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Tyson somberly concludes his career
Monday, June 13, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Mike Tyson was sprawled on the canvas, his head stuck oddly between the first and second ropes. Kevin McBride had shoved him down and now he sat there, trying to contemplate whether to get up.

 
 
 
Mike Tyson --

"Most of my fans are too sensitive when it comes to me. I'm a cold and a cruel and a hard person. I'm not used to sensitivity any more. Don't cry. I don't know how to handle people crying anymore."

 
 
 

The round was over, and so was Tyson's career. Nineteen years after he became the youngest man to win the heavyweight title, he was reduced to this.

An Irish heavyweight of little repute was bullying him around. He wasn't the baddest man on the planet anymore, not the baddest man in Washington, not even the baddest man in the ring.

He was an aging heavyweight who looked older by the minute Saturday night, finally coming to grips with the fact that this was the way it was going to end. It was all Tyson could do to look at referee Joe Cortez, and trudge wearily to his corner.

Tyson sat on his stool and told Cortez he had enough. Enough for this fight, enough for a tortured career that began with greatness only to spiral out of control and end in desperation and sadness.

He said he would fight no more. The sport that allowed him to earn more than $300 million had passed him by.

"This is it," Tyson said. "It's finished."

The once meteoric career ended 20 years and 56 fights after it began, with a March 6, 1985, first-round knockout of Hector Mercedes. In the early days Tyson was spectacular, fearsome and unlike anything boxing had ever seen.

The image of Tyson in his prime was indelible in the minds of boxing fans around the world. For four years he reigned supreme, seemingly unbeatable, knocking out fighters with vicious intensity and making them frightened even to get into the ring.

The Tyson who fought his last fight at the MCI Center bore a physical resemblance to the Tyson of old. But that was it. He was a shell of that fighter, much as he had been since losing to Buster Douglas in one of boxing's greatest upsets in 1990. Tyson hadn't beaten anyone of significance since stopping Razor Ruddock the next year.

"My career has been over since 1990," Tyson admitted. "I'm not going to lie to myself. I'm not going to embarrass this sport any more."

"You're smart too late and old too soon," Tyson said. "I just got caught up in that suction cup. I feel like Rip Van Winkle right now."

What he doesn't want is anyone to feel sorry for him.

"Most of my fans are too sensitive when it comes to me. I'm a cold and a cruel and a hard person. I'm not used to sensitivity any more. Don't cry. I don't know how to handle people crying anymore."

First published on June 13, 2005 at 12:00 am