Evander Holyfield vs. James Tillis

Evander Holyfield vs. James Tillis was a professional boxing match contested on July 16, 1988. The fight is notable for being Holyfield's first in the heavyweight division.

Evander Holyfield vs. James Tillis
DateJuly 16, 1988
VenueCaesars Tahoe in Stateline, Nevada
Title(s) on the lineNone
Tale of the tape
Boxer Evander Holyfield James Tillis
Nickname "The Real Deal" "Quick"
Hometown Atlanta, Georgia Tulsa, Oklahoma
Pre-fight record 18–0 38–14–1
Height 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 202 lb (92 kg) 210 lb (95 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA/WBC/IBF
Undisputed
Cruiserweight champion

Background

Evander Holyfield had previously defeated Carlos De León to add the WBC cruiserweight title to the WBA and IBF versions already in his possession and become the first undisputed champion in the division's history. After the victory, Holyfield announced his attentions to move up to heavyweight and veteran fighter and former contender James Tillis was eventually named his first opponent. Holyfield was expected to be a future challenger to then-undisputed heavyweight champion Mike Tyson, whom Tillis had fought two years prior to his fight with Holyfield. Though Tillis would lose, he had an impressive showing against Tyson, being the first person to go the distance with him and ending Tyson's 19-fight knockout streak. Though he was no longer a contender, Tillis' experience against several top heavyweights led to Holyfield's promoter Dan Duva selecting him as Holyfield's fist heavyweight opponent.[1] Tillis had formally been a top contender in the heavyweight division, starting his career with a 20–0 record and facing Mike Weaver in 1981 for the WBA heavyweight title, though he would lose a 15-round unanimous decision. Since then, Tillis' career had been veered largely into journeyman status, facing and losing to several top heavyweights including future and former heavyweight like champions Tyson Tim Witherspoon and Frank Bruno. Though Tillis was considered an underdog against Holyfield, he remained confident that he could earn an upset victory and gain a lucrative rematch against Tyson.[2]

The fight

Holyfield would have little trouble with Tillis, earning a relatively easy referee technical decision victory. There was a brief controversy at the end of round two as Holyfield and Tillis traded punches well after the bell rang. Holyfield's trainer Lou Duva got on the ring apron and restrained Tillis against the ropes which incited Williford who ran across the ring and shoved Duva before referee Richard Steele separated the two trainers. In round five Holyfield would hurt Tillis with several power punches in the final minute of the round. Tillis, with his back against the ropes, would barely make it out of the round as Holyfield landed a flurry of punches in the closing seconds. A clearly dazed Tillis returned to his corner where referee Steele called for the ringside doctor, whom advised Tillis to not continue, giving Holyfield the victory by referee technical decision.[3]

Fight card

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Time Notes
Heavyweight 200+ lb Evander Holyfield def. James Tillis RTD 5/10
Lightweight 135 lb John John Molina def. Miguel Medina TKO 8/10
Heavyweight 200+ lb Randy Johnson def. Steve Harvey TKO 1/6
Middleweight 160 lb Elias Mayorga def Richard LeFevre UD 4/4
Super Lightweight 140 lb Billy Martinez def. Jesse Madrilles TKO 4/4

References

  1. Evander Holyfield, already hailed as Mike Tyson's next serious challenger, UPI article, 1988-07-15 Retrieved on 2020-02-03
  2. Quick Tillis Back in Business for a Chance at Tyson, Oklahoman article, 1988-07-10 Retrieved on 2020-02-02
  3. Another TKO: 19-0 Holyfield Hammers Quick Tillis, Oklahoman article, 1988-07-18 Retrieved on 2020-02-02
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.