It could take 'seven or eight years' to pay Logan Paul, says Mayweather

Mayweather
Floyd Mayweather sat down with former NFL stars Ryan Clark, Channing Crowder and Fred Taylor and revealed all about his career.
The former five-division world champion last fought as a professional in 2017 against Conor McGregor and retired with a 50-0 record. However, Mayweather has remained in the sport since, fighting in two exhibition bouts - the most recent being an eight-rounder with Logan Paul.
The American said he was his 'own boss' when it came to financial decisions and insisted, he was the one who changed the landscape for athletes when it comes to lucrative deals.
"I wanted my dad to be proud of me first," said Mayweather. "Before anything. When my dad would say that 'my son will break all the records,' that stuck with me.
"On top of that, I wanted my own people to be proud of me. There's nothing like that feeling. I'm more than the 'American Dream'. I'm my own boss. I do what I want to do and I say what I want to say. If I feel that something is not right, then I'm going to speak on it.
"I changed the whole dynamic of how athletes get paid. I've been fighting since Michael Jordan was playing basketball. I was undefeated from then to now. LeBron James' career is almost over, and I'm still getting paid."
Mayweather was quizzed on a recent story that he still owes Logan Paul money from their June 2021 event. "Money" has claimed it will be sorted in time.
"This comes with the territory," said Mayweather. "To them, that's real money, and I like the YouTubers. The money on the back end though, from pay-per-view, that takes a while.
"Nothing comes right away. I'm still collecting checks from fights seven or eight years ago. They just hate when the table is turned. Be happy with the biggest payday you ever got in your life."
Mayweather continued to open up during the interview, which includes him becoming a grandfather to the son of his daughter Yaya Mayweather and rapper NBA Young Boy.
My partner in crime @FloydMayweather came through and killed it on our @thepivot podcast. Thanks Champ!!! I see you @happydad!! https://t.co/PSLwd7nxMh pic.twitter.com/TmZc5Ci7xD
— John Shahidi (@john) February 16, 2022
"I'm proud of my daughter and NBA YoungBoy," said Mayweather. "I look at him like one of my sons. I only want the best for him. These kids beef nowadays and they don't know what they're beefing for. These young rappers are dying on the regular. I'm going to continue to push both of them to be great in everything they do.
"I love being with my grandson. He's just like his mom was. All he wants to do is hold onto my leg and have me pick him up all day."
Mayweather even included an anecdote from time spent with billionaire Warren Buffet when talking about his wealth.
"Rich is something that's short term," said Mayweather. "Wealth is long term. It's established. I was sitting with Warren Buffett in my locker room before a fight and we were talking about private jets. He said he's got over 500 jets. But when you've been living this life for so long, that's normal.
"The only way to pick up these things is to sit, listen and learn. There are three ways to learn: hearing, seeing and doing. That's what makes me so deadly in boxing. I can learn all three ways. I'm deadly in all three ways.
"The ultimate goal is to go to sleep when you want to and wake up when you want to," said Mayweather. "If you're not doing that, then someone or something is controlling you. I don't want to be controlled. I want to be my own boss. That's why I paid 750 thousand dollars to get out of my first promotional contract. Because I eventually made 750 million dollars in just three fights.
"I don't really care what people believe. No matter what you do, it's not good enough for everyone. No matter what, they're going to say what they want to say. But the history books, they will say something completely different."





