Fight Date: | November 15, 2024 |
Fight Name: | Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson |
Location: | AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas, U.S. |
Fighter1: | Jake Paul |
Nickname1: | El Gallo ("The Rooster") |
Record1: | 10–1 (7 KOs) |
Hometown1: | Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
Height1: | [1] |
Weight1: | 227.2 lbs (103.05 kg) |
Style1: | Orthodox |
Fighter2: | Mike Tyson |
Nickname2: | Iron |
Record2: | 50–6 (2) (44 KOs) |
Hometown2: | Catskill, New York, U.S. |
Height2: | [2] |
Weight2: | 228.4 lbs (103.6 kg) |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Result: | Paul wins via 8-round unanimous decision (80–72, 79–73, 79–73) |
Recognition2: | Former undisputed heavyweight champion |
Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson was a professional boxing match between YouTuber-turned-professional boxer Jake Paul and former undisputed heavyweight world champion Mike Tyson. The bout took place on November 15, 2024, at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, and was streamed globally on Netflix, with 65 million people watching the event concurrently.[3] [4] Paul defeated Tyson via unanimous decision.[5]
Originally, the bout was scheduled to take place on July 20 but was postponed due to Tyson suffering an ulcer flare-up aboard a plane.[6]
This bout stirred up a lot of controversy and memes, with plenty of people calling out Paul for "elder abuse", while others poked fun at the fight for being too dull and predictable.
On November 3, 2023, it was reported that Netflix was considering streaming a boxing match involving Jake Paul on their service.[7]
On March 7, 2024, Netflix and Most Valuable Promotions announced that they were partnering to host an event headlined by Paul facing former undisputed heavyweight world champion Mike Tyson on July 20 at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. On April 2, Tyson confirmed at the time the bout was sanctioned as an exhibition bout.[8] On April 10, Paul confirmed that they would be submitting a request to the Texas Combative Sports Program for the bout to be sanctioned as professional.[9] On April 29, the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulations confirmed it approved the fighters' request and that the bout would be a sanctioned, professional fight.[10]
On May 31, Netflix announced that the event had been postponed due to Tyson suffering a ulcer flare up while boarding a plane.[11] Paul took to X (formerly known as Twitter) to call out his rival and fellow YouTuber-turned-professional boxer KSI to replace Tyson.[12] KSI responded and declined the offer stating he has a bout scheduled in August.[13] On June 7, Netflix confirmed the event was rescheduled to November 15.[14]
Three pre-fight press conferences were held in the following cities:
During the final press conference, Tyson slapped Paul after Paul stepped on his toe during their face off.
On October 24, Netflix announced an original documentary series titled Countdown: Paul vs. Tyson would premier its first two episodes on November 7 and the final episode on November 12.[18] The series debuted at number 4 on Netflix's Global Top 10, with 4.4 million viewers.[19] Each episode was narrated by Ice-T.[20]
On April 16, Netflix announced that the long-awaited rematch between Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano for the WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, and The Ring lightweight titles would be the co-feature bout.[21] On May 21, Netflix announced that Indian professional boxer Neeraj Goyat would face Brazilian internet personality Whindersson Nunes.[22] On September 16, a bout between Mario Barrios and Abel Ramos for the WBC welterweight championship was announced.[23]
Originally, prior to postponing of the event, Aston Sylve was scheduled to face Floyd Schofield but was not rescheduled after Sylve lost via knockout on the Jake Paul vs. Mike Perry event.[24] [25] Former mixed martial artist Darren Till was originally scheduled to face former WBC middleweight boxing champion Julio César Chávez Jr.[26]
NOTE: Min. denotes the time of each round. 2 denotes two minute rounds, 3 denotes three minute rounds.
Weight Class | vs. | Method | Round | Min | Time | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main Card (Netflix) | ||||||||
Heavyweight | Jake Paul | def. | Mike Tyson | 8 | 2 | |||
Lightweight | Katie Taylor (c) | def. | Amanda Serrano | 10 | 2 | |||
Welterweight | Mario Barrios (c) | vs. | Abel Ramos | 12 | 3 | |||
Super middleweight | Neeraj Goyat | def. | Whindersson Nunes | 6 | 3 | |||
Preliminary Card (YouTube) | ||||||||
Super middleweight | Shadasia Green | def. | Melinda Watpool | 10 | 2 | |||
Lightweight | Lucas Bahdi | def. | Armando Casamonica | 10 | 3 | |||
Featherweight | Bruce Carrington | def. | Dana Coolwell | 8 | 3 |
The bout between Paul and Tyson was sanctioned as a professional bout by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulations, with the ruleset being altered slightly. The bout was eight rounds of two minutes each (similar to the amateur masters boxing rules that rounds are limited to two minutes) with 14-ounce gloves (slightly lighter than the masters boxing rule of 16 ounces). Knockouts and knockdowns were permitted, and no headgear was present (unlike masters boxing, which require headgear).[27]
Paul walked out first to the song "In the Air Tonight" by Phil Collins alongside his brother Logan Paul in a custom Chevy Dually truck.[28] Tyson then walked out to "Murdergram" by Murder Inc.. After both men were in the ring, The Star-Spangled Banner was sung by Tori Kelly.
In the first round, both fighters entered in an orthodox stance, both throwing punches at each other. However, by the second round, Tyson seemed to have already been tired out and had lost momentum, which is a pattern that would continue throughout the fight. At the end of the last round, Paul bowed to Tyson, showing his respect and the two fighters embraced.[29]
Paul won via unanimous decision. After the bout, Tyson indicated that he will not retire after this bout and proceeded to call out Paul's brother Logan, which Logan responded by saying "I'd kill you, Mike" to Tyson.[30]
Laurence Cole | David Iacobucci | Jesse Reyes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Paul | Tyson | Paul | Tyson | Paul | Tyson | |
79 | 73 | 80 | 72 | 79 | 73 |
It was reported that Paul's expected purse was $40 million, and Tyson's was $20 million.[31] Taylor is projected to earn $6.1 million while Serrano claimed her purse was much larger.[32]
Many criticized Paul for fighting Tyson due to the significant age difference. The 31-year age difference between Tyson and Paul is the largest age difference in professional boxing history.[33] Former UFC Middleweight Champion Sean Strickland criticized Paul on X, stating, "this should be illegal", with current Middleweight Champion Dricus du Plessis agreeing.[34] [35] Fellow YouTuber-turned-boxer KSI described the bout on Instagram as "elderly abuse".[36]
During the weigh-in the day prior to the match, Paul stepped on Tyson's toes; Tyson has been on record stating he has foot problems due to health issues including sciatica, and has an aversion to people stepping on them.[37] Tyson slapped Paul across the face, afterwards telling the New York Post "I was in my socks and he had on shoes. He stepped on my toe because he is a fucking asshole. I wanted to think it happened by accident. But now I think it may have happened on purpose," adding "I was in a lot of pain. I had to reciprocate."[38] In social media posts, some speculated that Tyson's slap was in response to Paul making a racist gesture by climbing on stage and walking up to Tyson on all fours, imitating the knuckle-walking done by gorillas and chimpanzees.[39] [40] African Americans have historically been dehumanized with comparisons to non-human primates, including in sports.[41] [42]
Netflix has been criticized for widespread technical difficulties that plagued the event's livestream.[43] Many viewers tuning in were unable to watch the fight due to buffering. Many microphones and earpieces also experienced difficulties, with interviewee Evander Holyfield struggling to hear the host of the show because of issues with his earpiece. According to Downdetector, around 90,000 viewers reported outages in the hour leading up to the fight.
Many news outlets, including Irish ones, considered Katie Taylor's unanimous decision victory over Amanda Serrano as controversial, mostly disagreeing with the 95-94 scores in favor of Taylor. Those who called the fight controversial included Tom Malley in The Irish Times.[44]