Arsenal wrote:What I notice about the guys who love Tyson is that you just don't accept the facts. If someone gives an answer or a criticism then more rubbish unfolds. Holyfield lost to Ruiz, Toney or Byrd past his prime but Tyson lost to Douglas in his prime and Williams and McBride out of it! Lewis and Holyfield may have been beaten but not by them 3. Look who Holyfield lost to in his prime. Ruiz, Toney, Byrd, McCall and Rahman are certainly better than Williams and McBride and probably Douglas as well.
Zing!!! The truth has rolled in and all the bullshit is being shipped out. Great points, Arsenal. Ruiz, Toney, and Byrd all held either the WBA or IBF heavyweight titles at some point in their careers. Ruiz won the heavyweight title twice, Toney won titles in multiple divisions, and Byrd has held his own title for the past four years. And McCall, well he was famous for dropping Tyson in sparring and giving him his toughest sessions, so he was no joke even with plus size gloves on. Rahman is a two-time WBC champion, so that is nothing to sneeze at either.
Danny Williams is a decent fighter and a notch above pretenders like Audley Harrison, but we all saw what happened when he stepped up in class against Vitali Klitschko. McBride, though, is just plain terrible. The fact that Louis Monaco and feather fisted Axel Schulz stopped him speaks volumes of his ability. Neither one of these guys will ever win a major title or beat a legitimate top ten heavyweight. Yet they both KO'd Iron Mike Tyson!!!
Lewis and Holyfield fought the big fights and won them. Tyson never won a big fight after dispatching of a piss scared Michael Spinks in '88. That was 18 years ago. Holyfield, on the other hand, had a huge win over Hasim Rahman only four years ago and Lewis had a stoppage over Vitali Klitschko merely three years ago. When those guys deteriorated with age, they were able to rely on skill and guile, excellent conditioning, and toughness to keep winning. Once Tyson's blinding hand speed faded away, so did his ability to become a force in the division. So no matter whether Tyson lost to Douglas or not, he still would have slowed down just enough for another top fighter to come along and knock him off his perch.