mike tyson
Mike Tyson. When the 1990s began, Mike Tyson was simply the
most feared fighter the sport of boxing had known. He was 23
years old, and undisputed heavyweight champion of the world,
having won the WBC version at 20, and destroyed the claimants
of the other authorities just past his 21st birthday. He had
an awesome physique, including a phenomenal neck of 19 ½
inches, as thick and strong as some men's thighs. He entered
the ring robeless, wearing simple black shorts and black boxing
boots, and with an executioner's air of purposeful intent that
carried more menace than King Kong and Godzilla combined. Many
of his opponents were beaten by fear before any blows were exchanged.
Only four of 37 had managed to be still on their feet at the
final bell, mostly by subduing any violent feelings of their
own in favour of self-preservation. Then, as soon as the 1990s
began, everything went wrong. He lost his title to a 42-1 no-hoper
in the biggest shock in boxing history, he was charged with
rape, he was convicted, he served half of a six-year prison
sentence, he returned to the ring after a four-year absence,
regained a world title, then scandalously bit off part of an
opponent's ear during a contest and was banned for a year. His
outrageous behaviour guaranteed he would remain boxing's biggest-ever
box-office attraction.
The bundle of animosity that became famous as Iron Mike Tyson
entered the world on 30 June 1966 in the Cumberland hospital
in the Bedford-Stuyvesant district of Brooklyn, New York. He
weighed exactly 8 ½ lb. His mother was Lorna Tyson, who
already had two other children, who like Mike carried her maiden
name, since she and Jimmy Kirkpatrick, Mike's father, never
married. Kirkpatrick was a big, strong labourer, whose legacy
to Mike was the genes for the muscular development that would
one day make his fortune. Kirkpatrick left the family when Mike
was two years old and Lorna took her children to the nearby
area of Brownsville, which had even tougher and poorer streets
than those they left.
In this environment delinquency was second nature to most of
the young boys, and Mike, without a father and with a mother
who, however well-intentioned, couldn't control him, could not
avoid the influence of the streets. But young Mike was certainly
not a bully by nature and indeed throughout his life was to
display glimpses of surprising sensitivity in the general picture
he otherwise presented of utter callousness. The world bewildered
him at times, and perhaps his shocking behaviour was a way to
bring some sense into it.
His mother apart, the closest person to Mike as he grew into
childhood was his sister Denise. Mike learned from her soft,
girlish ways. His voice was quiet, unaggressive and with a slight
lisp, which he retained to some degree even when later on he
could alienate everybody inside or outside boxing by saying
of a punch which broke an opponent's nose: "I catch them
there because I'm trying to push the nose bone into the brain".
Perhaps he was still reacting then to the days when his boyhood
associates called him the 'the little fairy boy'. There could
hardly be a bigger contrast between the man who said those words
in his muscled malevolent prime and the retiring, bespectacled,
lisping, seven-year-old 'fairy boy', yet only a dozen years
or so wrought the difference.
All his life the super aggressive Tyson shown a fondness for
pigeons. He kept them as a boy, and legend has it that it was
through a bully pulling off the head of one of his pigeons that
Tyson discovered his strength and his warlike inclinations.
In an unthinking fit of fury young Mike beat up the bigger boy
who killed his pigeon, not only realising his power, but that
he enjoyed using it.
Tyson based the rest of his boyhood on a life of crime, which
was not confined to the petty theft from shops, stalls and slot
machines and the pick pocketing in gangs normally associated
with youngsters of the district. Tyson was arrested dozens of
times before he was 12, and among the offences he committed
was armed robbery. He was sent to a New York correction centre,
the Tyron School, where the unaccustomed discipline and schooling
made him an awkward rebel. But he and the school's athletic
coach, Bobby Stewart, an ex-boxer, came to an agreement: Tyson
would co-operate in lessons if Stewart would teach him boxing.
It didn't take long for Stewart to notice the potential this
amazingly strong, belligerent youngster would have as a boxer,
and he arranged for him to meet a contact of his in trainer
Cus d'Amato. Cus d'Amato was now 70 and in effect retired from
the pro boxing game, having been made bankrupt some seven years
earlier. He had been very successful in training two of his
charges to win world titles: heavyweight Floyd Patterson and
light-heavy Jose Torres.
When Cus d'Amato saw the 13-year-old Tyson sparring for the
first time he said: "That's the future heavyweight champion
of the world". He was living at the time in a large house
in the Catskill district of New York, where he had been installed
after his bankruptcy by a wealthy friend and boxing fan, Jim
Jacobs, a former champion handball player. D'Amato was living
there with his partner of 40 years, Camille Ewald, and was so
enthusiastic about Tyson's prospects that he persuaded the authorities
to allow Tyson to live in the house with himself and Camille.
Undertaking to make sure Tyson received an education as well
as boxing training in the gym he ran above the local police
station.
The arrangement worked pretty well with Tyson embarking on
a successful amateur career under D'Amato's surveillance, with
Teddy Atlas, a strong-man trainer, brought in to groom Tyson
for professional stardom. A hitch which foreshadowed some of
Tyson's later problems was overcome. Atlas was told that Tyson
had abused a 12-year-old girl and, in an attempt to shock him
into behaving more responsibly, he threatened Tyson with a gun.
The partnership became impossible. Tyson was taken back to the
Tyron school, but Cus d'Amato quickly arranged for him to return
to training under a new trainer, Kevin Rooney.
In the final trials for the 1984 US Olympic team, the 17-year-old
Tyson was beaten twice by Henry Tillman, who won the place in
the team and eventually the gold medal. D'Amato decided it was
time his boxer turned professional.
D'Amato had carefully arranged the wherewithal to finance Tyson's
launch to stardom. Jim Jacobs and Bill Cayton were the backers
and subsequent joint managers of Tyson. Cayton was an advertising
executive who had discovered through his business the appeal
of old fight films and who, with Jacobs, had formed Big Fights
Inc, buying up a huge collection of films which became the basis
of a long running TV series. Tyson liked to watch the old films,
and became knowledgeable about boxing history and his possible
place in it. The films suggested to Tyson and his team the idea
that Tyson should enter the ring in his plain black garb, like
the old champions, setting himself apart from the modern trend
of show-biz entrances and creating for himself the image of
the no-frills destroyer.
Tyson's mother died when he was 16, and two years later, Cus
D'Amato became his legal guardian. So it was a close-knit, highly
professional team which was behind Tyson when he made his pro
debut on 6 March 1985 at Albany, New York, against Hector Mercedes.
He was not yet 19, and he won by knockout after 107 seconds.
Cayton and Jacobs videoed this, an the other quick wins which
followed, to compile a tape advertising Tyson for distribution
to boxing people. Nothing was being left to chance.
Poor Cus d'Amato, however, was not to live to enjoy the day
he became associated with his third, and perhaps greatest, world
champion. He died in November 1985, aged 77. Nine days later
Tyson beat Eddie Richardson, appropriately in 77 seconds. It
was his 12th straight win, and ninth in the first round.
Tyson was not tall for a heavyweight, standing only 5ft 11 ½
in, but he weighed an adequate 220lb. D'Amato had taught him
how to bob and weave and present a moving and difficult target.
He mastered a fine array of hooks and uppercuts which he could
throw from a variety of angles. His main assets were his hand
speed, enabling him to deliver punches in swift combinations,
and the terrific power of his punching. His ruthlessness in
finishing off a stricken opponent was unsurpassed.
In 1986 the Home Box Office television channel (HBO) in the
USA was organising a tournament to unify the heavyweight championship,
the purses, allied to the television revenue, being sufficient
to get the champions of all bodies and the chief contenders
to agree the scheme. Such was the trail of destruction Tyson
left through the ranks of heavyweight pretenders that the HBO
enterprise would have been meaningless had he not been incorporated.
So it was that a mere 20 months after his debut, and a year
after D'Amato died, 20-year-old Mike Tyson was challenging Trevor
Berbick for Berbick's WBC championship. The 34-year old Berbick
had beaten three previous world champions (he had been Muhammad
Ali's last opponent), but was still a 4-1 underdog when he faced
Tyson at the Hilton Center, Las Vegas.
Although the convention in world title fights was that only
the champion wore black, Tyson risked a fine by appearing in
black as well. Berbick's answer was to enter the ring in a black
hooded gown, wearing knee-length black socks.
Tyson claimed he saw the fear in Berbick's eyes at the start,
and he began quickly severely staggering Berbick in the first
round. The second round was notable for the manner of Berbick's
defeat. He rose from his third knockdown, delivered with an
awesome left hook, to stagger right across the ring on drunken
legs to crash again. Pulling himself up with the help of the
ropes, he couldn't get his left ankle to hold him up, and the
referee had to support him as he declared the fight over. It
was a terrifying testament to Tyson's power. Tyson was the youngest
man ever to hold a version of the heavyweight title, beating
by 186 days Cus d'Amato's other protégé, Floyd
Patterson.
Four months later he outpointed James 'Bonecrusher' Smith,
who took care not to join in a fight until the last 30 seconds
of the last round. Smith admitted he fought only to survive,
but he came nowhere near to surviving as the WBA champion. Tyson
now owned two-thirds of the world's heavyweight championship.
The IBF champion ,Michael Spinks, however, now opted out of
the unification contests, presumably seeing a lucrative contest
with 'white hope' Gerry Cooney as a better prospect than possibly
losing his title and unbeaten record to Tyson. The IBF crown
was declared vacant , and Tyson had to wait for a new champion,
Tony Tucker (who won the IBF title by stopping Buster Douglas),
before he could incorporate the IBF strand and become undisputed
champion. He faced Tucker on 1 August 1987 and, despite being
shaken straight away by a left hook, he outpointed Tucker to
establish his right to total recognition.
Tyson the beat challenger Tyrell Biggs, prolonging the fight
in order to administer a bad beating, in revenge for what he
claimed was a 'lack of respect' shown him by Biggs years before
on their amateur days.
He then invited three prominent, beautiful women to watch him
repel the challenge of veteran ex-champion Larry Holmes (which
he did without difficulty): Naomi Campbell, the model, Suzette
Charles, who was Miss America, and Robin Givens, an actress
starring in a TV sitcom Head of the Class. Two weeks later he
married Robin Givens, a move which radically altered both his
private and boxing lives. Everything now seemed to go wrong
at once.
First of all Jim Jacobs, half of Tyson's management team, became
seriously ill with leukaemia. He died a couple of days after
Tyson, with new wife Givens at ringside, had easily disposed
of challenger Tony Tubbs in Tokyo. Tyson had recently signed
a new contract with his managers which meant that in the event
of Jacobs' death, Cayton would become sole manager, but Jacobs'
widow would continue to receive her husband's third of revenue
earned.
Miss Givens, with the strong support of her businesswoman mother,
now began to take a strong interest in Tyson's finances, telling
him that not enough of his earnings were getting back to him.
Her legal team alleged that Tyson had signed his last contract
with Cayton and Jacobs while being kept in the dark about Jacobs'
condition. They sought the contract to be declared invalid.
Meanwhile Don King, the ubiquitous promoter/manager, never happy
unless he controls all the likely heavyweight champions in the
world, opportunistically attended Jacobs' funeral and began
a strong wooing of the Tyson family with view to taking over
Tyson's business affairs to the benefit of all (in reality himself).
Meanwhile, Givens, who had claimed to be pregnant at the time
of her marriage to Tyson, allowed it to be revealed through
her sister that Tyson was abusing her and that as a result she
had suffered a miscarriage.
All this was brewing up as Tyson prepared for his most important
contest to date, a meeting with still unbeaten former IBF champion
Michael Spinks, whose supporters, including Ring and Boxing
Illustrated magazine, claimed he was the real champion by 'direct
descent'.
This contest took place at Atlantic City on 27 June 1988. It
turned out to be perhaps Tyson's most impressive performance.
Fans were kept waiting over 15 minutes for the start, as both
camps insisted their man was champion, and thereby entitled
to be second in the ring. Eventually the New Jersey Commissioner,
Larry Hazard, had to intervene and insist Spinks enter the ring
first.
Spinks was clearly nervous while it seemed that a hyped-up Tyson
couldn't wait to get at him.
A flurry of blows early in the first round put Spinks on one
knee and forced him to take a mandatory count of eight. When
Spinks tried to attack on the command 'BOX ON' he was caught
by a right uppercut which knocked him flat on his back, from
where he tried to rise but stood no chance. He was counted out
in 91 seconds. No one could now dispute that Tyson was the most
efficient fighting machine in the world
However, Tyson's next defence, against Frank Bruno, was rescheduled
several times and put back in all by six months or so as Tyson's
private problems mounted. He fractured his hand in a street
fight with former opponent Mitch Green; he drove his wife's
BMW into a tree in what many took to be a suicide bid; he threatened
to hang himself after chasing his wife and her mother through
a hotel lounge in Moscow, where Givens was filming; he objected
to being filmed and smashed a TV camera; he appeared with Givens
on a TV chat show looking drugged, and smiled foolishly and
submissively while she repeated many of these stories against
him, saying he was manic-depressive; he smashed up his house,
threw furniture into the street and chased off his wife and
her mother; he was sued for divorce; he signed a promotional
contract with Don King without consulting Cayton; he sacked
Kevin Rooney, his trainer since he turned professional, for
siding with Cayton; he finalised his divorce after only a year
and eight days of marriage, with Don King's help; and two women
accused him of sexual harassment.
When Tyson eventually met and overawed Bruno, his performance
was way below par, and he even allowed Bruno to stagger him
with a good punch before he finished him off in the fifth round.
Some good judges saw the seeds of decline in this fight, but
nobody anticipated what happened next. With Tyson's problems
with Cayton settled by an uneasy compromise, King was in control
as Tyson fought challenger James 'Buster ' Douglas in Tokyo.
If any betting existed, it was at odds which made Douglas a
42-1 shot. But Tyson was under-trained, listless and drugged
for veneral disease and depression. Well outboxed, he eventually
caught Douglas in the eight round with an uppercut which floored
Douglas who, because of a slow referee, was given a long count
(about 12 seconds), enough to save him taking any further punishment
before the bell rang. Douglas recovered fully in the interval,
continued as before and knocked out Tyson in the tenth, with
Tyson, knocked down for the first time in his career, groping
about on the canvas for a lost gumshield while the count was
completed. Because of the long count earlier afforded Douglas,
Don King spent days, it seemed at first with the support of
the WBC, to get the verdict reversed, but the boxing world laughed
at him.
Shocked by this reverse, Tyson responded well, getting himself
into better shape and beginning a comeback which saw him dispose
of his amateur conqueror, Henry Tillman, and the dangerous Donovan
'Razor' Ruddock twice. A mullet-million dollar title fight was
arranged with Evander Holyfield, who had assumed the heavyweight
crown from Buster Douglas. But circumstances forced this encounter
to wait for five years. Once more Tyson's reckless private life
intruded.
Three weeks after his second defeat of Ruddock, Tyson went on
a binge to Indianapolis, where he took a suite in a hotel near
to one where the Miss Black America contest was taking place.
He was introduced to the contestants, and on 19 July 1991 took
one of them, 18-year-old Desiree Washington, to his room. It
was 2.00 am and she alleged he raped her. Tyson was charged,
came to trial, and in March 1992 was sentenced to six years
imprisonment and four years' parole. As one who had lived the
life of a multi-millionaire, however foolishly and wastefully,
he reacted badly at first, but gradually he knuckled down and
devoted himself to keeping fit, and, he claimed, to reading.
He acquired new heroes (the names of Mao Tse-Tung and champion
black tennis player Arthur Ashe were tattooed on his arms).
He said he had been converted to Islam. He earned the maximum
remission for good conduct, and was released after three years
in March 1995.
Tyson was, of course, the hottest property in boxing. Everybody
wanted to see the monster. The MGM Grand Garden, Las Vegas,
signed him up to a six-fight deal and there was a further deal
with ShowTime, the pay-TV channel, leading estimates of his
first contest being worth $22 million to him. This comeback
fight, on 19 August 1995, was against a soft opponent, Peter
'Hurricane' McNeely, whose father fought Floyd Patterson for
the world title in 1961. McNeely had won 36 of his 37 fights,
but it was a carefully managed record.
He bravely rushed across the ring to attack Tyson crudely at
the bell and ,although Tyson missed with some counters, he eventually
landed one to put McNeely down. When McNeely went down again,
and rose looking groggy, his trainer Vinny Vecchione leapt in
the ring to rescue him, which caused his disqualification. The
contest lasted 89 seconds, and the sell-out crowd of 16,737,
who had paid inflated prices to see the slaughter , yelled their
disapproval at being cheated of blood.
Don King was still Tyson's promoter, and in all but name his
manager. In December Tyson had a second run-out, against Buster
Mathis Junior, another man whose father had fought for the title.
The first Buster Mathis was beaten by Joe Frazier in 1968, and
had died just before his son's meeting with Tyson. Mathis was
a much more credible opponent than McNeely. The fight was switched
from Atlantic City, where King was not allowed to promote because
of a fraud charge hanging over him, to the CoreStates Spectrum,
Philadelphia. Tyson won when a short right hook started a sequence
that knocked out Mathis towards the end of the third round.
But he was unimpressive, and to the experts clearly a long way
short of the man he was at his peak.
Nevertheless the Tyson publicity machine was rolling and, with
the warm-ups out of the way, it was time to start collecting
the various heavyweight titles again. First up was the WBC title,
held by Frank Bruno, Tyson's victim seven years before. The
immensely popular Bruno was upbeat in the run-up to the fight
at the MGM Grand Garden in March 1996, and attracted many British
fans to cross the Atlantic and snap up the 6-1 odds locally
available against him. Unfortunately for them, a frightened
Bruno was overawed by the occasion, and a Tyson assault in the
third round had him squatting on the bottom rope from where
referee Mills Lane had to rescue him. Tyson was a world champion
again and went on his knees in the ring to salute Allah.
Tyson's mandatory challenger for the title was Lennox Lewis,
but Lewis' camp agreed to step aside, for $6 million, so that
Tyson could challenge for the WBA championship.
Bruce Seldon was the WBA champion, and was expected to put up
about as much resistance as Bruno, when the two meet at the
MGM Grand Garden. An ex-convict (four years for robbery) he
had three defeats in 37 contests. The odds against him were
20-1. He was called the Atlantic City Express, and was certainly
very quick to grab Tyson when the fight started.
He looked as anxious as Bruno, was down twice in the first round,
rising each time, but the second time he shook his head and
referee Richard Steele called it off at 109 seconds.
The fans again hooted their displeasure. Seldon earned his biggest
purse, $5 million, while Tyson picked up around $35 million.
Tyson's WBC title had not been at stake in this fight, Tyson
being committed to meet Lewis for it. But now Tyson had the
WBA crown, he was at liberty to defend that against Evander
Holyfield, a fight which would be much bigger at the US box
office than Tyson-Lewis.
So Tyson decided to ditch his WBC championship. All was now
set for the big fight which should have taken place in 1989:
WBC and WBA champion Tyson versus former champion Evander Holyfield.
Holyfield had been a great cruiser and heavyweight champion,
but had impressed in only one of his previous seven fights,
suffering his only three defeats in this sequence. Significantly,
after losing his titles Michael Moorer in 1994, he had retired
from boxing because of a heart condition. A year before meeting
Tyson he had faced Riddick Bowe during a comeback and been stopped
in the eight, dramatically running out of steam after flooring
Bowe in the sixth. Few thought a seemingly worn-out Holyfield
would have the stamina to stand up to Tyson, but he trained
so hard for 15 weeks and appeared so confident that initial
betting odds of 22-1 on Tyson had been cut to around 6-1 on
the night. Of 48 reporters polled, however, only one favoured
Holyfield.
Right from the start of the bout at the MGM Grand Garden Holyfield
showed that he was not intimidated by Tyson. He even stood toe-to-toe
with him in the first round. Deprived of his usual psychological
dominance, and faced by a confident, fast, skilful foe, Tyson
quickly ran out of ideas. The contest developed into a scrappy
one, with lots of holdings. Tyson was 30, Holyfield 34, and
both began to look tired. In the sixth round Tyson walked into
a left hook from Holyfield that sent him down and sliding back-wards
across the canvas. He recovered and fought on bravely, but took
a battering in the tenth. The effects had not worn off before
Tyson was in trouble on the ropes in the 11th, and he ceased
fighting back when referee Mitch Halpern saved him from further
punishment. Tyson was bitterly disappointed. It was his second
defeat, but he had excuses for the first. This time he was beaten
by a better, and older man.
There had to be a return fight, and it was one of the most eagerly
awaited of all time. The date was 28 June 1997, the place MGM
Grand Garden in Las Vegas. Both men had now had 14 world title
fights, and both had won 12. Each was guaranteed $30 million.
The fight had been postponed from 3 May because of a training
injury to Tyson's eye. This time, of 50 boxing writers polled,
29 favoured Holyfield and 21 Tyson. Nevertheless Tyson was a
narrow betting favourite at around 6-4 on.
What happened shook the world of boxing. Holyfield won the first
two rounds, in which there was plenty of rough stuff. In the
second a clash of heads cut Tyson's eye, causing him to complain.
In the third Tyson came out without his gumshield, and was sent
back for it, but after two minutes of the round he took advantage
of a clinch to bite a chunk out of Holyfield's ear, and spit
it on the canvas. Holyfield leapt in pain and turned his back.
Referee Mills Lane, who proved much too weak to handle the fight,
called a halt, and deducted two points from Tyson, but after
a four minute delay allowed the round to continue. Tyson then
bit Holyfield's other ear. Astonishingly the round was allowed
to end, before the interval, Mills Lane belatedly disqualified
Tyson. The Nevada State Athletic Commission fined Tyson the
maximum according to their rules, a paltry tenth of his purse,
i.e. $3 million, and banned him for a year, a ban which operated
in all states, and which would not be reviewed until 5 July
1998.
Tyson was now publicly derided as low-life-scum, a coward,
etc. But, of course, he would still be the hottest property
in boxing were his licence restored. He had already earned more
from boxing than any previous boxer -an estimated $200 million.
In 1998 he owned six houses, including one he hardly used in
Connecticut which had 61 rooms, 38 baths, and a master bedroom
with five television sets. Yet he was reported to be short of
liquidity, and owing $7 million in tax. He publicly confronted
Don King outside a Los Angeles hotel demanding money, and allegedly
kicked the promoter in the face. Lawyers are claiming that King
did not account to Tyson fully and took more money from the
boxer that the law allows. Tyson ditched King as a promoter,
although King claims he has a valid contract with Tyson to promote
four more fights. While Tyson is banned this aspect is academic,
but in March 1998 Tyson was reported to file a $45 million fraud
suit against King.
Tyson's private life is as complex as ever. Since the break-up
of his marriage to Robin Givens, he has acquired four children,
and is reported to be a devoted, if usually absent father. He
also has a new wife, a paediatrician, Dr Monica Turner, who
says he's a good guy, that he is far more intelligent that the
press make out, and that she loves him for himself. His behaviour
is as wild as ever, and late in 1997 he crashed riding a motor
cycle, apparently having fallen asleep, and was nearly hit by
a truck. He suffered broken ribs and a partially collapsed lung.
He was riding without a licence, although still on parole from
his recent imprisonment. In March 1998 he earned himself $3
million as an 'enforcer' at a Wrestlemania meeting before 19,000
fans in Boston. At around 240lb, he laid out a wrestler with
a swift punch, but this "violence" which had no doubt
been rehearsed.
more celebrities...