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Boxing: Defeated Holyfield plans to keep fighting ( 2003-10-14 09:54) (Agencies)
Evander Holyfield had just taken a beating from James Toney, and now he was fighting another losing battle.
The problem was that every time Holyfield opened his mouth he gave another argument for retirement.
"If he (Toney) was a big puncher I'd have been torn apart," Holyfield admitted at one point.
To Holyfield's credit, he offered no excuses ¡ª and no protests ¡ª after his corner threw in the towel in the ninth round Saturday night when Toney was hitting him with every punch he threw. That wasn't the case in many of his recent fights when he blamed various injuries and opponents who weren't willing to mix it up with him for his poor showings.
But once again he blindly refused to acknowledge that, two weeks shy of his 41st birthday, he has neither the reflexes or the skills to continue as a heavyweight contender.
"No, I'm not going to retire," Holyfield said. "I'm going back to the drawing board."
Holyfield will have to find a fountain of youth on that board if he expects to ever be competitive again in the heavyweight division.
Just having his warrior will isn't good enough anymore, as Holyfield found out when he fought bravely but futilely against Toney.
Longtime trainer Don Turner told Holyfield before the ninth round began that he would stop the fight if the beating continued. When Holyfield was knocked down with a left to the body at 1:42 of the ninth round, Turner climbed on the ring apron to save the former four-time heavyweight champion from more punishment.
"I had to stop the fight," Turner said. "I didn't want to see my guy get hurt. I love him too much. I've seen four guys get killed in the ring."
Holyfield, who had won only two of his last seven fights before meeting Toney, said he spent too much time thinking in the ring about what he was going to do and not enough time actually doing it.
That's the mark of an aging fighter, of course, and even Holyfield seemed to recognize as much.
"I kept watching him, trying to figure out how I was going to hit him," he said. "By the time I figured it out, he had hit me."
Holyfield thought he would have an easy time against Toney, a former middleweight champion fighting for the first time as a heavyweight. Toney stood in front of him just as Holyfield wanted, but his reflexes wouldn't allow him to take advantage of it.
Outside of a few good left hooks in the first few rounds, Holyfield did little except swing at air. Toney, on the other hand, landed straight rights, hooks and nearly everything else he threw.
"I've never been hit that many times since 1986 with Dwight Muhammad Qawi," Holyfield said. "At least with Qawi I was hitting him back."
Unlike many aging boxers, Holyfield doesn't need to fight on. He's made tens of millions of dollars in the ring ¡ª $5 million for Toney alone ¡ª and has kept much of what he has earned. But he seems unable to tear himself away from the sport and the limelight. Now, though, Holyfield has little chance of ever getting fights that will win him a title again. He was so dominated by Toney that his market value is badly diminished, as well as his value as an opponent. About the only thing he can hope for is a third fight with Mike Tyson, who himself is badly in decline and in need of a big payday to pay off his debts. Whether boxing fans will buy into that fight, though, is even in question. Fighters are always the last ones to know when it's over. Holyfield may have been the only one in a crowd of 7,897 at Mandalay Bay hotel-casino who remained in denial.
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