This time, our regular boxing chronicle spotlights one of the most spectacular fighters the sport has ever known—a man many seasoned observers rank right alongside Marvelous Marvin Hagler among the all-time great middleweights. It’s a division steeped in legends, from Stanley Ketchel and Carlos Monzón to Nino Benvenuti, Gennady Golovkin, and Thomas Hearns.
His name is Bernard Hopkins, born January 15, 1965, in a tough North Philadelphia neighborhood. Officially registered as Bernard Humphrey Hopkins Jr., he was one of eight siblings. To boxing fans, he became known as “The Executioner” and later “The Alien.” On December 16, 2016, after 28 years and 2 months in the game, Hopkins laced them up for the final time, closing out a career with a dazzling ledger of 55 wins (32 by knockout), 8 defeats (just one by stoppage), and 2 draws.
His 28-year run in the sport ranks among the longest ever, second only to Jack Johnson’s 34 years (1897–1931) among heavyweights, Roberto “Hands of Stone” Durán’s 33 years (1968–2001), Archie Moore’s 28 years (1935–1963), and Evander Holyfield’s 27 (1984–2011).
Hopkins’ career unfolded in two very different acts. In his early years, he was a relentless wrecking machine—merciless, brutal, and persistent until opponents collapsed at his feet. In his later years, he transformed into a cerebral craftsman, a patient and cunning tactician who slowed fights to his rhythm, tied opponents up, and outfoxed younger rivals with veteran savvy. He became a ring scientist, a master of survival and strategy.
From the Streets to Immortality
Hopkins’ life story is as dramatic as his ring career. A troubled and violent teenager, he was committing robberies by age 13 and was sentenced at 17 to nearly two decades in prison for attempted murder and aggravated assault. After serving five years in Philadelphia’s Graterford penitentiary as inmate Y4145, Hopkins walked out determined to leave behind crime, alcohol, and drugs. He converted to Islam, found discipline in boxing, and began a path toward redemption.
What followed was extraordinary. Hopkins would go on to hold the middleweight crown for a record 10 consecutive years, and at age 49, he became the oldest fighter ever to win a world title—surpassing George Foreman, who did it at 45.
His pro debut ended in a points loss to Clinton Mitchell on October 11, 1988, in Atlantic City. But after that setback, Hopkins went unbeaten until 1993, when he dropped a decision to Roy Jones Jr. in their IBF middleweight title bout.
Hopkins captured the IBF strap on April 29, 1994, against Segundo Mercado, avenging a draw they had fought a year earlier in Quito, Ecuador. Eleven successful defenses followed before Hopkins unified with WBC champ Keith Holmes in 2001. Then came the showdown with WBA titlist Félix Trinidad, fresh off his win over William Joppy. Hopkins entered as the underdog, but in a fiery battle he stunned the Puerto Rican star, stopping him in the 12th round.
On September 18, 2004, Hopkins faced Oscar De La Hoya in Las Vegas for the WBO belt. A crushing body shot finished De La Hoya in the seventh, making Hopkins the first fighter in history to simultaneously hold the WBA, WBC, IBF, and WBO titles. His 20th title defense ended in defeat to Jermain Taylor, who repeated the feat in their rematch—becoming the only fighter to beat Hopkins twice in succession.
Still, the old warrior rose again. At 45, Hopkins dethroned Jean Pascal in Québec, winning the WBC light heavyweight crown and later adding the IBF version. On March 9, 2013, at age 49, he stunned the sport once again by dominating previously unbeaten Tavoris Cloud for the IBF light heavyweight title. At 6’1” with a near 75-inch reach, Hopkins defied time and the odds, cementing himself among the rare few—alongside Jermain Taylor—who have simultaneously held four recognized world titles.
A Bitter Farewell
Almost 52 years old, Hopkins made his final walk to the ring on December 16, 2016, at The Forum in Inglewood, California. His opponent, Joe Smith Jr., was 24 years younger and came in with power and ambition. The ending was as brutal as it was symbolic. Hopkins, sluggish and faded, was battered out of the ring in the eighth round. He climbed back through the ropes, but referee Jack Reiss mercifully waved it off at 53 seconds.
For the only time in his 65-fight career, Bernard Hopkins didn’t hear the final bell. The last gong had sounded for The Alien—a legend whose story stretched far beyond the ropes.
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