Throughout all of the controversy and poor behaviour, Tyson was one of the only ones to consistently praise his opponents skills and be honest about the times when he was hurt by them. It was something you didn't expect from such a brutal boxer. Like him or loathe him, an amazing boxer!
@@kawikadee9670 probably shaken I was like that to I was beat by some guy and trained my ass off I was doing good against other people but when I faced the same guy from before I was in my head doubting myself felt like the first time it’s crazy fighters have to be strong physically and mentally maybe he just didn’t like the pressure
Taking 10+ knockout shots from Tyson in his prime and not being dead, let alone still fighting and keeping it competitive is nothing short of incredible! 👏
Well, that's because you errantly believe that Tyson was the hardest heavyweight puncher, ever ... he wasn't. There have been a number of heavyweights, throughout the years, who could bang harder than Tyson. Ever heard of George Foreman, Ron Lyle, Ernie Shavers, and most notably, Lennox Lewis?
@@X-Factor-22 You mean when he was 21-years-old? Most fighters aren't 'in their prime,' until they're closer to 30. But, all of the Tyson apologists act like Tyson was washed up and way over-the-hill when he was 30, and when he fought his toughest row of opponents ... like Holyfield and Lennox Lewis, although both of those fighters were older than Tyson.
@@MatewanMassacre I agree wholeheartedly with your comment and thanks for the correction about Tyson being not being in his prime during this particular fight. I’m a fan of Tyson and believe he’s made great contributions to the sport, but the way a lot of people make him out to be some type of deity just shows they don’t know as much about the sport as they think they do.
'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!! Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title. McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson. At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity. The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place. Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall. Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson. Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 You can bring up the past accomplish all you like but a prime Mike Tyson would've destroyed Lennox Lewis, just like he did with all the other opponents who had the reach and height adventage. Lennox Lewis probably couldn't even take 5 punches from Mike Tyson back then let alone match his record of wins and KO's during those days.
@@ShadowYamoto imagine if Tyson abstained from sex the night before a fight and didn't do coke mike destroyed himself but we still love him his come back has been great
'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!! Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title. McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson. At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity. The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place. Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall. Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson. Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters.
I'm more of a UFC fan but gotta admit, watching Prime Tyson's highlights is what got me interested in combat sports, guy was an artist in the ring, there are other boxers like Lennox who reached greater heights and have better records but no one is as exciting as Tyson IMO despite only being in his prime for 3 years.
Iron Mike was the world's greatest front runner. Never did he walk through fire and win. He never came from behind to win, and he never rose from the deck to win. Tyson was the product of careful matchmaking. He never fought Ibeabuchi, Bowe or Holyfield in his prime. He ducked Lewis and even refused to fight Foreman. That tells you something, Tyson was unproven in his prime and his best win was against Spinks, a career light heavyweight. Tyson got beat against every elite fighter he ever fought.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 Lennox Lewis ducked Ibeabuchi and was incredibly lucky Ibeabuchi went away for almost 2 decades. Ike was the next great heavyweight fighter after Tyson in my opinion. Ibeabuchi would've KO'd Lewis and Holyfield and yes he would've defeated that past prime Tyson in the late 90s. Your anti Tyson bias is ridiculous and makes your opinion of him irrelevant.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 foreman didn’t want to fight Mike. And Mike agreed. Get rid of the word duck. It didn’t make sense for them. And Tyson saw how the Holmes fight affected Ali. It was out of mutual respect bruv. Don’t try to steal that from them
@Durango Kid u don't know shit abt boxing mate! Tyson wanted to fight foreman before he died of rigor mortis remember? Also didn't tyson come thru adversity and win twice against razor ruddock? And he came back with the uppercut from he'll against buster douglas only to be denied by a long count..
In a time when most of Mike's fights were over so fast you didn't dare look away even for a second, this man went the distance AND was still on his feet
The way Tony Tucker fought Tyson that night , was like watching Apólo Creed fighting Rocky 1. The showmanship,the confidence, the skills…. Everything was there that night. Everything ! He fought like a true Spartan!!!
You must 11years old and movie lover. Apollo Creed and Rocky Balboa they're not real persons. There's actual difference to live through your life and face the difficulties and even have success than just make up stories and imagine about movie characters. " talk the talk and WALK the WALK", do remember that verse? Think about it.
@@chello70 No I will not get hypothetical or methaphorical life even if thousends of elevens of movie lovers tells me to do so. There are a lot of better movies than Rocky by the way... Usual suspects, Last of the mohicans, easy rider and graduate... You should check it out... Yes those are old I have not watch movies for long long time I rather watch good boxing... Now get a movie
a lot of people also genuinely hated ali due to what he stood for from a civil rights standpoint as well, bro made the stance against the vietnam war and joined the nation of islam
Some of those blows look absolutely lethal. Majority of us would be out cold or dead with one punch like that. Respect for still standing for that long.
That is cool, for Mike to admit that he was also a good fighter and that he did have some edge on him early on. Its a big difference from many of todays fighters... That humility despite him being well known for being a superb boxer is really telling, and it deserves some recognition and respect.
How did I never know about this fight? Thanks a lot for sharing this with us. I also appreciate how you guys showed so much respect to him regarding his later career and personal life.
@@issymills6455 I get the impression that you don't understand the meaning of either pejorative you just used. Therefore, it is categorically impossible to offer a coherent rebuttal because whatever the hell you're trying to say is built on misunderstood English. Have a wonderful day, @issymills6455!
@@issymills6455 I want to like this comment because it is actually getting pretty entertaining lol. You ask a question with incorrect punctuation, then answer the question yourself. I can only imagine what that internal monolog must have sounded like...
Soft spoken Lennox Lewis at his best was the total package. When he fought seriously he was pretty much untouchable. The last undisputed Super Heavyweight champion emerged as cream of the crop against some of the biggest punchers in Heavyweight history. Lewis avenged his only two defeats by knockout. He didn't make excuses for his only two losses, he said, "It's Heavyweights, you can get caught, but i won the rematches in style," and, "Show me a Heavyweight Champion without a loss and i'll show you a fighter that fought a lot of nobodies." 57 year old Lennox is the GOAT. To hear him talk so clearly and eloquently after going up against 18 Heavyweight Champions is remarkable. The 18 HW Champions Lewis faced: Vitali Klitschko, Evander Holyfield, Mike Tyson, Shannon Briggs, Frank Bruno, Tony Tucker, Hasim Rahman, Oliver McCall, Mike Weaver, Henry Akinwande, Tommy Morrison and Ray Mercer were later recognized as WBO champions, British HW champion Gary Mason, European HW champion Jean Chanet, Commonwealth HW champion Derek Williams, Canada HW champion Razor Ruddock, IBF/WBF HW champion Michael Grant, and WBC International HW champion David Tua...*[[ technically not all were 'World' champions but champions nonetheless ]]. Other notable mentions; Olympic HW Gold medalist Tyrell Briggs, Andrew Golota, Zeljko Mavrovic, Frans Botha and Phil Jackson. Name another Super Heavyweight with a better resume? Only person i can think of is Wladimir Klitschko.
I remember before this fight being really worried Tyson might lose. Tucker was a great boxer. He went the distance Vs a PRIME Mike Tyson and also went 12 vs Lennox Lewis in 1998. Major respect. A bad ass in the ring with an iron jaw.
Tucker fought Lennox Lewis - the only fighter to ever drop him - in 1993, for the vacant WBC title. This was after Riddick Bowe won a decision over Holyfield, and Lewis had knocked out Razor Ruddock - the 2 were supposed to meet. But Riddick Bowe wanted no part of Lennox Lewis, and instead fought Michael Dokes and Jesse Ferguson, rather than give Lewis a title shot. So, the WBC stripped Bowe of the title, and Lennox Lewis squared off against Tony Tucker for the vacated belt.
Tyson fought with a combination of skill, talent, discipline and power. He was the most formidable boxer of the generation. Tucker was a mountain of a man who fought with the speed of a lightweight. This really was a great fight. Something I always appreciated about Tyson was that he would give honest reviews of his opponents before and after a fight. It seems that nowadays ego gets in the way of that.
Tucker always said he broke his hand early in the fight. Dude stood up to the baddest man on earth at the time and was still standing when it was over. Mad respect. Had some demons that cost him his potential place in history.
@@Ytnzy250No, Tucker didn’t have issues with drugs or crime or anything like that. He had a good boxing career and retired without many injuries. Nothing salacious.
I want to know what Tucker said when he got knocked down for the 1st time by Lennox Lewis. Maybe : "Oops... you got it man. But... you wouldn't knock me out". 😀
Fair credit to him, he went the distance with him, and in an era when Tyson was considered invincible. It shows the true class of a boxer, who went toe to toe with Mike Tyson, and was not knocked out, or looked like he was in any serious trouble during the fight. Having the skill, experience and also the necessary power, to trouble Tyson, in the earlier rounds, was something that few other boxers were able to do. Most boxers were so intimidated by Tyson, that they rarely lasted long in the ring, but Tucker came to fight, and put up a great performance. No shame in losing the fight over a points decision.
@John Anderson On the best day Chuck Wepner ever had, he wouldn't have a snowballs chance in Hell going the distance with Tyson, OR Tucker, for that matter
When Mike was so humble and respectful. Once Cus' died, he was devastated. His mentor gone and the journey to his dark side began. Glad to see he's gotten help.
I like the endcap of the video: the sort of epilogue about Tucker. Clearly he's done alright and while he may have lacked drive later, he still made it much farther than most and made a good, stable life for himself. Cheers.
And the guy was smart to fight mostly weak fighters outside of Tyson and Lewis, saved himself a lot of brain damage. Is the big money he could have made fighting all the top guys really worth the decreased quality of life later on.
@@ckobo84 Kinda sounds like the Bob Sapp strategy, make as much money as you can while sustaining as little damage to yourself as possible. Except Todd doesn't throw his fights against tomato cans. His wife is also damn hot.
I can't overstate how legendary it is to be such a talented and powerful fighter that even your opponents get respect just for stepping into the ring. Imagine being on such a level that you can elevate a man by defeating him.
@@BooBooDaFoo330they really don't tho, Tyson was an incredible boxer and amazing athlete for his size who hit way harder than people like you will ever give him credit for
Its amazing that Tyson was such a good tactician as well as being just a menacing puncher. He came across a really good fighter and had a long term plan to win instead of his usual blitz.
That's the problem with him. If he couldn't just drop you straight in the first round or two, he'd strategize and beat the everloving piss out of you until you did drop. Dude was a knockout artist with an absurd fight IQ with the power to back it all up. Once in a lifetime champion.
True. He got to the top, went 12 FUCKING ROUNDS AGAINST PRIME TYSON, then secured the bag and now can live comfortably without to many lasting injuries. That in itself is legendary, just when it compares to Tyson it looks.... dull. Dude got it made, and can live out his life a legend.
Tony Tucker was a warrior man. He gave us some of the best fights of the late 80s and early 90s. Dude never backed down from the toughest opponents. If he had just landed a few more clean shots in this fight it could have been a W for him. Buster Douglas really took what Tucker did well in this fight and amplified it, finally finding a way to topple Tyson. Tucker really deserves to not be one of those boxers just forgotten to time. If he had been in another era that didn't have all time greats like Tyson, Holyfield, and Lewis he could have had a monster career.
@@thediaz07 Iron Mike was the world's greatest front runner. Never did he walk through fire and win. He never came from behind to win, and he never rose from the deck to win. Tyson was the product of careful matchmaking. He never fought Ibeabuchi, Bowe or Holyfield in his prime. He ducked Lewis and even refused to fight Foreman. That tells you something, Tyson was unproven in his prime and his best win was against Spinks, a career light heavyweight. Tyson got beat against every elite fighter he ever fought.
@@thediaz07 'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!! Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title. McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson. At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity. The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place. Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall. Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson. Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters. He is without question a top 5 Heavyweight imo.
This is how a championship fight should be, respect for each other, both came to fight, no dirty tricks, put on a great show, both of them were in their prime as boxers and as men
Yeah man. Nowadays we egg shaped weights, gypsy curses, spiked drinks, bought refs, bought cornermen, and heavy costumes. Oh wait... That was all from one fight.
If you've been watching boxing you definitely know that Mike Tyson was different. This man punches with so much strength and style while fearlessly coming at his opponents for more. I don't know how he did that and I don't care, he'll forever be the greatest for me.
6:57 The sweat being blasted off of Tucker’s face when Tyson’s shot lands is what told me all I needed to know about the monstrous power of Tyson’s punches… 🤯
Most people forget that Tyson was barely 21 years old here, a kid basically, yet he already commanded such a terrifying aura. Always remember his age during his prime when putting his career in perspective. 10 months later he destroyed Spinks , and that was his last fight under Kevin Rooney, which was effectively the end of "prime Mike", all at 21 years, 11 months, and 28 days old. Tyson's development as a boxer effectively ended as soon as he left Rooney. Such a shame, just imagine what he could've achieved had they stayed together as Cuz D'Amato had wanted.
@@DrLoverLover Do you realize Tyson fought nearly 40 fights between 1985 and 1990? That is what most fighters do their entire careers, let alone over a decade; Tyson fought more than the average pro fighter career, in less than five years.
@@DrLoverLover Exactly. Whenever Tyson fan boys talk about him, they ALWAYS have to use the word "prime". Well, compare that to Pacquiao. Pacquiao got KO'd TWICE early in his career, but, both times, he rose back to become champion again. He then loses to Morales, yet he comes back to become champion AGAIN. He then loss to Bradley, then, in his very next fight, he got KO'd BADLY by Marquez, yet PacMan comes back to become champion AGAIN. He then loses to Mayweather, but then rises back to become champion AGAIN. He then loses to Jeff Horn, yet he rises back to become champion AGAIN. Manny Pacquiao's "prime" lasted over 20-years. From 1998 until 2019, Manny Pacquiao was a world champion in a major organization. No one makes excuses for Pacquiao's losses because they don't need to.
@@DeeperImageAutomotive And? He made the choice to fight that many fighters. Let me ask you this - were those fighters good fighters? Have you bothered to check who those fighters were and what their records were? I didn't think so.
@@DeeperImageAutomotive He had some of his weakest performances under Kevin Rooney, Looked poor against james tillis, james smith, mitch green, jose ribalta.. didn't look good in this fight either against the well conditioned but mediocre Tucker. Also failed to qaulify for the 1984 olympics under Rooney. Tyson was at his best when he was in shape and motivated. No legit time stamps on his prime.. He looked and did better against bruno in 1996 then he did in 1989.
All I got to say is they will never see another heavyweight BOXER like MIKE TYSON he's the best & thanks to his trainer he will always be thunder in the spotlight
He proved himself to be a great fighter. Why potentially destroy his life for something that would have amounted to an ego trip. Smart fighter, and ultimately, a smart man.
Mike Tyson was the ultimate display of the warrior spirit. The rise, the fall from grace, and then the rise again lol. There will never be another Mike Tyson and Cus D'Amato. Forever Champion 🏆
What rise again? He lost to Douglas, went to prison, won a title, won a title through a fighter diving, vacated his legitimate title to avoid Lennox lewis, and then got his arse handed to him by Evander. In all of the 1990s, he was champion for a year total. He never successfully defended a title in the 90s It was a frankly pathetic second title reign
@@Onefourtyfour "the rise, fall and rise again". I said what rise again. What about beating peter mcneely or winning a title with a dive, or never succesfully defending a title in the 90s, or losing to a cruserweight twice, or ducking Lennox twice in one year is a "rise again",
@@dylanburston7453 Mike owns one of the most successful marijuana edible companies in the country making well over $600,000 a month from that alone. Do you need help moving furniture around in your mom's basement?
Wow, thank you for this, I had forgotten all about TNT Tucker and this match-up! He must've been a crazy talent to box that good despite lackng in desire!
I love watching those old boxing matches when Mike Tyson fought tall fighters. The taller fighters tried to use their reach advantage, but Mike would time perfectly an approach that took away that advantage, and once up close, the advantage was always Mike’s.
Love the commentary. Shaking his head and showboating means either two things. He's hurt or out of ideas. This guy took everything Tyson had and still had more left in the tank. Tucker was tough.
Imagine having your first loss being to Tyson but going all rounds for him to sing your praises at the end, and then your 2nd ever loss was to the guy who 8-9 years later would beat Tyson. Fuck me, legendary career.
Much respect for Tony Tucker, he was a smart fighter, he knew he wasn't going to be able to beat Tyson at some point during the fight so he started fighting to survive, he showed a lot of endurance after receiving hard punches from Tyson that sent many other Tyson's opponents to the canvas.
I love how Tyson never underestimates his opponents. He comes in respecting their ability, and that's the best approach because he's therefore ready for anything and dismisses no possibilities.
9:50-10:05 Lewis vs Tucker is one example that showed Lewis's chin was not made of glass like many people said. He took some Tucker's best punches and stood still. He even became the 1st man who knocked down Tucker for the 1st time.
Man Tony Tucker could take a punch, and deliver the counter punches. Tyson knocked out guys in the 1st/2nd round with those haymakers. Tucker took them the whole fight. First time I've seen this fight. Tucker traded blows with Tyson the entire fight when Tyson was at the top of his game. Mad respect to him.
Newbie here but it's interesting that in the 80s 90s there we're lots of pound of difference. Big difference to todays rules. Just realizing this just gives Mike Tyson more credit to his greatness.
It’s incredible how many careers Tyson has ended. We could had a whole bunch of different heavyweight champions, all fighting it all out with each other on more or less equal levels, if Mike had never existed. He disposed of them like they would deal with you and me. That is absolutely astonishing. Mike Tyson, single-handedly changed the entire history of boxing and what it could had been.
What a stupid thought. We all enjoy watching young Mike, but you can't change history just by being part of it. If Mike doesn't exist who's to say someone else doesn't rise to the occasion. Hell, you literally just learned about Tony Tucker, a skilled, big, fast heavyweight. No Tyson omg maaaaaaaaaybe he gets inspired to train and fight to his potential? Or maaaaaaaaaybe 10 other variations of things happen. "Maybe" doesn't belong in boxing, moron
Another horribly dumb comment in the same string of comments no less lmao. Tyson and Cus are a dream match. There has never been another fighter with such natural gifts to fight a Cus style. Tyson was pitbull built, extremely quick feet, strong, and most of all quick with the dips. He could swim without getting wet, all at heavyweight. He was smaller, but made even that grand detriment a strength. No idea why I'm even responding to a retard that doesn't even know his name is "Cus" though 😂
@@stellviahohenheim Cus always said, that he had the perfect blue print for the ultimate fighter and he knew exactly how to shape that chosen one. He was waiting all his life for someone like mike. This has to be probably the best tuned boxer, trainer match in the history of boxing. Tbh, even finer than Ali and Dundee
Tyson match up with guys who were way out his league on paper. A true genius, turned his disadvantage into an advantage. Thanks to the mastermind Cus Demato📌💯🙌🔥
Tony Tucker deserves all the respect. His ring record was incredible, and although he didn't beat Mike Tyson in their fight, he went the distance with him and looked like he could've fought even longer after the final bell. That's what champions are made of.
I like to think I know boxing after 60 years, but Tony somehow slipped by me by not knowing him WELL ENOUGH to understand how really, REALLY good he was. So much MORE respect after this well-done video. (LOL, I was drinking when I watched this fight with a new gal, and "missed" alot of it.) Of course, I subscribed! Thanks, BLTV Classic!
Tyson raised the profile of the sport to a whole new level. I hope he inspires our young generation that with talent indurance and hard work you can be the best in the world.
When I hear Mike Tyson say "he was intimidating" I know he's just had a tough fight! For him to get into Mike's head! That was usually what won Tyson his fights. *KNOWING* he was going to smash through whatever was in front of him! But this guy got in his head, which would have definitely taken some of his confidence. Which is why we didn't see Iron Mike unleashing hell on this guy's body with fast, devastating blows! You can lose a fight before you start if someone is inside your head enough. And even Mike Tyson had his doubts as shown here. It's nice to know he wasn't actually a T-800.
Before he was champ, I had heard about Mike Tyson but figured it was just hype. I saw a news clip of him working out (similar to the one that starts this video) and I thought to myself - OMG, this guy will be the champion as long as he wants. His speed and power were incredible.
Dude took some seriously heavy shots from Tyson and stood for 12 rounds. Mad respect
"serious have shots"?
@@mwilliamshs corrected. Happy now?
@@mwilliamshs Yo Mr williams u were supposed to be at school teaching us english. Why are u here instead?
What about shots from Tucker?
@@Dielit305 Don't go after him for correcting spelling. If anything you should learn how to type properly, kid. Instead of looking stupid.
That fight was straight up cinematic. Mike's humility during that post fight interview is inspiring.
Cinematic is correct. It looked like a rocky movie!
Jesus loves yall, died for us, and rose again! Jesus calls for all of us to repent! He's coming back!!!
Throughout all of the controversy and poor behaviour, Tyson was one of the only ones to consistently praise his opponents skills and be honest about the times when he was hurt by them. It was something you didn't expect from such a brutal boxer. Like him or loathe him, an amazing boxer!
Imagine Mike and Rocky in their prime!!! It would have to be a draw?
@@brucetowell3432 yeah, rocky Balboa cause it's a fantasy
@@alanwilson8407 I believe he's referring to Marciano
Holyfield.
@Adcox Robert He knows, that's why he referred to it as fantasy. Ie. 'As long as you're fantasizing Marciano, why not fantasize Balboa.'
Tony Tucker took Tyson’s hardest punches and refused to go down. Respect.
I wonder why Tucker didn't want a rematch.
@@kawikadee9670 probably shaken I was like that to I was beat by some guy and trained my ass off I was doing good against other people but when I faced the same guy from before I was in my head doubting myself felt like the first time it’s crazy fighters have to be strong physically and mentally maybe he just didn’t like the pressure
@@tubbymontana7090 Yeah and Mike gave some intense pressure.
I feel like Tony Tucker is one of the most underestimated heavyweight boxers of that era
there's no "refusing to go down". You can stand the punches or not. And Tucker could stand them.
Taking 10+ knockout shots from Tyson in his prime and not being dead, let alone still fighting and keeping it competitive is nothing short of incredible! 👏
He did it while Tyson was still in prime!
Well, that's because you errantly believe that Tyson was the hardest heavyweight puncher, ever ... he wasn't.
There have been a number of heavyweights, throughout the years, who could bang harder than Tyson.
Ever heard of George Foreman, Ron Lyle, Ernie Shavers, and most notably, Lennox Lewis?
@@X-Factor-22 You mean when he was 21-years-old?
Most fighters aren't 'in their prime,' until they're closer to 30. But, all of the Tyson apologists act like Tyson was washed up and way over-the-hill when he was 30, and when he fought his toughest row of opponents ... like Holyfield and Lennox Lewis, although both of those fighters were older than Tyson.
@@MatewanMassacre
I agree wholeheartedly with your comment and thanks for the correction about Tyson being not being in his prime during this particular fight.
I’m a fan of Tyson and believe he’s made great contributions to the sport, but the way a lot of people make him out to be some type of deity just shows they don’t know as much about the sport as they think they do.
Jesus loves yall, died for us, and rose again! Jesus calls for all of us to repent! He's coming back!!!
Win or lose, anyone who got in the ring with a prime Mike Tyson and went the distance deserves absolute respect!
'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!!
Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title.
McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson.
At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity.
The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis
As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place.
Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall.
Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson.
Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 You can bring up the past accomplish all you like but a prime Mike Tyson would've destroyed Lennox Lewis, just like he did with all the other opponents who had the reach and height adventage. Lennox Lewis probably couldn't even take 5 punches from Mike Tyson back then let alone match his record of wins and KO's during those days.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 bro wrote an entire story. No one wants to sit here and read that my man
@@ShadowYamoto imagine if Tyson abstained from sex the night before a fight and didn't do coke mike destroyed himself but we still love him his come back has been great
I came to see Tyson put a flashy guy on the ground, I stayed because the flashy guy had legitimate bragging rights
I am not a die-hard boxing fan, but these videos are always a treat to watch and Mike is pretty inspirational.
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'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!!
Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title.
McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson.
At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity.
The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis
As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place.
Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall.
Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson.
Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 bro calm down
I'm more of a UFC fan but gotta admit, watching Prime Tyson's highlights is what got me interested in combat sports, guy was an artist in the ring, there are other boxers like Lennox who reached greater heights and have better records but no one is as exciting as Tyson IMO despite only being in his prime for 3 years.
Mike Tyson was a better fighter than Lewis, but his prime was shorter.
He made 10 round against Iron Mike in his prime. No one can doubt he was talented
Iron Mike was the world's greatest front runner. Never did he walk through fire and win. He never came from behind to win, and he never rose from the deck to win. Tyson was the product of careful matchmaking. He never fought Ibeabuchi, Bowe or Holyfield in his prime. He ducked Lewis and even refused to fight Foreman. That tells you something, Tyson was unproven in his prime and his best win was against Spinks, a career light heavyweight. Tyson got beat against every elite fighter he ever fought.
12 rounds
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 Lennox Lewis ducked Ibeabuchi and was incredibly lucky Ibeabuchi went away for almost 2 decades. Ike was the next great heavyweight fighter after Tyson in my opinion. Ibeabuchi would've KO'd Lewis and Holyfield and yes he would've defeated that past prime Tyson in the late 90s. Your anti Tyson bias is ridiculous and makes your opinion of him irrelevant.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 foreman didn’t want to fight Mike. And Mike agreed. Get rid of the word duck. It didn’t make sense for them. And Tyson saw how the Holmes fight affected Ali. It was out of mutual respect bruv. Don’t try to steal that from them
@Durango Kid u don't know shit abt boxing mate! Tyson wanted to fight foreman before he died of rigor mortis remember? Also didn't tyson come thru adversity and win twice against razor ruddock? And he came back with the uppercut from he'll against buster douglas only to be denied by a long count..
In a time when most of Mike's fights were over so fast you didn't dare look away even for a second, this man went the distance AND was still on his feet
well it'd be kinda weird if he went the distance while not on his feet
Watch documentary on mike Tyson watch his fight untill 19 year age this fucking stupid botch tony can't beat him ..
@@jacob9538 😆😆😆😆😆😆
Jesus loves yall, died for us, and rose again! Jesus calls for all of us to repent! He's coming back!!!
The way Tony Tucker fought Tyson that night , was like watching Apólo Creed fighting Rocky 1.
The showmanship,the confidence, the skills…. Everything was there that night. Everything !
He fought like a true Spartan!!!
You must 11years old and movie lover. Apollo Creed and Rocky Balboa they're not real persons. There's actual difference to live through your life and face the difficulties and even have success than just make up stories and imagine about movie characters. " talk the talk and WALK the WALK", do remember that verse? Think about it.
@@heimonen5174 It’s a hypothetical metaphorical example you plonking retarded idiot. Not a comparison !!! Get a life.
@@chello70 No I will not get hypothetical or methaphorical life even if thousends of elevens of movie lovers tells me to do so. There are a lot of better movies than Rocky by the way... Usual suspects, Last of the mohicans, easy rider and graduate... You should check it out... Yes those are old I have not watch movies for long long time I rather watch good boxing... Now get a movie
@@heimonen5174 Calm down, it's a metaphor.
@@heimonen5174 Nobody cares anymore what trolls have to say. Now get a life.
"LIKE HE WAS IN A CRADLE" whhhatttt!?!?!? That is some cold trash talk, she meant business 🤣🤣🤣🤣
From what the lady said of the Frazier - Ali fight, we can say that she is a big fan of Joe Frazier.
She definitely doesn’t have any experience in professional boxing so her comment is worthless she should go and cook some dinner
a lot of people also genuinely hated ali due to what he stood for from a civil rights standpoint as well, bro made the stance against the vietnam war and joined the nation of islam
I have an inkling that maybe if she went 8 seconds with Ali she would rethink the phrasing of that particular criticism.
@@albynoman 🙄
Some of those blows look absolutely lethal. Majority of us would be out cold or dead with one punch like that. Respect for still standing for that long.
That is cool, for Mike to admit that he was also a good fighter and that he did have some edge on him early on. Its a big difference from many of todays fighters... That humility despite him being well known for being a superb boxer is really telling, and it deserves some recognition and respect.
If Mike Tyson hits you in the face for 12 rounds and you're still standing, you're a f'ing legend.
Mike’s bald spot though
How did I never know about this fight? Thanks a lot for sharing this with us. I also appreciate how you guys showed so much respect to him regarding his later career and personal life.
Same. I don't remember it.
@@issymills6455 I get the impression that you don't understand the meaning of either pejorative you just used. Therefore, it is categorically impossible to offer a coherent rebuttal because whatever the hell you're trying to say is built on misunderstood English. Have a wonderful day, @issymills6455!
@@issymills6455 *you're
@@issymills6455 I want to like this comment because it is actually getting pretty entertaining lol. You ask a question with incorrect punctuation, then answer the question yourself. I can only imagine what that internal monolog must have sounded like...
@@jicudi Are you not embarrassed that you never knew about the Tyson v Tucker fight ? I would be. Once a casual, always a casual.
tony tucker was so underrated, he had knockout power in both hands and he was so fast, he was without a doubt mike tyson's toughest opponent.
James Tillis arguably beat him.
And the 5 people he lost to
@@dylanburston7453 Tyson lost to 6 people and was KO'd 5 times
Soft spoken Lennox Lewis at his best was the total package. When he fought seriously he was pretty much untouchable. The last undisputed Super Heavyweight champion emerged as cream of the crop against some of the biggest punchers in Heavyweight history.
Lewis avenged his only two defeats by knockout. He didn't make excuses for his only two losses, he said, "It's Heavyweights, you can get caught, but i won the rematches in style," and, "Show me a Heavyweight Champion without a loss and i'll show you a fighter that fought a lot of nobodies."
57 year old Lennox is the GOAT. To hear him talk so clearly and eloquently after going up against 18 Heavyweight Champions is remarkable.
The 18 HW Champions Lewis faced: Vitali Klitschko, Evander Holyfield, Mike Tyson, Shannon Briggs, Frank Bruno, Tony Tucker, Hasim Rahman, Oliver McCall, Mike Weaver, Henry Akinwande, Tommy Morrison and Ray Mercer were later recognized as WBO champions, British HW champion Gary Mason, European HW champion Jean Chanet, Commonwealth HW champion Derek Williams, Canada HW champion Razor Ruddock, IBF/WBF HW champion Michael Grant, and WBC International HW champion David Tua...*[[ technically not all were 'World' champions but champions nonetheless ]]. Other notable mentions; Olympic HW Gold medalist Tyrell Briggs, Andrew Golota, Zeljko Mavrovic, Frans Botha and Phil Jackson.
Name another Super Heavyweight with a better resume? Only person i can think of is Wladimir Klitschko.
@@Studentofsweetscience he's talking about Prime Tyson, not cocaine tyson.
@@Studentofsweetscience Lewis was the GOAT of that time period.
You stand toe to toe with Iron Mike to a decision, you're an absolute monster.
Prime Tyson…
I remember before this fight being really worried Tyson might lose. Tucker was a great boxer. He went the distance Vs a PRIME Mike Tyson and also went 12 vs Lennox Lewis in 1998. Major respect. A bad ass in the ring with an iron jaw.
1998 ?? Many people would then say Lewis could only beat old fighters.
So, please correct it.
@@lexsoft3969 it was in 1993 not 1998.And tucker was 35 years old in that fight and Lewis was 28.
I watched it live as well and was cheering for Tucker. Unfortunately he broke his hand. If he hadn't I think he would have won.
Tucker fought Lennox Lewis - the only fighter to ever drop him - in 1993, for the vacant WBC title.
This was after Riddick Bowe won a decision over Holyfield, and Lewis had knocked out Razor Ruddock - the 2 were supposed to meet.
But Riddick Bowe wanted no part of Lennox Lewis, and instead fought Michael Dokes and Jesse Ferguson, rather than give Lewis a title shot.
So, the WBC stripped Bowe of the title, and Lennox Lewis squared off against Tony Tucker for the vacated belt.
@@MatewanMassacre Dropped him twice. Think it was Lewis most cautious display though, so Tucker deserves a lot of respect.
The sound of those blows when they connect, my god! They are true warriors who can withstand so many blows to the head and still be standing.
Always loved how Tucker stood there and fought in every match he was in. Great fighter.
Tyson fought with a combination of skill, talent, discipline and power. He was the most formidable boxer of the generation. Tucker was a mountain of a man who fought with the speed of a lightweight. This really was a great fight. Something I always appreciated about Tyson was that he would give honest reviews of his opponents before and after a fight. It seems that nowadays ego gets in the way of that.
Tucker always said he broke his hand early in the fight. Dude stood up to the baddest man on earth at the time and was still standing when it was over. Mad respect. Had some demons that cost him his potential place in history.
Drugs?
For such an epic fight between two undefeated fighters, and no KO, I am surprised that a re-match never occurred
@@Ytnzy250No, Tucker didn’t have issues with drugs or crime or anything like that. He had a good boxing career and retired without many injuries. Nothing salacious.
“Personal demons”? Where did you pull that out of? That’s not true.
Can you elaborate on what you mean when you say he had demons? The other person in the comments disputes your statement.
“You didn’t knock me down Mike. You didn’t knock me down.” This man is a legend.
Jake L.
I want to know what Tucker said when he got knocked down for the 1st time by Lennox Lewis.
Maybe : "Oops... you got it man. But... you wouldn't knock me out". 😀
@@lexsoft3969 To be fair, Lennox Lewis was the best heavyweight of his generation, even better than Tyson...
@Marco Bertelli very possibly. But he didn't wanna know Mike in the early days. Mike peaked early, lennox peaked late.
@@dabiguy77 22yo Tyson would have sexually assaulted Lewis right there in front of millions and we couldn't have done anything to stop him.
It’s amazing the hits these guys take and not only still manage to stay standing, but also actually are able to keep on fighting.
This is undeniably the best boxing content on the platform! Thank you for sharing!
It shows how incredibly good Tyson was. The had a pretty big size disadvantage and still won. Great fight 👍
No, it just shows Tyson fought bums
@@timthompson8297 lmao...yeah, a 35-0 bum with the IBF belt. Meanwhile, you need a breather after getting up off the couch
Tysons height gave him an advantage on the upper cut watch his fightes and see how many times he uses it
@@timthompson8297 There's not a more untrue statement
@@gutar5675 Only 2 fighters he faught were Holyfield and Lenox Lewis and he lost both fights.
Fair credit to him, he went the distance with him, and in an era when Tyson was considered invincible.
It shows the true class of a boxer, who went toe to toe with Mike Tyson, and was not knocked out, or looked like he was in any serious trouble during the fight.
Having the skill, experience and also the necessary power, to trouble Tyson, in the earlier rounds, was something that few other boxers were able to do.
Most boxers were so intimidated by Tyson, that they rarely lasted long in the ring, but Tucker came to fight, and put up a great performance.
No shame in losing the fight over a points decision.
It's like Chuck Wepner, and the movie character he inspired, Rocky Balboa.
@John Anderson On the best day Chuck Wepner ever had, he wouldn't have a snowballs chance in Hell going the distance with Tyson, OR Tucker, for that matter
Milo, Wepner went into the 15th against Ali. You're clueless to think that a guy who did that wouldn't last.
Tucker better than Ali? SMH.
Frank Stallone is a better Singer than all of them.
Hats off to TT, the movement, the swagger, the skills… and most of all the Cameo mullet. Well done, mang
Reminds me of the singer in 'Sexual Chocolate' (Eddie Murphy)!!
Word Up!
That was THAT SOUL GLO!...
He got the moves like jagger..
When Mike was so humble and respectful. Once Cus' died, he was devastated. His mentor gone and the journey to his dark side began. Glad to see he's gotten help.
Yep you nailed it he wasn’t the Tyson we all normally seen it fuqqed him up in the head
Cus died before this
I like the endcap of the video: the sort of epilogue about Tucker. Clearly he's done alright and while he may have lacked drive later, he still made it much farther than most and made a good, stable life for himself. Cheers.
Its nice to see happy endings to boxing stories
And his woman is very easy on the eyes.
And the guy was smart to fight mostly weak fighters outside of Tyson and Lewis, saved himself a lot of brain damage. Is the big money he could have made fighting all the top guys really worth the decreased quality of life later on.
@@ckobo84 Kinda sounds like the Bob Sapp strategy, make as much money as you can while sustaining as little damage to yourself as possible. Except Todd doesn't throw his fights against tomato cans. His wife is also damn hot.
Yep some may have gone higher but many of them dropped far lower. Good for him.
These vids are always bangers gotta love Mike
Tucker was a real challenge for prime Mike but also proved Mike could hang in there for 12 rounds like nobody's business. Respect to Tony and Mike.
Mike got meaner and smarter as that fight went on
I can't overstate how legendary it is to be such a talented and powerful fighter that even your opponents get respect just for stepping into the ring. Imagine being on such a level that you can elevate a man by defeating him.
It’s just the popularity of Tyson, nothing more.
@@BooBooDaFoo330 and how did he become so popular? By being mediocre?
@@paul_warner naw I’m saying people overrate him and his abilities to the extreme.
@@BooBooDaFoo330they really don't tho, Tyson was an incredible boxer and amazing athlete for his size who hit way harder than people like you will ever give him credit for
yeah I'm not gonna listen to someone that clearly doesn't know shit@@BooBooDaFoo330
Love these Tyson videos, happy they’re back semi-regularly
BLTV coming up with some great Tyson content
I am loving this channel more than ever so right now
Gotta love the sportsmanship back in the days and how humble people were.
Now so many of them act like children on tilt, and have no self respect. Its a shame
Sportsmanship.. respect for your fellow player
Its amazing that Tyson was such a good tactician as well as being just a menacing puncher. He came across a really good fighter and had a long term plan to win instead of his usual blitz.
That's the problem with him. If he couldn't just drop you straight in the first round or two, he'd strategize and beat the everloving piss out of you until you did drop. Dude was a knockout artist with an absurd fight IQ with the power to back it all up. Once in a lifetime champion.
I like watching stories like these that don't end in a downward spiral. More of this please.
True. He got to the top, went 12 FUCKING ROUNDS AGAINST PRIME TYSON, then secured the bag and now can live comfortably without to many lasting injuries. That in itself is legendary, just when it compares to Tyson it looks.... dull. Dude got it made, and can live out his life a legend.
Tony Tucker was a warrior man. He gave us some of the best fights of the late 80s and early 90s. Dude never backed down from the toughest opponents. If he had just landed a few more clean shots in this fight it could have been a W for him. Buster Douglas really took what Tucker did well in this fight and amplified it, finally finding a way to topple Tyson. Tucker really deserves to not be one of those boxers just forgotten to time. If he had been in another era that didn't have all time greats like Tyson, Holyfield, and Lewis he could have had a monster career.
If
so how come there was never a re-match ?
@@MontyGumby ikr
Tony Tucker is criminally underrated
I know.
People love to hate on Tyson and call him overrated so they try to sh*t on Tyson's opponents.
@@thediaz07 Iron Mike was the world's greatest front runner. Never did he walk through fire and win. He never came from behind to win, and he never rose from the deck to win. Tyson was the product of careful matchmaking. He never fought Ibeabuchi, Bowe or Holyfield in his prime. He ducked Lewis and even refused to fight Foreman. That tells you something, Tyson was unproven in his prime and his best win was against Spinks, a career light heavyweight. Tyson got beat against every elite fighter he ever fought.
@@thediaz07 'Prime' Tyson was pre-Douglas Tyson which means pre-Feb 1990 Tyson. Well, Lewis turned pro in June 89 and although he had 7 fights in that 7 month period, by the time Tyson lost in Japan, Lewis was still fightin in leisure centres; untelevised bouts for which he was probably paid about 10 thousand a go. I’d be fascinated to know where a fledgling heavy who was still 7 fights from competing for his first title of any sort got those millions to pay the world heavyweight champion (Tyson) to avoid him!!!
Back in 1996, Lewis was on the comeback trail following his shock KO defeat to Oliver McCall, which cost him his WBC heavyweight title.
McCall had since lost the belt to Frank Bruno who was then knocked out by Tyson.
At this point, Lewis was in line for a shot at his old crown and took legal action to force his opportunity.
The New Jersey Supreme Court blocked Tyson’s plan to fight WBA champion Bruce Seldon, insisting that he must first face Lewis
As a result, the two camps worked out a deal which saw the Brit receive a payment of $4million to allow Tyson vs Seldon to take place.
Ultimately Tyson stopped Seldon in one round, claimed the WBA belt and then vacated the WBC, which Lewis won back in his rematch with McCall.
Eventually, when the pair did meet in 2002, Lewis dominated and KOd Tyson.
Lennox Lewis was the one everyone wanted to avoid at all cost. He was the the guy they all ducked be it through crooked ranking bodies or promoters protecting their fighters. He is without question a top 5 Heavyweight imo.
@@Alien_Observer_LV-426 i think Tyson showed a lot of heart in the Ruddock fights
This is how a championship fight should be, respect for each other, both came to fight, no dirty tricks, put on a great show, both of them were in their prime as boxers and as men
Yeah man. Nowadays we egg shaped weights, gypsy curses, spiked drinks, bought refs, bought cornermen, and heavy costumes. Oh wait... That was all from one fight.
If you've been watching boxing you definitely know that Mike Tyson was different. This man punches with so much strength and style while fearlessly coming at his opponents for more.
I don't know how he did that and I don't care, he'll forever be the greatest for me.
My buddy you are doing a fantabulous job we want more videos. Keep up the good work BL TV
6:57 The sweat being blasted off of Tucker’s face when Tyson’s shot lands is what told me all I needed to know about the monstrous power of Tyson’s punches… 🤯
And the amazing chin of Tucker.
Most people forget that Tyson was barely 21 years old here, a kid basically, yet he already commanded such a terrifying aura. Always remember his age during his prime when putting his career in perspective.
10 months later he destroyed Spinks , and that was his last fight under Kevin Rooney, which was effectively the end of "prime Mike", all at 21 years, 11 months, and 28 days old.
Tyson's development as a boxer effectively ended as soon as he left Rooney. Such a shame, just imagine what he could've achieved had they stayed together as Cuz D'Amato had wanted.
So "prime mike" that every fanboi is blabbing about was prime for a really short period. Great boxers are prime for almost a decade
@@DrLoverLover Do you realize Tyson fought nearly 40 fights between 1985 and 1990? That is what most fighters do their entire careers, let alone over a decade; Tyson fought more than the average pro fighter career, in less than five years.
@@DrLoverLover Exactly. Whenever Tyson fan boys talk about him, they ALWAYS have to use the word "prime". Well, compare that to Pacquiao. Pacquiao got KO'd TWICE early in his career, but, both times, he rose back to become champion again. He then loses to Morales, yet he comes back to become champion AGAIN. He then loss to Bradley, then, in his very next fight, he got KO'd BADLY by Marquez, yet PacMan comes back to become champion AGAIN. He then loses to Mayweather, but then rises back to become champion AGAIN. He then loses to Jeff Horn, yet he rises back to become champion AGAIN. Manny Pacquiao's "prime" lasted over 20-years. From 1998 until 2019, Manny Pacquiao was a world champion in a major organization. No one makes excuses for Pacquiao's losses because they don't need to.
@@DeeperImageAutomotive And? He made the choice to fight that many fighters. Let me ask you this - were those fighters good fighters? Have you bothered to check who those fighters were and what their records were? I didn't think so.
@@DeeperImageAutomotive He had some of his weakest performances under Kevin Rooney, Looked poor against james tillis, james smith, mitch green, jose ribalta.. didn't look good in this fight either against the well conditioned but mediocre Tucker. Also failed to qaulify for the 1984 olympics under Rooney. Tyson was at his best when he was in shape and motivated. No legit time stamps on his prime.. He looked and did better against bruno in 1996 then he did in 1989.
I feel like this is the first loss to Mike that I’ve seen, where they were still able to continue on with their career, in a positive manner.
What about Tillis in 86
Tyson won all the way but the guy knew how to tie him up.
All I got to say is they will never see another heavyweight BOXER like MIKE TYSON he's the best & thanks to his trainer he will always be thunder in the spotlight
You snuck in some battlefield 1942 music at the end there.
🤘
These outro's are so hard, would love to see an extended version.
Man your content helped a looooot through this tough time, thanks for this , discovered the channel a couple of days ago and hooked since
The entire world surrounded Mike during his prime!!!! He was literally boxing it self!!
Boxing promoters have never been able to make the numbers anywhere near to what they made when Iron Mike was in his prime.
@@anthonymcken6050 you mean ppv
Just like how Jordan ruled the world in his playing days!
I'm just starting to get into boxing and these videos are really helping me enjoy and see what boxing is really like
Best boxing channel
He proved himself to be a great fighter. Why potentially destroy his life for something that would have amounted to an ego trip. Smart fighter, and ultimately, a smart man.
Mike Tyson was the ultimate display of the warrior spirit. The rise, the fall from grace, and then the rise again lol. There will never be another Mike Tyson and Cus D'Amato. Forever Champion 🏆
What rise again? He lost to Douglas, went to prison, won a title, won a title through a fighter diving, vacated his legitimate title to avoid Lennox lewis, and then got his arse handed to him by Evander.
In all of the 1990s, he was champion for a year total. He never successfully defended a title in the 90s
It was a frankly pathetic second title reign
@@dylanburston7453 the lost to Douglas was the fall. Obviously.
@@dylanburston7453 the rise was becoming the youngest heavyweight champion in history. Duh
@@Onefourtyfour "the rise, fall and rise again". I said what rise again.
What about beating peter mcneely or winning a title with a dive, or never succesfully defending a title in the 90s, or losing to a cruserweight twice, or ducking Lennox twice in one year is a "rise again",
@@dylanburston7453 Mike owns one of the most successful marijuana edible companies in the country making well over $600,000 a month from that alone. Do you need help moving furniture around in your mom's basement?
Its funny how decades later we realize just how amazing Tyson was. The sounds of Tysons hits is terrifying
Just think how hard these boxers were who ate his hardest punches and were still continuing
U might have been a kid, but ppl always knew how great Tyson was. He was a phenom
Ali Tyson greatest heavyweight ever
I love your videos. That heart warming end with Tony Tucker was a wonderful touch
Wow, thank you for this, I had forgotten all about TNT Tucker and this match-up! He must've been a crazy talent to box that good despite lackng in desire!
I really love mike tyson and bltv classic your uploads are motivating and inspiring others ❤️
Both monsters in the ring, the sound of the punches landing was just murder 💯💯😎🦋🐝🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I love watching those old boxing matches when Mike Tyson fought tall fighters. The taller fighters tried to use their reach advantage, but Mike would time perfectly an approach that took away that advantage, and once up close, the advantage was always Mike’s.
If someone is tall even in boxing doesn't say they automatically are awesome fighters.
The sound Tyson's punches make on impact are something else.
Battlefield 1 soundtrack all day! Nice video, imagine if tyson stayed that humble trougout the years, woudl have been even greater
Tony Tucker was definitely the person that pushed Tyson the most at this point of his professional career
James Tillis arguably beat Mike in a similar performance before
@@dylanburston7453 BEAT? LoL oh hell nawwww.
@@dylanburston7453 Tillis won 4 rounds at best...he definitely did good..
@@dylanburston7453 James Tillis did good
I have to agree with James Tillis being that.
Love the commentary. Shaking his head and showboating means either two things. He's hurt or out of ideas. This guy took everything Tyson had and still had more left in the tank. Tucker was tough.
Kevin Rooney was an absolute legend
Still is 💪🏽💪🏽
but unfortunately he lacked that presence that Cus D'Amato had and for that the doubt and laziness got the better of Tyson.
@@strategygaming5830 And Don King.
Anyone that can hold their own in their prime against iron Mike in his Prime: RESPECT ✊🏽
Holy hell. What a tank. Kudos to him for taking so many of Tysons clean hits.
Imagine having your first loss being to Tyson but going all rounds for him to sing your praises at the end, and then your 2nd ever loss was to the guy who 8-9 years later would beat Tyson. Fuck me, legendary career.
Much respect for Tony Tucker, he was a smart fighter, he knew he wasn't going to be able to beat Tyson at some point during the fight so he started fighting to survive, he showed a lot of endurance after receiving hard punches from Tyson that sent many other Tyson's opponents to the canvas.
Total respect for anyone going 12 rounds with Tyson. OK beaten on points, but both fighters survived OK, well at least for now.
Tyson's left straights are INSANE.
Lightning fast, insane reach, hitting like a truck.
Your channel is so underrated! Thx for these vids ..
Just a fantastic documentary. Thank you for this. Bravo👏👏👏
What’s that sound effect behind his voice in minute 4:37
I love how much respect these fighters give each other, i love seeing this over the modern badmouth media grab efforts.
He fought Mike and never been knocked out. That's a flex.
I love how Tyson never underestimates his opponents. He comes in respecting their ability, and that's the best approach because he's therefore ready for anything and dismisses no possibilities.
Now this is boxing mad respect to both.
9:50-10:05 Lewis vs Tucker is one example that showed Lewis's chin was not made of glass like many people said. He took some Tucker's best punches and stood still. He even became the 1st man who knocked down Tucker for the 1st time.
Man Tony Tucker could take a punch, and deliver the counter punches. Tyson knocked out guys in the 1st/2nd round with those haymakers. Tucker took them the whole fight. First time I've seen this fight. Tucker traded blows with Tyson the entire fight when Tyson was at the top of his game. Mad respect to him.
Newbie here but it's interesting that in the 80s 90s there we're lots of pound of difference. Big difference to todays rules. Just realizing this just gives Mike Tyson more credit to his greatness.
It’s incredible how many careers Tyson has ended.
We could had a whole bunch of different heavyweight champions, all fighting it all out with each other on more or less equal levels, if Mike had never existed.
He disposed of them like they would deal with you and me.
That is absolutely astonishing. Mike Tyson, single-handedly changed the entire history of boxing and what it could had been.
it was a case of the right coach meeting with the right boxer. Gus was at his height of boxing knowledge and Tyson just does what gus tells him to
What a stupid thought. We all enjoy watching young Mike, but you can't change history just by being part of it. If Mike doesn't exist who's to say someone else doesn't rise to the occasion. Hell, you literally just learned about Tony Tucker, a skilled, big, fast heavyweight. No Tyson omg maaaaaaaaaybe he gets inspired to train and fight to his potential? Or maaaaaaaaaybe 10 other variations of things happen. "Maybe" doesn't belong in boxing, moron
Another horribly dumb comment in the same string of comments no less lmao. Tyson and Cus are a dream match. There has never been another fighter with such natural gifts to fight a Cus style. Tyson was pitbull built, extremely quick feet, strong, and most of all quick with the dips. He could swim without getting wet, all at heavyweight. He was smaller, but made even that grand detriment a strength. No idea why I'm even responding to a retard that doesn't even know his name is "Cus" though 😂
Yeah, especially when you look at most of his opponents records, he demolished so many world class fighters, just swept them aside
@@stellviahohenheim Cus always said, that he had the perfect blue print for the ultimate fighter and he knew exactly how to shape that chosen one. He was waiting all his life for someone like mike. This has to be probably the best tuned boxer, trainer match in the history of boxing. Tbh, even finer than Ali and Dundee
I have SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO much respect for that guy. In that day , just making it one round with MT was almost impossible let alone the entire fight .
as if it worth something
James Tillis 1st, followed by Mitch Green, James "bonecrusher" Smith and then Tony Tucker. But they all fought with their own styles and tactics.
Forget his Boxing career. Brutal childhood and then Don King? To overcome those 2 things? One tough dude 😊
Tyson match up with guys who were way out his league on paper. A true genius, turned his disadvantage into an advantage. Thanks to the mastermind Cus Demato📌💯🙌🔥
Tony Tucker is a warrior. Met him at OSU once and the man is a savage. He made Tyson look human for sure.
Tyson actually talked good things about him 😂😂
Tony Tucker deserves all the respect. His ring record was incredible, and although he didn't beat Mike Tyson in their fight, he went the distance with him and looked like he could've fought even longer after the final bell. That's what champions are made of.
that's what gets me about some fight pairings. If they're evenly matched, you need more rounds, and they should be as evenly matched as possible.
“That’s ok”.. what a champ! Graceful in defeat.
Tony Tucker talked the talk & walked the walk!
Good on both of ‘em. Rare to see such a match with both boxers showing respect after the match for each other. No bad blood.
I like to think I know boxing after 60 years, but Tony somehow slipped by me by not knowing him WELL ENOUGH to understand how really, REALLY good he was. So much MORE respect after this well-done video. (LOL, I was drinking when I watched this fight with a new gal, and "missed" alot of it.) Of course, I subscribed! Thanks, BLTV Classic!
Tyson raised the profile of the sport to a whole new level. I hope he inspires our young generation that with talent indurance and hard work you can be the best in the world.
Tucker is a beast too damn. Lasting 12 rounds with Tyson! 😳
Excellent video.
Great athletes who have entertained and educated the fans of this sport for decades.
God bless these guys!
When I hear Mike Tyson say "he was intimidating" I know he's just had a tough fight!
For him to get into Mike's head!
That was usually what won Tyson his fights. *KNOWING* he was going to smash through whatever was in front of him!
But this guy got in his head, which would have definitely taken some of his confidence. Which is why we didn't see Iron Mike unleashing hell on this guy's body with fast, devastating blows!
You can lose a fight before you start if someone is inside your head enough.
And even Mike Tyson had his doubts as shown here.
It's nice to know he wasn't actually a T-800.
Before he was champ, I had heard about Mike Tyson but figured it was just hype. I saw a news clip of him working out (similar to the one that starts this video) and I thought to myself - OMG, this guy will be the champion as long as he wants. His speed and power were incredible.
Great short documentary. Excellent editing.
Tyson fans 4ever... WE LOVE U, Tyson.
Considering most of Tyson's opponents were knocked out in about 30-60 seconds, I'd consider this a win for Tucker.