Mike Weaver (boxer) explained

Mike Weaver
Realname:Michael Dwayne Weaver
Nickname:Hercules
Weight:Heavyweight
Height:6 ft 1 in
Reach:78 in
Nationality:American
Birth Date:13 June 1951
Birth Place:Gatesville, Texas, U.S.
Total:60
Wins:41
Ko:28
Losses:18
Draws:1

Michael Dwayne Weaver (born June 13, 1951) is an American former professional boxer who competed from 1972 to 2000, and held the WBA heavyweight title from 1980 to 1982. He is widely regarded as one of the Best Heavyweight Boxers of the 1980s beating Heavyweight Champions such as Gerrie Coetzee and John Tate.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Marines

Weaver was a member of the United States Marine Corps from 1968 to 1971, and went to Vietnam. During this time he started amateur boxing and training.

Professional career

Early years

By 1972 Weaver was living and training in California, and took up professional boxing. In his early career, Weaver was considered a journeyman opponent. He was frequently brought in on short notice and overmatched against more experienced and developed contenders, and used as a sparring partner for Muhammad Ali and Ken Norton, who famously nicknamed him "Hercules" due to his top developed muscle definition.

In 1976 Weaver beat well regarded veteran Jody Ballard, and in 1978 lost two close decisions. First to contender Stan Ward for the California State Heavyweight title, and then to Leroy Jones for the NABF heavyweight title.

Heavyweight contender

In late 1978 Weaver got a new team and manager and reeled off five straight knockouts, two of which came over top ranked opponents. In October 1978 he came off the floor to knock out hard hitting Colombian Bernardo Mercado in 5, and in January 1979 knocked out hulking old foe Stan Ward in 9 to win the USBA heavyweight title.

WBC heavyweight title challenge against Larry Holmes

These wins helped get him a high-profile world title fight against undefeated WBC champion Larry Holmes in New York's Madison Square Garden in June 1979. New cable channel HBO bought the rights to the fight as Weaver was so lowly-regarded the fight was seen as a mismatch and the networks didn't want anything to do with it (Weaver was 20–8 to Holmes' 30–0).

But, in a brutal contest, Weaver proved far better than expected, however, and gave Holmes a really tough battle. Holmes would rally by decking Weaver with a sharp uppercut in the 11th and in the 12th, Holmes pounded Weaver with powerful rights until the referee stopped the fight.

USBA heavyweight title contest

Although Weaver had lost, his surprise showing had made him a deserved high-profile name. Later in the year he was back, retaining his USBA belt with a 12-round decision over Scott LeDoux whom he outboxed rather than slugged with. Using his jab a lot gaining complimentary reviews generally.

WBA heavyweight champion

In March 1980, Weaver fought John Tate for the WBA title, in Tate's backyard of Knoxville, Tennessee. Tate was an amateur star from the 1976 Olympic team. As a pro he had put together a 20–0 record and won the vacant WBA title by decisioning South African Gerrie Coetzee over fifteen rounds, in front of 86,000 hostile fans in Pretoria, South Africa.

Weaver vs. Tate produced one of the divisions finest knockouts ever. The taller Tate dominated Weaver for all the first 10 rounds. But then with sheer determination a battered Weaver suddenly turned it around, pushing Tate backward. But he'd left it too late, according to the commentators, as only 5 rounds remained and Tate was expected to resume his lead. However, with only 40 seconds left in the 15th round, Weaver caught Tate bouncing off the ropes towards him with a devastating left hook. It dropped Tate to the canvas out cold for well over a minute. Press pictures showed Tate sound asleep whilst Weaver did a handstand alongside to celebrate.

In October 1980 Weaver made his first defense, traveling to Sun City, South Africa, to fight Gerrie Coetzee. Weaver was hurt and nearly knocked down in the 8th round but rallied down the stretch and knocked Coetzee out in the 13th round. Coetzee, a good boxer/puncher, had never previously been down, amateur or pro.

In 1981 Weaver outpointed the spoiler James "Quick" Tillis over 15 rounds in Chicago to retain his title after a year's inactivity.

Losing the title to Michael Dokes; controversy

See main article: article. After another year's inactivity, Weaver took on highly regarded Michael Dokes in Las Vegas, December 10, 1982. Dokes came out fast and dropped Weaver inside the opening minute. As Weaver covered up on the ropes and Dokes missed a few swings, referee Joey Curtis stopped the fight after 1:03 had passed and awarded Dokes the victory by technical knockout. This caused controversy due to the timing of the stoppage, and many in the arena accused the fight of being fixed.

However, four weeks earlier, the fatal fight between Ray Mancini and Duk Koo Kim at Caesars' Palace had taken place where Kim died as a result of a brain injury. On the morning of the fight, Nevada State Athletic Commission officials warned all officials participating in the card to protect the health of the boxers in order to avoid another potential fight-related fatality, which Curtis responded, "Everybody has Duk Koo Kim in the back of his mind," referring to the November 13 fight, as Dr. Lonnie Hammargren, a doctor who had performed brain surgery in a futile attempt to save Kim, attended the meeting.[5] (ESPN later ranked this the #7 worst bad call by a referee in a fight, doing so in 2008.[6])

Weaver was given a rematch with Dokes on May 20, 1983, which ended in a 15-round majority draw; judge Jerry Roth gave Dokes a four-point victory while judges Harold Lederman and Larry Hazzard had it even.

Further title challenges and later career

In June 1985 Weaver took on Pinklon Thomas, who then held the WBC title. Weaver lost by eighth-round knockout. This would be Weaver's last title challenge although a notable 2nd-round KO of Carl "The Truth" Williams a skilled boxer would follow the defeat to Thomas. Weaver continued to fight for another 15 years. His career ended at the age of 49 with a sixth-round KO rematch loss to Larry Holmes.

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
60Loss41–18–1Larry HolmesTKO6 (10), Nov 17, 2000
59Loss41–17–1Melvin FosterTKO9 (10)Aug 8, 1998
58Win41–16–1Derrick RyalsUD10Mar 27, 1996
57Win40–16–1George O'MaraUD12Jun 21, 1995
56Win39–16–1Bill CorriganRTD2 (12), Sep 17, 1994
55Win38–16–1Ladislao MijangosKO2 (12), Jun 6, 1994
54Win37–16–1Bert CooperUD10Feb 27, 1993
53Win36–16–1Mike GansKO5 (10)Nov 17, 1992
52Loss35–16–1Lennox LewisKO6 (10), Jul 12, 1991
51Win35–15–1Dion BurgessTKO5 (10), Jul 18, 1990
50Loss34–15–1James SmithUD12Apr 4, 1990
49Win34–14–1Philipp BrownSD12Jul 27, 1989
48Win33–14–1Lionel WashingtonTKO1 (12), May 1, 1989
47Win32–14–1Bobby CrabtreeKO3 (10), Jan 31, 1989
46Loss31–14–1Johnny DuPlooyKO2 (10)Apr 30, 1988
45Win31–13–1Johnny DuPlooy6 (10)Nov 28, 1987
44Win30–13–1James PritchardTKO6 (10), Aug 24, 1987
43Win29–13–1David JacoKO2 (10)Jul 29, 1987
42Loss28–13–1Donovan Ruddock10Aug 23, 1986
41Loss28–12–1James SmithTKO1 (10), Apr 5, 1986
40Win28–11–1Carl WilliamsTKO2 (10), Feb 16, 1986
39Loss27–11–1Pinklon ThomasKO8 (12), Jun 15, 1985
38Win27–10–1Tony Anthony1 (10), Nov 9, 1984
37Win26–10–1Billy Joe ThomasTKO7 (10), Aug 31, 1984
36Win25–10–1Stan WardTKO9 (15)Sep 30, 1983
35Draw24–10–1Michael Dokes15May 20, 1983
34Loss24–10Michael DokesTKO1 (15), Dec 10, 1982
33Win24–9James TillisUD15Oct 3, 1981
32Win23–9Gerrie CoetzeeTKO13 (15), Oct 25, 1980
31Win22–9John TateKO15 (15), Mar 31, 1980
30Win21–9Scott LeDouxUD12Nov 24, 1979
29Win20–9Harry TerrellKO4 (10), Sep 22, 1979
28Loss19–9Larry HolmesTKO12 (15), Jun 22, 1979
27Win19–8Oliver PhilippsKO4 (10), Mar 2, 1979
26Win18–8Stan WardRTD9 (12), Jan 18, 1979
25Win17–8Abdul KhanKO2 (10), Dec 5, 1978
24Win16–8Bernardo MercadoTKO5 (10)Oct 22, 1978
23Win15–8Mike CreelKO2 (10), Sep 17, 1978
22Loss14–8Leroy JonesUD12Aug 19, 1978
21Loss14–7Stan WardUD12Jan 24, 1978
20Win14–6Pedro LovellUD10Nov 15, 1977
19Win13–6Dave MartinezKO1 (10)Sep 13, 1977
18Win12–6Bill SharkeyMD10Apr 1, 1977
17Win11–6Dwain BondsKO8 (10), Jan 19, 1977
16Win10–6Fonomanu Young SekonaKO6 (10)Nov 4, 1976
15Win9–6Jody Ballard10Jul 14, 1976
14Win8–6Tony DoyleTKO9 (10), Jun 27, 1975
13Win7–6Mani VakaPTS10Aug 24, 1974
12Loss6–6Duane BobickTKO7 (10)Jul 26, 1974
11Win6–5Orville QuallsKO2 (8), May 31, 1974
10Loss5–5Rodney Bobick10Mar 22, 1974
9Win5–4Ellis McKinleyPTS6Feb 21, 1974
8Loss4–4Larry FrazierKO2 (6), Dec 11, 1973
7Win4–3Bob SwoopesKO1 (6)Nov 9, 1973
6Win3–3Tony PuluKO2 (6)Oct 11, 1973
5Win2–3Lyn MartinKO1 (6), Sep 10, 1973
4Loss1–3Billy Ryan2 (4), Feb 28, 1973
3Win1–2Carlos LopezPTS5Feb 2, 1973
2Loss0–2Howard Smith5Oct 31, 1972
1Loss0–1Howard Smith3 (4)Sep 14, 1972

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Top Ranked Heavyweight Boxers of the 1980s . 2023-05-21 . ainsworthsports.com.
  2. Web site: Goodpaster . Mike . 2023-05-19 . Legendary Heavyweights: Top 10 Legendary Fighters of the 1980s . 2023-05-21 . The Grueling Truth . en-US.
  3. Web site: Boxing Rankings - Top 500 All-Time Heavyweights . 2023-05-21 . SportsRatings: Boxing/MMA.
  4. Web site: 2023-05-12 . Mike Weaver: Record & Stats . 2023-05-21 . www.martialbot.com . en.
  5. News: Katz . Michael . Referee Defends His Decision . 2019-05-07 . New York Times . NYT . 1982–12–12 . 1982-12-12.
  6. Web site: Cortez not the first referee to drop the ball in a big fight. ESPN.com. July 2008 .