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Lewis Keeps Titles, Knocks Out Tyson in Eighth Rou

RugerNinerRugerNiner Member Posts: 12,636 ✭✭✭
edited June 2002 in General Discussion
By TIM DAHLBERG
.c The Associated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (June 8) -- Lennox Lewis showed the bully who was boss.

Using a masterful left jab and landing his right hand at will, Lewis battered a befuddled Mike Tyson before stopping him with a crashing right hand in the eighth round to keep his heavyweight titles Saturday night.

Tyson was bleeding from cuts over both his eyes and from his nose when Lewis landed a punch that sent him sprawling on his back in Lewis' corner. Tyson tried to stand up at the count of eight, getting to one knee, but he was counted out by referee Eddie Cotton at 2:25 of the round.

"Some of the punches he took, I was shocked,'' Lewis said. "I felt them right through to my hand.''

It was a sudden end to a dominating performance by Lewis, who overwhelmed the former champion from the opening bell at the Pyramid Arena.

"There's no way I could ever beat him,'' Tyson said. "He's just too big and too strong.''

Lewis, the IBF and WBC champion, had vowed to beat Tyson to restore order to the heavyweight division. He pounded him with jabs from the first round on, keeping Tyson away and out of range. When Tyson did get close, Lewis hit him with a right uppercut or an overhand right.

"I wanted to prove I was the best fighter in the world,'' Lewis said. "Nobody gets away from my jab.''

Tyson certainly didn't. He was exposed as a fighter with limited skills who kept trying to throw punches at the champion but connected only occasionally. Tyson kept trying to rush in and land a big punch, but he never hurt Lewis with any of them.

The sight of Tyson being so thoroughly dominated was almost as shocking as his behavior afterwards, when he tenderly wiped the blood off of Lewis' cheek as the two answered questions.

"He's a magnificent, a prolific fighter, and he should continue fighting,'' Tyson said. "I love him and respect him too much to do something to him.''

Early in the eighth round, Tyson was already bleeding when Lewis hit him with a series of punches that buckled his legs and nearly put him down. Cotton ruled it a knockdown and gave Tyson an eight-count.

When the fight resumed, Lewis went after Tyson again, throwing right hands and jabs before finally connecting with a huge right hand that crashed into the side of Tyson's face, sending him sprawling on his back.

"He was ducking to my right, and I just wanted to catch him as he was doing that,'' Lewis said. "I caught him and he went down.''

Tyson had gone into the ring an underdog for the first time in his career, and it was quickly apparent why.

He had said he would "crush'' Lewis' skull, but Lewis made him look like an amateur, dominating inside and out with his jab and big right hands.

Punch Stats showed Lewis threw 328 punches and landed 193 of them, while Tyson threw 211 and landed only 49.

Officials had worried so much about Tyson fouling Lewis that there was a contract clause that a fighter who committed a vicious foul had to pay the other $3 million if the fight ended because of it.

Once the fight started, though, it was Lewis who was warned by Cotton for elbowing, pushing and holding. Cotton took a point away from Lewis in the fourth round for holding.

The three ringside judges gave Tyson only the first round, while the Associated Press had Lewis winning every round.

Lewis, who said he needed to beat Tyson to cement his legacy as a great heavyweight, not only did just that, but looked very impressive in the process.

At 6-foot-5, 249 1/4 pounds, he was bigger, faster and stronger than the 5-11 Tyson, who weighed 234 1/2.

"Mike Tyson was not ready for this kind of fight,'' Lewis' trainer Emanuel Steward said. "I was disappointed, but I was also relieved. It went pretty much exactly the way we wanted it to. The main thing was to make Mike Tyson fight Lennox's kind of fight and once we did that we knew it was going to be over.''

Lewis said he never worried about Tyson biting him or committing a foul to change the outcome of the fight.

"I thought Mike Tyson was going to behave himself. There was too many people watching. I wasn't going to give him any reason to bite me,'' he said.

Lewis, criticized in other fights for being too cautious in the ring, wasn't against Tyson, who was disqualified for biting Evander Holyfield on both ears in a 1997 title fight. Lewis pushed Tyson around, didn't let him get inside and generally acted like the bully himself.

Still, Steward kept telling Lewis between rounds to finish off Tyson.

"Emanuel was pleading with me to take him out,'' Lewis said. "Emanuel told me to take him out earlier. I was just waiting for the time.''

The loss may have been disastrous to the career of Tyson, who terrorized the heavyweight ranks in the 1980s, but has looked very ordinary in the ring since.

He and Lewis each made about $20 million for the fight and their contract called for a rematch. But it is not likely one would sell after the beating Tyson took -- even worse than the one Holyfield gave him in their first fight in November 1996.

"I don't think there will be any more fights with Mike Tyson,'' Steward said. "Who are we going to sell it to?''

Tyson and Lewis had been kept apart since they brawled in January at a news conference. A dozen yellow-shirted security guards entered the ring before the fighters and made sure they were separated until the bell.

Tyson came into the fight with only 18 rounds in the ring since biting Holyfield. During that time, Lewis was in 12 title fights, winning all except for a fluke punch by Hasim Rahman and a disputed draw with Holyfield.

The ring rust showed. Tyson appeared confused every time Lewis backed him up with the jab. He said after his last fight that he needed two more fights to get ready for Lewis, but claimed after 160 rounds of sparring that he was ready to beat him.

"He hurt me early, and he just kept pressure on me,'' Tyson said. "I could take a shot from him but I just couldn't see every punch.''

Lewis (40-2-1, 31 knockouts) has to fight a mandatory IBF defense against Chris Byrd, but then is mandated by fight contracts to give Tyson a rematch at that time.

"I just want to complete my legacy,'' Lewis said. "I wanted to prove I was the best fighter in the world.''

Tyson had to pay Lewis $335,000 out of his purse for biting him at the January news conference to announce the fight, which was originally scheduled for April 6 in Las Vegas.

Las Vegas, however, rejected the fight and several other states refused Tyson a license before Memphis finally bid $12 million to land it.

Several times, it was doubtful the fight would come off. Tyson had to be sequestered in Maui to train to keep out of trouble.

The fight was supposed to be one of the richest ever, generating nearly $100 million in revenue. Ticket sales were slow because they were priced as high as $2,400, but a crowd of 15,327 turned up to see the biggest sporting event ever in the city.

Tyson (49-4-2) was trying to become a three-time champion, something Lewis already accomplished when he won the IBF and WBC titles back from Rahman with a knockout Nov. 17. But he hadn't fought well against a top opponent since beating Razor Ruddock in 1991 and there were as many questions about his eroding ring skills as his antics outside the ring.


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Comments

  • timberbeasttimberbeast Member Posts: 1,738 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Tyson's downfall came a long time ago, when he fired his trainer, whose name escapes me at the moment. Prior to that, he devastated his opponents, all bigger, with crushing body blows, and when the pain brought the arms down, he delivered the final blow. Afterwards, so many opponents were intimidated by Tyson that they lost the fight before it even began. All he was doing was head-hunting in every fight, a smart trainer of an opponent should have seen that and used it. Most journeyman boxers could have beaten him if they weren't scared of him so badly. I guarantee there will be a rematch, and it will make big money. Pro boxing isn't THAT much different than pro wrestling. If it makes bucks, it will happen, even though the outcome is generally not pre-determined. Ask Mr. Ali. He's in the shape he's in today because he refused to go down. People remember his speed, skill and mouth, but always forget that of all boxers, he took the punch the best, a curse in disguise. The man fought 13 rounds with a broken jaw, for crying out loud. I don't believe that Ali or Frazier made it out of Manilla alive, and most folks would not have. Neither Lewis (whom I think is a great fighter, but poorly coached) nor Tyson would have. Tyson has become a footnote, but he's already made more money than I ever will in three lifetimes. If the market wants it, it will happen!
  • IconoclastIconoclast Member Posts: 10,515 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I don't consider boxing a sport . . . or if it is, in the same category as pit bulls and roosters. The difference is there's a lot more money, it has a pretense of legitimacy and usually involves animals with slightly higher levels of intelligence . . . although that is questionable in the case of Tyson.
  • Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Lewis definately took Tyson to school.The ridiculous part of the whole fight is that after the fight,Tyson thanked Lewis for the "PAY DAY".After be outclassed and outboxed so severely as Tyson was they will still have a rematch not for sport,not for the titles,but to stuff their pockets with cash.There is no way Tyson deserves a rematch but he will get one.Then to promote Tyson will continue his "Eat your children" diatribes and the public will eat it up only to have a has been Tyson get his * handed to him again.

    "If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
  • dheffleydheffley Member Posts: 25,000
    edited November -1
    Everytime Tyson hits the floor, my heart is lifted!

    Save, research, then buy the best.Join the NRA, NOW!Teach them young, teach them safe, teach them forever, but most of all, teach them to VOTE!
  • bullelkbullelk Member Posts: 679 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I guess Lewis will now get the recognition he deserves. It's been a long time coming. He is a hell of a boxer, but probably by not being an American citizen is why he didn't get it. I would like to have seen the fight, but damned if I pay 50 or 60 bucks to watch it. I'll settle for the replay.

    Gino

    "If All Else Fails, Read The Directions"
  • davcondavcon Member Posts: 139 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I don't think lewis will get the recognition he is looking for. Tyson fought for about 1 minute in the first round and spent the rest of the fight standing in front of lewis acting like nothing more than a punching bag. Tyson only landed 49 punches through 7+ rounds! Lewis didn't do a thing to earn my respect as a great champion. Both of them ought to retire.
  • Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    All Lewis did was beat a man who hadn't fought in two years.I don't care who you are,if you don't get yourself in the ring and condition with real fights you're not going anywhere against the champion.Tyson was in it for the money and had no real expectation to win.

    "If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878
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