Heavyweight unification series

The heavyweight unification series, also known as the Heavyweight World Series, was a sequence of professional boxing matches held in 1986 and 1987 to crown an undisputed champion of the heavyweight class. The series was produced by HBO Sports and promoted by Don King. It ended with Mike Tyson as undisputed champion, holding the championship belts of the International Boxing Federation, World Boxing Association, and World Boxing Council.[1]

Background

Prior to the series, the last undisputed heavyweight champion had been Leon Spinks, who won the championship in his 1978 victory over Muhammad Ali.[2][3] Spinks had been stripped of his WBC title later that year because he opted not to fight against a mandatory challenger; the heavyweight championship had been fragmented ever since.[3] This fragmentation and the resulting proliferation of title fights was seen by many as a discredit to the sport, and resulted in declining public interest in boxing.[3]

The idea of the series originated in October 1985, when Don King visited HBO Sports president Seth Abraham to propose a WBC title fight between Pinklon Thomas and Trevor Berbick.[4] Abraham had little interest in the fight, but, inspired by the World Series that was being televised at the time, he suggested making the fight the first in a series to unify the heavyweight titles.[4] King and Abraham mapped out the seven fights that would constitute the series, which King estimated could be produced for $20 million.[4]

King and HBO announced the series on January 17, 1986, during a press conference before a fight between Tim Witherspoon and Tony Tubbs.[5] That fight was seen as an unofficial prelude to the series, as the winner would hold the WBA title and would participate in the series.[5] The series would also include WBC champion Pinklon Thomas, IBF champion Michael Spinks, and top contenders from each of the three sanctioning bodies' rankings.[6] The organizers were hopeful that Mike Tyson, then a young, fresh face, would qualify for the tournament and generate excitement for what was otherwise seen by some analysts as an unappealing slate of fighters.[7][8]

Fights

Newspaper advertisement for the penultimate fight in the series, Mike Tyson vs. Pinklon Thomas
  • Trevor Berbick vs. Pinklon Thomas – March 22, 1986 at the Riviera – Berbick defeated Thomas by unanimous decision to gain the WBC title.[9][10]
  • Larry Holmes vs. Michael Spinks II – April 19, 1986 at the Las Vegas Hilton – Spinks defeated Holmes by split decision to defend the IBF title.[11]
  • Tim Witherspoon vs. Frank Bruno – July 19, 1986 at Wembley Stadium – Witherspoon defeated Bruno by technical knockout in eleven rounds to defend the WBA title.[12]
  • Michael Spinks vs. Steffen Tangstad – September 6, 1986 at the Las Vegas Hilton – Spinks knocked out Tangstad in four rounds to defend the IBF title.[13]
  • Trevor Berbick vs. Mike Tyson – November 22, 1986 at the Las Vegas Hilton – Tyson knocked out Berbick in two rounds to gain the WBC title.[14]
  • Tim Witherspoon vs. James "Bonecrusher" Smith – December 12, 1986 at Madison Square Garden – Smith defeated Witherspoon by technical knockout in the first round to gain the WBA title.[15]
  • Mike Tyson vs. James "Bonecrusher" Smith – March 7, 1987 at the Las Vegas Hilton – Tyson defeated Smith by unanimous decision to add the WBA title to his WBC title.[16]
  • "Hard Road to Glory" – May 30, 1987 at the Las Vegas Hilton
    • Tony Tucker vs. James "Buster" Douglas – Tucker defeated Douglas by technical knockout in ten rounds to claim the vacant IBF title (which had been stripped from Spinks)[2]
    • Mike Tyson vs. Pinklon Thomas – Tyson defeated Thomas by technical knockout in six rounds to defend the WBA and WBC titles.[17]
  • Mike Tyson vs. Tony Tucker – August 1, 1987 at the Las Vegas Hilton – Tyson defeated Tucker by unanimous decision to become the undisputed champion.[18]

Aftermath

Michael Spinks had been stripped of his IBF title in the middle of the tournament because he had accepted a lucrative offer to fight Gerry Cooney, instead of facing his mandatory challenger, Tony Tucker.[19][20] Spinks, however, was still recognized as the lineal champion (which he had not lost in the ring) and was also considered to be The Ring magazine heavyweight champion.[3] Following the unification series, there were ongoing calls for Tyson, the champion of all three major sanctioning bodies, and Spinks, the lineal champion, to fight and erase any doubt about the identity of the "true" champion.[3][21][22] In June 1988, the two champions faced off, and Tyson knocked out Spinks in 91 seconds.[23]

Tyson held on to his titles until February 1990, when he was knocked out by Buster Douglas.[24] The titles remained unified until December 1992, when undisputed champion Riddick Bowe relinquished his WBC title.[25]

See also

References

  1. Phil Berger (August 2, 1987). "Boxing; Tyson undisputed and unanimous titlist". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
  2. Steve Sneddon (May 31, 1987). "'Buster' flattened by Tucker's duster". Reno Gazette-Journal via Newspapers.com.
  3. Ira Winderman (July 28, 1987). "United we stand (almost)". Sun Sentinel. Fort Lauderdale, FL via NewsBank.
  4. John Florio; Ouisie Shapiro (2013). One Punch from the Promised Land: Leon Spinks, Michael Spinks, and the Myth of the Heavyweight Title. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 172–173.
  5. Lacy J. Banks (January 18, 1986). "Tubbs finally beaten in first title defense". Chicago Sun-Times via NewsBank.
  6. Matt Bennett (March 22, 1986). "Unification bouts begin". Columbus Dispatch via NewsBank.
  7. Norman Chad (March 29, 1986). "Tyson may be savior". Knickerbocker News. Albany, NY. Washington Post via NewsBank.
  8. Tim Layden (December 21, 1986). "A savior with nothing to save". The Times Union. Albany, NY via NewsBank.
  9. Richard Hoffer (March 22, 1986). "It's tournament time—in boxing". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
  10. "Berbick beats Thomas for WBC championship". Arizona Republic. AP. March 23, 1986 via Newspapers.com.
  11. Ed Schuyler Jr. (April 20, 1986). "Spinks beats Holmes again to keep title". Lexington Herald-Leader. AP via NewsBank.
  12. "Witherspoon stops Bruno, keeps title". New York Times. AP. July 20, 1986. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
  13. "Heavyweight series tightens up as Spinks, Tyson score knockouts". Daily Breeze. Torrance, CA. September 7, 1986 via NewsBank.
  14. "Tyson wins title from Berbick on early KO". Argus-Leader. Sioux Falls, SD. Gannett. November 23, 1986 via Newspapers.com.
  15. "Smith crushes Witherspoon in first". Los Angeles Times. AP. December 13, 1986. Retrieved 2018-10-09.
  16. "Tyson unifies title—for the moment". Baltimore Sun. March 9, 1987 via Newspapers.com.
  17. Robert Seltzer (May 31, 1987). "Tyson stops Thomas on TKO in 6th". Philadelphia Inquirer via Newspapers.com.
  18. Robert Seltzer (August 2, 1987). "Tyson wins, holds all three titles". Philadelphia Inquirer via NewsBank.
  19. "The International Boxing Federation stripped Michael Spinks of his..." UPI. February 26, 1987 via NewsBank.
  20. Gary Blockus (June 17, 1987). "When money means more than a title". The Morning Call. Allentown, PA via NewsBank.
  21. Jonathan Snowden (June 27, 2013). "91 seconds: Mike Tyson, Michael Spinks and the knockout that shook the world". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 2018-10-13.
  22. Shirley Povich (July 12, 1987). "Commentary: Spinks, not Tyson, is true champion". Los Angeles Times. Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-10-13.
  23. Jim Jenkins (June 28, 1988). "It's Tyson in 91 seconds". Sacramento Bee via NewsBank.
  24. Phil Berger (February 14, 1990). "Tyson concedes; wants rematch". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  25. Michael Martinez (December 15, 1992). "Bowe trashes his W.B.C. title belt". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
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