Tris Dixon profiles the ‘Baddest Man on the Planet’, Mike Tyson
ONCE known universally as “The Baddest Man on the Planet”, Mike Tyson captured the imagination of sports fans around the world when he burst onto the scene in the mid-late 1980s.
A troubled youth, saved from the streets by a caring mentor – his
trainer and manager Cus D’Amato – Tyson became the youngest heavyweight
champion in history at the age of 20, when he numbed Trevor Berbick
with a stunning left hook in Las Vegas in November 1986.
It was an astonishing achievement and as he terrorised the remainder of
the division he instilled fear into just about every heavyweight he
faced. Whether it was Frank Bruno crossing himself umpteen times on his
way in the ring, Michael Spinks freezing like a deer in the headlights
or Larry Holmes trying to be too tough for his own good, no one could
match Tyson in his prime. It was not about who he was beating but how he
was decimating them. As a result many Tyson fans think the fighter who
was so devastating then would have matched up favourably to the best
heavyweights in history.
We will, of course, never know and distractions out of the ring saw his prime cut terribly short.
Troubles with women, managers and promoters culminated in him
being stunned in arguably the biggest heavyweight upset of all time when
James “Buster” Douglas left a bewildered Tyson clawing away at the
canvas for a lost mouthpiece and although he tried to get back on track
with wins over old amateur rival Henry Tillman (ko 1), Alex Stewart (rsf
1) and Donovan “Razor” Ruddock (w rsf 7 and w pts 12) he was imprisoned
for raping a beauty queen in 1992, losing three years of what was left
of his prime.
Once out of Indianapolis jail, the punch and the powers of
intimidation remained but the ambition, hunger and dedication were long
gone.
He regained the WBC and WBA belts from poor Bruno and a scared witless
Bruce Seldon but then ran into a foe who could take his punch and was
not afraid; God-fearing Evander Holyfield just had Tyson’s number. He
stopped him in 11 rounds in 1996 and then seven months later an
out-of-ideas Mike twice bit Holyfield’s ears.
A ban and a conviction for an assault on two elderly motorists
saw him lose a couple more years but controversy was never far away.
He returned to starch Frans Botha with a devastating right hand
but later admitted trying to break the South African’s arm in a clinch.
He then fought to a No Contest with Orlin Norris, whom he knocked out
after the bell, and twice visited the UK for quick wins over Julius
Francis and Lou Savarese. Another No Contest followed, when a drug test
revealed he’d been smoking marijuana prior to a fight with Andrew Golota
but, in 2002, came the long-awaited clash with old sparring partner
Lennox Lewis. Tyson, whose peak was 15 years earlier, took a frightful
battering over eight rounds and limped into retirement following upset
losses to British enigma Danny Williams and limited Irishman Kevin
McBride. But what a wild ride it had been.
CREDIT TO:http://www.boxingnewsonline.net/on-this-day-mike-tyson-was-born/
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