Boxing
Looking back at two-time heavyweight king Tim Witherspoon
Published
5 months agoon
Last Sunday in Philadelphia at the recent PAB HOF Inductions event, I spoke with former two-time world heavyweight champion “Terrible” Tim Witherspoon, whom I have known for years.
Witherspoon is one of the nicest and most sincere former champions who attends Philadelphia boxing matches and events like this latest one. He is a fan favorite who was kind enough to answer a few questions about his career.
I first met Witherspoon in 1979 when he was at a Muhammad Ali sparring camp in Deer Lake, Pennsylvania, with his trainer “Slim” Jim Robinson.
Witherspoon turned professional in October 1979, defeating the debuting Joe Adams and winning his first fifteen fights before losing a disputed split decision to WBC world champion Larry “The Easton Assassin” Holmes (42-0) at the open-air Dunes Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada in May 1983 “I thought I won that fight for years, I learned you have to do more than just win,” Witherspoon said.
In the fourteenth fight, Witherspoon defeated Renaldo “Mr.” Snipes, 22-1-1, at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas by majority decision, which earned him a title shot. In his previous fight, Snipes was defeated in a title fight against Holmes.
I remember watching the Holmes-Witherspoon fight and feeling that Witherspoon should have received a split decision. Years later, I mentioned this to Holmes at his press conference, and he wasn’t elated that I said it.
Witherspoon rebounded in his next fight, defeating Floyd “Jumbo” Cummings 15-4-1 in the dunes. In September 1983, he won the vacant NABF title that Michael Dokes had vacated to continue winning the WBA title, defeating James “Quick” Tillis (26-3) in the first round. This earned him another title shot, winning the vacant WBC world title by defeating Greg Page (23-1) at the Convention Center in Las Vegas in March 1984. “Over time, I found out that Don King was just manipulating the fighters for his own benefit, warning us to get in shape, and he said there’s a adolescent kid named Mike Tyson and you better get in shape. He was just using us as opponents to get to Tyson,” Witherspoona said.
In August, in his first defense, Witherspoon lost a majority decision to Pinklon “Pink” Thomas 24-0-1 at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas. Another fierce fight.
Witherspoon won his next seven fights, including knocking out James “Broad Ax” Broad 17-1 to win the NABF title in two rounds at the Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo, Recent York.
Witherspoon then defeated future world champion James “Bonecrusher” Smith 15-3 at the Riviera Hotel. Three fights later, on January 17 in Atlanta, Georgia, he defeated Tony “TNT” Tubbs 21-0 to win the WBA world title, becoming a two-time world champion.
Right before the Tubbs fight on December 27, it was my birthday, I was training for the fight, and I was smoking marijuana. After the fight, I tested positive, paid a $25,000 fine, had to go through rehab for about six months, and got a rematch. Tubbs was injured in training, injured his shoulder, and did not fight for another 15 months.
Witherspoon then traveled to Great Britain in front of 40,000 spectators, stopping future world champion Frank Bruno (28-1) in the eleventh round in July 1986.
In December 1986, Witherspoon suffered his third loss in a rematch with “Bonecrusher”, losing in the first round at Madison Square Garden in Recent York, falling to 25-3. “I was supposed to fight Tubbs in a rematch, and when I heard he was injured, I left camp. I wasn’t in shape for that fight. We knew there was a three-knockdown rule, so I jumped. You could see me crawling on the floor. I faked it to make it look good, otherwise I wouldn’t get paid. I didn’t even get hurt,” Witherspoon said.
In 1987, Witherspoon filed a $25 million lawsuit against promoter Don King and his stepson Carl King, who was Witherspoon’s manager, accusing them of fraud and conflict of interest. In 1992, the lawsuit was settled out of court for $1 million. “I got the money, about $800,000 in parts,” Witherspoon said.
Witherspoon won his next eight fights. In March 1991, he won a split decision over another opponent I thought was Holmes’ overmatch, but he lost when he was 16-0, IBF USBA champion Carl “The Truth” Williams (23-3) at Trump Taj Mahal Stadium in Atlantic City, and Witherspoon won a split decision.
Three wins later, Witherspoon lost a split decision to Everett “Substantial Foot” Martin 17-14-1 at the Palace in Auburn Hills, Michigan. “I took him lightly and thought he was just an opponent,” Witherspoon said.
In January 1996, Witherspoon defeated former world cruiserweight champion Al Cole 27-1 and then Cuban great Jorge Luis Gonzalez 24-1, both at MSG. “I boxed Gonzalez, not wanting to get into a fight with him,” Witherspoon said.
In his next fight, Witherspoon lost to former WBO world champion Ray “Merciless” Mercer 23-4-1 in Atlantic City. “His jab was stronger than Holmes’,” Witherspoon said. After posting the win, he went on a five-fight losing streak against WBC continental American title challengers Larry “The Legend” Donald (29-1-1), James Thunder, 32-9, Andrew Golota, 31-3, “Super” Brian Nielsen, who tied Rocky Marciano’s record of 49-0. “His people came from Denmark to my house and asked me to dive and they would pay me for it, so I agreed,” said Witherspoon, who was stopped after four rounds. Witherspoon then lost in a rematch to Page 55-14-1 and was stopped after seven rounds in Fayetteville, North Carolina.
Witherspoon posted an 11-1-1 record before dropping his last two fights, including the vacant WBO Inter-Continental title to Lou Savarese (42-4). That put his final record in March 2003 at 55-13-1 with 38 shutouts.
Asking Witherspoon about today’s top heavyweights, he said: “I was in the UK and I had a daughter, Shanayiah Isabella Grace London Witherspoon, her mom’s last name was London and my last name and she’s 15 now,” he added. “I met Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury. They both asked me to spar with them. I would never have asked them to do that knowing the shape I was in,” Witherspoon said.
“Two years ago, I was taking my daughter to school when I woke up drenched in sweat. I felt very bad on the way to the hospital. The doctor said, ‘You’re lucky, if you hadn’t come, you would have died from blood clots,'” Witherspoon said.
“My son Tim Witherspoon Jr. has a boxing gym in Bristol, Pennsylvania,” Witherspoon said.
Witherspoon said he stays robust by drinking honey and turmeric smoothies and taking blood thinners. He has a lot of knowledge about what to do to stay robust.
Ken Hissner is an experienced boxing journalist with over 20 years of experience covering the world fight scene. As a senior writer for Boxing News 24is well known in the boxing community for his detailed results coverage, in-depth historical articles and ringside reports of major events.
Throughout his career, Ken has written for several major boxing outlets, building a reputation for accuracy, consistency and insight. His work often highlights both established champions and emerging prospects, providing context that connects boxing’s affluent history with today’s action.
When he’s not in the ring, Ken continues to study the sport’s past and present, ensuring his coverage reflects both deep knowledge and current relevance.
Last update: 21/10/2025
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Oleksandr Usyk is ready to ignore the WBC’s order and risk losing his world title
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39 minutes agoon
March 11, 2026
The WBC recently approved Oleksandr Usyk’s title defense against Rico Verhoeven, but ordered the Ukrainian to face interim champion Agit Kabayel next.
Usyk will face kickboxing star Verhoeven in May this year in Egypt. It was originally supposed to be a fight for the WBC commemorative belt, but it was later considered a legitimate world title fight. The WBC’s decision was met with criticism given that the Dutch kickboxing champion had just had one professional boxing fight and did not appear in the world rankings.
President Mauricio Sulaiman assured that Kabayel’s next well-deserved shot would be next, but Usyk’s latest interview, in which he revealed his planned last three fights before retirement, made no mention of the German heavyweight.
With the two-time undisputed champion set to face Verhoeven, the winner of Fabio Wardley’s fights with Daniel Dubois and Tyson Fury, it appears he plans to ignore the WBC’s order and risk being stripped of his green and gold belt.
If Usyk manages to retain his IBF and WBA belts – which is by no means guaranteed as neither sanctioning body has commented on the Verhoeven fight – and negotiates with the winner of the WBO champ’s Wardley vs. Dubois fight, he could lobby the WBC for an undisputed fight to trump his mandatory challenge and allow him to retain the belt.
It would be a blow to Kabayel, who has held the interim belt since February 2025 with a win over Zhilei Zhang. Since then, he has defended himself in Germany against Damian Knybadrawing a packed arena to go 27-0 with 19 knockouts.
Boxing
Gervonta Davis is reportedly negotiating with Isaac Cruz for a summer rematch
Published
3 hours agoon
March 11, 2026
Somewhat surprisingly, Mike Coppinger reports that Gervonta Davis may have a rematch with Isaac Cruz following his 2021 fall. For those who don’t know, Davis is currently accused of abusing his ex-girlfriend. Given the seriousness of the charges against him, it was understandable to believe that Davis would be out of the ring for an extended period of time. However, recent reports indicate that this may not be the case. Of course, the rematch may take place this summer.
Although Cruz won their 2021 battle by decision, he put up quite a fight with Davis, perhaps proving to be the Baltimore native’s toughest opponent at the time. Davis’ last fight was against Lamont Roach. This fight, which took place a year ago this month, was much closer than expected. Some believed Davis’ decision victory was a gift from the judges. Roach wanted a rematch, but it didn’t happen. Instead, Davis was scheduled to face Jake Paul in a novelty fight slow last year. Davis’s legal troubles put an end to the scheduled fight, and Anthony Joshua replaced Davis and then defeated Paul. While Davis would undoubtedly be the favorite to sign a rematch with Cruz, fans and analysts would undoubtedly wonder whether Davis is the fighter he once was.
First there was the Roach fight, then there was the fact that Roach was unwilling or unable to face Roach in a legitimate rematch. Add in the legal issues and a reported lack of interest in the build-up to Paul’s later crushing fight, and it’s no wonder people have questions. Things got to the point where even before his January arrest, people were questioning Davis’s interest in sports. Reports about talks about a second fight with Cruz, however, at least to some extent refute the thesis that Davis is not interested in fighting professionally.
This is obviously good news for Cruz as he now has a second chance to defeat the still undefeated Davis. The invigorating fighter most recently fought Lamont Roach to a draw in their December bout. Time will tell whether the fight with Davis will actually take place. This fight would definitely be fascinating to watch, even if it wasn’t exactly a great fight. If the fight becomes a reality, Davis will have the opportunity to re-establish himself as one of the biggest vigorous names in the sport.
Boxing
Tyson Fury doubts whether the judges will give him victory over Oleksandr Usyk
Published
5 hours agoon
March 11, 2026
“I won the third fight,” Fury told Gareth A. Davies. “But the thing is, I know if he gets up at the end of the fight, I’m not going to make a decision. For me, it’s like, I might as well give him the fight before we even start boxing. Give him a W and I’ll give him an L.”
Usyk defeated Fury twice in 2024 in hard-fought championship fights that decided the undisputed heavyweight title. The Ukrainian’s victories transformed the division and left Fury trying to rebuild momentum in the final stage of his career.
When the discussion turned to the scoring of these fights, Fury made it clear that he still viewed the outcome differently from the official verdicts.
“And like I said, I thought I won that fight,” Fury said. “But you know what he did? That’s someone else’s opinion again.”
Fury’s comments suggest that from his perspective the debate surrounding these fights remains unresolved. Instead of treating the defeats as decisive setbacks, the former champion still doubts whether a third meeting would have produced a different outcome on the scorecards.
This lingering doubt keeps the trilogy discussion alive even as the heavyweight landscape moves forward with other matchups. Fury has talked about returning to winning form and then fighting main fights again, but his comments show that the controversy surrounding Usyk’s decision has not abated.
For Fury, the conclusion remains the same: if he doesn’t stop Usyk, he doubts the judges would award him the victory.
Olly Campbell is a boxing journalist covering this sport since 2014, providing reports from the ring and technical analyzes of the most essential fights. His work focuses on fighter tendencies, tactical adjustments and the details that shape high-level competition.
Oleksandr Usyk is ready to ignore the WBC’s order and risk losing his world title
Gervonta Davis is reportedly negotiating with Isaac Cruz for a summer rematch
Tyson Fury doubts whether the judges will give him victory over Oleksandr Usyk
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