Book Excerpt: Heavyweight Armageddon: The Tyson-Lewis Championship Battle

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by tysonlewisbook, Nov 13, 2008.


  1. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Book Excerpt: Heavyweight Armageddon: The Tyson-Lewis Championship Battle
    By Scoop Malinowski

    "Our main focus on the day before and during the fight is certain points, certain things," said Courtney Shand. "We might see Lennox get up and do something. When he does it, you remind him of certain things. If he gets up and starts moving around, okay, remember when you do that? Do this. And as soon as you do that, do that. Positive reinforcement. If you push Tyson a certain way, we know what he's going to do before he resets himself to throw a punch. So, capitalize on that. When Mike does things a certain way, expect this. Positive reinforcing. We don't just go in and jump on him. As soon as Lennox shows us that fire, we're on him. Keep drilling it in."

    "Again, it's when he gets up and turns on the TV, he watches a certain section of the fight, okay, remember do this when you see this. What do you do if...? Sometimes we put questions on him. Okay, you saw what Buster did right there, okay what do you gotta do when that happens? When you get him off you, what do you have to do? Just keep his mind stimulated."

    "'Cause he has to read it. He's like a quarterback in a football game. He gets up there, he sees the defense lining up, just before he huts the ball and they shift - he's got to read what Tyson is gonna do. Read from his body language. Read from the way he's setting his feet. Because Tyson's, like, a deliberate fighter."

    "We watch our fights too. Because we gotta analyze what the other guy is trying to analyze about us. See what things we're doing that they might try to take advantage of. They're smart and we think we're smart. They're trying to match wits."
    ***
    Lewis emerged from his vehicle inside the Pyramid looking perfectly relaxed. HBO cameramen were there to greet him. He was wearing a red sweatsuit, black ragamuffin hat and black shades. He was chewing gum. Tyson arrived just before Lewis in a giant Rolls Royce limo wearing a tight-fitting blue short-sleeved muscle shirt. He was looking cool too, except for the huge sweat stains on his shirt.

    ...Then Mike Tyson strode out of his dressing room, to the beat of rap music by DMX's "What's My Name?" Iron Mike had his gloves together in front of his heart, with the customary white towel covering his body. At first glance, he looked slightly apprehensive, even reluctant for the fight, in contrast to how he seemed at the weigh-in. His posture looked a bit slumpy and droopy. He banged his hands together as he neared the ring.

    The entire crowd was mesmerized by the appearance of Tyson, one of the mightiest, most notorious and celebrated fighters the world had ever witnessed. But the fire was not burning at full intensity. To my eyes, he looked like he was more there because he had to be then because he wanted to be. There was a subdued element to his mood.

    When Iron Mike stepped through the ropes, much of the crowd applauded him. Love him or hate him, this was a man who defied all odds and achieved unparalleled greatness and distinction in the brutal sport of boxing. Upon hearing the acclaim, Tyson looked around, slightly inquisitive, acknowledging the unexpected warm greeting. He raised his arms about half way - not all the way up - in a muted pose of triumph. He looked a little nervous, even uncomfortable. But it was still Mike Tyson. Iron Mike Tyson was in the ring.

    There was no doubt about it, Lewis was the predator. There was a twelve-man wall of security dividing the ring, all attired in yellow shirts and black pants. Lewis's eyes looked clear and clean and spirited. You could detect not even an iota of doubt in his disposition.

    "Tyson came up to the barrier," Lewis would say later. "Looking at me, looking at my body. I'm beating my stomach, Yeah, I'm ready."

    ***

    Round Three

    Lewis continued the pattern of controlling the range with jabs and right hands. Lewis's graceful movements conjured the image of a great artist at work, poetically using his fists as tools to sculpt defeat onto this hulking shape of clay. Tyson's only answers were one-punch-at-a-time attacks, which Lewis easily thwarted. The size and reach advantages were just too much for Tyson

    Lewis drew first blood - a small cut over Tyson's right eye. Tyson looked to be in pain as Shields implored him, "You got to get closer to this man." But no man in 15 years had ever really done so. Those Lewis jabs and rights were a mighty arsenal to penetrate. Tyson grimaced as his cutman, Ira Trocki, tended to the wound. Steward told Lewis, 'He can't deal with your uppercut. Let's get it together. The man is tired."
    ***
    "I remember one summer about six, seven years ago, Tyson rolled up. He used to rise his Harley around Brooklyn. And he was riding around. And some of me and my people were outside, on Crown Street. And a couple of me and my boys was slap boxing, just playin' around. Tyson rolled up. By himself. And everybody looked. They were wondering if that was Tyson or not. So, he just roll up and he say, Yo, I'll give whoever knocks the other one out, I'll give you one hundred dollars right now. So, that just got people hyped. Word! Word! So they just start rumblin'. Next thing you know my boy just catches him with two lefts and a right - boop, boop, boop - and he just dropped him. Boop. Tyson said, Good ****. Gabe him a hundred dollars, got on his bike and left. I said, Oooohh, ****. I say, Yo, that's too much power for one man to have. It was like straight out of a movie scene. Because we just chillin' He just comes out of nowhere."

    ***

    In the fight did Tyson do anything you did not expect? "I'm glad he fought fair," Lewis said. "Because I was definitely ready for anything. Even after (the fight) I had respect for him. I was hitting him with some shots. It was the first fight where my hands were a little sore. I said it was because of the size of his neck. He's like a shock absorber. He'd take it, shake it off and come back at you. Like that Rhino Man in Spiderman."

    At the Cory Spinks-Ricardo Mayorga fight in Atlantic City in December 2003 you and Tyson were at ringside watching the fights in the same area, with him one seat in front of you. I was wondering if you both talked at all that night?

    Lennox Lewis: "Yeah. I don't know. For me, there's never any bad blood - unless you do something to me. When we sat there, everyone was tense, looking at us, everybody was tense like that. I could tell. I said, What's goin' on Mike? He looks back at me, [says in a high-strung voice] What's goin' on with YOU? And that was it [laughs]."

    "Heavyweight Armageddon: The Tyson-Lewis Championship Battle" is available at
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  2. Robbi

    Robbi Marvelous Full Member

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    Are you the author?
     
  3. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Sep 18, 2008
  4. Robbi

    Robbi Marvelous Full Member

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    Polish Mark.
     
  5. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Armageddon???? Is that over playing it a bit.

    I mean very few fights much less heavyweight fights are Armageddon type of fights. And Tyson Lewis was not one of em.

    The 1st and 3rd Ali Fraizer fights.
    Maybe Holyfiled Tyson??
    Johnson Jeff WAS a boxing Armageddon if one talks about the after math.
    Perhaps the Dempsey Tunney series.
    Thats about it imo.
     
  6. McGrain

    McGrain Diamond Dog Staff Member

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    1238, the title of the book is about selling as many copies as possible, not historical and linguistic accuracy.

    Cut the man some slack.
     
  7. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I just think there are many more impressive subjects than Tyson Lewis is all in regards to writting a book.
     
  8. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Sep 18, 2008
    Greetings Jack Dempsey;
    Lewis vs. Tyson did have good vs. evil overtones. Especially when you consider the way Tyson was behaving for the year or so going into it, the crazy interviews, Put a bullet in the Mofo's head, the bite and assualt at the press conf, alleged assualt of Frank Warren, the traffic altercations, the bizarre Rita Cosby interview on FOX News, the racist and jail house rant at the press conf, etc. Tyson was borderline nuts and angry at that time, broke, wife left him, was fighting Lewis for "kibbles and bits", his creditors would take much of his purse, etc.

    Plus (excerpt):


    Lucia Rijker: "The other great fight in history - Louis-Schmeling - was political. The fight of Lewis and Mike was almost light against darkness. Good against evil. And, to me, Mike needed the lesson to be humbled, he needed the lesson to realize his causes and how he lived his life were wrong. And Lennox was the one to show him. And, to me, the fight represented that good wins always over evil, eventually. Light wins over darkness. That gave me hope...that there is justice in life. Because I thought $50 million in the hands of a man that doesn't show responsible causes, would be dangerous. If Mike Tyson would have won against Lennox, he could have been a very dangerous influence. And if the world is like that, like Mike Tyson, where would the world go? It would be the world's destruction."

    Lennox Lewis: "It will be a battle of good versus evil. The way I look at it, the good guy has to win. And the good guy will win."

    Mike Tyson: "I've known Lennox since I was 16. I have mad respect for him. Everything I said was in proposition for promoting the fight. He knows I love him and his mother...This guy, there's no way I could ever beat him. He's just too big and too strong. He's just a consummate fighter."
     
  9. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I not going to get into if Tyson is evil or so. I also think life has a LOT of grey.

    Sure there are EVIL people like Bundy or Bin Laden, or Alber Fish, killers that bunch.

    Tyson to me is always a greay imo. He is not relly evil, but at the same time he is not good so to speak. He is a flaw human being(Who isnt?) Made mistakes, and I think the other reason Tyson does what he does is because he is a little nuts. Also he has a anger issue. And of couse the child hood.
     
  10. Robbi

    Robbi Marvelous Full Member

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    :blood
     
  11. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Writing a movie about a journeyman named Rocky Balboa was a risk too but the story was incredibly told, with great casting and soundtrack too. I believe Lewis vs. Tyson was a good fight but it was an important sociological fight in boxing history, like Ali-Frazier, Dempsey-Carpentier, Louis-Schmeling, Ali-Foreman, etc. And the cast of characters of Tyson vs. Lewis added to the story. There are so many incredible anecdotes and stories that add to it.

    Like they say, the book was better than the movie, I tried to make this book better than the actual fight. Tried for five years actually. Hope you take a look, think you will enjoy it. LeRoy Neiman enjoyed it, he even wrote the foreword.
     
  12. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Tyson is not evil but he was behaving pretty close to it at times. Actually he has a beautiful side too, which comes out many times in anecdotes in the book. It's kind of like this with Tyson. If you abuse and exploit even the kindest of dogs over and over, that dog will change for the worse. Tyson was his own worst enemy and was abused and exploited and robbed of many millions, wasted many too. He was in a bad place in his career for the years before the Lewis fight. He was fighting to get out of debt, after earning $200 million. But after losing to Lewis it's like a huge burden was lifted. He didn't have to be Iron Mike, the baddest man on the planet any more. He accepted the defeat gracefully. And has been pretty cool and normal without troubles since. He was touched by the greatness of Lewis, so to say.
     
  13. GazOC

    GazOC Guest Star for Team Taff Full Member

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    That excerpt doesn't "flow" at all, theres far too many short sentences IMHO. I know that sounds a bit picky but its the type of thing thats OK in small pieces of writing but that I find very annoying over the course of a book/ novel.

    Good luck though!!
     
  14. tysonlewisbook

    tysonlewisbook Well-Known Member Full Member

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    Thanks for reading it GazOC, It's broken up excerpts combined, wanted to do it differently, give more bang of the book than just the one single area of the book. It won't be for everyone, nothing ever is.
     
  15. Dempsey1238

    Dempsey1238 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Tyson is doing good, well outside of that pesky drug charge. Dont think the Lewis lost humble Tyson. Tyson is still is, well Tyson.