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Amir Khan recalls Floyd Mayweather meeting: 'He did say 'Amir I need a dancing partner!''

"Mayweather is hit and move so I'd have boxed him at his own game. That's the way to beat him"

Amir Khan
Image: Khan is considering retirement if he can't land his dream fights

Amir Khan has revealed a respectful conversation with Floyd Mayweather – and explained how he planned to defeat the 50-0 star.

Khan has been in the running to face Mayweather for years but a fight never came to fruition. He never came closer than 2014 when Mayweather snubbed him in favour of fighting Marcos Maidana.

"I met Mayweather at a WBC convention in Miami back in 2018," Khan told Sky Sports News. "We spoke. He was very respectful, he hugged me.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. throws a right at Manny Pacquiao during their welterweight unification championship bout on May 2, 2015 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Image: Fights with Mayweather & Pacquiao never happened for Khan

"We didn't speak about the Maidana thing ever!

"Mayweather is a funny character. He's one of those type of guys who wants to pick who he fights and be the boss and be the main headline. But when I met him face to face he was a different guy.

"He said hi to me and my wife and to my team and took pictures.

"We never spoke about why it didn't happen between us.

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"He did say: 'Amir I need a dancing partner!'

"I said: 'Yo Floyd it's me who's waiting on you!'

Khan explained his method to inflict defeat on Mayweather: "Every fight we have a game-plan. For that fight it would have been hit and move.

"It would have been a game of chess.

"Mayweather is hit and move so I'd have boxed him at his own game. That's the way to beat him.

"Fighters who put the pressure on him get caught themselves. I would have boxed him at his own game.

"The Maidanas, the Ricky Hattons tried to put him on his back foot but that's what he wants.

"A good boxer is the one that would have beat Mayweather. I don't know if I would have beaten him but I would have given it a hell of a try. As a fighter I have always had confidence in myself."

BOLTON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 10: Amir Khan poses for a portrait during a media day at the Amir Khan Boxing Academy on September 10, 2018 in Bolton, England. (Photo by Nathan Stirk/Getty Images)
BOLTON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 10: Amir Khan poses for a portrait during a media day at the Amir Khan Boxing Academy on September 10, 2018 in Bolton, England. (Photo by Nathan Stirk/Getty Images)

Mayweather retired undefeated in 2017 by beating Conor McGregor in his 50th fight. Five years ago he won the richest fight of all time by outclassing long-term rival Manny Pacquiao, who remains a target for Khan.

Pacquiao, aged 41, is the WBA welterweight champion and beat the previously-undefeated Keith Thurman last year.

Asked if a fight with Pacquiao is realistic, Khan said: "It's hard to say. Sometimes you wait around too long for fights like Manny.

"Like Mayweather you waste so much time trying to get him to sign the piece paper that guarantees the fight is happening - you waste time.

"I've almost had 40 fights now. I am going to take my time and see what options are out there.

"If the Pacquiao option is there it would be great to get back in the gym to work towards that.

"What's left out there? The big fight with Mayweather or Pacquiao? Who knows, that's up to them to sign."

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Khan calls out former sparring partner Pacquiao

Kell Brook is another long-term rival of Khan's but an all-British fight has never materialised.

"What happened? When me and [promoter Eddie Hearn] were in talks we were talking about it at 147lbs [welterweight]. Then as the talks were going on it went quiet.

"Then we hear that he's gone up to 154lbs [super-welterweight]. He knows I would never go up a weight. I went up [two divisions] against Canelo. I said 'if I am going to fight it would happen at 147'. It was him who walked away from the fight.

"He's a respectable fighter. He's a good fighter. It would be massive in the UK. 147lbs is the weight, really. I'm not going up or down."

But Brook said earlier this month: "I've given that angle up. There's no more I can do. It's gone past the line now."

Khan, a former unified super-lightweight world champion and Olympic silver medallist, is considering retirement if his preferred fights can't be agreed.

"One or two more fights? If I get the chance to have them, I'll do them," he said. "We'll see where the world takes me, but at this moment in time I don't know."

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