Nearly 40 years after making his professional debut, and 19 years after being battered into retirement, a 58-year-old Mike Tyson will climb back into the ring for a Netflix-backed bout that has drawn widespread condemnation across the boxing world.
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Tyson, who terrorised the heavyweight division during an imperious reign in the late 1980s, is lacing up the gloves once more to take on Youtuber Jake Paul, 27, in an officially sanctioned fight at AT&T Stadium, the home of the Dallas Cowboys, in Arlington, Texas.
The fight, which will be comprised of eight two-minute rounds, was initially due to take place in July but was postponed in May after Tyson required medical treatment on a flight from Miami to Los Angeles after vomiting blood due to a bleeding ulcer.
That gory mid-air emergency has provided another piece of ammunition for the numerous critics who have condemned Friday’s contest as a macabre circus act that poses an unacceptable level of risk for Tyson, who last graced a professional ring in 2005, when he was beaten via a technical knockout after quitting on his stool against Irish journeyman Kevin McBride.
“Twenty years ago, Mike Tyson retired from boxing, and was shot to pieces, right? I mean, completely shot,” the prominent British fight promoter Eddie Hearn said this week.
“If anyone thinks that Mike Tyson should be in a ring at this age, you either have absolutely no emotional feelings toward the man, or you’re an idiot. It shouldn’t be happening.”
Hearn’s rival promoter Frank Warren echoed those sentiments.
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“Mike Tyson is 58 years of age and he shouldn’t be fighting,” Warren said after the bout was announced. “It’s as simple as that.
“Anyone with an ounce of brains knows that it is ridiculous. You can be on a motorway stuck in a traffic jam and you get to the end of it and all it is people who have stopped to look at a crash — and that’s what this is.”
Tyson, who US reports say is being paid around $20 million for Saturday’s contest, has brushed off the concerns for his wellbeing, insisting when critics from the boxing world are motivated by jealousy.
His opponent Paul — who was born six months before Tyson bit off a chunk of Evander Holyfield’s ear in their infamous 1997 rematch — rose to prominence as a Youtuber, before turning his attention to boxing.
Since his first fight against a fellow Youtuber in 2018, Paul’s opponents have included a basketball player, mixed martial arts fighters and other professional boxers. In 11 fights he has won 10 (seven by knockout) and lost one.
AUSSIE RISING STAR SHOWS ‘INCREDIBLE GUTS’ IN LOSS
Up first, Dana Coolwell kicked off the action in the preliminary card as the gutsy Australian suffered a unanimous decision (80-70 x3) loss to the undefeated Bruce Carrington.
Coolwell, who was fighting in the United States for the first time and last fought in front of a sold-out crowd of 500 at Caloundra RSL, was up against it from the start as Carrington did well to establish his jab early and often.
Carrington’s power was evident right away and the American dropped Coolwell in the fourth round with a left hook although, as was the case the entire fight, the Australian continued to get up.
There was just no way in for Coolwell, who not only was getting lit up by Carrington but also struggling to generate much of his own offence, with the American expertly defending too.
If it wasn’t clear enough, Carrington put an exclamation mark on his dominant win by dropping Coolwell once more in the eighth with another left hook.
Once again, the Australian was still able to answer the referee’s call and while he may have been no match for Carrington, he had plenty of admirers in defeat.
“There is no quit in Coolwell,” Rosie Perez said in commentary.
“This is the type of boxer that fans like to see. I’m sure people are going to want to see him again.”
“He has showcased sublime boxing skills and given Dana Coolwell all he can handle and Coolwell has been down twice… incredible guts by Coolwell at the end of the fight,” added Mauro Ranallo.
To underline Carrington’s dominance, the American landed 237 of 521 punches compared to 82 of 544 for Coolwell.
‘EGREGIOUS’ SCORECARD CAUSES CONTROVERSY
Elsewhere, there was some controversy on the next fight from the preliminary card as Lucas Bahdi claimed a majority decision victory (95-95, 96-93, 98-92) over Armando Casamonica.
Both men entered the fight with undefeated records. Bahdi (now 18-0) though was the favourite, sitting in the top ten of both the IBF and WBA’s lightweight rankings.
Casamonica (now 14-1), meanwhile, was a late call-up after Corey Marksman had to pull out of the fight due to injury but didn’t look like the limited preparation was working against him.
Casamonica started well before Bahdi started to heat up at the end of the third round, landing an overhand right that was his best shot of the fight at that point.
It looked like Bahdi was building momentum on his way to a comfortable victory but Casamonica started to string together some nice combinations in the fourth and by the end of the sixth round was even showboating, clearly feeling quite confident despite his underdog status.
The fight ended up going the distance and Casamonica looked to have potentially done enough to secure the upset win, although the Netflix commentary team agreed it could go either way.
What they did not expect though was a 98-92 scorecard in Bahdi’s favour.
“That’s not by the hair of your chinny chin chin, that’s by the hair of your promoter promoter promoter,” Roy Jones Jr. said in commentary.
“There is no way those are the scorecards of the actual fight we watched,” added Amir Tyson.
“Those two scorecards are egregious.”
WHAT TIME DOES THE FIGHT START?
The action gets underway at 9.30am as Australian Dana Coolwell features on the undercard in a featherweight battle with Bruce Carrington.
The main card begins at 12pm, ended with Tyson vs Paul, which should begin around 3pm depending on how long the previous bouts last.
FULL FIGHT CARD
Main card
Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul – heavyweight
Katie Taylor (c) vs. Amanda Serrano for the WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO and The Ring lightweight titles – lightweight
Mario Barrios (c) vs. Abel Ramos for the WBC welterweight title – welterweight
Neeraj Goyat vs. Whindersson Nunes – super middleweight
Preliminary card
Shadasia Green vs. Melinda Watpool – super middleweight
Lucas Bahdi def. Armando Casamonica via majority decision (96-93, 98-92, 95-95) – lightweight
Bruce Carrington def. Dana Coolwell via unanimous decision (80-70 x3) – featherweight
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