George Foreman vs. Tommy Morrison
"Star-Spangled Battle" | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Date | June 7, 1993 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Location | Las Vegas Hilton in Paradise, Nevada | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBO Heavyweight Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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George Foreman vs. Tommy Morrison, billed as the "Star-Spangled Battle", was a professional boxing match contested on June 7, 1993 for the vacant WBO Heavyweight Championship.
Background
After WBO Heavyweight champion Michael Moorer opted to vacate the title in February 1993, the WBO sanctioned a match between popular 44-year-old ex-WBC and WBA heavyweight champion George Foreman and the then-up-and-coming 24-year-old prospect Tommy Morrison to determine who would be the next WBO Heavyweight champion.[1] Both fighters were looking to claim the title after recently losing their previous heavyweight title fight. Foreman had come up short to Evander Holyfield in a bid to become the oldest Undisputed Heavyweight champion two years prior, while Morrison had unsuccessfully challenged fellow undefeated contender Ray Mercer for the WBO title, in what was his first (and at the time of his fight with Foreman, only) professional loss in 1991. Prior to the fight, Foreman announced that his fight with Morrison would "probably (be) the last fight I'll ever have" while adding that he wanted to go out "right" by getting a "title belt around my waist".[2]
The Fight
Though the bout was promoted as a match between two of boxing's hardest punchers, neither fighter scored a knockdown nor had their opponent in any real danger. Morrison would abandon his usual aggressive style and spent much of the fight keeping his distance from Foreman, who was the aggressor for the duration of the fight and stalked the agile Morrison, who in turn circled the older and bigger Foreman and peppered him with sharp punches before quickly retreating. Though the pro-Foreman fans voiced their disapproval by showering Morrison with boos, Morrison's tactic ultimately paid off. Morrison would ultimately pick up a lopsided unanimous decision with two scores of 117–110 and one score of 118–109, becoming the new WBO Heavyweight champion in the process.[3]
Aftermath
Morrison's victory not only made him the WBO heavyweight champion, but also a legitimate contender to the three major heavyweight titles sanctioned by the WBA, WBC and IBF. Morrison first agreed to defend his newly won title against his Rocky V co-star Michael Williams in what was billed as real-life Tommy Gunn vs. Union Cane (the characters that Morrison and Williams played in the film) matchup. However, Williams refused to leave his dressing room and Morrison was forced to face unknown journeyman Tim Tomashek in what ultimately became a non-title bout. Morrison then agreed to a lucrative WBC title shot against champion Lennox Lewis,[4] but opted to defend his WBO title against little-known Michael Bentt in what was perceived to be a warmup before facing Lewis. However, Bentt would unexpectedly score three knockdowns over Morrison en route to a first-round knockout victory that cost Morrison his title match against Lewis.[5]
Foreman initially stuck with his retirement plans and spent a year and a half without participating in a boxing match. However, Foreman decided to challenge the newly crowned WBA and IBF heavyweight champion Michael Moorer for his titles to which Moorer accepted. Moorer had little trouble with Foreman and was ahead on all three scorecards when Foreman hit him with a sudden right hand in the 10th round that dropped Moorer for the count and made Foreman the oldest heavyweight champion in boxing history.
References
- ↑ June Bout for Foreman, N.Y. Times article, 1993-02-26, Retrieved on 2013-10-07
- ↑ Foreman to Retire After June 7 Match, N.Y. Times article, 1993-04-08, Retrieved on 2013-10-07
- ↑ Morrison Wins Over Foreman, But Not Fans, Baltimore Sun article, 1993-06-08, Retrieved on 2013-10-10
- ↑ Lewis-Morrison Bout Set; Both to Earn $8 Million, N.Y. Times article, 1993-07-02, Retrieved on 2013-10-10
- ↑ Morrison Loses Fight, $7.5 Million, N.Y. Times article, 1993-10-30, Retrieved on 2013-10-10