Lennox Lewis vs. Donovan Ruddock
Date | 31 October 1992 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Kensington, London, UK | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | Commonwealth heavyweight title | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lewis wins via 2nd-round KO |
Lennox Lewis vs. Donovan Ruddock , billed as The Fight for the Right, was a professional boxing match contested on 31 October 1992.[3] The fight was a WBC heavyweight title "eliminator", with the winner scheduled to challenge the winner of the Evander Holyfield–Riddick Bowe championship bout held two weeks later. In addition, Lewis' Commonwealth heavyweight title was also on the line.
Background
[edit ]In 1991, the number one and two ranked heavyweights, Mike Tyson and Donovan "Razor" Ruddock had two matches in order to determine who would next face Evander Holyfield for the Undisputed Heavyweight Championship. The first match took place on 18 March 1991, with Tyson winning the bout by seventh-round technical knockout after referee Richard Steele stopped the fight as Tyson was landing a six-punch combination on Ruddock. However, Ruddock and his camp complained that Steele had stopped the fight too early and demanded a rematch with Tyson, to which Tyson's camp agreed. The rematch took place on 28 June 1991 but Tyson was again able to pick up the victory, this time by unanimous decision. With Tyson now the number one contender, a match with Holyfield was made for November of that year. Before that match could take place, Tyson was pulled out with an injury and shortly after, was convicted and sentenced to six years in prison for the rape of Desiree Washington. As such, Ruddock became the WBC's number one ranked heavyweight and was matched up against the number two ranked heavyweight, 1988 Gold Medalist Lennox Lewis, who had yet to lose a match in his professional career. The bout would take place in Lewis' native England with the winner moving on to face the winner of the Evander Holyfield–Riddick Bowe championship bout that would take place only two weeks after the Lewis–Ruddock match.[4]
At the press conference Ruddock's promoter Murad Muhammad stated that they suspect Lewis of taking steroids prior to the upcoming fight. Lewis however neither confirmed, neither denied he did take steroids.[5] Ruddock was a 2 to 1 favorite to win.
The fights
[edit ]Taylor vs. España
[edit ]The co featured bout (actually broadcast after the main event on the HBO World Championship Boxing broadcast) saw WBA welterweight champion Meldrick Taylor make the second defence of his title against No. 1 contender Crisanto España.[6]
The fight
[edit ]España dropped Taylor in the 3rd round with a right hand. The challenger was deducted a point in the 6th for a low blow. Taylor was dropped again by a flurry in the 8th and the fight was stopped later in the round with Taylor pressed against the turnbuckle.[7]
Aftermath
[edit ]Taylor's trainer, Lou Duva speaking after the bout stated that his charge's career was over saying "He will not fight. Nobody's going to change our minds, that's for sure. I don't doubt that some of these wiseguys are going to think he should be fighting again, but if I gotta go to a commission to stop him, I'll go to a commission. The toughest thing is going to be to tell Meldrick. If he never talks to me again, fine, as long as he doesn't fight."
Main Event
[edit ]For nearly the entire first round, Lewis was able to keep the hard-hitting Ruddock at bay by effectively using his left jab and minimizing Ruddock's offense in the process. With 10 seconds left in the round, Ruddock ducked in an attempt to size up Lewis, but Lewis was able to land a quick, powerful right hand that dropped Ruddock to the canvas. Ruddock was able to answer referee Joe Cortez's 10 count as the round came to an end. Lewis would continue his attack early in the second round, dropping Ruddock for the second time with a combination while Ruddock was backed into the corner. Ruddock was able to get back up but was met with a furious rally from Lewis, who was able to drop Ruddock for the third time in the match with another combination. Following the knockdown, Cortez immediately stopped the fight and awarded the victory to Lewis by way of knockout.[8]
Aftermath
[edit ]Only two weeks after Lewis' defeat of Ruddock, Riddick Bowe would defeat Evander Holyfield to become the new Undisputed Heavyweight Champion. Per the agreement, Bowe was now obligated to face Lewis in his first defense of his newly won titles, but negotiations for the fight broke down after the two sides could not reach an agreement on a 90–10 split of the fights planned 32ドル million purse. Lewis was then offered 2ドル.5 million to take an interim fight against an opponent of his choosing and then fight Bowe for 9ドル million, but that deal was also rejected.[9] On 14 December 1992 Bowe officially vacated his WBC title at a press conference in which he tossed the belt into the trash and Lewis was named the new WBC Heavyweight champion that same day.[10] Lewis responded to Bowe's refusal to fight him by giving him the derogatory nickname of "Chicken Bowe". Though Lewis had originally hoped to face George Foreman in his first defense, he ultimately agreed to face the WBC's number one contender Tony Tucker in his first defense, winning the bout by unanimous decision.
Undercard
[edit ]Confirmed bouts:[11]
Winner | Loser | Weight division/title belt(s) disputed | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Venezuela Crisanto España | United States Meldrick Taylor | WBA World welterweight title | 8th round TKO. |
Non-TV bouts | |||
South Africa Dingaan Thobela | United Kingdom Tony Foster | Lightweight (8 rounds) | 8th round PTS. |
Sweden George Scott | United Kingdom Wayne Shepherd | Welterweight (8 rounds) | 6th round TKO. |
Broadcasting
[edit ]Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United Kingdom | Sky Sports |
United States | HBO |
References
[edit ]- ^ "The International Boxing official ratings as of September 1, 1992". Sun Journal. International Boxing Federation. Associated Press. 22 September 1992. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- ^ "The World Boxing Association official ratings as of September 1992". Record-Journal. World Boxing Association. 15 October 1992. Retrieved 24 November 2024.
- ^ "Lennox Lewis vs. Donovan Ruddock". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 14 October 2024.
- ^ Ruddock to Fight Lewis in the Fall, N.Y. Times article, 1992年07月03日, Retrieved on 2013年05月28日
- ^ Lennox Lewis and Razor Ruddock press conference in London (5:17 — 9:38)
- ^ "Meldrick Taylor vs. Crisanto Espana". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
- ^ Ian Thomson (2 November 1992). "Taylor Succumbs To España". New York Times. London. Archived from the original on 28 March 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
- ^ Good Show!, Sports Illustrated article, 1992年11月09日, Retrieved on 2013年05月28日
- ^ Lewis Says Foreman And Not Bowe Is Next, N.Y. Times article, 1992年11月27日, Retrieved on 2013年05月31日
- ^ Bowe Trashes His W.B.C. Title Belt, N.Y. Times article, 1992年12月15日, Retrieved on 2013年05月31日
- ^ "Event". BoxRec.
Preceded by vs. Mike Dixon
|
Lennox Lewis's bouts 31 October 1992 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by vs. Phil Jackson
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Donovan Ruddock's bouts 31 October 1992 |
Succeeded by |
Awards | ||
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Previous: Michael Nunn vs. James Toney |
KO Magazine Knockout of the Year 1992 |
Next: Julian Jackson vs. Gerald McClellan |