The Floyd Mayweather Jr.-John Gotti III exhibition rematch didn't have any excessive trash talk or a brawl like their original clash last year.
It was just a self-proclaimed "The Best Ever" in Mayweather serving up a boxing clinic over eight two-minute rounds to put this surprise rivalry to bed Saturday night and coast handily at the Arena CDMX in Mexico City, and live on DAZN.
The 47-year-old boxing legend did what he wanted in the ring from establishing the jab to piecing together combinations, touching the body and eluding Gotti III's shots, while flashing smiles along the way.
"We had to put on a show for the people. I want to thank Gotti for being a man of his word," Mayweather said live on DAZN, while the two men embraced, seemingly burying any lingering bad blood.
Gotti III added: "He still got it."
That was for sure as Mayweather was sharp, proving in this 16-minute exhibition rematch that he's still a master of his craft.
The only bit of controversy that the rematch included came during the second round when the referee stopped the action to warn Mayweather about punching behind the head to which "Money" repeatedly told him to "move!" His demands came to fruition as the referee was immediately replaced.
When the action resumed, Mayweather picked up where he left off by re-establishing the jab like clockwork to little resistance as the prodding weapon split Gotti III's guard.
Gotti III couldn't figure Mayweather's sweet science out and there's no shame in that considering Mayweather's 50-0 pro record signals that none of his opponents could resolve his brilliant boxing, either.
After the fight, Mayweather seemingly dismissed the idea of having an exhibition bout with another boxing legend in Julio Cesar Chavez, 62, heaping praise onto the Hall of Famer for paving his way, instead.
Here's how the entire Mayweather vs. Gotti III rematch main card went.