Nigel Benn vs. Iran Barkley

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Nigel Benn vs. Iran Barkley
Benn vs Barkley.jpg
DateAugust 18, 1990
Venue Bally's Las Vegas, Paradise, Nevada
Title(s) on the line WBO middleweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Nigel Benn Iran Barkley
Nickname The Dark Destroyer The Blade
Hometown West Ham, London, U.K. The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Purse $400,000 $200,000
Pre-fight record 26–1 (24 KO) 25–5 (16 KO)
Age 26 years, 6 months 30 years, 3 months
Height5 ft 9+12 in (177 cm) 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 159 lb (72 kg) 160 lb (73 kg)
Style Southpaw Orthodox
Recognition WBO
Middleweight Champion
IBF
No. 4 Ranked Middleweight [1]
WBA
No. 8 Ranked Middleweight [2]
Former WBC middleweight champion
Result
Benn wins via 1st round TKO

Nigel Benn vs. Iran Barkley was a professional boxing match contested on August 18, 1990, for the WBO middleweight title. [3]

Contents

Background

After losing his WBA middleweight title to Roberto Durán in February 1989, Iran Barkley would get a shot at the IBF's version of the middleweight title when he challenged champion Michael Nunn six months later, though he would lose via unanimous decision. [4] Despite the loss, Barkley secured another middleweight title fight, this time against the inaugural WBO champion Doug DeWitt. However, the fight, which was scheduled to take place on January 15, 1990, on the undercard of the George Foreman–Gerry Cooney fight, was called off after Barkley had to withdraw after suffering a torn retina in his left eye. [5] Matthew Hilton was subsequently named as Barkley's replacement. [6]

DeWitt defeated Hilton and then was matched up against Nigel Benn for his next defense. Benn dominated the fight, knocking DeWitt down four times en route to a technical knockout victory. [7] In July, after Barkley's left eye finally healed and he was cleared to return to boxing, the Benn–Barkley fight was made official. [8]

The fight

As soon as the opening bell rang, Benn quicky attacked Barkley with a combination that left Barkley stunned and backed into the corner. Barkley, caught off guard by Benn's aggressive start, attempted to clinch but was unable to do so and was caught with a left hook that sent him down only 20 seconds in. Barkley answered referee's Carlos Padilla Jr.'s 10-count at six and continued the fight as Benn continue to wildly throw big power punches that Barkley was able to mostly dodge before countering with a left hand that sent Benn back into the ropes. Barkley continue to attack Benn while he was against the ropes but Benn was able to weather the attack and hit Barkley with several big punches to regain control of the fight and again sent Barkley down with a right-left combination, landing an illegal punch while Barkley was on his knees though the referee did not punish Benn for the infraction. A dazed Barkley again got back up but was quickly sent down for the third time. With the three knockdown rule in effect, Padilla, unsure if Barkley was knockdown or slipped, briefly consulted members of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, who ruled that Barkley had indeed been knockdown, resulting in the fight being immediately stopped and Benn awarded the victory via technical knockout. [9]

Aftermath

Benn would return to the UK and meet Chris Eubank three months later in Birmingham. After losing to Benn, Barkley underwent surgery for a detached retina and was inactive for a year.

Fight card

Confirmed bouts: [10]

Weight ClassWeightvs.MethodRoundNotes
Middleweight160 lbs. Nigel Benn (c)def. Iran Barkley TKO1/12 Note 1
Super Lightweight140 lbs. Charles Murray def.Salvador VillaKO1/8
Bantamweight118 lbs. Eddie Cook def.Martin Perez RamirezKO2/6
Flyweight112 lbs. Scotty Olson def.Robert GarzaTKO2/6
Super Middleweight168 lbs.John McClaindef.Joey DeGrandisUD4/4

^Note 1 For WBO middleweight title

Broadcasting

CountryBroadcaster
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico Televisa
Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines GMA Network
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom ITV
Flag of the United States.svg  United States ABC

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References

  1. "The International Boxing Federation official ratings as of August 1990". Gainesville Sun. Richmond, Virginia: International Boxing Federation. 8 August 1990. Retrieved 1 December 2024.
  2. "The World Boxing Association official ratings as of June 1990". The Daily Gazette. Caracas, Venezuela: World Boxing Association. 18 July 1990. Retrieved 1 December 2024.
  3. "Nigel Benn vs. Iran Barkley". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 28 August 2024.
  4. Nunn Retains Title and Runs Streak to 34-0, NY Times article, 1989-08-15 Retrieved on 2024-07-14
  5. IRAN BARKLEY INJURED; FIGHT IS OFF, Deseret News article, 1989-12-20 Retrieved on 2024-07-12
  6. Hilton in for Barkley, NY Times article, 1989-12-22 Retrieved on 2024-07-14
  7. Hilton in for Barkley, NY Times article, 1990-04-30 Retrieved on 2024-07-14
  8. Barkley-Benn bout announced for Aug. 18, UPI article, 1990-07-11 Retrieved on 2024-07-14
  9. Benn TKO's Barkley in first round, UPI article, 1990-08-18 Retrieved on 2024-07-15
  10. "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Nigel Benn's bouts
18 August 1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Iran Barkley's bouts
18 August 1990
Succeeded by
vs. Juan Hernandez