The Columbus Dispatch

Foreman sees title path for Tyson

- Josh Peter

George Foreman became boxing’s oldest heavyweigh­t champion when he was 45. Now, 26 years later, Foreman said he can envision the record being snatched away by 54-year-old Mike Tyson.

“If he gets in shape like he’s in now, and then gets his timing back, and all the other things fall into place, he can have an opportunit­y to fight for the title,” Foreman, the Hall of Famer, told USA TODAY Sports on Sunday. “If he can be managed right, a champion, the right champion, will come to him. And if the right one comes, he can knock him out.”

Foreman’s comments came a day after Tyson returned to the ring 15 years after his last fight. He looked formidable, albeit against 51-year-old Roy Jones Jr.

Fit and powerful, Tyson fought Jones to a draw in an eight-round exhibition match, as scored by three former WBC champions.

“Tyson looked great,” Foreman said. “He really did. And Roy Jones had to use every old skill out of the book to keep himself from being knocked out.

“I just couldn’t believe what I saw. And that was just an exhibition. Just think if (Tyson) had some activity the last two years. He’d be in line to be the champion of the world again at 54, 55.’’

Defying Father Time in the ring was Foreman’s crowning achievemen­t. In 1994, at the age of 45, he knocked out Michael Moorer, then 26, in the 10th round of their fight to win the WBA, IBF and Lineal Heavyweigh­t championsh­ips.

Foreman, 71, said Tyson’s path to another title shot would probably require at least three more fights and could take two years.

“You have to have a really good manager to navigate you who to fight and who not to fight,” he said. “But if he gets someone who can do some creative moves, he can be in the big time quickly,”

Fighting two-minute rounds in Staples Center without spectators and against a 51-year-old man hardly qualifies as “the big time.” But that didn’t dampen Foreman’s enthusiasm about Tyson.

“What impressed me most, he missed a lot of shots,” Foreman said. “He found himself out of position. He recaptured it and got back on track. Roy Jones had him confused the first round or two, and he

fought through that.

“That impressed me more than anything he did. Keeping his mind in the game. He almost lost his cool a couple of times and he patted (Jones) on the shoulder and let him go.”

Though Tyson failed to connect with most of his punches, he landed a vicious uppercut.

“My jaw still is sore,” Jones said. “He’s capable of fighting anybody because, truthfully, people are going to have problems getting out of the first couple rounds with him. That was the hardest part, getting past the first two, three rounds.

“So if he catches you, you’re going to have problems. I was feeling everything. He’s an exceptiona­l puncher still, and he can do anything he wants to do.”

Larry Holmes, the former heavy

weight world champion, is less convinced.

“I was not impressed,” Holmes told USA TODAY Sports. “He couldn’t get close on (Jones). And by the time he did get close, it was a wrestling match. That’s what it was.”

Teddy Atlas, the boxing trainer and fight commentato­r, said the idea of Tyson competing against elite heavyweigh­ts like Tyson Fury, Anthony Joshua and Deontay Wilder is delusional.

“It would be a joke,” he said. “It would be a one-round debacle.”

Yes, Atlas is well aware of what Foreman did against Moorer in 1994.

“Speed goes, timing goes, reflexes go,” he said. “But as George Foreman proved, power stays. Power is one of the last things to run away on you.”

Like Foreman at 45, Tyson looked powerful at 54.

“But you could see that there were opportunit­ies to catch Tyson as he’s coming in,” Atlas said. “Jones wasn’t able to stand in that sort of pocket, if you will, and throw a straight right hand. Tyson, as he’s coming in, he starts to launch a left hook, and he starts to create an opening that can be filled. Jones wasn’t able to do that. He was physically and mentally not able to do that.”

The same would not be true against elite competitio­n, said Atlas, who noted that Tyson showed better technique and proved more physical than Jones because, “I also saw a guy that was old, who’d just get destroyed by hard jabs and straight punches before he ever got close.’

 ?? JOE SCARNICI/TRILLER VIA AP ?? Mike Tyson throws a punch during an exhibition match against Roy Jones Jr. on Saturday in Los Angeles. Ringside judges unofficial­ly ruled the bout a draw.
JOE SCARNICI/TRILLER VIA AP Mike Tyson throws a punch during an exhibition match against Roy Jones Jr. on Saturday in Los Angeles. Ringside judges unofficial­ly ruled the bout a draw.

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