Mike Tyson vs. Carl Williams
Date | July 21, 1989 | |
Location | Convention Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey | |
Title(s) on the line | WBA/WBC/IBF/Lineal Heavyweight Championships | |
| ||
Mike Tyson vs. Carl Williams | ||
"Iron" | "The Truth" | |
Tale of the tape | ||
---|---|---|
Catskill, New York, US | From | Absecon, New Jersey, US |
36–0 | Pre-fight record | 22–2 |
WBA/WBC/IBF/Lineal Undisputed Heavyweight Champion | Recognition | IBF No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight |
Mike Tyson vs. Carl Williams was a professional boxing match contested on July 21, 1989, for WBA, WBC, IBF and Lineal Heavyweight championships.
Background
After Tyson's dominating victory over Frank Bruno five months prior, negotiations for a potential bout with Carl Williams began, and on June 15, 1989, the fight was made official.[1][2] Four years earlier, Williams had challenged then-IBF Heavyweight champion Larry Holmes for the title, only to narrowly lose by unanimous decision. Prior to his fight with Tyson, Williams had won his previous five fights, including a victory over former champion Trevor Berbick which got him back into contention.
The Fight
The fight would only last 93 seconds, becoming Tyson's second quickest title fight after his 91-second victory over Michael Spinks the previous year. Tyson and Williams began the fight trading punches with each other, though Tyson's aggressiveness caused Williams to hold several times. About 76 seconds into the round, Williams attempted to hit Tyson with a left jab. Tyson countered and hit Williams with a left hook that sent Williams to the canvas. Though Williams was able to get back on his feet and was seemingly ready to continue the fight, referee Randy Neumann controversially stopped the fight and awarded Tyson the victory by technical knockout.[3]
Aftermath
Because of the controversial nature of Tyson's victory, both Williams and his manager Ira Leibowitz urged the WBA, WBC and IBF to change the ruling Tyson victory to no-contest while also demanding a rematch between the two.[4] However, all three boxing organizations, as well as Tyson's camp refused a Tyson–Williams rematch with Don King's spokesman stating that Williams would have to "go out and knock out a few good fighters" before a rematch with Tyson could happen.[5]
Tyson's victory over Williams would mark the last successful defense of his Undisputed Heavyweight Championship. His next fight would be against little-known James "Buster" Douglas on February 11, 1990, in Tokyo, Japan. Despite being a 42-1 underdog, Douglas was able to knock out Tyson in the 10th round to pull off the upset and become the new Undisputed Champion.
HBO, which broadcast the fight live across the nation, did not expect the early conclusion and was hence forced to fill time with episodes of The Kids In The Hall and HBO One Night Stand (prior to the latter, they put up a card explaining the unscheduled broadcast).
References
- ↑ Williams Next For Tyson?, N.Y. Times article, 1989-04-19, Retrieved on 2013-05-05.
- ↑ King Makes It Official, N.Y. Times article, 1989-06-16, Retrieved on 2013-05-05.
- ↑ The Beatings Go On, Sports Illustrated article, 1989-07-31, Retrieved on 2013-05-06.
- ↑ The Truth: Tyson Hard-headed, Orlando Sentinel article, 1989-08-24, Retrieved on 2013-05-06.
- ↑ Tyson–Willams Rematch Refused, L.A. Times article, 1989-08-22, Retrieved on 2013-05-06.