Fight Name: | Michael Spinks vs. Steffen Tangstad |
Fight Date: | September 6, 1986 |
Location: | Las Vegas Hilton, Winchester, Nevada, U.S. |
Titles: | IBF, The Ring and Lineal heavyweight titles |
Fighter1: | Michael Spinks |
Nickname1: | Jinx |
Hometown1: | St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
Purse1: | $1,000,000 |
Record1: | 29–0 (19 KO) |
Height1: | 6 ft 2+1/2 in |
Weight1: | 201 lb |
Style1: | Orthodox |
Recognition1: | IBF, The Ring and Lineal Heavyweight Champion |
Fighter2: | Steffen Tangstad |
Hometown2: | Tønsberg, Norway |
Purse2: | $50,000 |
Record2: | 24–1–2 (14 KO) |
Height2: | 6 ft 2 in |
Weight2: | 214+3/4 lb |
Style2: | Orthodox |
Recognition2: | IBF No. 12 Ranked Heavyweight EBU heavyweight champion |
Result: | Spinks wins via 4th-round TKO |
Michael Spinks vs. Steffen Tangstad was a professional boxing match contested on September 6, 1986, for the IBF, The Ring and lineal heavyweight titles.[1]
Michael Spinks, in his first fight in the Don King and Butch Lewis-promoted heavyweight unification series, made the first successful defense of his IBF heavyweight title on April 19, 1986, by scoring a split decision victory over Larry Holmes, whom he had previously defeated the previous September to capture the title, in an IBF-mandated rematch rematch.[2] Following his win over Holmes, Spinks entered talks to face former heavyweight title challenger Gerry Cooney, who was coming off a victory over contender Eddie Gregg that got him back him into contention,[3] but Spinks bypassed Cooney in favor of a fight with Steffen Tangstad, the European heavyweight champion. As Spinks had already made his mandatory defense against Holmes, Spinks had the choice to make an optional defense against any of the IBF's top 12 contenders and chose the number-12th ranked Tangstad rather than face Cooney, who was ranked 10th, after a disagreement between Spinks' promoter Lewis and Cooney's manager Dennis Rapaport over the split of the purse.[4]
Tangstad, who was a virtually unknown in the United States and was a sizeable 7–1 underdog going into the fight, was given little to no chance of even competing with Spinks and his selection as an opponent for the heavyweight champion was met with derision with boxing commentator Al Bernstein going as far as saying everything Tangstad did was "totally slow motion."[5] Spinks and Lewis were criticized for picking a safe opponent that Spinks would have an easy time defeating en route to advancing to the finals of the unification series.[6] Responding to the criticism, Spinks stated "I think you have all underrated Steffen. He's a good fighter. I'm gonna respect the guy just like any other opponent." though he admitted "It would feel good to have a short night."[7]
The Spinks–Tangstad main event was supplemented with a Bobby Czyz–Slobodan Kačar IBF light heavyweight title bout, in which Czyz would win his first of two world titles by knocking out Slobodan Kačar in the fifth round.[8] Also on the undercard, Mike Tyson knocked out Alfonso Ratliff in the second round in what was his final fight before entering the heavyweight unification series and challenging Trevor Berbick for the WBC heavyweight title.[9]
After a close first round, with Tangstad taking the round on two of the judge's scorecards, Spinks took control in and had little trouble with Tangstad through the rest of the fight. With just over a minute left in the third round, Spinks sent Tangstad down for the first time with two left jabs followed by a big right hand, though Tangstad was up quickly and he and Spinks continued to trade punches until the round ended. Early in the fourth, Spinks dropped Tangstad again with a short left while the two fought in close quarters. Tangstad, though clearly shaken after the knockdown, answered the referee's count at eight and continued the fight, though Spinks almost immediately sent Tangstad down again with another big left. Though Tangstad, now bleeding from the nose, was able to get back up, he informed referee Richard Steele that he did not continue and the fight was stopped, giving Spinks the victory by technical knockout at 58 seconds of the round.[10]
After his victory over Tangstad, Spinks controversially exited the heavyweight unification series and instead agreed to face Gerry Cooney.[11] HBO, who held the rights to broadcast the series and had expected Spinks to participate as long as he held the IBF title, went to court and a judge granted an injunction that legally prohibited Spinks and Cooney from fighting outside the unification series.[12] After a several month-long legal battle, a judge lifted the injunction in March 1987 and Spinks finally met Cooney in June of that year, knocking him out in the fifth round.[13] [14]
As a result of his loss, Tangstad was suspended by the European Boxing Union for 60 days, which prevented him making a scheduled defense of his EBU title against Andre van den Oetlaar and he subsequently stripped of the title as a result. Though he stated at the time that he was "through with fighting for the European title." and claimed that "all I want now is to face an American world champion again", he never fought professionally again.[15]
Confirmed bouts:[16]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Michael Spinks (c) | def | TKO | 4/15 | ||
Light Heavyweight | 175 lbs. | Bobby Czyz | def. | Slobodan Kačar (c) | TKO | 5/15 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | James Douglas | def. | Dee Collier | UD | 10/10 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Mike Tyson | def. | Alfonso Ratliff | TKO | 2/10 | |
Super Welterweight | 154 lbs. | Glenn Thomas | def. | Bruce Sewell | KO | 1/6 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Terry Davis | def. | Bruce Johnson | TKO | 3/5 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Alex Stewart | def. | James Warren Walker | TKO | 3/4 |
align=center | Country | align=center | Broadcaster |
---|---|---|---|
ITV | |||
HBO |