Mike Tyson vs. Tony Tubbs
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Date | March 21, 1988 | |
Location | Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan | |
Title(s) on the line | WBA/WBC/IBF Heavyweight Championships | |
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Mike Tyson vs. Tony Tubbs | ||
"Iron Mike" | "TNT" | |
Tale of the tape | ||
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Catskill, New York, US | From | Cincinnati, Ohio, US |
33–0 | Pre-fight record | 24–1 |
WBA/WBC/IBF Undisputed Heavyweight Champion | Recognition |
Mike Tyson vs. Tony Tubbs was a professional boxing match contested on March 21, 1988 for the WBA, WBC and IBF Heavyweight Championships.
Contents
Background
Tyson was only two months removed from an impressive victory over ex-Heavyweight champion Larry Holmes. Shortly after his victory, Tyson's promoter Don King was able to work out a blockbuster deal with Michael Spinks and Spinks' promoter Butch Lewis that would see Spinks finally meet Tyson for the Undisputed Championship. Before that fight would happen, however, Tyson would first have to defend his titles against former WBA Heavyweight champion Tony Tubbs in Tokyo, Japan for his first ever title defense outside of the United States.
Much was made about the weight of Tony Tubbs. The Japanese promoters had offered Tubbs an additional $50,000 had he weighed less than 235 and Tubbs himself claimed he would come into the fight at 230 pounds, however it was revealed at the final weigh-in that he in fact weighed 238 pounds. It was revealed before the fight that Tubbs had a falling out with his trainer Richie Giachetti, who had been recommended to Tubbs by Tyson's previous opponent, Larry Holmes. Giachetti would claim lack of motivation on Tubbs' part, stating "I tried to kick him in the ass, get him in shape, and Tony didn't like that. It's a shame. The guy has real ability, but I don't think he's in good shape."[1] Despite his weight issues, Tubbs remained confident that he could pull off the upset and defeat Tyson, stating "A lot of guys who've lost to him have made the mistake of getting caught up in his kind of fight, and I won't let him suck me up into his kind of fight. I won't let him do that. I'm going to make him box. He's never faced a guy with my hand speed."[2]
The Fight
The two fighters fought a close 1st round. Tubbs was able to land several jabs and avoid Tyson's power punches. At the end of the round, one judge ruled in favor of Tubbs 10–9, another gave the round to Tyson 10–9, and the third awarded a draw 10–10. At the beginning of 2nd round, Tubbs again fought Tyson well, being able to land several punches within the first two minutes of the round. However, with 30 seconds left in round 2, Tyson landed a right body shot–right uppercut combination as Tubbs was against the ropes. Referee Arthur Mercante, Sr. then separated the two men and Tubbs, clearly hurt from the exchange, staggared towards Tyson who then landed a left hook to the side of Tubbs' head. Tubbs legs gave way and he collapsed to mat with 15 second left in the round. Almost immediately afterwards, Tubbs' trainer Odell Hadley jumped into the ring, causing Mercante to stop the fight at 2:54 and award Tyson the victory via technical knockout.[3]
Aftermath
Next up for Tyson would be his highly anticipated bout against Lineal Heavyweight champion Michael Spinks. Despite months of heavy buildup with two undefeated Heavyweight champions going up against one another, the fight did not last long, with Tyson knocking out Spinks within 91 seconds. After this Tyson would take an eight-month layoff before returning in February to face England's Frank Bruno, defeating him via 5th round technical knockout. After another successful defense against Carl Williams, Tyson would return to the Tokyo Dome to face little-known James "Buster" Douglas in what was supposed to be another easy fight for Tyson before he would face Evander Holyfield. However, Douglas would pull off the shocking upset, defeating Tyson by 10th round knockout.
References
- ↑ Controversy Surrounds Tubbs; All Is Upbeat on Tyson Front, L.A. Times article, 1988-03-18, Retrieved on 2013-05-01.
- ↑ Training Hard, Tubbs Entertains Notions of a Win, L.A. Times article, 1988-02-24, Retrieved on 2013-05-01.
- ↑ Tyson Takes Tokyo , Sports Illustrated article, 1988-03-28, Retrieved on 2013-05-02.