, third-most in 
history); Marcos Maidana, whom he fought twice; Pacquiao; and Berto.
"When
 Showtime Networks and Floyd Mayweather teamed up for the first time in 
2013, it was called a record-breaking deal -- and that's exactly what it
 has been," said Stephen Espinoza, executive vice president and general 
manager of Showtime Sports. "Through five fights of the six-fight term, 
the results have exceeded our grandest expectations. Floyd has never 
hesitated to take on the best of the best in his division.
"In 
Andre Berto, Floyd has chosen an opponent who always comes to fight and 
always entertains. Berto's power and athleticism make him a legitimate 
threat against any opponent, and against Floyd, we expect Berto to be as
 aggressive as ever."
The fight was announced just 40 days before 
fight night, which is very short notice for a major pay-per-view. 
Ellerbe said the reason was because they wanted to announce other fights
 on the card at the same time.
Many believe that Showtime was 
negotiating with Mayweather for rights to future fights should he stick 
to his retirement plans but later decide to come back for a potential 
50th consecutive victory. Showtime and Ellerbe denied that.
There
 also were discussions about putting the fight on CBS as opposed to 
pay-per-view, but those discussions did not pan out for a variety of 
reasons.
Ellerbe said that to put the fight on CBS, they would 
have needed much more time to pull it off. They also would have needed 
to sell a lot of advertising to cover the costs, including what is 
likely to be a purse of at least $35 million for Mayweather.
"In 
order to execute something like that you need months and months to plan 
that out," Ellerbe said. "We need six to seven months of lead time to 
make something like that possible. Ultimately, it wasn't possible."
 

 
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