Floyd Mayweather Jr. is implying that a planned Dec. 31 fight with a Rizin Fighting Federation kickboxer isn’t going to happen over differences involving the magnitude of the event.
In an Instagram post Wednesday, Mayweather said he initially agreed to a small exhibition and that he and his team were “completely derailed” and should have put a stop to Sunday’s news conference at the time.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Floyd Mayweather (@floydmayweather) on
On Sunday, Rizin announced that Mayweather would face 20-year-old Japanese kickboxing phenom Tenshin Nasukawa in Saitama, Japan, on New Year’s Eve. Mayweather wrote in his Wednesday post that he never agreed to a fight with Nasukawa and had — “with all due respect” — never heard of him before visiting Japan.
Key details of the proposed fight were never announced, including the specific rules of the bout, the number of rounds, the weight limit, how the fight broadcast would be distributed and what type of gloves they would wear.
Now it appears the whole thing will be scrapped, with Mayweather apologizing to his fans for the “very misleading information that was announced.”
During the news conference, Mayweather had said: “This particular bout is a special bout as far as we’re giving the people something they’ve never seen before. The world has never seen Mayweather compete live in Tokyo. Throughout the years, I’ve seen a lot of fans from Japan come to Las Vegas and come to the U.S., but me and my team said let’s do something different. Let’s go over to Japan.
“As far as the weight class, we’re not really worried about that. It’s all about me going out there and displaying my skills against another skillful fighter. So we both want to go out there and display our skills and give people excitement. I just want to entertain. I will speak with my team and I will let my team get with Rizin and I’m pretty sure they’ll come up with a great idea, but it’s all about entertainment and that’s what we want to do for the people.”