Michael Moorer vs. Vaughn Bean, billed as The March of Ides, was a professional boxing match contested on March 29, 1997, for the IBF heavyweight title.[1]
Date | March 29, 1997 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Las Vegas Hilton, Winchester, Nevada, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | IBF Heavyweight Championship | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Moorer wins via majority decision (116–113, 115–113, 114–114) |
Background
editMichael Moorer, in his second reign as IBF heavyweight champion, was coming off a TKO victory over Francois Botha on the undercard of first Mike Tyson–Evander Holyfield fight on November 9, 1996.[2] Following his victory, Moorer was given the opportunity to headline his own pay-per-view by taking on the undefeated but little-known Vaughn Bean. Bean came in to the fight with a 27–0 record and was ranked by IBF as the number-five heavyweight contender, but had faced marginal competition up to that point and he was installed as sizeable 5–1 underdog.[3] Just before the fight, Moorer took ill with the common cold forcing him to no-show a pre-fight press conference the week of the fight, though his manager John Davimos dismissed the illness and insisted Moorer would be "100 percent" come fight time. Moorer had a lot riding on the fight as a victory over Bean all but insured him a chance to face the winner of the Holyfield–Tyson rematch originally scheduled to take place a month later in May, but later pushed back to June. Moorer, however, remained focused on his fight with Bean and refused to entertain the thought of a fight with Tyson, who was a slight favorite over Holyfield, stating "We can't talk about Tyson because if I don't beat Bean, then there's no fight."[4]
The fight, which took place on March 29, 1997, was originally scheduled to take place two week before that date on March 15, but problems within Moorer's camp, namely with his manager John Davimos, whom Moorer was looking to replace, and trainer Teddy Atlas, who vowed to leave Moorer should he part ways with Davimos, caused the fight to be pushed back.[5] Moorer ultimately retained both Davimos and Atlas' services.
The Moorer–Bean main event was complemented with three other world championship fights as well as a non-title bout featuring Julio César Chávez taking on journeyman Tony Martin in what was the featured extraction on the undercard. Chávez was originally set to face Gary Kirkland, but Kirkland was forced to pull out of the fight after suffering a cut during training leading to Martin taking the fight on two weeks notice.[6] Chávez and Martin had agreed to a catchweight of 145 pounds, between the super lightweight and welterweight divisions, but Chávez weighed in at 151 pounds six pounds over the contracted limit and had to pay Martin $100,000 out of his $700,000 purse in order to get Martin to agree to fight at a heavier weight. Chávez would win the fight by unanimous decision.[7]
The fight
editDespite a lackluster effort, Moorer would nevertheless earn a close majority decision victory. Moorer fought an extremely cautious, defense-orientated style and despite pleas from Atlas for Moorer to press the action and fight more aggressively. Moorer ultimate did just enough as two judges scored the fight 116–113 (seven rounds to four, one round even) and 115–113 (seven rounds to five) while the third judge scored the fight even at 114–114, having had Moorer down four rounds going into the ninth before giving Moorer the final four rounds.[8]
Aftermath
editThe fight was Moorer's last with Atlas as his trainer. Atlas was so displeased with Moorer's subpar performance that he announced his decision to leave Moorer just two days after the Bean fight, admitting that he had and Moorer had a volatile training camp leading up to the fight in which the two had almost come to blows. Explaining his decision to part ways with Moorer, Atlas explained "I watched Cus D'Amato at the end, saying he would always be true to his principles, and allow himself to be treated badly (by Tyson) just to be with a fighter. I saw that and I vowed it would never happen to me."[9] Moorer would hire Freddie Roach to replace Atlas for his next fight; a unification bout with Evander Holyfield, who had defeated Tyson in their rematch by disqualification to set up a rematch with Moorer three years after Moorer had previously defeated him for the WBA and IBF heavyweight titles.[10]
Fight card
editConfirmed bouts:[11]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
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Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Michael Moorer (c) | def | Vaughn Bean | MD | 12/12 | Note 1 |
Super Welterweight | 154 lbs. | Laurent Boudouani (c) | def | Carl Daniels | UD | 12/12 | Note 2 |
Strawweight | 105 lbs. | Ricardo López (c) | def. | Mongkol Charoen | UD | 12/12 | Note 3 |
Super Welterweight | 154 lbs. | Julio César Chávez | def. | Tony Martin | UD | 10/10 | |
Mini Flyweight | 105 lbs. | Alex Sánchez (c) | def. | Víctor Burgos | UD | 12/12 | Note 4 |
Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Julio César Green | def. | Bernice Barber | KO | 4/8 | |
Lightweight | 135 lbs. | Laura Serrano | def. | Cheryl Nance | TKO | 3/4 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Nate Jones | def. | Ricardo Phillips | UD | 4/4 |
^Note 1 For IBF heavyweight title
^Note 2 For WBA super welterweight title
^Note 3 For WBC strawweight title
^Note 4 For WBO mini flyweight title
Broadcasting
editCountry | Broadcaster |
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United States | Showtime |
References
edit- ^ "Michael Moorer vs. Vaughn Bean". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ The Bigger They Are . . . Holyfield Stops Tyson, NY Times article, 1996-11-10 Retrieved on 2024-09-02
- ^ Moorer to Take on Unknown Bean, LA Times article, 1997-03-29 Retrieved on 2024-09-02
- ^ Moorer low-key self as fight nears, Las Vegas Sun article, 1997-03-26 Retrieved on 2024-09-02
- ^ Moorer or Less, Atlas Shrugged, NY Daily News article, 1997-01-22 Retrieved on 2024-09-02
- ^ A New Trainer for Moorer, and Possibly a New Holyfield, NWI Times article, 1997-03-16 Retrieved on 2024-09-03
- ^ Chavez fails to impress in victory over journeyman, Tampa Bay Times article, 1997-03-30 Retrieved on 2024-09-03
- ^ Moorer clings to IBF title with lethargic win over Bean, Tampa Bay Times article, 1997-03-30 Retrieved on 2024-09-02
- ^ Poor Moorer fight leads Atlas to leave, Tampa Bay Times article, 1997-03-31 Retrieved on 2024-09-03
- ^ A New Trainer for Moorer, and Possibly a New Holyfield, NY Times article, 1997-11-06 Retrieved on 2024-09-03
- ^ "BoxRec - event".