Evander Holyfield vs. Pinklon Thomas

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The Countdown Continues...
DateDecember 9, 1988
VenueConvention Hall, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Tale of the tape
Boxer Evander Holyfield Pinklon Thomas
Nickname The Real Deal Pinky
Hometown Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. Pontiac, Michigan, U.S.
Pre-fight record 19–0 (15 KO) 29–2–1 (24 KO)
Age 26 years, 1 month 30 years, 9 months
Height 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)
Weight 210 lb (95 kg) 222 lb (101 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBA, WBC and IBF undisputed
Cruiserweight Champion
IBF
No. 4 Ranked Heavyweight
Former WBC heavyweight champion
Result
Holyfield wins via 7th-round corner retirement

Evander Holyfield vs. Pinklon Thomas, billed as The Countdown Continues..., was a professional boxing match contested on December 9, 1988.[1]

In his previous fight, Evander Holyfield had defeated James Tillis by referee technical decision in his heavyweight debut. After Holyfield's victory, his next opponent was announced to be former WBC heavyweight champion Pinklon Thomas. In Thomas' previous fight, he had been knocked out by Mike Tyson in his first title shot since losing his WBC title in 1986 to Trevor Berbick. Following his loss to Tyson, Thomas had not fought since, going on a 16-month hiatus before agreeing to face Holyfield.

The winner of this fight was expected to next face former WBA heavyweight champion Michael Dokes, with the winner of that fight expected to be next in line for a shot at Mike Tyson's undisputed heavyweight championship.[2] Dokes appeared on the undercard, defeating Rocky Sekorski by unanimous decision to retain the WBC Continental Americas heavyweight title.

The fight

For the second consecutive fight, Holyfield would earn a victory as a result of a corner stoppage, this time after round seven. Though he again failed to gain a knockdown, he nevertheless dominated Thomas throughout, having won every round on two judge's scorecards while the third gave Thomas a single round. With Thomas having endured punishment for seven rounds, his trainer Angelo Dundee refused to let him go back for the eighth, giving Evander Holyfield the victory by referee technical decision.[3]

Aftermath

After the bout, Holyfield would give up his undisputed cruiserweight title to focus on his heavyweight campaign.[4][5]

Fight card

Broadcasting

References

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