Boxing never grants immortality. Glory fades, belts change hands, and fans move on. Yet even in that cycle, a few names refuse to disappear. Mike Tyson proves it. At 20, he became the youngest heavyweight champion ever, a snarling storm of aggression shaped by Cus D’Amato’s “peek-a-boo” defense. With that style, Tyson didn’t just beat opponents—he devoured them, often before the opening bell even settled. Years later, Floyd Mayweather Jr. defined another era. He went 50-0, building an empire on flawless defense, surgical counters, and ring IQ that turned the sweet science into high art.

Beyond the ring, he rewrote the rules of athlete wealth, teaching fighters how to own the business as much as the fight. Now, decades apart yet drawn together, Mike Tyson at 59 and Mayweather at 48 pre

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