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Boxing History

Mike Tyson vs. George Foreman? We win some, we lose some

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Mike Tyson


In 1998, Donald Trump was just Donald Trump, but he had plans for a fight that would change boxing. Well, that was his spiel at the time.

Trump actually had two fights in mind; the Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield trilogy and the Tyson-George Foreman fight.

Tyson and Holyfield met outside his office sometime in the early summer of 1998. It was a shock to both, but it was clearly Trump’s move. But his real goal was to get Foreman, who last fought in overdue 1997, into the ring with Tyson.

During this time, Tyson had some problems; he had an argument with Don King during a kick outside a Los Angeles hotel, there was a $100 million lawsuit circulating, and he had to try to get his boxing license back. As we recall, he took a lump or two out of Holyfield’s ear during his last fight. Tyson was suspended, Trump had a plan.

Donald Trump and Don King (DON EMERT/AFP via Getty Images)

At a July hearing in Fresh Jersey, Tyson was feeling fine until he swore. After that outburst, it was all over, Trump was furious, Foreman remained retired, and we all missed what was probably one of the greatest and most absurd fights in boxing history.

This Saturday [], we will get the kind of fight that has so often been lost. The Tyson-Foreman fight was extreme, but there are many other comical, absurd and wonderful fights we’ve lost over the years.

I’m talking about fights that took place, often officially, and then something went wrong and they never happened. They are lost forever; many people thought that the Fury and Usyk fight was over for good.

Some fights were agreed in principle, a handshake was made and perhaps a few good pounds were paid to make it possible. There are others that were rumors, but good rumors, not the newfangled version where one champion calls another ap**** or ab**** and immediately thinks they can sell every seat in the Garden. They often had difficulty selling the deckchair in their own garden.

How about Tim Witherspoon’s saga with the Klitschko brothers? It seemed to take a decade. “They wanted too much from me,” Tim always said. “It’s just business,” the brothers always said. I would love to see the last of the best “Spoon in with a Klitschko” movies.

Another distant idea was Naseem Hamed fighting Azumah Nelson; Zoom Zoom was the WBC super featherweight champion, while Hamed was the WBO featherweight champion. What about Hamed and Arturo Gatti? I love this one. At the end of Hamed’s incredibly stimulating victory over Kevin Kelley in Fresh York in December 1997, I spoke to Pat Lynch, Gatti’s man, and he confirmed that it had been mentioned. Gatti was four pounds heavier and held the IBF super featherweight title. Lynch dismissed that, too: “Gatti would have slaughtered him,” he said overdue at the Garden.

Arturo cats

Arturo Gatti (Ed Mulholland/USA Today Sports)

There was also a great British showdown that was agreed to one evening in the Empire Pool at Wembley and ended with the death of one of the boxers in the ring. In June 1980, Johnny Owen and Charlie Magri fought for the same bill in the Empire Pool; Owen was the British Bantamweight Champion and Magri never lost or defended his British Flyweight title. They sat and talked in the locker room. They were separated by a few kilos and there was no super flyweight division. They also met as students and Magri won.

That June night, they agreed to fight. First, Owen had to go to Los Angeles and fight Lupe Pintor for the world bantamweight title in September. Johnny never came back.

One of my favorites is the 1981 John L. Gardner vs. Muhammad Ali fight in Hawaii. Ali said it would happen, it happened, and Mickey Duff received a huge cash payment after meeting with a man named Harold Smith in Los Angeles. Duff talked to Gigantic John, Gigantic John agreed and dates were discussed for the fall of Smith’s empire – he was robbed. Duff kept the money but told the authorities in America; Gigantic John didn’t get a dime and didn’t get a chance to fight Muhammad Ali. This is a true story. We have lost this person forever.

In the summer of 1990, Barry Hearn was preparing Mike McCallum for an outdoor fight in Brighton against Chris Eubank. I think initially there was talk of it being at Ancient Trafford. It never happened, but it was more than a rumor.

One or two disappeared because one of the men went to prison rather than training camp. Perhaps the most infamous example came in December 1982, when Davey Moore agreed to terms and signed a contract to defend his WBA welterweight title against Tony Ayala Jr. At that time, Ayala Jr. was undefeated in 22 fights, 19 of which ended prematurely. No one doubted that he would be a boxing star.

Tony Ayala Jr.

Tony Ayala Jr

He had a guarantee that the $700,000 for Moore and Garden for the proposed May 1983 fight would sell out. They even held a press conference that made Ayala Jr lose his mind two weeks later. He sexually assaulted a woman and was arrested while shadow boxing half-naked in the street at 3 a.m. The fight was over for good; he served every day of his minimum sentence of 15 years. Instead, Moore fought Roberto Duran in June and lost. Ayala Jr never became the fifth king.

There’s a little bit of everything in the fights we lost along the way. It’s just a pity that so many escaped. Still, it’s Saturday in Riyad and it looks like it’s been lost.

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Boxing History

40 Years Later: Remembering the Pain and Tragedy of Billy Collins Jr.’s Fight with Luis Resto

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40 Years On: Remembering The Pain And The Tragedy Of The Billy Collins Jr-Luis Resto Fight

Forty years ago, on the undercard of Roberto Duran Vs. Davey Moore fights two men on opposite ends of their careers in Recent York in a ten-round welterweight fight. What happened next changed both men’s lives forever, and the events in the ring that night also changed boxing.

Billy Collins Jr., 21, was a 14-0 prospect who was expected to make the cut. Promoted by Bob Arum and trained by his father, former fighter Billy Collins Sr., the newborn Tennessee fighter was paired with a tough but not terribly unsafe fighter named Luis Resto. Resto, a 27-year-old Puerto Rican with a record of 19-8-2(8), would eventually become one of the most infamous fighters in all of boxing. The same could be said for the fight Resto “won.”

Trained by Panamanian Lewis Resto, to everyone’s surprise, defeated Collins Jr. Resto, not known as a particularly mighty hitter, moved into action that was usually aggressive and stimulating to watch Collins. Collins soon began to show severe facial damage, with both eyes rapidly swelling and his cheekbones and forehead also becoming gruesomely deformed by the end of the fight.

Collins really struggled, but he managed to stay tough until the final bell. It wasn’t until afterward, when people found out what had happened, that fans could truly appreciate just how tough Collins was. The two men met in the middle of the ring after the decision was announced, and as Resto went to pay his respects to Collins, Collins Sr. shook hands with the man who had just beaten his son and immediately noticed something was wrong – he could feel that Resto’s gloves were almost completely devoid of padding.

The trainer/father immediately raised the alarm bell and Resto did everything he could to get away, looking at his own trainer Lewis with desperation. There has indeed been significant tampering with the Resto gloves, resulting in approximately one ounce of padding being removed from each glove and, perhaps even worse, some Band-Aid placed on each Resto box. The beating of Collins Jr. is now seen by the world as simply the terrible thing it actually was. Resto denied any wrongdoing. Resto claimed it was all Panama’s fault. He was playing with Resto’s gloves without the warrior knowing.

Only he didn’t.

Years later, in 2009, when Eric Drath’s wonderful and moving documentary “Assault in the Ring” was released, Resto finally admitted that he knew about the gloves, the cast, and the drug that Panama gave him that helped him breathe during the fight, thus allowing him to get a second wind; Resto stating that the drug was given to asthma patients.

All of this was supposed to happen a few years earlier, and so far, both fighter and trainer have been paying the price. Panama was sentenced to a year in prison, Resto to two and a half, and both men had their driving licenses taken away. Resto would never fight again; Lewis would never be allowed to enter the ring as a trainer again. But for Collins Jr., it was much worse. Falling into depression, his career was torn away from him due to solemn facial injuries, the father and husband began drinking heavily, and by accident or on purpose, he crashed his car into a creek near his home, dying at the age of seven. It happened on March 6, 1984. Billy was only 22 years aged.

The events that took place at Madison Square Garden 40 years ago have never been forgotten and will never be forgotten. How could something like this be allowed to slip through the rules and regulations? How could such a heinous act of barbaric fraud have gone undetected? Panama, as we learned from Resto in Wrath, took care of his misbehavior in the locker room bathroom. Resto, who has shown and continues to show real remorse for what happened, has clearly suffered. Nevertheless, the hatred some people have for the former fighter remains unchanged.

Lewis, who died in September 2020, never showed remorse and never admitted to any crime. No obituaries were written after Lewis’ death.

The man’s life was nearly taken on the night of June 16, 1983, as a promising career in the ring was brutally cut miniature. Some firmly believe that Panama Lewis was the real bad guy behind the disgusting plan, while others claim that Resto was involved and equally guilty. Panama knew what he was sending his fighter to do, namely to inflict horrendous pain on another boxer through illegal violence, which he had to know about. While Resto certainly knew that he was fighting against a deck that was so stacked in his favor that he hit his opponent with gloves that were prepared.

Would Billy Collins Jr. have forgiven either man if his life hadn’t ended so prematurely and so tragically? We’ll never know. But there are plenty of people who will never forgive Lewis or Resto. And who can blame those people?

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Boxing History

The thieves who stole Zale grabbed Basilio’s championship belts; Unfortunately, the belts are lost forever

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Thieves Who Stole Zale, Basilio Championship Belts Caught; The Belts Sadly Lost Forever

Fight fans could read in 2015 how valuable world championship belts were stolen from the Hall of Fame in Canastota. Four belts belonging to the great Carmen Basilio and two belts belonging to the also great Tony Zale were stolen. Now, almost ten years later, the thieves who committed this crime have been caught. It’s a good news.

The bad news, however, as RingTV.com reports, is that the belts were likely melted down by the perpetrators so that they could move the metal around in discs or rods. If that is indeed the case, the belts are gone forever. Nine of the thieves have been named (they won’t be here), and several more are under investigation.

The 20-year-old gang of thieves not only stole the championship belts for which two all-time greats bled, but also valuable works of art and a number of championship rings belonging to the legendary Yogi Berra. According to an article in Ring, rings belonging to baseball great Berry fetched prices well over $1,000,000 on the open market. Can you put a price on the belts won by Zale and Basilio?

Haley Zale, a relative of the Man of Steel, released a tiny statement regarding the end of the “Bring Back the Seat Belt” campaign.

“It is with a ponderous heart that I announce that the Bring Back The Belts campaign has come to an end,” Zale wrote on social media. “Closing is just a word. The feeling runs deeper. The belts are gone. But the trash bags have finally stopped!”

It is of course a great pity that the six championship belts no longer exist, melted away in the pursuit of dollars, as most likely was the case. Some things are more valuable, much more significant than money. The great belts that these two boxing legends won in their great fights in the ring have now lost their examples. Just ask a die-hard boxing fan and they’ll tell you.

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Boxing History

On This Day in 2000: Mosley and De La Hoya gave us a state-of-the-art welterweight classic

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On This Day In 2000: Mosley And De La Hoya Gave Us A Modern Day Welterweight Classic

If a fan wants to create a list of the 10 best welterweight world title fights in history, chances are a state-of-the-art classic that took place on this day in 2000 would be included. Once-beaten superstar Oscar De La Hoya met undefeated “Sugar” Shane Mosley at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, and the fight dubbed “Destiny” provided us with two electrifying performances full of speed, power and boxing.

Both were in their prime, De La Hoya was 26 years ancient, Mosley was 28. De La Hoya was 32-1(26) and the current WBC welterweight champion. Mosley was perfect with a record of 34-0 (32) and reigned as the IBF lightweight champion for over two years. In search of greatness, Mosley moved up to 147 pounds and had two non-title fights at the novel weight before facing De La Hoya.

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De La Hoya, who had lost his undefeated record to a hard-fought and hotly contested decision in another huge fight, the one against Felix Trinidad, was eager to redeem himself and against the talented and lightning-fast Mosley, De La Hoya would have to put an end to everything hanging in the balance to win. The expected rematch with Trinidad did not materialize, and De La Hoya instead boxed Derrell Coley, winning the fight and later reinstated as WBC welterweight champion after Trinidad made the decision to enhance weight.

So De La Hoya-Mosley stepped forward and fans everywhere braced themselves for something special. They got it.

De La Hoya was the biggest star of the Mike Tyson sports bar, while Mosley was showered with tons of praise, with the great Gil Clancy stating that watching Mosley fight “was like watching a fighter” [from] already in the 1940s.” Roy Jones Jr., who in the eyes of many was the king of P4P himself, called Mosley the best lightweight he had ever seen other than Roberto Duran.

Despite the enthusiastic praise Mosley was receiving, De La Hoya was the narrow favorite. Mosley, however, had probably the best fight of his entire professional career. The fight was very close in every round, with both men showing great jab, great body attack and super-fast combinations. One man rolled the round before the other came back to win the next round. Halfway through the game, De La Hoya seemed to be leading, maybe even in control. However, as with the Trinidad fight, Oscar lost several later rounds.

However, unlike the Trinidad fight, where De La Hoya got on his bike in the closing rounds and neglected to land enough punches, this time Oscar fought Mosley. The difference was that Mosley had a better gas tank in the overdue rounds, and his fire and venom allowed him to win rounds 10, 11 and a truly invigorating 12th and final round. They both gave it their all, but Mosley had a little more to give.

With the crowd on their feet, with multiple rounds of the Year Round, the fight lived up to all the hype. Ultimately, Mosley won by split decision, with the score being 116–112 and 115–113 for “Sugar”, with the second score being 115–113 for “Golden Boy”.

Mosley became a novel star in the lower weight classes, and De La Hoya, although he did not win the fight, managed to rehabilitate himself after the defeat against Trinidad. No one could question De La Hoya’s heart now. And no one could question Shane Mosley’s brilliance.

The nickname “Sugar” was and is complex to live up to and well deserved to be given. But “Sugar” Shane Mosley proved he was special.

Let’s hope that later this year, on July 29, we will see another welterweight classic, this time with the clash of Terence Crawford and Errol Spence. Will this upcoming fight make YOUR top 10 welterweight world title fights?

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