A ruthless Floyd Mayweather scored a 10th round technical knockout over mixed martial arts champion Conor McGregor, cementing his legacy as one of boxing's all-time greats.
McGregor, making his professional boxing debut, had boasted he would knock out the 40-year-old American early but his lack of ring savvy betrayed him as Mayweather improved to 50-0 to surpass heavyweight great Rocky Marciano's 49-0 record for most wins without a loss or draw.
Whether the megafight will be the richest of all-time, as promoters predicted, is still to be determined but Mayweather left no doubt of his place in the pantheon of boxing greats in what he said was his last fight.
As promised, McGregor came out full of fury and menace but Mayweather, long regarded as the finest defensive fighter to step into the ring, left few openings and used the first three rounds to feel out his opponent.
By the fourth round Mayweather went on the attack and started landing blow after blow against a suddenly desperate McGregor who was bravely hanging on while clutching and grabbing the American.
In the 10th, Mayweather moved in for the kill pinning a visibly fatigued McGregor against the ropes and landing a flurry of punches when the referee stepped in to stop the fight.
Mayweather said he got a tougher fight than he expected.
"He is a lot better than I thought he was, he used different angles and was a tough competitor but I was the better man tonight," said Mayweather.
"Our game-plan was to take our time, let him shoot all his heavy shots early on and then take him down at the end, down the stretch.
"We know in the MMA he fights 25 minutes real hard and after that he starts to slow down.
"I guaranteed this fight wouldn't go the distance. A win is a win."
Mayweather insists this was his last outing in the ring.
"This was my last fight tonight, my last fight, for sure. I chose the right dance partner to dance with."
McGregor will walk away with his reputation intact after putting up an accomplished showing in his first professional bout.
The 29-year-old believes the referee Robert Byrd called time on the fight too early.
"I took the early rounds fairly handy," he said. "I thought it was close, I thought the stoppage was a bit early, there was a lot on the line and I thought he should have let me carry on.
"I was just a little fatigued. He is composed and you have got to give it to him.
"I thought it was close. I get a little wobbly when I'm tired, it is fatigue, the referee could have let it keep going, let the man put me down. I am clear headed.
"Where were the final two rounds? Let me wobble to the corner and make him put me down.
I've been strangled on live TV and came back. When you're in here in the squared circle, everything is different."
Reuters