Donnerstag, 5. November 2015

On This Day: George Foreman regains the world heavyweight title at the age of 45


DUBBED “One For The Ages,” Foreman-Moorer took place at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on November 5, 1994 and not only were the WBA and IBF belts on the line, the lineal title was also at stake; Moorer having become “The man who beat the man,” with his April 1994 upset win over Evander Holyfield.

26-year-old Moorer was unbeaten at 35-0 at the time of his maiden title defence and he had made history with the points win over Holyfield, becoming the first ever southpaw heavyweight champion. 45-year-old Foreman was 72-4 and he was seeking some history making of his own; that of becoming the oldest man to ever hold the world heavyweight crown.

Foreman was only a slight betting underdog according to the Vegas bookmakers, who had Moorer as a 2-1 favourite to retain his belts. However, in terms of expert opinion, “Big” George was a huge outsider – as HBO commentator Larry Merchant put it, “George was a gazillion-to-one to win this fight.”

Merchant didn’t stop there. “George has sweatshirts older than Moorer,” he said. Merchant also applauded Foreman for the sheer strength of his will and for his refusal to ever take a backward step.
 Before the fight, Foreman and Moorer’s trainer Teddy Atlas got into a brief spat, with Atlas losing his cool in the build-up to the fight and shoving Foreman. “Go get me a sandwich and sit down,” responded Foreman, who refused to lose his own composure.

Also before the fight, as a result of the WBA refusing to sanction the fight, Foreman had to go to court to fight for his chance to fight. George won on the grounds of age discrimination. However, Foreman then had to prove to the court that he was still in possession of his mental sharpness along with his physical wellbeing. To prove his mental faculties, in particular his memory, George listed for the court, in reverse order, all serving Presidents of The United States.

Running into the ring on his entrance, Foreman wore the same red shorts he’d donned when losing his heavyweight championship to Muhammad Ali twenty years and one week previously. “They made me look a little chubby,” George later said, “but I had to make sure I came in as heavyweight champion.”

Also conjuring up memories of “The Rumble in The Jungle” was the presence of legendary corner-man Angelo Dundee. Back in Zaire in 1974, Dundee was, of course, in Ali’s corner. Now he was giving Foreman his words of wisdom on how to overcome the odds.

Moorer got off to a great start, cracking Foreman with right jabs, hooks to the jaw and also scoring with brutal uppercuts that snapped the old man’s head back. Behind on points at the conclusion of the ninth round, Foreman needed a KO lest his unlikely dream would become a nightmare. Reaching back in time, Foreman found a right hand bomb that sent Moorer crashing to his back in the 10th. “It happened,” bellowed HBO’s Jim Lampley, as a concussed Moorer was unable to rise before the count of 10.

Foreman knelt in a prayer of thanks in a corner seconds after he’d regained his crown. Foreman’s brother, Roy, fainted a few moments later. The crowd went into a complete frenzy. “Has this finally exorcised the ghost of Ali?” Merchant asked Foreman in the post-fight interview. A beaming Foreman knew his demons had forever vanished.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net

Dienstag, 3. November 2015

10 fights that need to happen in boxing


10 Tyson Fury v Anthony Joshua (Heavyweight)

Win or lose against Wladimir Klitschko on November 28, Tyson Fury is one of the biggest names in British boxing, as is the fearsome Anthony Joshua. The Londoner has looked levels above his overmatched foes so far, and needs to get past Dillian Whyte for the British title on December 12.

However, this clash would do massive business in the UK where both men are household names.

9 Manny Pacquiao v Errol Spence (Welterweight)

Bit of a curveball, but hear us out. The Filipino icon is set to bow out from the sport in April while Spence is considered by many the top prospect in the sport and heir to Floyd Mayweather’s throne. Manny has consistently shown a willingness to take risky fights – which Errol would be – and still has plenty to give at 36.

Terence Crawford looks to have moved to the top of Pacquiao’s hit list and while the Omaha native is an exceptional talent, he is not yet widely known and doesn’t talk a good game.

A former Olympian and a confident talker, Spence is already gathering a decent following and a fight with Pacquiao could prove the perfect torch-passing ceremony for him to usher in a new age of boxing stars.

8 Adonis Stevenson v Artur Beterbiev (Light-heavyweight)

Although Stevenson against Sergey Kovalev is the first pick at 175lbs, it seems a long way off. However, as Beterbiev and Adonis are both signed to Al Haymon, there’s much more chance of them squaring off. A wildly successful amateur, Beterbiev has torn through the ranks as a pro, blitzing all in his path.

Stevenson is a class champion with a monstrous punch and this fight would guarantee excitement.

7 Vasyl Lomachenko v Guillermo Rigondeaux (Featherweight)

Two of the greatest amateur boxers in history could potentially meet as professionals. Weight issues would need to be resolved as Loma operates at featherweight, Rigo at super-bantam, but the Cuban has reportedly claimed he would be willing to move up in order to make the fight.

While it would not be an all-out war, a fight between these two would display constant technical brilliance – a purist’s dream.

6 Scott Quigg v Carl Frampton (Super-bantamweight)

Plenty has been said and written about this domestic dust up, and if the promoters involved are to be believed, an announcement could be imminent.

It’s a terrific fight both stylistically and in terms of significance. With both men proving their class on the world stage in recent fights and Frampton signing with Al Haymon, it has relevance globally also.

5 Roman Gonzalez v Naoya Inoue (Super-flyweight)

Considered by most the best fighter on the planet, WBC flyweight champion Gonzalez could seemingly get the Japanese slugger to move down from super-fly. However, as the young Inoue continues to grow that becomes more difficult and a fight at 115lbs would grant the Nicaraguan the chance at world honours in a fourth weight class.

Both are electrifying fighters who box on the front foot, ensuring fireworks. It’s the superfight of the smaller weight classes.

4 Gennady Golovkin v James DeGale (Super-middleweight)

This is included in the list under the pretence that Golovkin would enter as a sizeable favourite over any other middleweight on the planet. Thus, a move to 168lbs would help him improve his pound-for-pound status.

DeGale is currently the world’s leading super-middleweight, with Andre Ward seemingly now a light-heavyweight, and would ask questions of Golovkin we have not seen answered. The IBF champ is a slick, elusive boxer with a potent shot to boot.

It would be a serious test of whether ‘GGG’ is a truly elite fighter.

3 Kell Brook v Amir Khan (Welterweight)

Another potential fight that has long been spoken about, Khan and Brook continue to prove themselves as two of the best welterweights on the planet.

Amir is still hunting a fight with Pacquiao while Brook is set to face Diego Chaves next, though everyone hopes these two are on a collision course.

2 Wladimir Klitschko v Deontay Wilder (Heavyweight)

If Klitschko retains against Fury in November, a unification clash with WBC champion Wilder for all the belts would be colossal. For Klitschko – a chance to cement his legacy and finally become the undisputed champion. For Wilder – the chance to depose the best heavyweight in recent years.
Plus, everyone loves a big heavyweight fight.

1 Andre Ward v Sergey Kovalev (Light-heavyweight)

Two legitimate pound-for-pound ranked fighters going at it is a mouth-watering prospect, especially when both are unbeaten and considered top of their respective weight classes.

Ward has cleaned out the super-middleweight division while Sergey sits atop the pack at 175lbs. Neither has faced a fighter like the other and you can make a stern case for either man winning.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net


Samstag, 31. Oktober 2015

On This Day: The birth of great Australian, Les Darcy


GENERALLY regarded as Australia’s best ever boxer, James Leslie Darcy’s inclusion in our list of the top 100 boxers in history is simply remarkable considering he fought professionally for less than seven years before tragically passing away at only 21 years of age. Nevertheless, his place among the all-time greats is without doubt warranted.

One of the finest middleweights ever to grace the sport, “The Maitland Wonder” contested all of his 50 pro fights Down Under. Although he never fought outside of his homeland, this was not for want of trying.

The precocious Aussie’s emergence coincided with that of World War I. With his family to provide for, Darcy naively decided to evade his country’s military draft in order to secure lucrative bouts in the USA.

However, fights for Les were not forthcoming in the States. American promoters and state governors were unwilling to issue the Woodville man a boxing licence, as they looked disapprovingly upon his failure to enlist in the Australian army.


Despite failing to showcase his talents on US soil, Darcy was still able to share a ring with many of the top American middleweights of his era. He twice stopped Eddie McGoorty (rsf 15 and rsf 8) and also defeated Billy Murray on two occasions (pts 20 and rsf 6). Other notable victims included Jimmy Clabby (pts 20), George KO Brown (pts 20 twice) and Buck Crouse (ko 2).

Arguably his most impressive win came when he knocked out George Chip in his last ever ring appearance. Chip had claimed a newspaper decision victory over the legendary Harry Greb only three months previously, yet the deadly Darcy finished the Pennsylvanian off in nine rounds.

He never held the official world middleweight title (only the Australian version), but he was widely considered as the best in the division from around 1915-1916, with his innovative boxing style well ahead of its time.

After suffering from blood poisoning and subsequently developing pneumonia, he died in the USA on May 24, 1917. Australia mourned the loss of a native hero, who remains a national sporting icon to this day.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net

Freitag, 30. Oktober 2015

On this day: Muhammad Ali shocked the world


IT was the greatest hour of the 20th century’s greatest sportsman, that ended with the slaying of possibly the most devastating and feared heavyweight in history and that proved the making of the most recognisable promoter the boxing world has seen.

41 years ago today, 60,000 gathered at the Stade du 20 Mai in the heart of the Kinshasa jungle, in the recently renamed dictatorship of Zaire, to witness The Rumble in the Jungle, a happening that – even by boxing’s high standards – proved as memorable as it did surreal.

It was said there was nothing the challenger Muhammad Ali could do to stop the champion George Foreman, whose punching power and air of invincibility intimidated as much as the small death he had inflicted on Joe Frazier when winning the WBC and WBA titles three fights earlier, ruthlessly punching through him in the same way he had 37 others (he was then 40-0), including Frazier and Ken Norton, previously.

Instead “The Greatest”, leaning on the ring’s loose ropes throughout and shunning the footwork for which he was partly famed, incredibly and fearlessly took the raging Foreman’s finest shots to both face and body – a tactic so daring some feared a fix – until an eighth-round opening was presented by the champion’s slackening, inelegant, yet still imposing figure.

Throwing a life-changing right hand, the challenger sent the champion crashing to the canvas where, overwhelmed with fatigue, he succumbed to defeat. Ten years after winning his title against Sonny Liston and seven after it was stripped, Ali was the world heavyweight champion once again.

“Almost at that precise moment, the skies opened above, and there was this amazing electric storm,” recalls The Independent on Sunday’s Alan Hubbard, who that night was ringside. “Flashes of lightning, thunder, and the rain cascaded down. It was so heavy that some of the ringside telephones were actually washed away in the storm.

“The river had just expanded and overflown into the roads. Everywhere you looked you saw these young kids dancing, and doing the Ali shuffle. [Boxing commentator] Reg Gutteridge was very anxious to get back [to Kinshasa] because he was doing a live television piece for ITV, but I thought we were all going to be drowned.

“I’ve covered many world title fights, World Cups, 12 Olympics, Winter Olympics, but one event is etched in the mind. I think about it frequently. That’s The Rumble in the Jungle. It was so bizarre, so ethereal, that you never forget it.

“To be sitting at four o’clock in the morning, in a jungle clearing, in an African country, in Zaire that was, with 60,000 Zairians [60,000 is the most common figure; accounts range between 50,000 and 80,000 but, emblematic of Zairian inefficiency, no official attendance was given] singing ‘Ali bomaye, Ali bomaye’ [‘Ali, kill him’], a big picture of Mobutu, the president of Zaire in the background, watching this incredible drama unfold… It is the most exhilarating experience I have ever had in sports journalism.

“There’d been nothing like it before, nothing like it since, and I doubt there ever will be again, and it was all because of one man. It was because of Ali, who literally transcended boxing.

“The fight itself was absorbing. Everybody with the exception of one or two expected Foreman to win. I thought Foreman would win. But Ali’s tactics were quite incredible.

“Although he totally denies it, the late Angelo Dundee [Ali’s trainer] did climb into the ring before the fight started and slackened the ropes. He says he didn’t and that he was just testing them, but we actually saw him, so the ‘rope-a-dope’ was already formed in Ali’s mind.

“Dundee had prophesised that Foreman would blow up like an old bull elephant around about the eighth round, and that’s precisely what happened.

“Ali threw everything at him, and he actually took everything from Foreman too. We could hear him saying to Foreman in the clinches: ‘Is that your best shot, George? Is that your best shot? You ain’t hurting, George, you ain’t hurting, is that all you’ve got?’

“And then came that wonderful moment – that corkscrewing right hand. It looked a glancing blow but it was expertly delivered, like a sword, and Foreman spun round in the ring. You could see that his head was all over the place.

“He didn’t get up, and the whole place absolutely erupted.”

The scenes captured on camera were of an unforgettable triumph, of the underdog and people’s champion conquering the colossal, previously-indestructible aggressor, but images elsewhere in the stadium carried an altogether more sinister tone – bloodstains on the arena floor as a reminder of that shed by anti-government protesters, 1,000 criminals imprisoned in chambers to prevent negative publicity from their potential crimes (it is alleged that between 40 and 100 of these were hanged in the square in Kinshasa), bullet holes in a wall deep in the stadium where others had been lined up and shot.

“That was the first time a sporting event had been held in an environment like that,” added Hubbard. “You never thought it could happen.”

It had all been made possible, of course, by Don King. The previously-little known promoter, who first appeared at Foreman’s side when the champion stopped Ken Norton in two rounds in Caracas, Venezuela, seven months earlier, seduced Mobutu Sese Seko – then the cruel and corrupt dictator of the country known today as the Democratic Republic of Congo – into paying each fighter $5million (£3.13m, and more than Rocky Marciano, Joe Louis or Jack Dempsey earned in an entire career, though loose change if considering Mobutu stole in the region of £3.7bn in aid money to leave Zaire crippled with debt) for a prolific propaganda coup for his country, his presidency, and the most evocative fight in history.

Mobutu is said to have watched the fight from his palace through fear of assassination but, just as with his ruling, there was no escaping his influence or the racial overtones that were present throughout. The Rumble in the Jungle, which significantly was refereed by the black American Zach Clayton, came at the height of the black power movement of the seventies and was truly a raw, black celebration.

“The Foreman-Ali fight was one of the fantastic achievements that God blessed me with,” King, whose name featured nowhere on the fight’s contracts, told Boxing News. “It was a spiritual thing. It was through God and perseverance, dedication and commitment, to demonstrate that people of colour could rise to the occasion if given the opportunity.

“It was the two hottest athletes in the world at that particular time. The location chose me: it was the [US’s] segregation, racist mentality, and they did not want to see a black man pull off something of this sort.

“We had a search on, and we ended up in Kinshasa, Zaire. It weren’t because I wanted to go to Africa, it was because Africa was the only place that would accept us.

“I named the fight ‘From the Slave Ship to the Championship’ [this was later replaced when it offended Zairians] and so that’s what we rolled with. At that time we were still living in 1865.”
“That fight made King,” The Sun’s Colin Hart, another ringside and one of the few to correctly predict victory for Ali, explained. “He’s the best promoter there’s ever been, in my opinion. He got government money involved in three major fights.

“It was supposed to be the coming home of the black man to Africa, and the black Americans hated it, they loathed it. Ali didn’t like the look of the women, etcetera, and they couldn’t wait to get out of there.”

As Ali in the fight’s lengthy build-up had unintentionally insulted the Zairians when he told reporters “All you who think George Foreman is gonna whup me; when you get to Africa, Mobutu’s people are gonna put you in a pot, cook you, and eat you”, the then-charmless Foreman wrongly wore traditional African dress upon arrival in a country he found to be unexpectedly modern while unintentionally scaring locals with his dog, a large German shepherd.

“We didn’t know the difference between east, west, north Africa, we didn’t know anything, so when coming to Africa, we thought ‘Boy, this is really gonna get us recognition, why not put on African clothes and walk around with that image’,” Foreman told BN.

“The whole idea of me taking that fight was to bridge the gap with Americans, and those who had been born in Africa, and kind of make a bridge there. Putting on the clothes was a part of that.”
If it was an attempt to win the popularity contest, Foreman lost out as convincingly as he did the fight. Ali, who by now had joined the Nation of Islam and was influencing his times, was attempting to reclaim the WBA title stripped from him seven years earlier for his refusal, on religious grounds, to join the US army’s war effort in Vietnam and declared himself, to the delight of the locals,  “going back home to fight among my brothers”, having called Africa his home, the home of the black man, and saying: “Damn America and what America thinks.”

The setback wasn’t Foreman’s last before he eventually entered the ring in the early hours, as demanded by US television, of October 30: Ali’s popularity continued to soar through his regular exposure to locals in Nsele while his rival remained isolated; Foreman feared his food was being poisoned; a witch-doctor was even said to have told Ali a ‘succubus’, or female demon – “a woman with trembling hands” – would get to the champion by fight night.

The two had originally been scheduled to meet on September 25, immediately after a concert performed by black acts including James Brown, Bill Withers and The Pointer Sisters but their fight was postponed when, five days prior, Bill McMurray accidentally and disastrously elbowed the champion during sparring and opened a significant cut over his right eye.

“Someone asked me the other day about the cut – ‘was that part of my decline?’” said Foreman. “But I was so confident, I could have suffered two cuts and still beat Muhammad Ali. I was just that confident – as a matter of fact, over-confident. I should have in hindsight left Africa, got myself healed real good, and come back for a later date, but I was just that over-confident.

“I’d never been cut in training and then you gotta stop working out, you can’t spar anymore. It disrupted my preparation but I don’t think it caused me to lose at all. Because once the bell rang, I was still the aggressor. I never stepped back once from Muhammad Ali.”

Leaving Africa may have been the sensible option but it was one Mobutu, through fears the fighters wouldn’t return – “If [Foreman] went home, I think he would have never came back,” said King – ruthlessly refused them. Tales persist of armed guards seizing the champion’s passport and of warnings to each fighter from Mobutu’s henchmen; even the media were kept in Zaire until a three-day argument, and Mobutu covering the cost of flying both the European and American contingents back, changed the dictator’s mind. He did, however, share another of their concerns.
“The press chief was a man called Chimpumpu wa Chimpumpu, whose brother was a government minister with Mobutu,” said Hart. “He always wore a fur hat, you never saw him without it.
“We sent our copy back by telex [teleprinters]. The bloody telex operators, when we used to hand our stuff in, there was hardly anybody there because they all used to bunk off and go to sleep [Alan Hubbard added that the operators had also been asking for bribes]. And we complained to Chimpumpu that the telex operators were never there when we needed them. It went up to Mobutu, and it came down from on high: ‘The next telex operator found asleep when he should be on duty will be shot’.”

Foreman remained the overwhelming favourite on fight night and, deep down, it’s probable even Ali understood why. The challenger avoided ever watching the champion hit the heavy bag, aware the impression it would leave on his psyche could go even deeper than Foreman’s fists did on the bag itself and, come the 30th, he wasn’t alone in needing reassurance.

His pre-fight changing room was one of intense fear and anxiety, his entourage no longer immune to widespread concerns that not only Ali’s status but his life was at risk, that at 32 the ability to evade Foreman was behind him while his pride – as suffocatingly intense as the stadium’s atmosphere – ensured he’d continue to take a beating until possibly his final breath.

Ali then energised his entourage like he memorably did so many others throughout his decorated career as he also energised and composed himself before making his way to the ring where he awaited the champion.

The ropes loose (Angelo Dundee denied ever causing this – the heat of the jungle causing them to stretch and Dundee attempting to tighten them was one explanation offered; Hart also believes suggestions Dundee loosened the ropes to be a myth), the challenger left the world aghast as, using the now-iconic rope-a-dope, he taunted Foreman and absorbed a remarkable beating until the champion punched himself out and allowed Ali to claim his finest victory.

“I didn’t dance,” Ali said immediately after the fight. “I didn’t dance for a reason. I wanted to make him lose all his power. I kept tell him he had no punch, he couldn’t hit, he swing like a sissy, he’s missing, let me see you box!”

“I was shocked,” Foreman told BN, “because I backed him into the corner, and got him some heavy shots, and anyone else would have crumbled. “I think about after the third round when I really gave it to him hard, the bell rang and he dropped his arms to uncover himself and said ‘I made it’. And he knew that he had weathered the biggest storm he had ever and would ever again. And even I remember thinking ‘He made it’. I don’t know how he did it, I just don’t know.

“I was discouraged about a lot of things back then, more than discouraged, but if I was going to beat him – really beat him fair and square – the ropes wouldn’t have made any difference.”
Forty years on, the Stade du 20 Mai is a crumbling, rusting relic housing some of DR Congo’s poorest; referee Zach Clayton, Foreman’s cornermen Archie Moore, Dick Sadler and Sandy Saddler, and those close to Ali – Angelo Dundee, Drew “Bundini” Brown and Walter Youngblood (later known as Wali Muhammad) – are no longer with us.

It is the memories of The Fight, of the Academy Award-winning documentary When We Were Kings, promoter Don King, Foreman’s publicist Bill Caplan, Ali’s business manager Gene Kilroy, the fighters themselves and, in this context more importantly, their collective legacies that remain.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net

Mittwoch, 28. Oktober 2015

On This Day: Wilfredo Gomez defeats Carlos Zarate in five rounds


ON October 28, 1978 two future Hall of Famers clashed in a famous Mexico vs Puerto Rico brawl. Puerto Rican hero Wilfredo Gomez defended his WBC super-bantamweight belt against Mexican bantamweight champion Carlos Zarate at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan.

GOMEZ needed five rounds to get the better of Zarate, knocking him down three times in the process, to retain his belt. The fight boasts the highest knockout percentage shared between two fighters in a world title fight.

GOMEZ entered the ring with after knocking out 21 of his victims, although he drew his first professional fight, while Zarate, who held the WBC bantamweight title going into the fight, had knocked out 54 of his 55 opponents.

BOTH men went through gruelling camps, with international bragging rights on the line, as well as the title, with both men wanting to give their country something to cheer.

THE Mexico – Puerto Rico remains one of the most intense rivalries in boxing today as it was back then, and this fight captured the imagination of both countries.

THE day before the fight, tensions were high, and both men failed to make the weight. Both came in at 124lbs, 2lbs over the limit and whilst “Bazooka” Gomez made it at the second attempt, Zarate toiled and drained himself down, making it at the fourth time of asking.

WHEN they entered the ring, anticipation for the fight was at fever pitch. The power shots landed at will and a brawl was on the cards. But Gomez had other ideas and decked Zarate in the fourth.

THE Mexican champion was up, but Gomez pressed forward, knocking him down again at the end of the round, just after the bell sounded. Roared on by a partisan crowd, Gomez went out to finish the job and 44 seconds later it was all over.

AS referee Harry Gibbs waved the fight off, Zarate’s corner simultaneously threw in the towel. Gomez retained his title, which he would hold until vacating in 1983, before securing two more world belts at two more weights.

BOTH men are rightly considered all-action heroes, with both inducted into the Hall of Fame, Gomez in 1995 and Zarate the year previously in 1994.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net

Dienstag, 27. Oktober 2015

On This Day: Marcel Cerdan is killed in plane crash on his way to rematch with Jake LaMotta


MARCEL CERDAN lived a life that sounds like a movie: poor boy from a humble background who rose to become world champion, had an affair with famous singer and died tragically young in a plane crash.

In fact, his life HAS been made into a movie, several times. It’s also been woven into films about Edith Piaf, the French songstress he had the fling with while married and a father.

Cerdan is the most famous French boxer ever, and his only rival as that nation’s best fighter is Georges Carpentier, who was also world champion but got to live to a ripe old age.

Marcel’s end still seems heartbreaking. Having ripped the world middleweight title from Tony Zale in 1948, he lost it to Jake LaMotta in Detroit in June 1949, when a first-round spill to the canvas separated his left shoulder and meant he was hardly able to punch. Even then, he lasted into the 10th before his manager Jo Longman threw in the towel.

A rematch was arranged for New York so the Cerdan party had to fly across the Atlantic (an adventure in those days). Their plane stopped at the Azores to refuel, but crashed into a mountain with everyone on board killed on October 27 1949. Marcel was 33 years old.

Born in Algeria, then part of France, Marcel was 18 when he turned pro in Morocco (also part of French North Africa).

By 1939 he was European welterweight champion, but the war scuppered any world title hopes, even though he continued to box, and win.

In 1947 he became European middleweight king, adding the world title when he forced Zale to retire after 11 rounds in Jersey City. The Ring named it the 1948 Fight of The Year, but three fights later he was dead, with the French going into mourning at the loss of their charismatic hero.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net

Dienstag, 20. Oktober 2015

On This Day: Andrew Golota stuns onlookers as he quits against Mike Tyson


IN the year 2000 at The Palace in Detroit, former heavyweight king Mike Tyson scored a quick TKO over the notoriously unstable Andrew Golota, but the win, which came when Golota refused to begin the third round, was later changed to a No-Contest due to Tyson failing a post-fight drugs test.

1. THE fight, which was dubbed “Showdown in Motown,” was promoted by Lois Hearns, the mother of legendary “Hitman” Thomas Hearns, who fronts Hearns Entertainment.

2. IN the run-up to the fight, boxing writers had a field day, asking whether it was actually possible for Tyson and Golota – two of boxing’s most controversial bad boys – to engage in a fair and foul-free contest.

3. FOR Tyson, the fight marked the fifth bout in a comeback that had been launched following a ban for biting Evander Holyfield’s ears in 1997. For Golota, the fight marked his 10th ring appearance since losing back-to-back fights to Riddick Bowe and Lennox Lewis.

4. TYSON came out fast as was usually the case, looking to unload bombs on the man dubbed “The Foul Pole.” Scoring a knockdown courtesy of his formidable right hand just seconds before the end of the opening session, Tyson looked to be on his way to another explosive KO victory. But Golota, after being hurt in the early going of the second-round, held his own, landing return fire. A memorable fight was shaping up.

5. YET Golota, who had picked up a cut above his left eye, then angered both Tyson and the fans in attendance by refusing to come out for the third-round. “I quit,” he told referee Frank Garza. Golota also claimed Tyson deliberately head-butted him in the first round, the infringement causing the cut to his eye. Golota’s corner-man, Al Certo, pleaded with his fighter to carry on fighting, trying to force the gum-shield into Golota’s mouth for the third round. “I should’ve shoved it up his ass,” Certo later remarked.

6. TYSON was so incensed he had to be physically restrained from resuming his attack on Golota, with Mike trying his best to get across the ring to lay hands on his opponent. Golota was pelted with beer cups and other things by the irate crowd as he left for his dressing room.

7. GOLOTA, it later transpired, had taken quite a beating. A trip to the hospital revealed how he had suffered, along with the cut above his eye, a concussion, a fractured cheekbone and a herniated disc in his neck.

8. AFTER the fight and the sudden ending, people attempted to figure out what had happened. Tyson’s then corner-man Tommy Brooks said that in his opinion Golota suffered an anxiety attack and had not been a coward. Certo also revealed how his fighter had actually wanted to quit after the first round had ended.

9. TYSON advisor Shelly Finkel told the press that the Golota fight would be Tyson’s final bout. Instead, the former champ boxed (on and off) for a further five years, winning two more outings and being stopped in the other three. Golota returned in 2003, boxing irregularly until 2009, only to make comebacks in early 2013 – with a possible bout in the works for this year.

10. THE Tyson-Golota bout is in the record books as a NC 3 because Tyson tested positive for marijuana.

Source: boxingnewsonline.net