LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Sr. remembers the moment he discovered his son had a feel for the family business.
Floyd Jr. was just 9-10 months old, not even walking yet. But his father had been showing him how to hold his hands in a boxing position, a skill young Floyd would learn quickly.
"One day I came into the room and he's laying back on the pillow doing just what I was showing him," Mayweather Sr. said. "I said, 'This is it. He's going to be a fighter.'"
It wasn't long after that when the two had another kind of father-son moment. This one, too, lives in Mayweather family lore, but for a different reason.
Floyd Sr. was facing the wrong end of a shotgun, aimed at him by his brother-in-law during a dispute in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Mayweather was holding his year-old son and, like the boxer he was, was thinking on his feet.
"I wasn't going to put that baby down," he told the Los Angeles Times in 2012. "I didn't want to die. It wasn't about putting my son in the line of fire. I knew he wouldn't shoot the baby. So he took the gun off my face, lowered it to my leg and bam!"
The shotgun blast destroyed most of Mayweather's left calf, and pretty much ended his career as a welterweight contender. He would fight on, but his mark in boxing would end up being made in other ways.
Floyd Sr. isn't exactly the guiding force behind the fighter who will make a record purse of some $180 million or more to fight Manny Pacquiao. He has spent long stretches of time estranged from his son, and was in prison on a drug conviction when Floyd Jr. fought in the 1996 Olympics before turning pro.