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View Full Version : Williams knocks out Tyson in 4th


SteamshipTime
07-31-2004, 05:36 AM
From FoxSports.com (http://msn.foxsports.com/story/2623724)

Mike Tyson was knocked out in the fourth round Friday night in a shocking end to the latest comeback of the fighter who once was the most feared heavyweight of his era.

Unheralded British heavyweight Danny Williams landed a flurry of punches that sent Tyson sprawling into the ropes, perhaps ending his career with the same kind of fury that Tyson once unleashed on other fighters.

The fighter once called the baddest man on the planet went down from a final right hand, then laid helplessly along the ropes, blood streaming down his face. He tried to get up to beat the count, then fell down again and the fight was waved to a stunning close at 2:51 of the fourth round.

The fight was a free-for-all from the opening bell, with Tyson landing some huge left hooks early, only to take punishment himself when Williams got over his initial stage fright and began brawling himself.

Tyson won the first three rounds, but Williams was landing well to the head and when he began throwing punch after punch with Tyson near a neutral corner, Tyson couldn't answer back.

Fighting in Muhammad Ali's hometown before a big crowd that cheered his every move, Tyson tried with every punch to score the kind of spectacular knockout that would make him a heavyweight contender once again at the age of 38.

But Williams wouldn't go down and then came back with shocking suddeness to win.

It was Tyson's first fight in 17 months, and only his second since taking a beating from former heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis two years ago.

He was desperately trying to resurrect a career that made him more than $300 million, but the loss to a 9-1 underdog perhaps signals the end of an era in the heavyweight division

"People forget this isn't a peak Mike Tyson. This was a Mike Tyson who was 38 years old," Williams said. "I thought I could win."

Tyson left the ring refusing to talk, but his manager Shelly Finkel said he twisted his knee late in the first round and it bothered him.

"He couldn't get leverage," Finkel said. "When the guy was leaning on him I knew it would be a bad night."

The crowd of 17,253 that nearly filled Freedom Hall came to see a knockout by Tyson, and when Tyson rocked Williams with a big uppercut and some left hooks in the first two rounds it looked like they would get what they came for.

But Tyson was cut in the third round, and Williams showed he was going to be the bully in this fight. He hit Tyson on the break, losing a point, then hit him low, and the referee took another point.

"The way Tyson fights when he hits you with a good shot you want to get one back at him," Williams said.

Williams came in with a 31-3 record with 26 knockouts, but had fought only once in the United States. He said before the fight he wouldn't be scared and would beat Tyson in the late rounds, but the end came even earlier than he thought.

"I felt like I had him," Williams said. "I just remember (Evander) Holyfield fighting him that Holyfield kept coming with shot after shot."

Tyson won the first three rounds on all three ringside scorecards. But Williams, who weighed 265 pounds to 233 for the former champion, kept fighting back and soon seemed to be getting the better of Tyson when they traded head shots.

In the fourth round, Tyson landed a big left hook early, but soon Williams took over and was landing almost unanswered when he drove Tyson into the ropes with the final punch.

Referee Dennis Alfred began counting and got to five, then waited for Williams to go to a neutral corner, giving Tyson more time. But even that wasn't enough as Tyson lay beaten, bleeding and battered on the ropes.

"He was laying on him a lot. The weight wore him out," Tyson trainer Freddie Roach said. "He had a great amount of firepower. Mike moved his head well and threw good combinations."

Williams, the former British Commonwealth champion, had an impressive record but had never fought a name opponent or top contender. Still, Tyson had ring rust after his long layoff and he hadn't been beating household names recently, either.

"This guy can punch a bit, so you have to be careful," Roach warned before the fight.

Tyson, who blew an estimated $300 million fortune, earned about $8 million for the 57th fight of a pro career that began 19 years ago. He could only keep $2 million of it, with the rest going to pay off some of the $38 million he owes to creditors, under a bankruptcy reorganization plan.

AWAR
07-31-2004, 05:38 AM
I almost feel sorry for Tyson.

SteamshipTime
07-31-2004, 05:41 AM
Boxing is a young man's sport. And as I myself have had to grudgingly acknowledge, 38 is not young in that context.

Edana
07-31-2004, 05:49 AM
Did anyone watch this? We did because it's free comedy.

Who was that fat black women hovering over him with her shirt wide open and her bra hanging out? His mom or his new girlfriend (since he has no money)?

robinder
07-31-2004, 06:23 AM
Boxing is a young man's sport. And as I myself have had to grudgingly acknowledge, 38 is not young in that context.

Didnt George Foreman win the heavyweight title when he was 40 something?

otto_von_bismarck
07-31-2004, 06:31 AM
Didnt George Foreman win the heavyweight title when he was 40 something?
I think he was past 40, gotta admire him for coming out of retirement and walloping whatever wimp held the title at the time( I watched that fight).

SteamshipTime
07-31-2004, 02:25 PM
Foreman is definitely the exception: a big, strong guy with an iron jaw.

My advice to Tyson is to find a sex-starved rich widow. Maybe he could move to Thailand.

Sigrun
07-31-2004, 03:04 PM
Tyson never had the finesse that real boxers learn. He was always just a puncher and a brawler on toothpick legs. He's also completely insane, which may be good for street fighting, but doesn't work well in the ring. He never had the heart & determination that makes a real fighter get up from the canvas and keep fighting.

And Hello, what kind of moron blows $300 million?! THREE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS.

der kleine Doktor
08-01-2004, 06:40 AM
Mike Tyson's brain got dismantled in one of the matches he one just barely and that is why is has become nothing, but an untamed gorilla. It is pretty funny that he lost to a no name fighter. Perhaps the nerves in his skin got busted open and the ink went to his brain with the tattoo of idiocy. Bottom line is Rocky Marciano is better than any boxer that ever lived.

cerberus
08-01-2004, 09:31 PM
Just feel sad for a lad who had nothing got everything and lost it all.
The freeloaders and hangers on , b******s everyone of them.

CONSTANTINVS MAXIMVS
08-02-2004, 12:20 AM
This just shows: a babboon with a gazillion dollars in the bank is still a babboon.

SteamshipTime
08-02-2004, 01:44 AM
Just feel sad for a lad who had nothing got everything and lost it all.
The freeloaders and hangers on , b******s everyone of them.

This is why everyone should cultivate a strong sense of individuality.