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Pastimes : 100 Acre Wood

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To: Lost1 who started this subject6/9/2002 12:58:11 AM
From: Lost1  Read Replies (3) of 3287
 
Lewis Crushes Tyson to Retain Heavyweight Title
Sun Jun 9,12:42 AM ET

MEMPHIS, Tennessee (Reuters) - Lennox Lewis pummeled Mike Tyson to defeat in the eighth round on Saturday to retain his world heavyweight title after an emphatic display.

The British boxer, dominant throughout, knocked an increasingly dispirited Tyson down twice in the round to end the fight after cutting him around both eyes.

The first knockdown was a left uppercut that staggered Tyson and left him almost defenseless.

The second -- a right to the jaw -- left Tyson, also bleeding from his nose, motionless on his back on the canvas before being counted out two minutes and 25 seconds into the round.

Lewis, who retained his WBC and IBF titles, wheeled away in triumph at the Pyramid Arena before declaring: "This completed my legacy, I wanted to prove I was the best boxer in the world, on the planet.

"Nobody gets away from my jab."

Tyson, meanwhile, a shadow of the fighter he once was and who barely landed a telling punch throughout apart from a couple of hooks, was magnanimous in defeat. "He was splendid, a masterful boxer -- I take my hat off to him," he said.

He said he had needed a few more fights to prepare properly before pleading with Lewis to give him a rematch.

The 36-year-old British boxer refused to let Tyson inside throughout, using effective jabs and combinations to keep Tyson away while also staggering him with a series of uppercuts.

Lewis, taking advantage of a near six-inch height advantage, opened up a cut over Tyson's right eye in the third round and assumed control in the fourth. With 11 seconds left in the round, Lewis swung wildly and Tyson hit the canvas, but it was ruled a push, not a knockdown.

"My trainer wanted me to take him out in the fourth round but I wanted to soften him up more with my jab," Lewis said.

The tactic worked to perfection as Tyson, trying to regain the title for a third time, ran out of steam.

In the sixth, Lewis whacked Tyson with a straight right to the head, but a determined Tyson refused to back down and continued to try to move inside on Lewis. Lewis' career record climbed to 40 wins, two losses and one draw, while the 35-year-old Tyson, trying to regain the title he lost in 1996, fell to 49 wins and four defeats.

Tyson had not lost since June 28, 1997, when he was disqualified for biting the ears of Evander Holyfield.

He only featured in one round, the first, before gradually grinding to a halt as he was outboxed and out-thought.
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