Last weekend in New York, King’s two last heavyweight hopes — Bermane Stiverne and Eric Molina — were both knocked out. He’s 86 years old and his last champion, IIRC, was Tavoris Cloud, who lost his title in 2013. Since then, King’s been hanging on by a thread. That thread snapped with both of his heavyweight were eliminated. Stiverne is 39 and maybe has a few “he’s a former champ” paydays left, and Molina, a two-time loser in title fights, is 3-3 over his last six fights with three KO losses — his 2016 win over Tomas Adamek gave him a second act, but at 31 there’s no reason to believe he’ll ever be more than an opponent again. So that would seem to be it. I can’t remember the last time King actually promoted a show all on his own — in his heyday he would have cards stacked with champions and contenders, some of whom were in the ring at 3 or 4 in the afternoon on shows that would run until midnight, because his roster was so stacked and he had obligations for them to fight however-many times a year. It’s funny how he’s gone from being reviled and considered as a charicature of every single thing that is bad and evil about boxing to now bowing out as a semi-beloved old grandpa-of-boxing figure. He may be brought in from time to time as a hype man by some promoter or other to get some publicity for a show, but I think we can count him out for good now.
You don't remember correctly, because obviously his last champion was Bermane Stiverne of course, who lost his belt early 2015.
Don's got more staying power than a Hindu cockroach. He's nearly impossible to kill in the first place. Once you think you're rid of him, he reincarnates.
One can only hope. Although it was pretty funny when he started to sing Happy Birthday to Stiverne in the press conference. It was like he was Bermane's embarrassing dad.
Imagine if Don King was in his prime promoting days now with all this social media etc. Everyday would be hilarious
Now we have to settle for videos of fat Tyson Funny announcing a comeback while waddling down to the ice cream shop and calling it road work.
Imam is extremely limited. He has the physical goods but horrible technique. Unless he has improved. No head movement, no idea how to control distance, no defensive responsibility.
He's done. At the point he's just a name. His son isn't much. Best guess is Don Jr. is in charge of the family business at this point.
Don said he's semi-retired. There was an article the other day, I think in the Washington Post that said he's scaled back his business a lot and he's down to just a few employees.