Iran Barkley vs. James Toney, billed as Two Angry Men, was a professional boxing match contested on February 13, 1993, for the IBF super middleweight title.[1]
Date | February 13, 1993 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Caesars Palace, Paradise, Nevada, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | IBF super middleweight title | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Toney wins via 9th round RTD |
Background
editReigning IBF super middleweight champion had defeated Thomas Hearns by a close split decision in March 1992 to claim Hearns' WBA light heavyweight title.[2] Following the victory, Barkley opted to relinquish the light heavyweight title and continue to fight in the super middleweight division. Barkley's first defense of his super middleweight title was originally scheduled to take place against former WBO middleweight champion Doug DeWitt in Beijing, China on October 16.[3] However, the fight was cancelled after Barkley developed severe tendinitis in his left elbow.[4]
Prior to the cancellation of his fight against DeWitt, Barkley confronted IBF middleweight champion James Toney at a post-fight press conference after Toney had successfully defended his title against Mike McCallum on August 29, 1992. The two men exchanged words before security stepped in to prevent the scene from escalating, though promoter Bob Arum waved the security off and allowed Barkley and Toney to continue their banter.[5] After Barkley's elbow injury healed, plans were put in motion for a Barkley–Toney fight, with the fighters first taking part in tune-up bouts on December 5, 1992, at the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Barkley would defeat Robert Folley by fourth-round knockout while Toney would stop Doug DeWitt by referee technical decision, putting their super middleweight championship fight on. Chaos again ensued at the post-fight press conference with Barkley and Toney hurling epithets at each other with their respective entourages also getting into a scuffle as well. Afterwards Barkley promised that he would "ruin Toney."[6]
Each fighter was scheduled to earn a career high $1,000,000 purse. Toney, who still held the IBF middleweight title going into the fight, announced that he would vacate that title in favor of the super middleweight title should he defeat Barkley.[7]
The fight
editThe fight proved to be a lopsided affair as Toney dominated Barkley, winning eight of the nine rounds. Toney bloodied Barkley's nose in the first round, dislodged his mouthpiece twice and by the third round, Barkley's left eye began to swell and got progressively worse as the fight went on. With Barkley's eye almost completely shut by the end of the eighth round, referee Richard Steele asked ringside doctor Flip Homanski to examine the injury to determine if Barkley was healthy enough to continue. Homanski cleared Barkley to continue the fight, but after continuing to take tremendous punishment in the ninth round, Barkley's trainer Eddie Mustafa Muhammad informed Barkley that he would not let him continue. Barkley protested the decision, but after Steele advised ringside officials that Barkley was in no shape to continue, the fight was stopped and Toney was awarded the victory by referee technical decision.[8]
Aftermath
editESPN's boxing commentator Barry Thompkins would describe Toney's performance as "as close, I believe, to perfection as you can be in a boxing match."
Fight card
editConfirmed bouts:[9]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Super Middleweight | 168 lbs. | James Toney | def. | Iran Barkley (c) | RTD | 9/12 | Note 1 |
Super Middleweight | 168 lbs. | Roy Jones Jr. | def. | Glenn Wolfe | TKO | 1/10 | |
Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Clayton Williams | def. | Bronco McKart | UD | 4/4 | |
Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Joseph Kiwanuka | def. | Jacobo Garcia | UD | 4/4 | |
Super Featherweight | 130 lbs. | Fernando Sanchez | def. | Juan Carlos Lopez | UD | 4/4 |
Broadcasting
editCountry | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United States | HBO |
References
edit- ^ "Iran Barkley vs. James Toney". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 29 August 2024.
- ^ Decision Goes to Barkley After a 12-Round Brawl, NY Times article, 1992-03-21, Retrieved on 2024-07-22
- ^ Barkley to Fight in China, NY Times article, 1992-08-11, Retrieved on 2024-07-22
- ^ Arum Cancels Bout, NY Times article, 1992-09-19, Retrieved on 2024-07-22
- ^ Toney Retains Title, Then the Action Starts, NY Times article, 1992-08-31 Retrieved on 2024-07-21
- ^ Barkley and Toney Start Tuneup for Next Round, NY Times article, 1992-12-06 Retrieved on 2024-07-21
- ^ Barkley and Toney Try the Old Way, NY Times article, 1993-02-12 Retrieved on 2024-07-21
- ^ Toney takes title from Barkley, UPI article, 1993-02-14 Retrieved on 2024-07-23
- ^ "BoxRec - event".