Terence Crawford may be into reaching new milestones, but there is at least one he has no desire to chase: Floyd Mayweather’s immaculate 50-0 record.

Crawford, the WBO 147-pound titlist from Omaha, Nebraska, will attempt to become the undisputed welterweight champion July 29 when he takes on Errol Spence Jr., the WBC, WBA, IBF champion from Desoto, Texas, at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Showtime Pay-Per-View. A win would give Crawford, a titlist in three divisions, instant bragging rights and arguably clinch his place in posterity.

But as far as going after Mayweather’s vaunted unbeaten record?

A hard pass, according to Crawford himself.

“Nah, I ain’t ever thought of [reaching] 50-0,” Crawford said on the CBS Sports Radio show Maggie & Perloff. “That’s Mayweather thing. That’s his record. I commend him. He can have that.”

Asked if he planned to fight at least 11 more times, Crawford demurred.

“Not at all,” he replied, with a smile.  

Mayweather retired in 2017, upon knocking out UFC star and boxing novice Conor McGregor inside 10 rounds in Las Vegas. Since then, Mayweather has been busy on the exhibition circuit. In early June, Mayweather participated in an exhibition with mafia scion John Gotti III that was marred by a post-fight brawl.

Crawford then noted that while he does not expect to fight too long that his next one against Spence will almost certainly not be his last.

“We don’t plan on it being [our last fight],” Crawford said.

Prompted to weigh in on who he thinks is the greatest fighter of all time, Crawford pointed to Mayweather.

“It’d have to be Mayweather,” Crawford said. “Everything. Not just cuz of the record—fighting style, everything that surrounds ‘Money’ Mayweather. It would have to be Mayweather.”

Crawford last fought in December, when he stopped David Avanesyan in six rounds at CHI Health Center in Crawford’s hometown of Omaha.

Spence fought more than one year ago, in April, picking up a 10th-round technical knockout over Yordenis Ugas at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, to unify three 147-pound titles.