It turns out to be a disaster. As a result, it turns out to be, so far, the last major prizefight at Madison Square Garden, "The Mecca of Boxing."
Evander Holyfield had won the heavyweight title, as recognized by the World Boxing Association (WBA), the World Boxing Council (WBC), and the International Boxing Federation (IBF), by beating James "Buster" Douglas in 1990.
However, despite all 3 major organizations recognizing him as such, he was not the "undisputed" champion: People wanted to see him fight Mike Tyson, seeing Douglas' win over Tyson 8 months earlier as a fluke. They still thought of Tyson as "the real champion."
But Tyson had gone to prison for rape. In the meantime, Holyfield had lost the titles to Riddick Bowe, regained the WBA and IBF titles (but not the WBC title) from Bowe, then lost them to Michael Moorer -- who then lost them to 45-year-old former Champion George Foreman.
One thing led to another, and the titles were split again. Tyson got out of prison, and got the WBA title back. But Holyfield beat him twice, and was, again WBA Champion. Moorer regained the IBF title, and Holyfield beat him to regain it.
Lennox Lewis was born in London, and spent his teenage years in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. In 1993, he was awarded the WBC title because Bowe had refused to fight him. He lost the title to Oliver McCall. The title was vacated again, and in 1997, Lewis and McCall fought for it, and Lewis won it.
Both men were older than most Heavyweight Champions: Lewis was 33, Holyfield 36. Lewis went into the fight 34-1; Holyfield, 36-3.
The referee was Arthur Mercante Jr. His father, Arthur Mercante Sr., had officiated the 1st Muhammad Ali vs. Joe Frazier fight at The Garden, also a unification bout, in 1971. He had also officiated in 1973, when George Foreman took the title from Frazier; and in 1960, when Floyd Patterson took the title back from Ingemar Johansson. Arthur Sr. was still alive, and in attendance.
It was generally agreed that Lewis dominated early, with Holyfield winning only Round 3 out of the 1st 5. Holyfield won Round 6, Lewis Round 7. Holyfield then took control, winning Rounds 8, 9, 10 and 11. But Lewis dominated the 12th and final round.
The television commentators expected Lewis to be named the winner by the judges. What followed stunned everybody. Stanley Christodoulou had Lewis a 116-113 winner on his card. But Eugenia Williams scored it 115-113 for Holyfield. And Larry O'Connell had it at 115-115, a flat-out draw.
By all rights, the points should have been totaled up, which would have made it 344-343, the slimmest of margins, for Lewis. But, under the rules, it was a "split draw," and each fighter kept his respective belts.
The Garden crowd booed. On HBO, Jim Lampley called it "a travesty," and Foreman called it "a shame." Boxing historian Steve Farhood, who had edited the magazines The Ring and KO, said, "I've been covering boxing 20 years. I would put this in the top 5 for the worst decisions I've seen." Roy Jones Jr., then the undisputed Light Heavyweight Champion, called it, "the type of thing that makes him not want to stay in boxing." Rudy Giuliani, then the Mayor of New York, was in attendance, and he agreed with Lampley's assessment, calling it "a shame."
A rematch was inevitable. On November 13, Lewis-Holyfield II was held at the Thomas & Mack Center outside Las Vegas. This time, there was no controversy: It went the full 12 rounds, but Lewis won a unanimous decision, becoming the undisputed Heavyweight Champion.
Lewis remained Champion until 2001, getting knocked out by Hasim Rahman. He took the title back by knocking Rahman out 7 months later, humiliated Tyson with an 8th-round knockout in Memphis in 2002, and knocked Vitali Klitschko out in the 6th round in Los Angeles on June 21, 2003. That was his final fight, and he retired as Champion, with a record of 41-2-1. He remains the last undisputed Heavyweight Champion of the World
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