I love watching this fight. Not just for the upset factor but the era. It was really a huge transition point for the heavyweight division and a story of two top notch fighters who really lost the ball when seemingly at absolute tip top. Douglas had previous mental lapses Tyson was not worn by ring wars and age so much as his own aura and massive success. Mentally...he got fat. Way too much is made of him not being at best, having issues etc etc but who doesn't. You sink or swim and really find out what your make up is when faced with the biggest adversity.

Ive seen it said that Mike was the most dominant destructive force in decades and you can't deny his ferocity and edge of the seat appeal. The man was a dynamo! But largely he swept clean a cluttered field of hangers on and belt holders that warmed the trinket more then merited the Championship. Besting a Tubbs, Tucker, Biggs etc etc does not equate to same dominance in division just years later had it been a peak Bowe, Holyfield, Mercer or even a slower though much wiser Foreman etc. He did all that can be asked in terms of going through what was available and giving division something it desperately lacks since and thats uniformity and a undeniable figure head. But ultimately he waned and got caught slipping and thats all it takes. He was the best he was able to be that night. Thats on him, entirely. And Douglas put on a show for the ages, just a display of long fluid punching and mindset that makes you glad to be a fan...and wishing he had kept his head right for a while. I think Tyson benefits from a bit of rose colored glasses and a yearning to have that undeniability and clarity back in what so many hold to be the division which drives the sport. He gave alot away of him self and could never really regain footing.