John Ruiz vs. James Toney explained

Fight Name:John Ruiz vs. James Toney
Fight Date:April 30, 2005
Location:Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York
Titles:WBA and IBA heavyweight titles
Fighter1: John Ruiz
Nickname1:"The Quietman"
Hometown1:Chelsea, Massachusetts
Record1:41–5–1 (28 KO)
Height1:6 ft 2 in
Weight1:241 lb
Style1:Orthodox
Recognition1:WBA
Heavyweight Champion
The Ring
No. 2 Ranked Heavyweight[1]
Fighter2: James Toney
Nickname2:"Lights Out"
Hometown2:Grand Rapids, Michigan
Record2:68–4–2 (43 KO)
Height2:5 ft 9 in
Weight2:233 lb
Style2:Orthodox
Recognition2:WBA/WBC
No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight
The Ring
No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight
IBA
Heavyweight Champion
Former 3-division world champion
Result:No Contest (Toney originally won by unanimous decision)

John Ruiz vs. James Toney was a professional boxing match contested on April 30, 2005, for the WBA heavyweight championship.

Background

After Roy Jones, Jr. elected to return to fighting as a light heavyweight, an interim championship match was signed between former world champions Ruiz and Hasim Rahman. Ruiz won the fight, and after Jones decided not to return to the heavyweight division the WBA promoted him to full champion; Ruiz joined the list of fighters to have regained a piece of the heavyweight title after previously losing it, which at the time consisted of him, Evander Holyfield, Lennox Lewis, Michael Moorer, Mike Tyson, George Foreman, Tim Witherspoon, Muhammad Ali, and Floyd Patterson.

Ruiz made two defenses of his championship, defeating Fres Oquendo and getting a very controversial unanimous decision over Andrew Golota where most observers had Golota winning.[2]

Toney, the former middleweight and super middleweight world champion, had been fighting in the cruiserweight division for some time when he faced off against previously unbeaten Vassiliy Jirov for the IBF cruiserweight championship. Toney knocked down the four-year reigning champion in the final round en route to a unanimous decision victory, taking a major world title in a third weight class. Shortly thereafter, Toney moved up to heavyweight and took on Holyfield his debut in the class, scoring a knockdown in the ninth round and forcing Holyfield's corner to stop the fight. After trying to pursue a fight with Jones, who had handed Toney his first professional defeat, he elected instead to fight Ruiz after taking a tuneup against Rydell Booker, which he won in a lopsided unanimous decision.[3] [4]

Going in to the fight both the WBA & WBC ranked Toney as their number 1 contender, with the IBF ranking him 3rd.[5]

Toney was looking to join Jones and Bob Fitzsimmons as the only fighters to hold world championships at middleweight and heavyweight; he would be the first to do this without winning a major world title at light heavyweight first.

The fight

Toney would control most of fight, knocking Ruiz down in the 7th round on route to a unanimous decision win, with scores of 116–111, 116-111 and 115–112.[6] HBO's Harold Lederman also had the bout scored as 116–111 to Toney. Ruiz announced after the fight that he would be retiring.

Aftermath

Several days after the fight, it was revealed that in a post-fight urine test, the anabolic steroid nandrolone was detected in Toney's sample. The WBA responded by vacating the result of the fight, returning the title to Ruiz, and forbidding Toney to fight for its world championship for a minimum of two years.[7] In addition, Toney drew a suspension of 90 days from the New York State Athletic Commission and a fine of $10,000.

Reinstated as champion, Ruiz rescinded his retirement. However, he did not stay champion for very much longer as in his next defense against Nikolai Valuev, Ruiz lost a majority decision. He would fight twice more in his career for the WBA world championship, losing a unanimous decision in a rematch with Valuev and getting knocked out by David Haye in what would prove to be his final fight in 2010.

Toney, meanwhile, would fight only once more for a major heavyweight championship. In 2006 he took on reigning WBC champion Hasim Rahman and fought him to a majority draw, with two of the three judges scoring the bout even. He would go on to continue fighting until 2017, including a return to the cruiserweight division where he attempted to win the WBA championship (unsuccessfully), winning several fringe world championships along the way.

Undercard

Confirmed bouts:[8]

Winner LoserWeight division/title belt(s) disputed Result
Vicente Mosquera Yodsanan Sor NanthachaiWBA World super feather titleUnanimous Decision.
Ray Austin Larry Donaldvacant WBC–USNBC heavyweight titleMajority Decision Draw.
DaVarryl Williamson Derrick JeffersonWBC Continental Americas/WBO NABO Heavyweight titles2nd-round TKO.
Non-TV bouts
Luis Alberto Pérez Luis BolanoIBF World super flyweight title6th-round TKO.
Evans Ashira Quentin SmithMiddleweight (10 rounds)Unanimous Decision.
Israel Garcia Andriy OliynykHeavyweight (6 rounds)Unanimous Decision.
Elio Rojas Anthony MartinezFeatherweight (6 rounds)Unanimous Decision.
Oleksandr Harashchenko Elvir MuriqiLight Heavyweight (6 rounds)Split Decision.

Broadcasting

align=center Countryalign=center Broadcaster
TSN
Canal+
Solar Sports
Sky Sports
HBO

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ring Magazine . Ring's Pound for Pound Best and Division Ratings For Period Ending Apr 20, 05 . doghouseboxing.com . Doghouse Boxing . 12 July 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20050423215732/http://www.doghouseboxing.com:80/ring/ring042205.htm . 23 April 2005 . 20 April 2005.
  2. Web site: John Ruiz vs. Andrew Golota. BoxRec. 2018-10-24.
  3. Web site: James Toney vs. Evander Holyfield. BoxRec. 2018-10-24.
  4. Web site: Toney vs. Ruiz Is a Fight for Title, Attention. Los Angeles Times. 2018-10-24.
  5. Web site: Archived copy . ibf-usba-boxing.com . 13 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20050302232034/http://ibf-usba-boxing.com/ibfratingsheavyweight.htm . 2 March 2005 . dead.
  6. Web site: John Ruiz vs. James Toney Round by Round Coverage - Boxing News. boxingscene.com. 2018-10-24.
  7. News: Toney Fails Drug Test and Is Stripped of Title. The New York Times. 12 May 2005. 2018-10-24. Sandomir. Richard.
  8. Web site: BoxRec - event.