The News-Times (Sunday)

Holyfield, 57, staying ready in case Tyson wants another piece

-

Evander Holyfield in a gym is not much of a news flash. Even if going to a gym these days does hold perils beyond that guy on the next elliptical machine who wants to fill you in on the past 10 years of his life. You should floss as regularly as Holyfield works out. So, no biggie there.

Evander Holyfield in a gym with the vague hint in the air of some kind of forcharity exhibition against Mike Tyson that might require the resurrecti­on of either Barnum or Bailey to promote — now that seems to prompt at least an arched eyebrow.

Floating is this notion of an Ear Bite Reunion Tour that due to no popular demand is still gaining a life of its own. Holyfield, 57, and Tyson, 53, both have posted various messages on social media showing them punching at air and pads and bags while declaring their intentions to fight for a good cause. Both look far more fit than most guys you see in a Flomax commercial. Imaginatio­ns have taken over from there.

Down in South Florida, where the Atlanta-reared Holyfield has made a home for several years now, he is doing nothing to quell the gossip.

“I’m waiting, it has created a big buzz, everybody has been talking about it,” he said in an interview this week.

Then, in a little tweak of his old rival, Holyfield said it wouldn’t really be his place to set up the fight because, “it’s like you’re a bully, you’d ask somebody (to fight) that you’ve beaten twice.”

“I asked Riddick Bowe, he’s beaten me twice. And he said ‘Nobody wants to see you with me, they want to see you with Tyson.’ ”

Holyfield and Tyson, of course, are forever linked by their two fights in the late 1990s. In the first, as a 25-1 underdog at one point, Holyfield won on an 11th-round TKO. The rematch achieved infamy when a frustrated Tyson resorted to biting both of Holyfield’s ears, taking a piece of the right one before referee Mills Lane decided that some acts are too shameful even for boxing and disqualifi­ed Tyson.

Some fighters get cauliflowe­r ears; Holyfield got a chew-toy one. In the decades since, he has worn his everso slight deformity with pride. In fact, he put up a quite clever little video recently proving that he has enough ear remaining upon which to hang a face mask. It was in response to a meme showing a mask dangling from just his “good” ear with the message: “Thanks a lot, Mike Tyson.”

Holyfield fought well past the point of a logical retirement, his last bout a TKO of one Brian Nielsen in Denmark at the age of 48. This comeback nine years later, he said, has no motivation beyond the desire to raise money for his charitable foundation and its work with children. The coronaviru­s pandemic has made that work all more pressing, he said.

For someone with the pre-existing condition of 57 pro fights, many of them bloody sieges, Holyfield pronounces himself tip-top. “I feel wonderful,” he said, although he might want to get a second, medical opinion before entering a ring again.

He’s at his fighting weight of 215 pounds and has expressed great joy at getting back to some strenuous work in the gym — no sparring allowed just yet. The adjustment to living within the ever-shifting rules of engagement with the coronaviru­s has seemed minimal to him, other than the fact he hasn’t been back to a Sunday service in Atlanta in a couple months.

 ?? Al Bello / Getty Images ?? From left, former heavyweigh­t champions Mike Tyson, Lennox Lewis and Evander Holyfield are honored before the heavyweigh­t bout for Deontay Wilder’s WBC and Tyson Fury’s lineal heavyweigh­t title on Feb. 22 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.
Al Bello / Getty Images From left, former heavyweigh­t champions Mike Tyson, Lennox Lewis and Evander Holyfield are honored before the heavyweigh­t bout for Deontay Wilder’s WBC and Tyson Fury’s lineal heavyweigh­t title on Feb. 22 at MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States