Oliver McCall vs. Larry Holmes, billed as "Burden of Proof", was a professional boxing match contested on April 8, 1995 for the WBC Heavyweight Championship.[1] The undercard included world championship bouts in four other categories.
Date | April 8, 1995 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Caesars Palace, Paradise, Nevada, U.S. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBC Heavyweight Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
McCall wins via 12-round unanimous decision (115-112, 115-114, 114-113) |
Background
editAfter Oliver McCall stunned Lennox Lewis in the second round to become WBC Heavyweight Champion, he turned down a $10 million offer from Lewis for an immediate rematch. Instead he agreed to fight 46 year old former WBC, IBF and lineal heavyweight champion Larry Holmes, who was making his fourth attempt at regaining a heavyweight title after losing to Michael Spinks in 1985.[2] Each of his previous three attempts (against Spinks in 1986 in a rematch, against Mike Tyson in 1988, and against Evander Holyfield in 1992) ended in defeat, although he went the distance in two of the three fights.
The fights
editIn addition to the main event title fight, four other world championship bouts were contested that evening.
Undercard
editThere were wins Carl Daniels, Frans Botha, Henry Akinwande, Tim Austin and Nana Konadu on the undercard.
Tucker vs Seldon
editTitle(s) on the line | WBA Heavyweight Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Seldon defeated Tucker by 7th round corner retirement |
The first bout of the televised portion of the card was between Bruce Seldon and former IBF champion Tony Tucker for the WBA heavyweight title that had been stripped from George Foreman after he refused to fight top contender Tucker.[3]
The fight
editSeldon used his left jab to control the action, landing frequently on Tucker's head. After round 7 the ringside physician Flip Homansky examined Tucker's badly swollen left eye and told referee Mills Lane that Tucker could not continue.
At the time of the stoppage Seldon led all three scorecards 67-66, 67-66 and 68-65
Aftermath
editRingside physician Flip Homansky explained his decision saying "I was checking the fight for three rounds and I was concerned about the orbital rim and nasal fractures, I was more concerned (Tucker's) eye than the title shot. Tucker was gradually losing vision out of the left eye. It was going to close totally. And that is just how I had to handle it."
Tucker was unhappy with the stoppage saying "I was winning the fight clearly, I was ahead on all the scorecards. They'd better give me a rematch. It was wrong for them to stop the fight."
Seldon meanwhile would say "If I have to beat him up again, I'll beat him up again, it's all right with me."
It was later determined that Tucker's eye socket was fractured.
Trinidad vs Turner
editIn the next fight, IBF welterweight champion Félix Trinidad made the sixth defence of his championship he had held since 1993 against Roger Turner.[4]
The fight
editTrinidad made quick work of Turner, knocking him out in the second round to run his record to 26-0.
Chávez vs Parisi
editJulio César Chávez faced Giovanni Parisi in the third defence of his WBC and lineal junior welterweight championships that he had won back from Frankie Randall in June 1994 to avenge what was, to that point in his career, his only defeat.
The fight
editChavez won a lopsided unanimous decision to win his 93rd career fight.
Santana vs Norris II
editThe final match before the main event was a rematch for the WBC super welterweight crown, in which former champion Terry Norris looked to regain the championship he lost to Luis Santana under controversial circumstances in November 1994.[5]
Norris was a 13-1 favorite.
The fight
editNorris started well knocking Santana down once in round two and once in round three.
However, as he had been in the first fight, Norris was disqualified. This time, he hit Santana after the bell to end the third round and referee Kenny Bayless awarded the fight to Santana.
Main Event
editFor most of the 12 rounds Holmes was often hanging on the ropes, allowing McCall to open a flurry, before countering with quick rights. McCall tried to jab with Holmes throwing right leads and connecting with McCall's chin.
In the ninth round a McCall left backed Holmes backward into the ropes, which were the only thing that kept him from falling. From then on, McCall dominated the fight. There were no knockdowns, but McCall gave Holmes a severe gash on his left cheekbone.
Judge Barbara Perez scored the fight 114–113, judge Tomi Tomihari had it 115–114 and judge Chuck Giampa called it 115–112, all three to McCall.[6]
Aftermath
editOliver McCall's next bout was against British veteran Frank Bruno, who defeated him later in 1995 to win the title. Bruno in turn would immediately lose the title in his first defence against Mike Tyson, whom the winner of the fight was contractually obligated to face.
Bruce Seldon would make one successful defence of his WBA title, defeating Joe Hipp by TKO in the tenth round on the undercard of Tyson's comeback fight event. In his next fight after that, he defended the title against Tyson, who knocked him out in the first round.
Félix Trinidad would hold onto the IBF welterweight championship until 1999, making a total of fourteen successful defences. After winning the WBC and lineal championships from Oscar De La Hoya that year, he moved up in weight and by 2001 had also won titles at junior middleweight and middleweight.
Julio César Chávez would make one more sanctioned defence of his WBC and lineal super lightweight titles before losing them to De La Hoya by knockout in June 1996, the first time in his career he had been stopped. He continued fighting until 2005, finishing with a career record of 107 wins, 6 losses, and 2 draws.
Terry Norris and Luis Santana fought for a third time on the Tyson comeback undercard, and this time there was a definitive winner as Norris knocked Santana out in the second round to regain the WBC super welterweight title. Norris then added the IBF championship and the lineal championship to his resume by beating Paul Vaden in his next fight. He would hold those titles until 1997.
Undercard
editConfirmed bouts:[7]
Winner | Loser | Weight division/title belt(s) disputed | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Luis Santana | Terry Norris | WBC World super welterweight title | 3rd round DQ. |
Julio César Chávez | Giovanni Parisi | WBC World super lightweight title | Unanimous Decision. |
Félix Trinidad | Roger Turner | IBF World welterweight title | 2nd-round TKO |
Bruce Seldon | Tony Tucker | vacant WBA World heavyweight title | 7th-round RTD |
Non-TV bouts | |||
Carl Daniels | James Mason | Middleweight (10 rounds) | 7th round RTD. |
Frans Botha | Willie Jake | Heavyweight (8 rounds) | Unanimous Decision. |
Henry Akinwande | Calvin Jones | Heavyweight (8 rounds) | 2nd-round KO. |
Tim Austin | Javier Diaz | Bantamweight (8 rounds) | 1st round Technical Draw. |
Nana Konadu | Robert Parra | Super Bantamweight (8 rounds) | 1st-round KO. |
James Stanton | Javier Diaz | Heavyweight (6 rounds) | 6th round PTS. |
Broadcasting
editCountry | Broadcaster |
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Mexico | TV Azteca |
United States | Showtime |
References
edit- ^ "Oliver McCall vs. Larry Holmes". BoxRec.
- ^ Dufresne, Chris (8 April 1995). "McCall Versus Holmes (Yes, That Holmes) Heads Five-Fight Card" – via LA Times.
- ^ "Tony Tucker vs. Bruce Seldon". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
- ^ "Felix Trinidad vs. Roger Turner". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 16 November 2024.
- ^ "Luis Santana vs. Terry Norris (2nd meeting)". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 16 November 2024.
- ^ "McCall wears down Holmes, wins decision". Baltimore Sun.
- ^ "Event". BoxRec.