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This Thai 'dwarf giant' is just one win from Floyd Mayweather record

Updated on: 27 February,2018 12:30 PM IST  |  Bangkok
AFP |

Unsung outside the boxing world, a Thai fighter nicknamed the "dwarf giant" is quietly closing in on Floyd Mayweather's undefeated 50 fight record and with it an unlikely place among the sport's greats

This Thai 'dwarf giant' is just one win from Floyd Mayweather record

This photo taken on January 31, 2018 shows the current World Boxing Council (WBC) mini-flyweight champion, Wanheng Menayothin, taking out his mouthguard during a training session in Bangkok. Unsung outside the boxing world, the Thai fighter nicknamed the "dwarf giant" is quietly closing in on Floyd Mayweather
This photo taken on January 31, 2018 shows the current World Boxing Council (WBC) mini-flyweight champion, Wanheng Menayothin, taking out his mouthguard during a training session in Bangkok. Unsung outside the boxing world, the Thai fighter nicknamed the "dwarf giant" is quietly closing in on Floyd Mayweather's undefeated 50 fight record and with it an unlikely place among the sport's greats. Pic/ AFP PHOTO


Unsung outside the boxing world, a Thai fighter nicknamed the "dwarf giant" is quietly closing in on Floyd Mayweather's undefeated 50 fight record and with it an unlikely place among the sport's greats. At 5ft 2in (1.57m) and weighing just 105lb (47.6kg), minimum-weight Wanheng Menayothin is shorter, leaner and significantly less wealthy than "Money" Mayweather, the brash American who was teased from retirement last year by a $100 million purse to fight MMA star Conor McGregor.


But this spring Wanheng could tie Mayweather's 50-0 record and enter boxing lore. His 50th bout in April or May is set to be against Panama's Leroy Estrada in Thailand, a low-key affair that will be followed by fans and boxing enthusiasts, but not the global audience drawn to the cross-discipline spectacle between Mayweather and McGregor. The milestone is generating boxing buzz in a country that is better known for Muay Thai, the kingdom's boxing-style martial art that also allows kicking, kneeing and elbows to the head.


"Am I proud? Yes I am, for being on par with the superstars," the softly spoken 32-year-old said while sitting on a tyre and wrapping his fists with gauze ahead of a training session at his Bangkok gym. His record of 49 wins with 17 knockouts has been earned against relative minnows -- many of them regional fighters -- but he has been dominant in the minimum-weight division and holds the World Boxing Council belt. With his present stats he has already matched the legendary fighter Rocky Marciano, but he doesn't dwell too much on the numbers. "I never thought about breaking records. I just want to win every fight like all athletes who don't want to lose. Keep winning until I quit."

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