Date | June 10, 2006 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | IBO, NBA and The Ring light heavyweight titles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hopkins wins via unanimous decision (118–109, 118–109, 118–109) |
Antonio Tarver vs. Bernard Hopkins , billed as Fight to the Finish, was a professional boxing match contested on June 10, 2006, for the IBO, NBA and The Ring light heavyweight titles. [1]
In February 2005, longtime reigning middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins had expressed interest in moving up to light heavyweight to challenge The Ring light heavyweight champion Glen Johnson who had just defeated Antonio Tarver by split decision to claim the title the previous month. Though Johnson welcomed facing Hopkins, the close nature of his fight with Tarver warranted a rematch between the two which Johnson had already agreed to, forcing Hopkins to pivot to another fight while he awaited the winner of the Johnson–Tarver rematch. [2] Hopkins would move on to face Jermain Taylor in July, in what Hopkins expected to be his final fight as a middleweight before moving up to light heavyweight to face Tarver, who had defeated Johnson in their June rematch, in what was planned to possibly be the final fight of his career. [3] However, Hopkins was shockingly defeated by Taylor via a narrow split decision and chose to postpone his the Tarver fight in order to pursue a rematch with Taylor in December, which he also lost. [4] [5] Tarver, meanwhile, would agree to face Roy Jones Jr. on the October 1 date originally set for his fight with Hopkins, defeating Jones for the second time in a row to keep his titles. [6] [7] The Tarver–Hopkins fight was finally announced in February 2006 to take place on June 10 in Atlantic City after weeks of difficult negotiations. [8] Hopkins reiterated that the fight would be his last stating that the fight was "going to be everything I’ve accomplished wrapped up in one night." [9] Tarver, in response, would state "this guy is trying to steal my throne. He is trying to ride out in the sunset with my championships. There is only going to be one fighter to finish in this championship and that's me." [10] Leading up to the fight, Tarver promised that he would knockout Hopkins within six rounds. As a result, Hopkins insisted that a clause be included in their contract that should Tarver be unable to deliver on his promise, he would donate $250,000 to Hopkins' Make-a-Way foundation. [11]
Hopkins would dominate the fight, easily defeating Tarver by unanimous decision with all three judges scoring the fight 118–109 (10 rounds to two) in his favor. Hopkins used constant movement and pressure to outland the naturally larger Tarver, who appeared to be lethargic and sluggish and was unable to land much sustained offense against the superior defense of Hopkins. Hopkins was credited with the lone knockdown of the fight after landing a right that sent Tarver off balance, causing his right glove to touch the canvas. Tarver ended up throwing more punches but landed only 78 of his 437 thrown punches compared to Hopkins who landed 133 punches. [12]
After his victory over Tarver, Hopkins remained adamant that the fight would be his last stating that he had promised his mother he would not box past the age of 40 unless it was to accomplish his self-imposed goal of moving from middleweight to capture the light heavyweight title, something his idol Sugar Ray Robinson had tried and failed to do in 1952 against Joey Maxim. [13] This retirement would be very short-lived, however, as Hopkins would sign a contract in February 2007 to face Ronald "Winky" Wright that July. [14] After defeating Wright by unanimous decision, Hopkins' boxing career would last another nine years before ending at the end of 2016.
Roughly a year after the fight, Tarver made allegations that there was a "great possibility" he had been drugged prior to facing Hopkins, in turn causing his less-than-stellar performance. Tarver claimed he did not feel like himself on the night of the fight and said he was a "dead man walking" and a "shell" of himself. Though he had no proof and his post-fight urinalysis came back clean he nevertheless argued that "something happened." [15] His poor performance was thought to have stemmed from having lost a massive amount of weight after filming Rocky Balboa earlier in the year. Tarver had weighed as much as 218 pounds portraying the heavyweight champion Mason "The Line" Dixon meaning that he had to lose 43 pounds to get down to the light heavyweight limit of 175. Tarver, though, would downplay his losing weight being a problem before the fight stating "I'm lean, mean, I'm ready to go. I've got no excuses, no problems. I don't have a problem. I'm ready." [16]
Confirmed bouts: [17]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Light Heavyweight | 175 lbs. | Bernard Hopkins | def | Antonio Tarver | UD | 12/12 | Note 1 |
Super Bantamweight | 122 lbs. | Israel Vázquez (c) | def. | Iván Hernández | RTD | 4/12 | Note 2 |
Super Welterweight | 154 lbs. | Andrey Tsurkan | def. | Héctor Camacho Jr. | TKO | 8/10 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Kevin Johnson | def. | Daniel Bispo | UD | 10/10 | |
Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Rock Allen | def. | Ken Humphrey | TKO | 1/6 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Roderick Willis | def. | Willie Palms | UD | 6/6 | |
Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Jorge Páez Jr. | def. | Travis Hartman | UD | 4/4 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Dave Brunelli | def. | Jamie Campbell | MD | 4/4 |
^Note 1 For IBO, NBA and The Ring light heavyweight titles
^Note 2 For WBC Super Bantamweight title
Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United States | HBO |
Roy Levesta Jones Jr. is an American professional boxer. He has held multiple world championships in four weight classes, including titles at middleweight, super middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight. As an amateur boxer he represented the United States at the 1988 Summer Olympics, winning a light middleweight silver medal.Jones is considered by many to be one of the greatest boxers of all time, pound for pound, and left his mark in the sport's history when he won the WBA heavyweight title in 2003, becoming the first former middleweight champion to win a heavyweight title in 106 years.
Antonio Deon Tarver is an American former professional boxer and boxing commentator. In boxing he competed from 1997 to 2015, and held multiple light heavyweight world championships, including the WBA (Unified), WBC, IBF and Ring magazine titles, as well as the IBO light heavyweight and cruiserweight titles.
Jermain Taylor is an American former professional boxer who competed from 2001 to 2014. He remains the most recent undisputed middleweight champion, having won the WBA (Undisputed), WBC, IBF, WBO, and The Ring middleweight titles in 2005 by beating Bernard Hopkins, and in doing so ending Hopkins' ten-year reign as middleweight champion. This made Taylor the first, and to date, only male boxer in history to claim each title from all four major boxing sanctioning organizations in a single fight. He once again defeated Hopkins six months later, making him the only fighter to have defeated Hopkins twice. He retired as a world champion in the months that followed his capture of the IBF middleweight title for a second time, after making a substantial recovery from a brain injury sustained earlier in his career.
Ronald Lamont "Winky" Wright is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1990 to 2012. He is a two-time light middleweight world champion and was the last to hold the undisputed title at that weight until Jermell Charlo in 2022. In his later career he also challenged for a unified middleweight world title. He announced his retirement from boxing in 2012, following a loss to Peter Quillin.
Glengoffe Donovan Bartholomew Johnson is a Jamaican former professional boxer who competed from 1993 to 2015. He held the IBF, IBO and Ring magazine light heavyweight titles between 2004 and 2005, and challenged once each for world titles at middleweight and super middleweight.
In boxing, the undisputed champion of a weight class is the boxer who simultaneously holds world titles from all major organizations recognized by each other and the International Boxing Hall of Fame. There are currently four major sanctioning bodies: WBA, WBC, WBO, and IBF. There were many undisputed champions before the number of major sanctioning bodies recognizing each other increased to four in 2007, but there have been only 19 boxers to hold all four titles simultaneously.
Chad Dawson is an American former professional boxer who competed from 2001 to 2019. He held multiple world championships in the light heavyweight division, and was one of that division's most highly regarded boxers between 2006 and 2013.
Jean-Thenistor Pascal is a Haitian-born Canadian professional boxer. He held the WBA (Regular) light-heavyweight title from 2019 to 2021, and previously the WBC, IBO, Ring magazine and lineal light-heavyweight titles between 2009 and 2011, and challenged once for the WBC super-middleweight title in 2008.
Félix Trinidad vs. Bernard Hopkins, billed as And Then There Was One, was a boxing match that took place on September 29, 2001, at Madison Square Garden in New York City, between WBC and IBF middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins and WBA middleweight champion Félix Trinidad to unify all three titles and decide the first undisputed middleweight champion since Marvin Hagler. The winner would also become The Ring middleweight champion. The undercard featured championship fights in three other weight classes.
Bernard Hopkins Jr. is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1988 to 2016. He is one of the most successful boxers of the past three decades, having held multiple world championships in two weight classes, including the undisputed middleweight title from 2001 to 2005, and the lineal light heavyweight title from 2011 to 2012.
Boxing in the 2010s includes notable events about boxing which occurred between 2010 and 2019. The decade saw high intensity action in the welterweight division. The match between veterans Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao broke PPV records. The broadcast of the fight in the Philippines was watched by nearly half the country's households. Mayweather retired at a record 50-0-0 while Pacquiao became the first eight division champion. The middleweight division saw immense action in the later years of the decade. After a draw in 2017, Canelo Alvarez ended Gennady Golovkin's long reign in 2018. The heavyweight division was dominated by Klitschko brothers before Wladimir's loss to Tyson Fury in 2015. Other talents that emerged were Anthony Joshua, Deontay Wilder and undisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksander Usyk.
Bernard Hopkins vs. Chad Dawson was a boxing match contested for the WBC and The Ring light heavyweight championships.
Antonio Tarver vs. Roy Jones Jr. III, billed as No Excuses, was a professional boxing match contested on October 1, 2005 for Tarver's IBO and The Ring light heavyweight championships.
Glen Johnson vs. Roy Jones Jr. was a professional boxing match contested on September 25, 2004 for the IBF light heavyweight championship.
Bernard Hopkins vs. Roy Jones Jr. II, billed as The Rivals, was a professional boxing match contested on April 3, 2010. The fight was a rematch of the May 22, 1993 bout between the two where Jones defeated Hopkins for the IBF middleweight title.
Oscar De La Hoya vs. Bernard Hopkins, billed as It's History, was a professional boxing match contested on September 18, 2004 for Hopkins' WBA (Undisputed), WBC, IBF, and The Ring middleweight championships, and Oscar De La Hoya's WBO middleweight championship.
Roy Jones Jr. vs. Danny Green, billed as It's On, was a professional boxing match contested on December 6, 2009 for the IBO cruiserweight championship.
Jermain Taylor vs. Bernard Hopkins II, billed as No Respect, was a professional boxing match contested on December 3, 2005, for the WBA (Undisputed), WBC, WBO, and The Ring middleweight championships.
Bernard Hopkins vs. Winky Wright, billed as Coming to Fight, was a professional boxing match contested on July 21, 2007, for the The Ring light heavyweight title.