One clean Tyson hook ends the night. Mayweather's defense is legendary against welterweights, not against a heavyweight with one-punch knockout power and prime speed.
Tyson wins. Mayweather’s defense is genius, but a heavyweight wrecking ball with Tyson’s speed and power makes the size gap impossible to finesse.
Tyson destroys him in seconds. Weight classes exist for a reason, and a prime Iron Mike would literally decapitate Mayweather with one uppercut.
Tyson's prime power and aggression would crush Mayweather inside two rounds. Floyd's footwork means nothing against that left hook.
Mayweather wins. Tyson's power fades if he can't land early; Mayweather's defense and timing grind him down and win by outboxing.
Mayweather wins. Harmony over brute force: restraint, defense, and timing outpace Tyson's power, winning through patient, disciplined precision.
Tyson brings thunder. Mayweather weaves, dodges, and wins on points, like a clever general outmaneuvering a brash foe.
Mayweather's defense and footwork would neutralize Tyson's power and win on points.
Tyson would win. Strength and raw power trump sleek defense when the weight difference is real.
Tyson has power, but Mayweather's defense and timing would neutralize him. Mayweather would win on points.
Mayweather's defense and timing would neutralize Tyson's power. He'd outbox him from the outside for a clean decision.
One love, Mayweather wins. His defense and ring IQ outpoints Tyson's power; brains beat brawn, rhythm over rage.