Fight Date: | March 7, 1987 |
Fight Name: | Dennis Andries vs. Thomas Hearns |
Location: | Cabo Hall in Detroit, Michigan |
Fighter1: | Dennis Andries |
Nickname1: | The Hackney Rock |
Record1: | 28–6–2 |
Height1: | 5 ft 10½ in |
Weight1: | 174 lb |
Style1: | Orthodox |
Hometown1: | Hackney, London, England |
Recognition1: | WBC light heavyweight champion |
Fighter2: | Thomas Hearns |
Nickname2: | The Hitman |
Record2: | 43–2 |
Hometown2: | Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |
Height2: | 6 ft 1 in |
Weight2: | 173 lb |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Recognition2: | 2–division World champion |
Titles: | WBC light heavyweight title |
Result: | Hearns wins via 10th–round TKO |
Dennis Andries vs. Thomas Hearns was a professional boxing match contested on March 7, 1987, for the WBC light heavyweight title.
In November 1986 2–division world champion Thomas Hearns had come to an agreement to face reigning WBC light heavyweight champion Dennis Andries. Hearns, who at the time had won world titles in both the welterweight and light middleweight divisions, decided to temporarily bypass an opportunity for a world title in the middleweight division and move up 15 pounds to the challenge for the light heavyweight title.[1]
The fight was originally planned to take place on February 7 in Las Vegas, but Showtime, who owned the rights to broadcast the fight, chose to postpone the fight in hopes of instead scheduling it for a March 20 date in Hearns' native Detroit. Andries' manager was against postponing the fight to such a later date after Andries had already trained for the initial February date, as such the fight was moved to its final March 7 date.[2]
Hearns would put forth one of his most dominating efforts as he scored six knockdowns over the overmatched Andries. After a mostly tactical first five rounds largely controlled by the challenger, Hearns would connect with a short right hand that dropped Andries for the first time and then was knocked down a further three times after numerous flurries by Hearns, though he was able to answer the referee's 10–count each time. As the WBC does not use the automatic knockout (three knockdowns in one round) rule that is enforced in WBA championship fights and in many state authorities, Andries was able to continue the fight though Hearns would take a commanding lead on the scorecards with a rare 10–5 round. Hearns would send Andries down for the fifth time with a right hook in the ninth round, but Andries would quickly get back up once again. In the tenth round, Hearns dropped Andries for the sixth and final time after ducking a wild swing by Andries and countering with a short right hand of his own. Andries was able to get back up, but the referee stopped the fight as Andries was too dazed to continue.[3]
Hearns reign as light heavyweight champion would be brief as he announced after the fight that he would go down in weight to challenge for a world title in the middleweight division stating "I want that fourth title"[4] In his next fight Hearns would make history, becoming the first fighter to claim world titles in four different weight classes after knocking out Juan Roldán to claim the WBC middleweight title.[5]
Andries would rebound from his loss to Hearns and would reclaim the WBC light heavyweight title after defeating Tony Willis 2 years later in 1989. After losing the title to Jeff Harding in his first defense, Andries would become capture his third light heavyweight title after knocking out Harding in their rematch, joining only Marvin Johnson at the time as the only three–time world champion in the light heavyweight division.[6]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Light Heavyweight | 175 lbs. | Thomas Hearns | def. | Dennis Andries (c) | TKO | 10/12 | |
Light Middleweight | 154 lbs. | Milton McCrory | def. | Rafael Corona | TKO | 1/12 | |
Super Featherweight | 130 lbs. | Erskine Wade | def. | Richard Campbell | TKO | 3/8 | |
Super Middleweight | 168 lbs. | Philip Morefield | def. | Tim Richardson | TKO | 2/8 |