Tyson's elite Power (99) and elite Hand Speed (95) define this era.
Trophy Case
1987
Unified all 3 belts (WBC, WBA, IBF) at age 20
1986
20 years, 4 months, 22 days — KO'd Trevor Berbick in R2
1986
Awarded after his devastating unbeaten run through the heavyweight division
2011
Inducted alongside a career that changed heavyweight boxing forever
The Story
The Youngest Heavyweight Champion
At 20 years and 4 months old, Tyson knocked out Trevor Berbick to become the youngest heavyweight champion in history. The knockout was so violent that Berbick fell, got up, fell again, got up, and fell a third time — his legs simply refused to cooperate after Tyson's left hook.
The Destruction Era
From 1985 to 1990, Tyson was the most terrifying force in sports history. He knocked out 9 of his first 11 title challengers, most within four rounds. Opponents were visibly afraid before the opening bell. His combination of speed, power, and aggression at 5'10" and 218 pounds was a physical impossibility that somehow existed.
Iron Mike
At his peak, Tyson was not just the heavyweight champion — he was a cultural phenomenon. His fights generated hundreds of millions in pay-per-view revenue. His intimidation factor was so high that several opponents admitted to being beaten before they entered the ring. Peak Tyson may have been the most devastating puncher who ever lived.
The Reinvention
Tyson's post-boxing career has been one of the great redemption stories in sports. His one-man show on Broadway, his podcast, his cannabis empire, and his genuine self-reflection have endeared him to a new generation. He went from the most feared man alive to one of the most beloved.
The Pet Tigers
Tyson famously owned pet Bengal tigers, a fact so absurd it was used as a plot point in The Hangover. He reportedly spent $70,000 per month on their care. Whether this was the greatest or worst pet decision in history remains hotly debated. Tyson himself has said it was "foolish" but he doesn't regret it.
Rumored · Never confirmed
In Their Own Words
“Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.”
— Mike Tyson
The most quoted line in combat sports history. Tyson's combination of devastating power and psychological intimidation made opponents defeated before the bell rang.
“He's the most naturally talented heavyweight I've ever seen. What he could have been without the chaos... that's the real tragedy.”
— Lennox Lewis, on Mike Tyson after their 2002 fight
Lewis knocked out Tyson in the eighth round of their 2002 fight. Even in defeat, Lewis acknowledged that Tyson's raw talent was the greatest he ever faced.
The Journey
The Rise of Iron Mike
· Catskill, USA
Trained by the legendary Cus D'Amato, Tyson tore through the heavyweight division with terrifying speed and power, becoming the youngest champion in history at 20 and going 37-0 with 33 KOs.
33
kos
37-0
record
The Fall and Return
· USA
After the shocking loss to Douglas and a prison sentence, Tyson returned but was never the same fighter. The Holyfield losses and the ear-bite incident defined a tragic second act.
13-6
record
Cultural Icon
Tyson became one of the most recognized figures in world culture — his name synonymous with devastating power and the allure of boxing at its most primal.
Signature Moments
91 Seconds to Immortality
At just 20 years old, Tyson destroyed WBC champion Trevor Berbick in 2 rounds to become the youngest heavyweight champion in history. The final knockdown sequence — Berbick falling three times from a single punch — remains one of boxing's most replayed moments.
Announced the arrival of the most terrifying force in boxing history.
The Buster Douglas Miracle
In Tokyo, 42-1 underdog Buster Douglas knocked out the seemingly invincible Tyson in round 10, delivering the greatest upset in boxing history. Tyson had been untouchable — until he wasn't.
The moment that proved Tyson was mortal. Changed boxing forever.
The Youngest Heavyweight Champion — 20 Years Old
Tyson knocked out Berbick in the second round to become the youngest heavyweight champion in history at 20 years and 4 months. He was a wrecking ball — 5'10" of pure explosive power fighting among giants. The boxing world had never seen anything like him.
Twenty years old. Heavyweight champion of the world. Tyson was the most terrifying young athlete in sports history.
The Fear Factor — The Walk-Out
Tyson's entrance was the most intimidating in sports. No robe. No music. Just black shorts, black shoes, and a towel with a hole cut in it. He walked to the ring with murder in his eyes. Opponents were beaten before the bell rang. Several fighters admitted they lost the fight in the tunnel.
No robe. No entourage. Just terror. Mike Tyson's ring entrance defeated opponents psychologically before a single punch was thrown.
Record-Breaking Performances
The games and seasons that rewrote history
Youngest Heavyweight Champion in History
Tyson was 20 years old and had already knocked out 26 of his 28 opponents. He destroyed Berbick in the second round with a left hook that sent Berbick stumbling across the ring like a drunk. Tyson would go on to unify all three heavyweight titles within his first two years as champion, becoming the undisputed heavyweight champion at 21.
Youngest heavyweight champion in boxing history. A record that has stood for nearly 40 years.
Cus D'Amato had died the year before, but his training had already forged Tyson into the most terrifying fighter the sport had ever seen. Tyson's peek-a-boo style, combined with his devastating power, made him must-see television. He was 28-0 with 26 KOs. Nobody wanted to fight him.
Greatest Rivalries
Tyson vs Holyfield: From Upset to Infamy
See Evander Holyfield's profileAn 11-year-old rivalry that produced the biggest upset and the most infamous moment in boxing history.
Head-to-Head
Head-to-head: Holyfield 2, Tyson 0. Fight I (1996): Holyfield TKO R11. Fight II (1997): Tyson DQ R3 (bit Holyfield's ear).
Tyson and Holyfield were supposed to fight in 1991 when both were in their primes. Tyson's upset loss to Buster Douglas and subsequent prison sentence delayed the fight for five years. When they finally met in 1996, Tyson was a 25-1 favorite. Holyfield was considered washed up at 34.
Defining Moments
Turning Point
Fight I: Holyfield stopped Tyson in the 11th round — one of the biggest upsets in boxing history. Holyfield outfought, outworked, and outclassed the most feared heavyweight alive. Tyson had no answer for Holyfield's aggression.
The Verdict
Holyfield won both fights and exposed Tyson's limitations against a fighter who refused to be intimidated. Tyson's ear bite overshadowed Holyfield's achievement — one of the great injustices in boxing history.
Tyson vs Holyfield produced two of the most memorable moments in boxing history — one of the greatest upsets (Fight I) and the most infamous act of unsportsmanship (Fight II). The ear bite transcended sport and became a cultural reference point.
Career Numbers
Career Record
44 KOs in 56 fights — "Everyone has a plan until they get punched"
50-6 (44 KOs)
Career KOs
Also Larry Holmes (44) — Tyson's came in far fewer rounds
44
KO Victories
88% KO rate
44
KO Percentage
KO rate
88%
Title Defenses
9
First-Round KOs
First-round knockouts
22
Youngest HW Champion
Youngest HW champion (20 years, 4 months)
20
Losses
2 no contests
6
Wins
44 by knockout
50
2:48
Average KO Time
Average fight time in first 19 fights — under 3 minutes
91 seconds
Average First-Round KO Time
Average first-round KO time during 1985-86 — 15 of his first 28 opponents didn't survive Round 1
$3.6B total
Career PPV Revenue
Generated an estimated $3.6B in pay-per-view revenue across his career — people paid just to see if someone could survive
14M+
Total PPV Buys
Over 14 million PPV buys — the most must-see fighter of all time
20 years, 4 months
Youngest Heavyweight Champion
Youngest heavyweight champion in history at 20 years, 4 months — a record that has stood for almost 40 years
211
Total Rounds Fought
211 total rounds — would've been fewer if opponents fell faster
200
Head Movements Per Round
Estimated 200+ head movements per round — the peek-a-boo defense
45
Career Knockdowns Scored
45 career knockdowns — at heavyweight, that's 45 small earthquakes
22
First-Round KOs
22 first-round knockouts — most opponents heard the bell once and never heard it again
7
First-Minute KOs
7 KOs in the first minute of a fight — some opponents barely touched gloves
Season Stats · Iron Mike Peak (1986-1990)
Engine Attributes
Fan Debate
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