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Tommy Morrison vs. Michael Bentt

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The Tulsa Shootout
DateOctober 29, 1993
VenueTulsa Convention Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma
Title(s) on the lineWBO Heavyweight Championship
Tale of the tape
Boxer United States Tommy Morrison United States Michael Bentt
Nickname "The Duke"
Hometown Jay, Oklahoma Queens, New York
Purse $1,200,000 $135,000
Pre-fight record 38–1 (33 KO) 10–1 (5 KO)
Age 24 years, 9 months 28 years, 1 month
Height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm) 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 226+34 lb (103 kg) 226 lb (103 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBO
Heavyweight Champion
WBO
No. 9 Ranked Heavyweight
Result
Bentt defeated Morrison by 1st round technical knockout

Tommy Morrison vs. Michael Bentt, billed as The Tulsa Shootout, was a professional boxing match contested on October 29, 1993 for the WBO Heavyweight championship.[1]

Background

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On October 18, 1991, the then-undefeated Tommy Morrison lost to Ray Mercer via 5th-round knockout in his first attempt at capturing the WBO heavyweight title.

Following his loss, Morrison strung together eight consecutive victories before landing another shot at the vacant WBO title against popular 44-year-old former heavyweight champion George Foreman. Through the course of the fight, Morrison abandoned his aggressive style and used constant movement to keep Foreman off balance. Though the pro-Foreman crowd booed Morrison for using the tactic, it nevertheless paid off as Morrison was able to pick up a lopsided unanimous decision, winning by two scores of 117–110 and one score of 118–109, becoming the new WBO heavyweight champion in the process.

Originally, Morrison's first defense was scheduled to be against his Rocky V co-star Mike Williams, but Williams pulled out only an hour before the fight after refusing to take a pre-fight drug test. As such, Morrison proceeded to defeat unknown journeyman Tim Tomashek in what would ultimately become a non-title bout after the WBO refused to sanction the fight.[2]

A month prior, Morrison had reached an agreement to face the undefeated Lennox Lewis for Lewis' WBC heavyweight title.[3] However, before moving on to face Lewis, Morrison chose to first defend his WBO title against the virtually unknown Michael Bentt, who was a highly decorated amateur, but had only 11 fights in five years as a professional.

Bentt went on to fight Morrison reportedly not fully recovered from an arm fracture.

The fights

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Toney vs. Thornton

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The Tulsa Shootout:James Toney vs. Tony Thornton
Title(s) on the lineIBF super middleweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer United States James Toney United States Tony Thornton
Nickname "Lights Out" "The Punching Postman"
Hometown Grand Rapids, Michigan Glassboro, New Jersey
Pre-fight record 39–0–2 (26 KO) 35–5 (25 KO)
Age 25 years, 2 months 33 years, 11 months
Height 5 ft 8 in (173 cm) 5 ft 11 in (180 cm)
Weight 168 lb (76 kg) 167 lb (76 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition IBF
Super Middleweight Champion
The Ring No. 10 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
2-division world champion
IBF
No. 3 Ranked Super Middleweight
Result
Toney defeats Thornton by unanimous decision

In the chief support James Toney made the first defence of the IBF super middleweight title he had won from Iran Barkley in February, against Tony Thornton.[4]

Toney was originally set to face No. 1 contender and former champion Darrin Van Horn,[5] however he pulled out of the fight after claiming a shoulder injury.

The fight

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In a somewhat tentative fight Toney was able to keep out of reach of Thornton's jab.

Toney was able to get Thornton against the ropes in the 9th round, landing a hard left and an overhead right, however neither man was able to land any seriously damaging blows. The lack of action prompted boos from the roughly 7,200 crowd.

At the end of 12 rounds Judge Paul Weitzel scored it 118–110, Steve Epstein 118–110 and Lucien Joubert 116–112 all in favour of the champion. HBO's unofficial scorer Harold Lederman also had it 118–110.

According to Compubox, Toney landed 431 of 1,011 total punches (43%) while Thornton connected on 323 of 827 (39%).

Aftermath

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Speaking after the bout Toney said "I had the jab in his face all night, I beat him decisively can't anybody dispute that." When asked about the boos from the crowd he responded "I don't care what the crowd thinks, they wanted to see blood and guts. I fight to win."[6]

Preceded by
vs. Larry Prather
James Toney's bouts
29 October 1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. Willie Ball
Tony Thornton's bouts
29 October 1993
Succeeded by
vs. Lenzie Morgan

Main Event

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Morrison was able to quickly get Bentt's back up against the ropes and staggered him twice with left hooks. Morrison would hit Bentt with a multiple-punch combination, but soon tired, allowing Bentt to counter with a combination of his own that sent Morrison down to the canvas only 50 seconds into the round. Morrison was able to answer the referee's count, but Bentt quickly attacked him with another powerful combination that sent Morrison into the ropes and back onto the canvas only seconds after the first knockdown. With Morrison clearly shaken up from the knockdowns and the three knockdown rule in effect, Bentt relentlessly continued to hammer Morrison with another powerful combination in an effort to get the deciding knockdown. After backing Morrison into the ropes, Bentt landed a six-punch combination that again sent Morrison down. The fight was immediately stopped and Bentt was named the winner by technical knockout at 1:33 of the first round, becoming the new WBO Heavyweight Champion.[7]

Aftermath

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Morrison's loss not only cost him the WBO title, but also his planned $8 million WBC title fight with Lennox Lewis.[8] Morrison would go undefeated in his next eight fights, which concluded with a knockout of former number one contender Donovan "Razor" Ruddock that got him back into contention. After a WBO heavyweight title match with Riddick Bowe fell through, he finally met Lewis in a non-title bout on October 7, 1995, ultimately losing by sixth round knockout.

Bentt, meanwhile, would make the first defense of his title on March 19, 1994 against British fighter Herbie Hide. Bentt was knocked out in the seventh round and had to be rushed to the hospital where he spent four days in a medically induced coma after suffering brain damage.[9] Though he eventually made a full recovery, the injuries were severe enough that Bentt was forced to retire shortly after.

Undercard

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Confirmed bouts:[10]

Broadcasting

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Country Broadcaster
 Canada TSN
 United Kingdom Sky Sports
 United States HBO

References

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  1. ^ "Tommy Morrison vs. Michael Bentt - BoxRec".
  2. ^ Strange Title Defense For Morrison, Chicago Tribune article, 1993-08-31, Retrieved on 2013-09-30
  3. ^ Lewis-Morrison Bout Set; Both to Earn $8 Million, N.Y. Times article, 1993-07-02, Retrieved on 2013-09-30
  4. ^ "James Toney vs. Tony Thornton". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  5. ^ Michael Scogin (24 October 1993). "Morrison Makes First Title Defence". Observer-Reporter. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  6. ^ "Toney prevails in 12 round decision". Lawrence Journal-World. Tulsa, Oklahoma. Associated Press. 30 October 1993. Retrieved 2 December 2024.
  7. ^ Morrison Toppled By Bentt In 1:33, Philadelphia Inquirer article, 1993-10-30, Retrieved on 2013-09-30
  8. ^ Morrison Loses Fight, $7.5 Million, N.Y. Times article, 1993-10-30, Retrieved on 2013-09-30
  9. ^ Bentt Collapses After Loss; Urged To Retire, Philadelphia Daily News article, 1994-03-21, Retrieved on 2013-09-30
  10. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Tommy Morrison's bouts
29 October 1993
Succeeded by
vs. Tui Toia
Preceded by
vs. Mark Wills
Michael Bentt's bouts
29 October 1993
Succeeded by