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ESPN:Mike Tyson on HOF ballot for 1st time

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    ESPN:Mike Tyson on HOF ballot for 1st time

    Mike Tyson on HOF ballot for 1st time

    Former undisputed heavyweight champion Mike Tyson and all-time great Mexican icon Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. are among three fighters on the International Boxing Hall of Fame ballot for the first time.

    Joining them in their first year of eligibility is former undisputed junior welterweight champ Kostya Tszyu of Australia.

    Full members of the Boxing Writers Association of America began receiving ballots Monday. They are due back to the Hall of Fame by Nov. 1. Results of the balloting will be announced on Dec. 7 with the annual induction ceremony at the Canastota, N.Y, shrine scheduled for June 12. Fighters must be retired for five years before they become eligible for election.

    The trio of Tyson, Chavez and Tszyu, all popular fighters around the world, being on the ballot for the first time gives the Hall of Fame the potential for a star-studded class.

    "Like in any sport, there are various years where some names are more popular than in other years, but we look at each inductee equal to each other for their achievements in the ring," Ed Brophy, the executive director of the Hall, said. "The 2011 ballot has some high-profile names on it, which generates a lot of interest and excitement with boxing fans."

    Tyson (50-6, 44 KOs), one of the most famous and feared fighters in history, was just 20 when he knocked out Trevor Berbick in the second round in 1986 to become the youngest heavyweight champion ever. Tyson made nine defenses, including unifying the three major titles, during his four-year reign of destruction.

    He knocked out former champion Larry Holmes in 1988 and blew away Michael Spinks, unbeaten at the time and owner of the lineal title, in a memorable 91-second demolition in 1988. At the time, it was the biggest money fight in boxing history. Tyson was dethroned by Buster Douglas, who knocked him out in a shocking 1990 upset.

    Tyson would later go to prison on a **** conviction, but eventually won two more belts in 1996, knocking out Frank Bruno in the third round and Bruce Seldon in the first round before losing back-to-back fights to Evander Holyfield in fights that set box office records.

    Chavez (107-6-2, 86 KOs), regarded by many as the best fighter in Mexico's rich boxing history, was a three-division champion and long reigned atop of the pound-for-pound list. He claimed titles at junior lightweight, lightweight and junior welterweight in a career that spanned 25 years, from 1980 to 2005.

    Chavez won his first title, the WBC junior lightweight belt, in 1984, stopping Mario Martinez in the eighth round, and made nine defenses. In 1987, he stopped Edwin Rosario in the 11th round to win the WBA version of the lightweight title and eventually unified belts by defeating Jose Luis Ramirez via 11th-round technical decision in 1988. In his next fight, Chavez stopped Roger Mayweather in the 10th round to claim WBC junior welterweight title.

    Chavez's third defense of that title was perhaps his most memorable fight. He met Meldrick Taylor in the 140-pound unification fight in Las Vegas in 1990 and was trailing on all three scorecards entering the 12th and final round. But Chavez rallied to drop Taylor, and referee Richard Steele, in one of the most controversial calls in boxing history, stopped the fight with two seconds left. The fight was later named fight of the year by Ring ****zine.

    Chavez reigned until Oscar De La Hoya dethroned him in 1996.

    Tszyu (31-2, 25 KOs), who was born in Russia but moved to Australia after his standout amateur career, had two junior welterweight title reigns during his 13-year professional career. He stopped Jake Rodriguez in the sixth round in 1995 to claim the IBF 140-pound title and defended it five times until suffering an upset knockout loss to Vince Phillips.

    But Tszyu's second title reign is where he made his mark as he collected three major titles to become undisputed champion. He stopped Miguel Angel Gonzalez in the 10th round to claim a vacant belt in 1999 and made eight dominant defenses, including stopping an aging Chavez. Tszyu also scored knockouts against Sharmba Mitchell and Zab Judah in title unification bouts to become undisputed champion.

    Tszyu eventually was stopped by Ricky Hatton in the 11th round of their 2005 showdown, and although Tszyu never announced his retirement, he has not fought since.

    The rest of the field on the 45-man ballot are holdovers from previous years, including former featherweight champion "Prince" Naseem Hamed, former welterweight champ Donald Curry, former super middleweight titlist Sven Ottke and former three-division titlist Wilfredo Vazquez.


    i included a poll for you guys. who do you think deserves to top among the these three in International Boxing's HoF?

    Vote and discuss. thanks!
    15
    tyson
    33.33%
    5
    chavez
    66.67%
    10
    tszyu
    0.00%
    0

    #2
    am sorry for the duplicacy. mod can u delete this? thanks.

    Comment


      #3
      I think Tyson should some time be inducted but I could understand him being passed up. The **** conviction, the fact he bit off his opponents ear in a heavyweight title fight and the constant trouble and bad press he gave boxing will definitely hurt his chances.

      Comment


        #4
        1. Chavez
        2. Tyson
        3. Tszyu

        An argument can be made that Chavez is the greatest Mexican fighter of all time (I strongly disagree). Tyson's time at the top was so brief that I don't see how he could be placed ahead of Chavez, who holds records for longevity that may never be broken.

        Of course, I always found Tyson to be extremely dull to watch, and am, as everyone knows, probably his biggest hater on this site. Tyson, to me, represents everything bad about professional sports.

        But objectively, Tyson probably should be ranked slightly ahead of Tszyu.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by prinzemanspopa
          I'm not convinced by Ottke,but I fail to see how Tszyu is anymore deserving than the rest of the candidates.He beat a few solid fighters,ruled over an poor era of junior welterweights,then picked up some shot fighters,who were no longer relevant at the top level and most importantly,avoided rematching the man who knocked him silly,Vince Phillips.People hold it against Hamed for losing to a prime ATG in Marco Antonio Barrera,and yet give Tszyu a free pass for losing,avoiding a rematch,and continuing his career without ever making mention of Vince Phillips.



          Speaking of which,why is Dariusz Michalczeski never mentioned in these discussions? I'd rate his career over both Hamed's and Tszyu's.Other than Roy Jones and Virgil Hill,he's the most accomplished,most decorated LHW since Michael Spinks.
          He never called out or sought revenge over Gonzalez or or the other guy that knocked him ****** inside six rounds. Reigned over a very weak era of LHW's and never beat anyone of any consequence and avoided the only good fighter in his weight class.

          Comment


            #6
            Tyson's made boxing more headlines than boxing gave him.

            He deserves the hall of fame, more than any other man on the ballot, especially since he has become such a reformed character.

            I don't know if to be inducted right now would be good for his personality but theres only one way to find out if he has finally matured or if this reformed character is part of one of his self-delusional charades.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by SBleeder View Post
              1. Chavez
              2. Tyson
              3. Tszyu

              An argument can be made that Chavez is the greatest Mexican fighter of all time (I strongly disagree). Tyson's time at the top was so brief that I don't see how he could be placed ahead of Chavez, who holds records for longevity that may never be broken.

              Of course, I always found Tyson to be extremely dull to watch, and am, as everyone knows, probably his biggest hater on this site. Tyson, to me, represents everything bad about professional sports.

              But objectively, Tyson probably should be ranked slightly ahead of Tszyu.
              Who do you think is the greatest Mexican boxer? Sal Sanchez? Ruben Olivares? Zarate?

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by DET. IRONSIDE View Post
                Tyson's made boxing more headlines than boxing gave him.

                He deserves the hall of fame, more than any other man on the ballot, especially since he has become such a reformed character.

                I don't know if to be inducted right now would be good for his personality but theres only one way to find out if he has finally matured or if this reformed character is part of one of his self-delusional charades.
                Totally agree, nice comments.

                Comment

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