Top 5 Stories of the Week
Imagine a prime Mike Tyson inside the Octagon. | Photo: Jeff
Sherwood/Sherdog.com
Though the term “Baddest Man on the Planet” has been bandied about flippantly in mixed martial arts discussions over the past several years, the man who inspired the nickname will likely always be regarded as the true holder of that title.
Mike Tyson was the original “Baddest Man on the Planet” and remains a vivid part of boxing’s history due to his vicious knockout power and polarizing behavior. A the age of 20, the Cus D’Amato-trained pugilist became the youngest heavyweight boxing champion in history by knocking out Trevor Berbick in 1986, battering his foe with shots he later described as “hydrogen bombs,” according to the Los Angeles Times. Tyson eventually unified the WBC, WBA, IBF and “The Ring” heavyweight titles to become the division’s undisputed emperor before a shocking upset at the hands of James “Buster” Douglas and a rape conviction cost him both his championships and his freedom.
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“Well, in ’93, I was in prison, so there wouldn’t have been a fight, but there is no way I would have won,” Tyson said. “I had no idea what was going on with that type of fighting and would’ve been taken by surprise. I would have had to train in that particular art of fighting before that happened. That’s a particular art. You’re not going to go in there with just your hands and not have a great ground game. You also need a great wrestling game to be successful, and you won’t be exciting, as well. You have to have both games. You have to know how to wrestle and box. That’s just the truth.”
The stories of interest on Sherdog.com this week:
Iron Sharpens Iron
In Defense of ‘Toquinho’
Rumbling Elsewhere
Cat and Mouse
In the Hurtin’ Business
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