Floyd Mayweather Jr. vs Tony Duran 09.05.1997
Las Vegas fight fans were treated to a glimpse of the future on 9 May 1997, as Floyd Mayweather Jr delivered the fastest finish of his professional career. The 20-year-old prospect needed only one minute and twelve seconds to dispatch Tony Duran in their scheduled six-round super-featherweight contest at the Orleans Hotel & Casino. Referee Toby Gibson waved off proceedings after a heavy knockdown left Duran unable to continue.
Mayweather, scaling 129 lbs, entered the ring with the confidence of a man tipped for greatness. His opponent, Denver’s Tony Duran, came in at 133 lbs with a reputation as a willing competitor. Duran had once started his career with a sparkling 9-0 record, but hard times followed—he arrived in Las Vegas without a victory in his previous ten outings, including a points loss to Jeff Mayweather, Floyd’s uncle, earlier that year.
The bout itself was over almost as soon as it began. Barely a minute into the opening round, Mayweather sank a crisp left hook into Duran’s ribs, the first real sign that the youngster’s body punching carried menace. Duran recoiled and backed to the ropes, and Mayweather pounced with ruthless precision. A rapid flurry forced an opening and Mayweather let fly with a straight right that detonated on the chin. Duran crashed to the canvas, flat on his back.
Showing courage, Duran clambered to all fours and beat the referee’s count at six. But his legs betrayed him; as he swayed unsteadily, Gibson had seen enough and brought matters to a halt at 1:12 of the first round.
The victory marked Mayweather’s fourth and final first-round stoppage as a professional, and it showcased the raw firepower he carried before his career became defined by masterful defence and ring generalship. It was another step in a blistering start that had already seen him halt Jerry Cooper in 99 seconds, Kino Rodriguez in 104, and Bobby Giepert in a minute and a half.
Though only seven fights into his paid career, the whispers around Mayweather were already growing louder. Renowned trainers and commentators had been calling him a prodigy since his controversial exit from the Atlanta Olympics. Against Duran, he showed why. Speed, accuracy, and ruthless finishing instinct—all the hallmarks of a man destined for world titles—were on display in the blink of an eye.
For Duran, the night added to a difficult chapter of his career. For Mayweather, it was a statement that Las Vegas had a new attraction. This was not yet the slick defensive master the world would come to know, but a youthful puncher eager to make an impression. And on this spring evening in Nevada, he certainly did.