BLTV Classic recaps Tyson's infamous showdown with Joe Frazier's son, Marvis.
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The last moment where Marvis talks about his father was pretty beautiful. You can tell he had love for him and admired him
@hfj957 Жыл бұрын
Shhhhhheeeeettttt I would too...imagine your dad being the guy who beat Ali in his prime??? Aside from that being a man who fought countless amounts of awesome fighters from an Era where guys didn't know how to duck fighters and 15 rounds were normal.
@thediaz07 Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah dude. That’s the best way to look at it. What a legend both of them.
@carlosescobar3524 Жыл бұрын
almost made me cry
@nyoro8628 Жыл бұрын
True 🙄💪
@crisalcantara7671 Жыл бұрын
Jo, right. . . But the fact that his cheek is still swollen shows what a beast Tyson was.
@svenboelling5251 Жыл бұрын
Anyone else binge watching Tyson fights. It's pure entertainment
@frontleftfender Жыл бұрын
Yep. I was an 80’s kid and been watching that era of 80’s and 90’s Mike ever since. Unfortunately Cus passed and Tyson fell into the Don King network of horrible two-faced criminals and they ruined a vulnerable man.
@OCRay1 Жыл бұрын
Is it really a binge when you can watch 20 fights, beginning to end, in less than a half hour?
@mwilliamshs Жыл бұрын
@@mwilliamshs But if you throw in the backstory in some of those fights like the Frazier one, it gets longer :D
@georgexanthopoulos3003 Жыл бұрын
I'm in the middle of watching all of his fights after i finished watching Muhammad Ali's fights a couple days ago. After Tyson I'm moving to Pernell "sweat pea" Whittaker. And one of my favorites who never ducked and fought everybody and either won or gave the other guy fits , Buddy Mcgirt...
@cojack636 Жыл бұрын
I watch everything up to Buster Douglas
@newgenerationtechnology2930 Жыл бұрын
Marcus Frazier is a legend. "Standing in the shadow of Joe Frazier, to me it was like standing in the light.” Man, I have so much respect for that statement right there.
@DonMon69 Жыл бұрын
A light of defeat I mean the old man couldn't beat Tyson even on his best days Much love to Marvis beating bigger guys and very well could have been a title holder
@harryheath772811 ай бұрын
Marcus? And no Marvin Frazier is not a legend
@GoGetYourShinebox9 ай бұрын
@@GoGetYourShinebox Marvin? And yes, Marvis Frazier is a legend. You couldn't do vetter
@hollokutya13157 ай бұрын
@@hollokutya1315 How is he a legend of the sport?
@GoGetYourShinebox7 ай бұрын
@@hollokutya1315 he isn't a legend. his father was, but his son isn't. that's because he didn't do anything spectacular, though he was an underrated and fantastic fighter regardless with a very respectable record, especially with his only two losses to two legends
@patootie35297 ай бұрын
I was at that fight. It was unplanned. We happened to be partying that weekend in AC and found out about the fight. We paid $500 for crappy balcony seats the day of the fight. The sound of that knockout was clear and loud from where I was sitting. I was in shock that you could hear that from so far away. Mike was definitely one of the greatest punchers of all time. I also remember a guy that had paid $1K for front row. He went to buy a hotdog and missed the whole fight. LoL
@AscendedAngel Жыл бұрын
Damn 1150 for a hotdog! I added fhe 50 cause im sure even in the 80s a hotdog is like 50 bucks in an arena lol.
@ChrisZukowski88 Жыл бұрын
I will never understand the people who go get some food right when the fight is about to start lol, expecially a match with a prime Mike Tyson...
@kimo_leopoldo Жыл бұрын
imagine buying a hot dog and missing mike tyson in his prime
@johnhenry3758 Жыл бұрын
lol
@jamescollings27 Жыл бұрын
I was a little kid and my dad had a bunch of friends over for the ppv. There was a guy who went to get a cold beer who missed the whole thing haha
@calebreuter Жыл бұрын
being brave isn't enough. Stepping into the ring with Mike Tyson in those years was real bravery. Tyson was an absolute machine. Amazing fighter
@70stunes71 Жыл бұрын
It was possible Suizid
@rawgab4439 Жыл бұрын
Until Buster Douglas
@rafaelramirez1507 Жыл бұрын
Before he got the title.
@davanmani556 Жыл бұрын
Agree , but had Mike Tyson had to Fight in the 1960's an 1970's where U had to go 15 rounds Mike Tyson would have melted against the Boxers of that Day , Tyson was Not a 15 round Fighter but a 10 round Knock Out Sniper -
@user-ug4hw7oq7y Жыл бұрын
Holyfield was brave but unlike Marvis, had a chin and the punching power to beat Tyson.
@MrSinister718 Жыл бұрын
Frazier’s son only lost to Mike Tyson and Larry Holmes top of the greatest heavyweights ever. Absolutely nothing to be ashamed of, he did amazing compared to most great athletes kids
@thelordofgifts5343 Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Also, I think he had issues with an eye injury which meant he had to move quickly if he was going to achieve anything. Others blame Smokin' Joe for changing his fighting style as a pro, which didn't suit him. But still, he beat some good names as a pro.
@tonberrykinged Жыл бұрын
He also lost against Bonecrusher Smith, but was awarded the decision just because he was the son of.
@gerardusch Жыл бұрын
He lasted 5 seconds
@ricardoferreira203811 ай бұрын
Mike isn't even close to that spot.
@Dempsey187310 ай бұрын
How long did both fights combined last .. yes he was pressured to be game .. jus an observation
@seantogher34689 ай бұрын
There's a few athletes that will never be duplicated and Tyson is definitely in that group!
@jeramiedill92798 ай бұрын
100%on the dot
@wally24824 күн бұрын
I absolutely admire the heck out of Tyson. Every punch was calculated. He never threw wild punches. He was an amazing boxer. 💯
@drewmarshall7248 Жыл бұрын
19-2 as a professional boxer while fighting legitimate contenders is something to be very proud of.
@jackjackson811 Жыл бұрын
Only lost to two ATG in their prime
@dannykeeley9005 Жыл бұрын
Yup
@nellatl Жыл бұрын
@@dannykeeley9005 honorable losses. I’d be happy with that. Homes and Tyson.
@EndingVisions Жыл бұрын
@@EndingVisions fr lol
@chadferguson5304 Жыл бұрын
Legitimate contenders?
@TheStraightestWhitest Жыл бұрын
“Standing in the shadow of Joe Frazier, to me it was like standing in the light.” That is genuinely the most beautiful sentiment I have ever heard a son say about his father. Maybe instead of a boxer, he should have been a poet.
@rubikscubeearf6218 Жыл бұрын
Marvis Frazier = Class
@londoncab2814 Жыл бұрын
love how I scrolled down and read this exactly when he started saying it hahah
@HonchoHundo Жыл бұрын
All fighters are poets. The martial arts are the purest art form through which a man can express himself. It changes who you are to learn to fight.
@NoBaconForYou Жыл бұрын
Made me tear up. I have a little boy and I hope one day he'll say something like that about me
@kendo512 Жыл бұрын
@@londoncab2814 than why he fight someone on medication?
@Bewefau Жыл бұрын
"I never felt like I was standing in his shadow, I was standing in the light; my father was Smokin Joe Frazier." Paraphrased. That statement demonstrates an incredible perspective and humility.
@mechanicallycreative9788 Жыл бұрын
hes right tho, a real man doesnt let pride come in the way between your happiness or your family relationships
@bballforever1008 ай бұрын
Even though Tyson had his issues back then, to say wise words like "if my trainer and coach think I'm ready, then I will fight" instead of being big headed. Really says alot.
@ACasualSolo Жыл бұрын
Shut up
@hiwahiwakeiki3671 Жыл бұрын
Cus D'Amato trained him well
@JackTheripper911 Жыл бұрын
Cus was more than just a trainer to him. That was the closest thing to a father that Mike ever had. Cus didn't just train him. He raised Mike under his roof as well. That's where Mike learned respect.
@TitoMcFadden Жыл бұрын
Had he only stayed that way.
@malbuff Жыл бұрын
Good point
@ExZachary Жыл бұрын
I find it incredible how mature Tyson was physically and mentally at 19, you can tell that his confidence came from how hard he worked, it never came off as cocky imo.. what an absolute legend. The precision, speed and the power is really astonishing.
@matthewkennedy2275 Жыл бұрын
When you have a mentor wise as Cus Di Amato it is normal!The kid grew up with him like hes son and this trainer/coach/mentor had a god given talent of creating CHARACTER cause before you achieve anything in life you have to got or develop the CHARACTER first unfortunatly most trainers dont know s$$$ about this field..
@jimnewt2138 Жыл бұрын
what does imo mean
@gerardosantiago8694 Жыл бұрын
@@gerardosantiago8694 “in my opinion”
@matthewkennedy2275 Жыл бұрын
his confidence came from the streets. he beat up a grown man as a child for killing his pidgeon, after that the guy's from the neighborhood would bring guy's in to fight him. he was a monster when he met cus, he just gave him respect and boxing experience
@JoeSmith-mp2fn Жыл бұрын
@@JoeSmith-mp2fn His confidence came from the streets? Man he was a scared kid when he met Cus broken..Cus made him what he was not the "streets"
@jimnewt2138 Жыл бұрын
Joe was indeed a legendary boxer,what his son said was absolutely nice and full of respect ( towards Joe.)
@samson9098 Жыл бұрын
Joe Frazier was awesome you could walking to his gym in North Philly he would talk to you work with you Marvin Frazier is cool too
@alexwilliams9744 Жыл бұрын
Any man brave enough to step into a ring with Tyson 1986-1990 deserves respect
@WORLD8NSH5KNIGHT1 Жыл бұрын
I love how aggressive Tyson was. He wasn’t just throwing wild punches around. He put all of his body and mind into each and every punch, and he could deliver them SO FAST. He knocked Frazier out cold with one blow and had already punched him in the face 3 more times by the time Frazier actually hit the ground.
@Crakinator Жыл бұрын
Miss good old boxing 🥊 like that.
@dontrustwhiteyevery1 Жыл бұрын
@@dontrustwhiteyevery1 agree, today’s time we are witnessing stupid gayweather who just run and hug and win by points.
@mohdmohatshim9256 Жыл бұрын
It aint even that impressive shii i can prob beat him now
@Michigone3 Жыл бұрын
Also he wasnt when he got his shit rocked by holy field
@Michigone3 Жыл бұрын
dont blink 🤣
@xSirenityTVx Жыл бұрын
19-2, only losing to 2 legendary boxers? That's a damn impressive career.
@joncoda365 Жыл бұрын
Cool facts 👌🏻
@rafaelramirez1507 Жыл бұрын
Lmao ….he beat 2 legendary fighters who were past their primes. They were both bums past their primes . Tyson only fought bums
@Az-sn9ex Жыл бұрын
@@Az-sn9ex Frazier.
@joncoda365 Жыл бұрын
@@joncoda365 lmao ..he sucked . He was a bum . Go see his resume and you will agree that he was a bum
@Az-sn9ex Жыл бұрын
@@Az-sn9ex Question, who have you fought professionally?
@biggalaxy9102 Жыл бұрын
I’m impressed with Joes sons attitude and outlook on being his son. Positive guy and that’s just as impressive or more than being a boxing champion
@chrislewis5069 Жыл бұрын
I am also impressed by the father, who took the time to train and try with his son... and with marvellous results in my opinion. Theirs together is the biggest victory of man.
@dimitristripakis736410 ай бұрын
5:30 Even in the adrenaline rush of the moment, Tyson still has the presence of mind and I believe the wisdom to say he follows the advice of his manager and trainer.
@johnpatmos1722 Жыл бұрын
People are missing the fact that Tyson had so much confidence and trust in his trainers that if they sent him into the ring he knew he would win. That’s a bond
@mc-fu6wo Жыл бұрын
Not with buster, whole life changed
@yes-qw6om Жыл бұрын
@@yes-qw6om yeah cuz then he didnt have his old trainers with him.The ones who kept him looking invincible.
@Wingzofelzorro Жыл бұрын
@@Wingzofelzorro cus d Amato died before Tyson went pro
@yes-qw6om Жыл бұрын
@@yes-qw6om yeah but with Rooney his philosophy survived.Once Tyson left Rooney his conditioning went away lost alot of head movement and footwork.
@Wingzofelzorro Жыл бұрын
@@Wingzofelzorro maybe he lost some footwork and head movement but not conditioning, his stamina wasn’t always so great
@yes-qw6om Жыл бұрын
Tyson in his prime was so insanely ripped, what a beast, glad he found himself in the present while still having such a legendary past
@angelicscythe565 Жыл бұрын
👨🏾🍳👌🏽
@rare_sushi Жыл бұрын
Yeah he was ripped af and when he came out of prison he even came out shredded
@lucianamendes7891 Жыл бұрын
@@lucianamendes7891 would have loved to date him back then 😝
@chinaarlene7035 Жыл бұрын
With canons like those, Jake Paul would most definitely have a GOOD and REASONABLE chance😉😉
@karmaclown752 Жыл бұрын
@@chinaarlene7035 he is muslim he doesn't date
@raindoset5408 Жыл бұрын
Marvis Frazier had a very respectable career. He suffered terrible ko losses but he was in the ring with legitimate heavyweights and that's very difficult to do. His dad had more heart than anyone and was an all time great and Marvis showed the heart of a champ but came up short.
@joelchavez61 Жыл бұрын
He just didn't have the talent unfortunately...
@jaha777jaha6 Жыл бұрын
Touching what Marvis said about his dad in the interview, that makes him a champion to me.👍🏾🙏🏾
@eugenehammonds34867 ай бұрын
Joe Frazier is older than his son only for 16 years and 9 months. Imagine becoming a father at that age. Back then, people matured way earlier than nowadays.
@kazakh-interista8 ай бұрын
At 0:58 "It's very difficult, with a kid who throws hydrogen bombs." This is the most aptly description for Tyson's power I've ever seen.
@Strider-Ragnarok Жыл бұрын
yeah, he was saying they couldn't get him into deep waters, many rounds of experience, because he kills everyone in 1-2 rounds lol
@LIONTAMER3D Жыл бұрын
Mike was surprisingly articulate, all of his post fight interviews were almost poetic
@AP-tr1et Жыл бұрын
Thpinal
@leonrussell9607 Жыл бұрын
@@leonrussell9607 😂
@buckenheimer3 Жыл бұрын
Why surprising ? He is smart
@badronne1918 Жыл бұрын
What's surprising about it?
@holliswilliams8426 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but you can't tell Howard Stern, and his ASSistant, and personal ass wipe Robin Quivers that. They called him retarded. Like to see them tell him that to his face.
@billking1751 Жыл бұрын
A true Son never forgets his father's legacy. Hats off to you sir!
@jaysonfederick58504 ай бұрын
Great video..always! Love your narrative style and editing.
@W0LFRAVEN- Жыл бұрын
Marvis is such a humble guy and to even attempt to equal or even surpass his fathers legacy is commendable and respectful!! Great job Marvis!!
@rocky-iv1446 Жыл бұрын
Güneş gibi parlayan Mike, etrafına ışıltılar saçan kuyrukluyıldız Marvis'i 30 saniyede yuttu. Hoşçakal Marvis...
@yuksely2783 Жыл бұрын
He never really stood a chance to equal his father. Smokin' Joe is a top 10 fighter of all time and beat the GOAT in his prime. There's no shame in trying. Got me choked up that interview at the end though, you can tell just how proud he was of his father and I'm sure Joe was just as proud of his son. Joe will always be my favorite fighter. The man is a hero in my hometown of Philly and he just had the biggest heart imaginable, that clearly rubbed off on his son.
@eggoslayer1001 Жыл бұрын
But that man did need to look back at his pops and whind up that punch to the boys face. Such disrespect(little funny tho)
@thepopeofkeke Жыл бұрын
Lol, he shoulda never snarled at Mike along with his father. They were looking down on Mike but Tyson settled the score anyway. This fight made that family an embarrassment.
@cappystrano1 Жыл бұрын
He was clearly trash / delusional kid
@vonjovi484911 ай бұрын
This guy knocked his opponent out and continued knocking him out. Mike is a boxing icon .
@brunisshoshari2392 Жыл бұрын
1:27- that dude went flying 🕊️💸
@Jooshboipats Жыл бұрын
That’s really cool that Marvin is proud of his father. It doesn’t seem like it’s something that haunts him or was forced into.
@Crittek Жыл бұрын
Why wouldn’t he be proud of a dad who beat the odds and became a celebrated champion boxer. And beat Ali ta boot
@christopherqueen8097 Жыл бұрын
@@christopherqueen8097 There’s a lot of famous successful people that had their offspring follow in their footsteps with utter contempt.
@Crittek Жыл бұрын
Marvis*
@hereticapostate9560 Жыл бұрын
The way Mike delivers those knockouts while being hit in the face, no reaction. Priceless. Literally stone faced!
@badnoodlez Жыл бұрын
Marvis could box but him playing to his dad's name and his lack of chin got him smoked he got hit with that upercut he crumbled like a sitting chair out cold
@harryheath2450 Жыл бұрын
Have you ever seen a boxers hands move as fast as Tyson's 😂
@winniepeg2020 Жыл бұрын
@@winniepeg2020 That, and that this Mike was stepping and controlling distance perfectly. Sadly, later he was only moving forward and being smothered,, but here you see him take steps back to create the correct distance for power... scary!
@rivalgx32109 ай бұрын
Mike had the ability to look terrifying before a match, and seem like the greatest guy youd want to talk sports with after Early on anyway.
@craigusselman5469 ай бұрын
It's like trying to get a pitbull to not bite you by trying to smack it with a rolled up newspaper lol.
@The-Black-Death3 ай бұрын
The way Muhammad, who was Mike's hero, asked Mike to get revenge on Joe was so beautiful. Like father and son.
@Spitsworth8 ай бұрын
He knocked him unconscious, conscious, and unconscious in one combo. Damn.
@ralph8339 ай бұрын
I love how aggressive Tyson was. He wasn’t just throwing wild punches around. He put all of his body and mind into each and every punch, and he could deliver them SO FAST.
@alexisgarcia2689 Жыл бұрын
Usually when watching other boxers fight, you kinda get the sense that the punches feel soft ( I know they are not), but with Mike it’s the exact opposite. There’s so much force in each strike.
@awesomnalityАй бұрын
I'm not in the shadow Joe Frazier, I'm in the light. Beautiful sentiment and absolutely true. Marvis had a great career by any measure. Lots of wins and his only two losses came from two hall of famers. He should be proud of his dad, and himself.
@benjaminjones6586 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. Beautiful sentiment and by the sounds of it a good, happy man. So great to see people out there just... Being. Seems like he's doing all right in that interview. Hope he still is.
@forgethought8174 Жыл бұрын
Very true
@idristetteh7969 Жыл бұрын
He only got demolished.
@boraxsopanic2670 Жыл бұрын
@@boraxsopanic2670 words of someone who never even trained
That fight against Joe Frazier's son, you could hear the impact 🤧🥴🤯. Mike Tyson's punches are *BRUTAL* 🥊😵😴
@rahiemthomas5617 Жыл бұрын
I love seeing focus and determination at that phenomenal level.
@JustinGray7010 ай бұрын
Tyson was given with insane power, jaw, speed and a desire to win. Being a heavyweight is not as easy as it seems, you must have a talent otherwise it is nearly impossible to win no matter how hard you train. Respect to Marvis 19-2 in the times with the most powerful and eager contenders. Fighting guys like Tyson and Holmes is not an easy task.
@chieleine6848 Жыл бұрын
Sadly people will mostly remember Frazier for this infamous loss against a prime Tyson
@TheWorld-of7dd Жыл бұрын
@@TheWorld-of7dd How many people can say that they got in the ring with Mike Tyson😁
@chieleine6848 Жыл бұрын
@ProTheGrammer It does not matter if he got knocked out in the 1-st or the 10-th round he stood there with probably the best heavyweight there has ever been
@chieleine6848 Жыл бұрын
Tyson doesnt not have a jaw. Losing to a bum like Buster Douglas proved that.
@MrSinister718 Жыл бұрын
@@MrSinister718 He got punished for 10 rounds and still managed to knock him down after 1 eye closed and barely standing, so yeah he doesn't have a string jaw at all...
@chieleine6848 Жыл бұрын
Kudos to Marvis for knowing when to hang up the gloves. Too many children of famous athletes, actors, etc think that because of their famous parents, they've got the skills too. It's almost never the case and Marvis went out with an exceptional record and dignity.
@stormykeep9213 Жыл бұрын
Yes true especially when you marry a woman or impregnate one with inferior athletic and maybe intellectual genetics
@victorotene Жыл бұрын
Actually, Tyson convinced him.
@boraxsopanic2670 Жыл бұрын
marvis truly is a good fighter. if only he wasn't born in the era of Mike it would be a different outcome.
@travisstryder216 Жыл бұрын
Padded record. Frazier wasn’t anywhere close to being ready to fight Larry Holmes who despite being 44-0 was slowing down a bit. The size difference and skill disparity was to wide a gap to make up. Fighting Tyson a few years later was an asinine mistake too. He was too inactive at times, too small, and didn’t fight enough quality fighters.
@Freedomtospeak1 Жыл бұрын
Ahem sons of Jack*e Ch*n and W*ll Sm*th
@amirulakmal5140 Жыл бұрын
Sad to know I wasn't alive during this man's prime. Mike Tyson was an animal, he had speed, accuracy, power, aggressiveness to make all of his fights entertaining
@NelmarSen Жыл бұрын
Mike is a national treasure. I wish more people would acknowledge this
@TheBeard411 Жыл бұрын
Imagine being knocked out by Tyson but instead of dropping to the floor you freeze up standing then fall in slow motion giving Tyson the chance to land 5 extra knock out blows ...
@mrt445 Жыл бұрын
Haha! Good comment
@234dilligaf Жыл бұрын
Why bother having a referee?
@victorl416 Жыл бұрын
@@victorl416 I don't think the ref could have done anything. It's just one of those situations that are unavoidable because of how fast Tyson is. Also from his angle I don't think the ref saw the uppercut that knocked him out standing.
@mrt445 Жыл бұрын
His hand position as he was going down is the fencing response, which is what your body does after you receive brain stem trauma in the process of a tremendous concussion. Bad news.
@Flumphinator Жыл бұрын
Bye bye brain activity
@tomwalsh63 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this fight. All the announcers seemed to talk about before the fight was the relationship between Joe and Marvis. When they finally got around to mentioning Tyson it was like, "oh yeah, Marvis's opponent is one of the hot young heavyweight prospects. Somebody called Mike Tyson." I had never seen somebody get destroyed like that in a boxing match. By the end the only thing holding Frazier up were the ropes and Tyson's fists.
@keithdean9149 Жыл бұрын
lmao
@TDSheppard1 Жыл бұрын
@@TDSheppard1 that's hilarious 😂
@davokelly7876 Жыл бұрын
It was a terrible miss-match and Joe Frazier should not have put Marvis in with either Tyson or Holmes.
@TheHumbuckerboy Жыл бұрын
The last part of your statement 😂😂😂😅😅😅. Mike hit him 4 or more shots while he was out on his feet 😬😬😬
@marcusbaby2871 Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣💀
@mathewsbusiness1263 Жыл бұрын
I love Marvis and Joe's relationship so much. It sounded like the really loved each other.
@tbranch2278 ай бұрын
I love those historic boxing videos about Mike Tyson, thanks!
@michagorecki8893 Жыл бұрын
When Mike humbly and calmly said he was the best fighter in the world, I believed him. There were days, months, maybe longer periods of time that Tyson was the baddest man on the planet.
@theshapeexists Жыл бұрын
he still is.
@calicoasting Жыл бұрын
Years
@sholland42 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to Heavyweights, most agree that it goes Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis, Mike Tyson.
@ghostbravo7127 Жыл бұрын
That is a given.. undoubtedly the truth
@mikecavossa6450 Жыл бұрын
@@ghostbravo7127 it goes ali then mike Ali would have to tire him out cuz if they went blow for blow Ali better hope Mike had the respect to hold back but that’s how Ali fights he tires them out that’s how he wins but it goes ali then mike for heavy weight then of all time it goes Robinson Ali then mike
@Zaza420islit Жыл бұрын
One of the most terrifying knockouts in boxing history.
@twriggy2018 Жыл бұрын
His dad fed him to the Lion king !
@rodneymckinnon90754 ай бұрын
one of the most terrifying and beautiful knockouts..in all of fight sports history...
@emoneyg33 Жыл бұрын
That last little clip of Marvis was awesome.
@xtlm Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy to see the respect that Tyson shows towards his trainers and coaches. Most people with egos like his lose all respect for authority.
@wompbozer3939 Жыл бұрын
@David Elbourne yeah also his trainers literally treated him like family too.
@wasabi5338 Жыл бұрын
6:11 Amazing to have Marvis Frazier's perspective that he was never standing in the shadow of his father Joe, it shows the love and respect he had for his father and allowed him to live very proud of his own achievements
@The123CRAZYG Жыл бұрын
Tyson paces around like a tiger. Chilling
@bryant7542 Жыл бұрын
This was the scariest I've ever seen a human. Mike literally hit him three times while he was unconscious standing up before he could even hit the floor and all three shots would knock most people out seperately
@jharrjs80 Жыл бұрын
On that right uppercut he literally lifted him off the ground. His left foot goes up in the air as his head tilted all the way back. Mike was a beast!
@anthonypierre2094 Жыл бұрын
Joe frazier Sr wanted his son to get the same experience that he got from George Foreman !
@rodneymckinnon90754 ай бұрын
“My dad is Smokin Joe Frazier.” Man I wish I could say that.
@secondsidefilms4473 Жыл бұрын
I am mike tyson, man I wish I could say that
@ishansabharwal8802 Жыл бұрын
Lol but I love to say he got 1-2 smoked which his dad would been in the ring
@h-tinetowing2042 Жыл бұрын
Excellent come again route to the truth.I like that.
@sheritrayer4429 Жыл бұрын
I have a lot of respect for Marvis, he went into those fights with heart and gave it his all 💯
@lilzayytt7 ай бұрын
Amazing perspective from Frazier at the end. He knows hes lucky to have the support and father he did.
@NeutralGuyDoubleZero8 ай бұрын
The sound Mike Tyson’s punches make is like no other professional boxer when he makes contact with his opponent, it has a sweet precise sound like witnessing the perfect golf swing. It’s a thing of beauty.
@TrendyAndy Жыл бұрын
👍🏼
@iboquattro Жыл бұрын
Sheeseshh what an analogy 😭
@jayswrld666 Жыл бұрын
actually it sounds more like a wrecking ball entering your garage
@boatm492011 ай бұрын
Most of his fights were fixes
@easterbuny222610 ай бұрын
I feel bad for Joe Frazier, he had to watch his son get destroyed by a prime Mike tyson.
@thegoat6116 Жыл бұрын
Ikr
@pauclyoung2124 Жыл бұрын
Just like he did with George Forman lol, look at both videos and they are almost the same thing lol
@billflk2364 Жыл бұрын
U see his face when he was getting whooped by Larry Holmes
@chuckobucko2896 Жыл бұрын
I don't think Tyson was even in his prime yet.
@keithdean9149 Жыл бұрын
Why would you feel bad for the man that put his son in that situation? Why wouldn’t you feel bad for the kid that got forced into the ring against a man he had no business being in the ring with? Joe Frazier was a good fighter but a terrible manager.
@danfiorini785 Жыл бұрын
Love Marvis' attitude. Just seems like a great guy.
@876r876rf8 ай бұрын
I'm glad the Fraziers have a healthy loving relationship, and that Marvin doesn't feel overshadowed by his father's legacy. And my god, Mike Tysons boxing is gorgeous, beautiful head movement as always and uppercuts to the moon!
@thornautrey1123 Жыл бұрын
Man Marvis has such a healthy and positive outlook on things. That's a VERY admirable quality, much more so than boxing skills IMO...
@uNkLeRaRa4 Жыл бұрын
Oh please they was trash . Marvin sister was better then marvin
@terrenceperkins5282 Жыл бұрын
@@terrenceperkins5282 both don’t compare to joe frazier
@yes-qw6om Жыл бұрын
@@terrenceperkins5282 They *were* trash.
@uNkLeRaRa4 Жыл бұрын
@@yes-qw6om whatever
@terrenceperkins5282 Жыл бұрын
@@yes-qw6om joe overrate
@terrenceperkins5282 Жыл бұрын
What a lovely quote “standing in the light.” That’s a great way of looking at it. His father was, and still is a legend.
@johnburke4931 Жыл бұрын
Thank you bro
@SlimR3aps Жыл бұрын
Joe Frazier will always be one of the greatest.....and it looks like he was a good dad too. Probably my favorite fighter and boxing personality ever. Humble, tough and no nonsense or trashtalk.
@JK-cz6bu Жыл бұрын
Mad respect to Marvis, a career to be proud of for sure.
@jonathanpeck1057 Жыл бұрын
As each year goes by I think more and more people realise how great Tyson actually was.
@francisjtuk Жыл бұрын
@Jake Black yes but we have to remember a lot of the young people nowadays don't know that much about him but these KZhead videos show great he was.
@francisjtuk Жыл бұрын
Just like Jordan. Tyson and Jordan were athletes that you were lucky to watch their careers.
@muddeprived Жыл бұрын
He wandered in the wilderness for a long time.
@patricksquinlan1 Жыл бұрын
"One of the greatest of all time" ends up being scrutinized for its actual context whenever Tyson is dragged by boxing fans. He's my favorite boxer but I can't place him in a top ten when going by a lot of metrics such as professional record. I give him the benefit of the doubt that were it not for some career turns the wrong way that he could have retired better but that can be said for a lot of fighters who are not highly regarded today. He was unique and interesting and fun to watch but on top of that was also actually good enough to where it's not really highly argued when people regard him as a GOAT even if it's not technically true for all eras.
@Magneticitist Жыл бұрын
@@Magneticitist A lot of fighters had better careers, and were great for much longer. I think Tyson's magic was those first years where he destroyed all comers (including, unfortunately, Larry Holmes, who should have known better), up to the Douglas fight, which is one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. Everything went off the rails after that. He seems to be having a bit of a renaissance these days, with renewed appreciation of how he was at the beginning. The new Wise & Humble Mike persona is a good look for him. I suspect he's probably high a lot. That helps.
@patricksquinlan1 Жыл бұрын
The last lines were beautiful... Great respect
@Cragsman_Qureshi10 ай бұрын
The speed of a welterweight .. with the power of a super heavyweight .. guy was unreal.
@mxpwr4003 Жыл бұрын
I replayed the fight so many times. The sound of those punches are insane. Could knock a man's head clean off, credit to Marvis for keeping his.
@taariqkhanoflegend4622 Жыл бұрын
“If he doesn’t die, it doesn’t count. If he’s not dead, it doesn’t count”. Mike was an animal in his prime.
@Kelzo_001 Жыл бұрын
Tyson was fearsome in the ring --- but he knew how to intimidate outside the ring, too
@tommitchell4570 Жыл бұрын
@@sg-yq8pm Agree. Tyson would sometimes forget that boxing is a sport and you are not supposed to die. I think Tyson said before his Lewis fight that he would "kill and eat Lewis's children". Not very sportsman like.
@wanderer1955 Жыл бұрын
@@sg-yq8pm Wrong. People can actually die in the ring & have died in the ring. Tyson made you think he could literally kill anyone he was in the ring with. It was legit. Your comment only shows that you are ironically the stupid & nonsensical one by virtue of never having witnessed it live. If you had - you wouldn't have exposed yourself.
@ModernDayRenaissanceMan Жыл бұрын
@@sg-yq8pm And his dumb fans just eat it up. Tyson was a very ignorant and low intellect man, mistaken as intelligent by his equally ignorant fans.
@VCthaGOATdunker Жыл бұрын
@@wanderer1955 Tyson wasn't a sportsman .
@TheHumbuckerboy Жыл бұрын
I'm from the Philippines watching back a true fighter boxer mike tyson.
@punk4697 ай бұрын
That quote at the end is beautiful.
@no_one_of_that_name_here Жыл бұрын
4:37 That guy in the stands having the time of his life witnessing history!
@APAMVs Жыл бұрын
LOL, dude was going crazy back there. One of the best nights of his life, I bet.
@Meela234 Жыл бұрын
I bet the guy behind him was pissed he missed the knockout LOL
@michaelcohen9363 Жыл бұрын
I feel for Frazier’s son. I’d be thinking-I didn’t beat Ali, why are you pissed off at me? An enraged Tyson at that point in his career is terrifying. I don’t care what Frazier said about his dad being in his corner and that he can’t lose, you’d be very intimidated even if you try your best to not show that on the outside. Scary as F!!!
@OCRay1 Жыл бұрын
What do you mean by I didn’t beat Ali why are you pissed off at me?
@MatthewSmith-uf6tr Жыл бұрын
Marvin's father Joe beat Ali. It pissed tyson off so he took it out on marvin
@jeffbarrett4478 Жыл бұрын
@TIL IS 4 nobody cares about you either shut the fk up
@4truths127 Жыл бұрын
@@MatthewSmith-uf6tr Joe beat Ali back in the day before Ali won in the rematch. Tyson went on a tear and basically attempted to murder people that had beat his idol. He basically took transferred agression from Joe and put it on Marvis even though Joe was just a humble nice guy. Tyson also tried to take Larry Holmes head off because of how he beat up on Ali late in his career.
@TheSeattleGamer Жыл бұрын
@@TheSeattleGamer It may have been a very different story if Tyson had been facing a prime Holmes.
@TheHumbuckerboy Жыл бұрын
Excellent work.
@JAYDUBYAH29Ай бұрын
Imma start learning how to box either june or July. I'm glad I found this channel. It's very entertaining.
@mature94211 ай бұрын
There's no shame in taking a loss to one of the all time greats.
@daves2822 Жыл бұрын
Facts it's a privilege
@pursuithemi5.7awd81 Жыл бұрын
Two of the all time greats, Marvin fought Larry Holmes too.
@soakedbearrd Жыл бұрын
@@soakedbearrd He never should have been put up against either Tyson or Holmes ... poor guy ... he needed someone to look after his health.
@TheHumbuckerboy Жыл бұрын
No shame at all except seeing him lumped n slumped in the corner.
@jqbaker418 Жыл бұрын
Tyson nuked Marvin. :). It should have been a war crime.
@boraxsopanic2670 Жыл бұрын
The quality that you are able to provide with these old videos is unmatched! Thank you
@djstyles97 Жыл бұрын
Right uppercut, jab to the face, right hook and left hook for goodnight. That speed was incredible and I literally had to slow it down to 0,25 to see the combo. Iron Mike is an instinctual beast. There's no though, just action and reaction.
@Joni_Tarvainen8 ай бұрын
I love that last clip
@zacharysherry29108 ай бұрын
1:36 look at that movement. That's fucking unreal. Like a choreographed scene from a movie, but it's all instinct and reflex. Mike was easily one of the best boxers ever. No question.
@signoguns8501 Жыл бұрын
d'amato shift
@bignigincoming8774 Жыл бұрын
THE best
@Spitsworth Жыл бұрын
Get out of here, he wasn't even in the top 1000. He was a bum. He failed every time he faced a real boxer. He lost to Buster Douglas? That isn't greatness,it mediocre. He had potential, he wasted it. Please tell me why you think a guy like Tyson who lost the title pretty quickly,was so great???
@jameswalsh3976 Жыл бұрын
@@jameswalsh3976 if there was a definition for a hater youd be it
@Cam-ej1cu Жыл бұрын
@@Cam-ej1cu If their were a definition of a fanboy with rose colored glasses making a guy who wasted most of his talent into an icon, he but he still clung to delusions , take a bow... 😂
@jameswalsh3976 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for including that part at the end. Wonderful to see such a great father and son relationship. Respect for both Joe and Marvis.
@LYLEWOLD Жыл бұрын
Much respect for Marvis, he fought the scariest and most brutal fighter during this era. He has NOTHING to be ashamed about, on the contrary.
@thomasdupont718610 ай бұрын
Yes he does, he almost got Eatten up by a Hungry Lion. Iron Mike
@rodneymckinnon90754 ай бұрын
Yo this is fire you should do more content like this on other 90s fighters.
@dustinadagala2590 Жыл бұрын
Anyone can knock anyone out in a fight. There’s been some hard hitting boxers through the years like George Foreman. I never saw anyone hit like Mike Tyson could, especially with either hand. He’s the most impressive slugger I’ve ever seen climb in the ring.
@joehelvey5794 Жыл бұрын
Sonny liston hit way harder he was unreal
@pjsbush5105 Жыл бұрын
Ernie Shavers, George Foreman and Mike Tyson top 3 hardest hitters
@jamesoshea494 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesoshea494 Liston hits harder than tyson
@senatorarmstrong2100 Жыл бұрын
@@senatorarmstrong2100 Is it that he hits harder or his gloves were just bigger because I know his hands were huge
@jamesoshea494 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesoshea494 both
@senatorarmstrong2100 Жыл бұрын
How Frasier he described his father as the light and not a shadow was so beautiful 💙💫
@EnchantedJewelzEmpire Жыл бұрын
The guys a bulldawg !!! Since day one Glad he still has something to prove 💪💯
@rudyescalante512611 күн бұрын
Loved the ending message
@brendon5553 Жыл бұрын
Tyson one of the few special/terrifying fighters who could hit another fighter so fast and hard you honestly think he killed him.
@iAintSayDat Жыл бұрын
That’s for sure. Frazier scared me how he just crumpled to the floor.
@dbell582 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching the fight and thought I’ve scene guys on the street get killed I thought for sure Marvis was dead.
@saihemebillings2820 Жыл бұрын
@@saihemebillings2820 You've seen guys die in the street due to street fights ?
@TheHumbuckerboy Жыл бұрын
@@TheHumbuckerboy happens more than people think
@Snide01 Жыл бұрын
Velocity, baby. Tyson had it. Tommy Morrison, Lennox Lewis, David Tua, Razor Ruddock, Julian Jackson, Gerald McClellan too. Elite velocity.
@presence5426 Жыл бұрын
Tyson in his prime was just magical brutality.
@hannibalwantsahuggrande3433 Жыл бұрын
he took people's soul in the pre-fight stare down. he made his introduction by the announcer sound like a verdict to his opponents.
@LIONTAMER3D Жыл бұрын
The real savage 💪🏿💪🏿
@amadousane99378 ай бұрын
A man that respects his father is a man worth respecting
@deathreaper65549 ай бұрын
Mike was just sending his opponents into early retirement one after another! These are the best boxing edits on KZhead!
@slumdogg1613 Жыл бұрын
Still can’t get over his voice and the fact that he can knock anyones head off . 😂😂😳
@rcheaven96 Жыл бұрын
Yep don't judge anybody by their speech. Lol
@georgeton49912 ай бұрын
Mike has always had a knack for using really appropriate statements and at the right time. One of the things that make him legendary.
@georgegatuguta53763 ай бұрын
Marvis is a great guy, an humble and gentleman, he earned 2 millions in his career. Well Done!
@felicecancellara4524 Жыл бұрын
I'll say this as a boxing trainer, it never hurts to take time developing a fighter, especially if they have youth on their side. As a trainer it's my duty to instill confidence and self-belief in my charge. He has to have the unshakable belief that he can beat his opponent whoever he is in that moment. Jim Jacobs and Bill Cayton knew exactly what they were doing managing Tyson. Tyson only had 17 amateur fights before turning to the pro ranks. They had the money and clout to be able to secure him the "safe" opponents to build his record and confidence to eventually beat the top dogs, and it worked! The problem why contemporary fighters who appear to have all the tools don't succeed is that the investors in those fighters are looking for as quick a return on their investment. It's all financially driven.
@bh1422 Жыл бұрын
Yes that is true, and it's also reflected in 80's music when record labels took time to properly develop their artists --- these days, it's all about banging out the dumbest generic shit and artists are thrown by the wayside and easily replaced
@lukebuchwald9252 Жыл бұрын
@@lukebuchwald9252 Spot on
@bh1422 Жыл бұрын
Well said sir. You know your stuff.
@user-mv7kh5sv9z Жыл бұрын
People don't realize that Mike Tyson wasn't just one man. His trainers, coaches and management were ALL top notch! Cus and Kevin Rooney made Tyson!
The last moment where Marvis talks about his father was pretty beautiful. You can tell he had love for him and admired him
Shhhhhheeeeettttt I would too...imagine your dad being the guy who beat Ali in his prime??? Aside from that being a man who fought countless amounts of awesome fighters from an Era where guys didn't know how to duck fighters and 15 rounds were normal.
Hell yeah dude. That’s the best way to look at it. What a legend both of them.
almost made me cry
True 🙄💪
Jo, right. . . But the fact that his cheek is still swollen shows what a beast Tyson was.
Anyone else binge watching Tyson fights. It's pure entertainment
Yep. I was an 80’s kid and been watching that era of 80’s and 90’s Mike ever since. Unfortunately Cus passed and Tyson fell into the Don King network of horrible two-faced criminals and they ruined a vulnerable man.
Is it really a binge when you can watch 20 fights, beginning to end, in less than a half hour?
@@mwilliamshs But if you throw in the backstory in some of those fights like the Frazier one, it gets longer :D
I'm in the middle of watching all of his fights after i finished watching Muhammad Ali's fights a couple days ago. After Tyson I'm moving to Pernell "sweat pea" Whittaker. And one of my favorites who never ducked and fought everybody and either won or gave the other guy fits , Buddy Mcgirt...
I watch everything up to Buster Douglas
Marcus Frazier is a legend. "Standing in the shadow of Joe Frazier, to me it was like standing in the light.” Man, I have so much respect for that statement right there.
A light of defeat I mean the old man couldn't beat Tyson even on his best days Much love to Marvis beating bigger guys and very well could have been a title holder
Marcus? And no Marvin Frazier is not a legend
@@GoGetYourShinebox Marvin? And yes, Marvis Frazier is a legend. You couldn't do vetter
@@hollokutya1315 How is he a legend of the sport?
@@hollokutya1315 he isn't a legend. his father was, but his son isn't. that's because he didn't do anything spectacular, though he was an underrated and fantastic fighter regardless with a very respectable record, especially with his only two losses to two legends
I was at that fight. It was unplanned. We happened to be partying that weekend in AC and found out about the fight. We paid $500 for crappy balcony seats the day of the fight. The sound of that knockout was clear and loud from where I was sitting. I was in shock that you could hear that from so far away. Mike was definitely one of the greatest punchers of all time. I also remember a guy that had paid $1K for front row. He went to buy a hotdog and missed the whole fight. LoL
Damn 1150 for a hotdog! I added fhe 50 cause im sure even in the 80s a hotdog is like 50 bucks in an arena lol.
I will never understand the people who go get some food right when the fight is about to start lol, expecially a match with a prime Mike Tyson...
imagine buying a hot dog and missing mike tyson in his prime
lol
I was a little kid and my dad had a bunch of friends over for the ppv. There was a guy who went to get a cold beer who missed the whole thing haha
being brave isn't enough. Stepping into the ring with Mike Tyson in those years was real bravery. Tyson was an absolute machine. Amazing fighter
It was possible Suizid
Until Buster Douglas
Before he got the title.
Agree , but had Mike Tyson had to Fight in the 1960's an 1970's where U had to go 15 rounds Mike Tyson would have melted against the Boxers of that Day , Tyson was Not a 15 round Fighter but a 10 round Knock Out Sniper -
Holyfield was brave but unlike Marvis, had a chin and the punching power to beat Tyson.
Frazier’s son only lost to Mike Tyson and Larry Holmes top of the greatest heavyweights ever. Absolutely nothing to be ashamed of, he did amazing compared to most great athletes kids
Yeah. Also, I think he had issues with an eye injury which meant he had to move quickly if he was going to achieve anything. Others blame Smokin' Joe for changing his fighting style as a pro, which didn't suit him. But still, he beat some good names as a pro.
He also lost against Bonecrusher Smith, but was awarded the decision just because he was the son of.
He lasted 5 seconds
Mike isn't even close to that spot.
How long did both fights combined last .. yes he was pressured to be game .. jus an observation
There's a few athletes that will never be duplicated and Tyson is definitely in that group!
100%on the dot
I absolutely admire the heck out of Tyson. Every punch was calculated. He never threw wild punches. He was an amazing boxer. 💯
19-2 as a professional boxer while fighting legitimate contenders is something to be very proud of.
Only lost to two ATG in their prime
Yup
@@dannykeeley9005 honorable losses. I’d be happy with that. Homes and Tyson.
@@EndingVisions fr lol
Legitimate contenders?
“Standing in the shadow of Joe Frazier, to me it was like standing in the light.” That is genuinely the most beautiful sentiment I have ever heard a son say about his father. Maybe instead of a boxer, he should have been a poet.
Marvis Frazier = Class
love how I scrolled down and read this exactly when he started saying it hahah
All fighters are poets. The martial arts are the purest art form through which a man can express himself. It changes who you are to learn to fight.
Made me tear up. I have a little boy and I hope one day he'll say something like that about me
@@londoncab2814 than why he fight someone on medication?
"I never felt like I was standing in his shadow, I was standing in the light; my father was Smokin Joe Frazier." Paraphrased. That statement demonstrates an incredible perspective and humility.
hes right tho, a real man doesnt let pride come in the way between your happiness or your family relationships
Even though Tyson had his issues back then, to say wise words like "if my trainer and coach think I'm ready, then I will fight" instead of being big headed. Really says alot.
Shut up
Cus D'Amato trained him well
Cus was more than just a trainer to him. That was the closest thing to a father that Mike ever had. Cus didn't just train him. He raised Mike under his roof as well. That's where Mike learned respect.
Had he only stayed that way.
Good point
I find it incredible how mature Tyson was physically and mentally at 19, you can tell that his confidence came from how hard he worked, it never came off as cocky imo.. what an absolute legend. The precision, speed and the power is really astonishing.
When you have a mentor wise as Cus Di Amato it is normal!The kid grew up with him like hes son and this trainer/coach/mentor had a god given talent of creating CHARACTER cause before you achieve anything in life you have to got or develop the CHARACTER first unfortunatly most trainers dont know s$$$ about this field..
what does imo mean
@@gerardosantiago8694 “in my opinion”
his confidence came from the streets. he beat up a grown man as a child for killing his pidgeon, after that the guy's from the neighborhood would bring guy's in to fight him. he was a monster when he met cus, he just gave him respect and boxing experience
@@JoeSmith-mp2fn His confidence came from the streets? Man he was a scared kid when he met Cus broken..Cus made him what he was not the "streets"
Joe was indeed a legendary boxer,what his son said was absolutely nice and full of respect ( towards Joe.)
Joe Frazier was awesome you could walking to his gym in North Philly he would talk to you work with you Marvin Frazier is cool too
Any man brave enough to step into a ring with Tyson 1986-1990 deserves respect
I love how aggressive Tyson was. He wasn’t just throwing wild punches around. He put all of his body and mind into each and every punch, and he could deliver them SO FAST. He knocked Frazier out cold with one blow and had already punched him in the face 3 more times by the time Frazier actually hit the ground.
Miss good old boxing 🥊 like that.
@@dontrustwhiteyevery1 agree, today’s time we are witnessing stupid gayweather who just run and hug and win by points.
It aint even that impressive shii i can prob beat him now
Also he wasnt when he got his shit rocked by holy field
dont blink 🤣
19-2, only losing to 2 legendary boxers? That's a damn impressive career.
Cool facts 👌🏻
Lmao ….he beat 2 legendary fighters who were past their primes. They were both bums past their primes . Tyson only fought bums
@@Az-sn9ex Frazier.
@@joncoda365 lmao ..he sucked . He was a bum . Go see his resume and you will agree that he was a bum
@@Az-sn9ex Question, who have you fought professionally?
I’m impressed with Joes sons attitude and outlook on being his son. Positive guy and that’s just as impressive or more than being a boxing champion
I am also impressed by the father, who took the time to train and try with his son... and with marvellous results in my opinion. Theirs together is the biggest victory of man.
5:30 Even in the adrenaline rush of the moment, Tyson still has the presence of mind and I believe the wisdom to say he follows the advice of his manager and trainer.
People are missing the fact that Tyson had so much confidence and trust in his trainers that if they sent him into the ring he knew he would win. That’s a bond
Not with buster, whole life changed
@@yes-qw6om yeah cuz then he didnt have his old trainers with him.The ones who kept him looking invincible.
@@Wingzofelzorro cus d Amato died before Tyson went pro
@@yes-qw6om yeah but with Rooney his philosophy survived.Once Tyson left Rooney his conditioning went away lost alot of head movement and footwork.
@@Wingzofelzorro maybe he lost some footwork and head movement but not conditioning, his stamina wasn’t always so great
Tyson in his prime was so insanely ripped, what a beast, glad he found himself in the present while still having such a legendary past
👨🏾🍳👌🏽
Yeah he was ripped af and when he came out of prison he even came out shredded
@@lucianamendes7891 would have loved to date him back then 😝
With canons like those, Jake Paul would most definitely have a GOOD and REASONABLE chance😉😉
@@chinaarlene7035 he is muslim he doesn't date
Marvis Frazier had a very respectable career. He suffered terrible ko losses but he was in the ring with legitimate heavyweights and that's very difficult to do. His dad had more heart than anyone and was an all time great and Marvis showed the heart of a champ but came up short.
He just didn't have the talent unfortunately...
Touching what Marvis said about his dad in the interview, that makes him a champion to me.👍🏾🙏🏾
Joe Frazier is older than his son only for 16 years and 9 months. Imagine becoming a father at that age. Back then, people matured way earlier than nowadays.
At 0:58 "It's very difficult, with a kid who throws hydrogen bombs." This is the most aptly description for Tyson's power I've ever seen.
yeah, he was saying they couldn't get him into deep waters, many rounds of experience, because he kills everyone in 1-2 rounds lol
Mike was surprisingly articulate, all of his post fight interviews were almost poetic
Thpinal
@@leonrussell9607 😂
Why surprising ? He is smart
What's surprising about it?
Yeah, but you can't tell Howard Stern, and his ASSistant, and personal ass wipe Robin Quivers that. They called him retarded. Like to see them tell him that to his face.
A true Son never forgets his father's legacy. Hats off to you sir!
Great video..always! Love your narrative style and editing.
Marvis is such a humble guy and to even attempt to equal or even surpass his fathers legacy is commendable and respectful!! Great job Marvis!!
Güneş gibi parlayan Mike, etrafına ışıltılar saçan kuyrukluyıldız Marvis'i 30 saniyede yuttu. Hoşçakal Marvis...
He never really stood a chance to equal his father. Smokin' Joe is a top 10 fighter of all time and beat the GOAT in his prime. There's no shame in trying. Got me choked up that interview at the end though, you can tell just how proud he was of his father and I'm sure Joe was just as proud of his son. Joe will always be my favorite fighter. The man is a hero in my hometown of Philly and he just had the biggest heart imaginable, that clearly rubbed off on his son.
But that man did need to look back at his pops and whind up that punch to the boys face. Such disrespect(little funny tho)
Lol, he shoulda never snarled at Mike along with his father. They were looking down on Mike but Tyson settled the score anyway. This fight made that family an embarrassment.
He was clearly trash / delusional kid
This guy knocked his opponent out and continued knocking him out. Mike is a boxing icon .
1:27- that dude went flying 🕊️💸
That’s really cool that Marvin is proud of his father. It doesn’t seem like it’s something that haunts him or was forced into.
Why wouldn’t he be proud of a dad who beat the odds and became a celebrated champion boxer. And beat Ali ta boot
@@christopherqueen8097 There’s a lot of famous successful people that had their offspring follow in their footsteps with utter contempt.
Marvis*
The way Mike delivers those knockouts while being hit in the face, no reaction. Priceless. Literally stone faced!
Marvis could box but him playing to his dad's name and his lack of chin got him smoked he got hit with that upercut he crumbled like a sitting chair out cold
Have you ever seen a boxers hands move as fast as Tyson's 😂
@@winniepeg2020 That, and that this Mike was stepping and controlling distance perfectly. Sadly, later he was only moving forward and being smothered,, but here you see him take steps back to create the correct distance for power... scary!
Mike had the ability to look terrifying before a match, and seem like the greatest guy youd want to talk sports with after Early on anyway.
It's like trying to get a pitbull to not bite you by trying to smack it with a rolled up newspaper lol.
The way Muhammad, who was Mike's hero, asked Mike to get revenge on Joe was so beautiful. Like father and son.
He knocked him unconscious, conscious, and unconscious in one combo. Damn.
I love how aggressive Tyson was. He wasn’t just throwing wild punches around. He put all of his body and mind into each and every punch, and he could deliver them SO FAST.
Usually when watching other boxers fight, you kinda get the sense that the punches feel soft ( I know they are not), but with Mike it’s the exact opposite. There’s so much force in each strike.
I'm not in the shadow Joe Frazier, I'm in the light. Beautiful sentiment and absolutely true. Marvis had a great career by any measure. Lots of wins and his only two losses came from two hall of famers. He should be proud of his dad, and himself.
Agreed. Beautiful sentiment and by the sounds of it a good, happy man. So great to see people out there just... Being. Seems like he's doing all right in that interview. Hope he still is.
Very true
He only got demolished.
@@boraxsopanic2670 words of someone who never even trained
@@hassanaltarawneh1569 Pulverized? Smashed? Obliterated? Clobbered? Decimated? Destroyed? Crushed?
That fight against Joe Frazier's son, you could hear the impact 🤧🥴🤯. Mike Tyson's punches are *BRUTAL* 🥊😵😴
I love seeing focus and determination at that phenomenal level.
Tyson was given with insane power, jaw, speed and a desire to win. Being a heavyweight is not as easy as it seems, you must have a talent otherwise it is nearly impossible to win no matter how hard you train. Respect to Marvis 19-2 in the times with the most powerful and eager contenders. Fighting guys like Tyson and Holmes is not an easy task.
Sadly people will mostly remember Frazier for this infamous loss against a prime Tyson
@@TheWorld-of7dd How many people can say that they got in the ring with Mike Tyson😁
@ProTheGrammer It does not matter if he got knocked out in the 1-st or the 10-th round he stood there with probably the best heavyweight there has ever been
Tyson doesnt not have a jaw. Losing to a bum like Buster Douglas proved that.
@@MrSinister718 He got punished for 10 rounds and still managed to knock him down after 1 eye closed and barely standing, so yeah he doesn't have a string jaw at all...
Kudos to Marvis for knowing when to hang up the gloves. Too many children of famous athletes, actors, etc think that because of their famous parents, they've got the skills too. It's almost never the case and Marvis went out with an exceptional record and dignity.
Yes true especially when you marry a woman or impregnate one with inferior athletic and maybe intellectual genetics
Actually, Tyson convinced him.
marvis truly is a good fighter. if only he wasn't born in the era of Mike it would be a different outcome.
Padded record. Frazier wasn’t anywhere close to being ready to fight Larry Holmes who despite being 44-0 was slowing down a bit. The size difference and skill disparity was to wide a gap to make up. Fighting Tyson a few years later was an asinine mistake too. He was too inactive at times, too small, and didn’t fight enough quality fighters.
Ahem sons of Jack*e Ch*n and W*ll Sm*th
Sad to know I wasn't alive during this man's prime. Mike Tyson was an animal, he had speed, accuracy, power, aggressiveness to make all of his fights entertaining
Mike is a national treasure. I wish more people would acknowledge this
Imagine being knocked out by Tyson but instead of dropping to the floor you freeze up standing then fall in slow motion giving Tyson the chance to land 5 extra knock out blows ...
Haha! Good comment
Why bother having a referee?
@@victorl416 I don't think the ref could have done anything. It's just one of those situations that are unavoidable because of how fast Tyson is. Also from his angle I don't think the ref saw the uppercut that knocked him out standing.
His hand position as he was going down is the fencing response, which is what your body does after you receive brain stem trauma in the process of a tremendous concussion. Bad news.
Bye bye brain activity
I remember watching this fight. All the announcers seemed to talk about before the fight was the relationship between Joe and Marvis. When they finally got around to mentioning Tyson it was like, "oh yeah, Marvis's opponent is one of the hot young heavyweight prospects. Somebody called Mike Tyson." I had never seen somebody get destroyed like that in a boxing match. By the end the only thing holding Frazier up were the ropes and Tyson's fists.
lmao
@@TDSheppard1 that's hilarious 😂
It was a terrible miss-match and Joe Frazier should not have put Marvis in with either Tyson or Holmes.
The last part of your statement 😂😂😂😅😅😅. Mike hit him 4 or more shots while he was out on his feet 😬😬😬
🤣🤣💀
I love Marvis and Joe's relationship so much. It sounded like the really loved each other.
I love those historic boxing videos about Mike Tyson, thanks!
When Mike humbly and calmly said he was the best fighter in the world, I believed him. There were days, months, maybe longer periods of time that Tyson was the baddest man on the planet.
he still is.
Years
When it comes to Heavyweights, most agree that it goes Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis, Mike Tyson.
That is a given.. undoubtedly the truth
@@ghostbravo7127 it goes ali then mike Ali would have to tire him out cuz if they went blow for blow Ali better hope Mike had the respect to hold back but that’s how Ali fights he tires them out that’s how he wins but it goes ali then mike for heavy weight then of all time it goes Robinson Ali then mike
One of the most terrifying knockouts in boxing history.
His dad fed him to the Lion king !
one of the most terrifying and beautiful knockouts..in all of fight sports history...
That last little clip of Marvis was awesome.
It’s crazy to see the respect that Tyson shows towards his trainers and coaches. Most people with egos like his lose all respect for authority.
@David Elbourne yeah also his trainers literally treated him like family too.
6:11 Amazing to have Marvis Frazier's perspective that he was never standing in the shadow of his father Joe, it shows the love and respect he had for his father and allowed him to live very proud of his own achievements
Tyson paces around like a tiger. Chilling
This was the scariest I've ever seen a human. Mike literally hit him three times while he was unconscious standing up before he could even hit the floor and all three shots would knock most people out seperately
On that right uppercut he literally lifted him off the ground. His left foot goes up in the air as his head tilted all the way back. Mike was a beast!
Joe frazier Sr wanted his son to get the same experience that he got from George Foreman !
“My dad is Smokin Joe Frazier.” Man I wish I could say that.
I am mike tyson, man I wish I could say that
Lol but I love to say he got 1-2 smoked which his dad would been in the ring
Excellent come again route to the truth.I like that.
I have a lot of respect for Marvis, he went into those fights with heart and gave it his all 💯
Amazing perspective from Frazier at the end. He knows hes lucky to have the support and father he did.
The sound Mike Tyson’s punches make is like no other professional boxer when he makes contact with his opponent, it has a sweet precise sound like witnessing the perfect golf swing. It’s a thing of beauty.
👍🏼
Sheeseshh what an analogy 😭
actually it sounds more like a wrecking ball entering your garage
Most of his fights were fixes
I feel bad for Joe Frazier, he had to watch his son get destroyed by a prime Mike tyson.
Ikr
Just like he did with George Forman lol, look at both videos and they are almost the same thing lol
U see his face when he was getting whooped by Larry Holmes
I don't think Tyson was even in his prime yet.
Why would you feel bad for the man that put his son in that situation? Why wouldn’t you feel bad for the kid that got forced into the ring against a man he had no business being in the ring with? Joe Frazier was a good fighter but a terrible manager.
Love Marvis' attitude. Just seems like a great guy.
I'm glad the Fraziers have a healthy loving relationship, and that Marvin doesn't feel overshadowed by his father's legacy. And my god, Mike Tysons boxing is gorgeous, beautiful head movement as always and uppercuts to the moon!
Man Marvis has such a healthy and positive outlook on things. That's a VERY admirable quality, much more so than boxing skills IMO...
Oh please they was trash . Marvin sister was better then marvin
@@terrenceperkins5282 both don’t compare to joe frazier
@@terrenceperkins5282 They *were* trash.
@@yes-qw6om whatever
@@yes-qw6om joe overrate
What a lovely quote “standing in the light.” That’s a great way of looking at it. His father was, and still is a legend.
Thank you bro
Joe Frazier will always be one of the greatest.....and it looks like he was a good dad too. Probably my favorite fighter and boxing personality ever. Humble, tough and no nonsense or trashtalk.
Mad respect to Marvis, a career to be proud of for sure.
As each year goes by I think more and more people realise how great Tyson actually was.
@Jake Black yes but we have to remember a lot of the young people nowadays don't know that much about him but these KZhead videos show great he was.
Just like Jordan. Tyson and Jordan were athletes that you were lucky to watch their careers.
He wandered in the wilderness for a long time.
"One of the greatest of all time" ends up being scrutinized for its actual context whenever Tyson is dragged by boxing fans. He's my favorite boxer but I can't place him in a top ten when going by a lot of metrics such as professional record. I give him the benefit of the doubt that were it not for some career turns the wrong way that he could have retired better but that can be said for a lot of fighters who are not highly regarded today. He was unique and interesting and fun to watch but on top of that was also actually good enough to where it's not really highly argued when people regard him as a GOAT even if it's not technically true for all eras.
@@Magneticitist A lot of fighters had better careers, and were great for much longer. I think Tyson's magic was those first years where he destroyed all comers (including, unfortunately, Larry Holmes, who should have known better), up to the Douglas fight, which is one of the most amazing things I've ever seen. Everything went off the rails after that. He seems to be having a bit of a renaissance these days, with renewed appreciation of how he was at the beginning. The new Wise & Humble Mike persona is a good look for him. I suspect he's probably high a lot. That helps.
The last lines were beautiful... Great respect
The speed of a welterweight .. with the power of a super heavyweight .. guy was unreal.
I replayed the fight so many times. The sound of those punches are insane. Could knock a man's head clean off, credit to Marvis for keeping his.
“If he doesn’t die, it doesn’t count. If he’s not dead, it doesn’t count”. Mike was an animal in his prime.
Tyson was fearsome in the ring --- but he knew how to intimidate outside the ring, too
@@sg-yq8pm Agree. Tyson would sometimes forget that boxing is a sport and you are not supposed to die. I think Tyson said before his Lewis fight that he would "kill and eat Lewis's children". Not very sportsman like.
@@sg-yq8pm Wrong. People can actually die in the ring & have died in the ring. Tyson made you think he could literally kill anyone he was in the ring with. It was legit. Your comment only shows that you are ironically the stupid & nonsensical one by virtue of never having witnessed it live. If you had - you wouldn't have exposed yourself.
@@sg-yq8pm And his dumb fans just eat it up. Tyson was a very ignorant and low intellect man, mistaken as intelligent by his equally ignorant fans.
@@wanderer1955 Tyson wasn't a sportsman .
I'm from the Philippines watching back a true fighter boxer mike tyson.
That quote at the end is beautiful.
4:37 That guy in the stands having the time of his life witnessing history!
LOL, dude was going crazy back there. One of the best nights of his life, I bet.
I bet the guy behind him was pissed he missed the knockout LOL
I feel for Frazier’s son. I’d be thinking-I didn’t beat Ali, why are you pissed off at me? An enraged Tyson at that point in his career is terrifying. I don’t care what Frazier said about his dad being in his corner and that he can’t lose, you’d be very intimidated even if you try your best to not show that on the outside. Scary as F!!!
What do you mean by I didn’t beat Ali why are you pissed off at me?
Marvin's father Joe beat Ali. It pissed tyson off so he took it out on marvin
@TIL IS 4 nobody cares about you either shut the fk up
@@MatthewSmith-uf6tr Joe beat Ali back in the day before Ali won in the rematch. Tyson went on a tear and basically attempted to murder people that had beat his idol. He basically took transferred agression from Joe and put it on Marvis even though Joe was just a humble nice guy. Tyson also tried to take Larry Holmes head off because of how he beat up on Ali late in his career.
@@TheSeattleGamer It may have been a very different story if Tyson had been facing a prime Holmes.
Excellent work.
Imma start learning how to box either june or July. I'm glad I found this channel. It's very entertaining.
There's no shame in taking a loss to one of the all time greats.
Facts it's a privilege
Two of the all time greats, Marvin fought Larry Holmes too.
@@soakedbearrd He never should have been put up against either Tyson or Holmes ... poor guy ... he needed someone to look after his health.
No shame at all except seeing him lumped n slumped in the corner.
Tyson nuked Marvin. :). It should have been a war crime.
The quality that you are able to provide with these old videos is unmatched! Thank you
Right uppercut, jab to the face, right hook and left hook for goodnight. That speed was incredible and I literally had to slow it down to 0,25 to see the combo. Iron Mike is an instinctual beast. There's no though, just action and reaction.
I love that last clip
1:36 look at that movement. That's fucking unreal. Like a choreographed scene from a movie, but it's all instinct and reflex. Mike was easily one of the best boxers ever. No question.
d'amato shift
THE best
Get out of here, he wasn't even in the top 1000. He was a bum. He failed every time he faced a real boxer. He lost to Buster Douglas? That isn't greatness,it mediocre. He had potential, he wasted it. Please tell me why you think a guy like Tyson who lost the title pretty quickly,was so great???
@@jameswalsh3976 if there was a definition for a hater youd be it
@@Cam-ej1cu If their were a definition of a fanboy with rose colored glasses making a guy who wasted most of his talent into an icon, he but he still clung to delusions , take a bow... 😂
Thanks for including that part at the end. Wonderful to see such a great father and son relationship. Respect for both Joe and Marvis.
Much respect for Marvis, he fought the scariest and most brutal fighter during this era. He has NOTHING to be ashamed about, on the contrary.
Yes he does, he almost got Eatten up by a Hungry Lion. Iron Mike
Yo this is fire you should do more content like this on other 90s fighters.
Anyone can knock anyone out in a fight. There’s been some hard hitting boxers through the years like George Foreman. I never saw anyone hit like Mike Tyson could, especially with either hand. He’s the most impressive slugger I’ve ever seen climb in the ring.
Sonny liston hit way harder he was unreal
Ernie Shavers, George Foreman and Mike Tyson top 3 hardest hitters
@@jamesoshea494 Liston hits harder than tyson
@@senatorarmstrong2100 Is it that he hits harder or his gloves were just bigger because I know his hands were huge
@@jamesoshea494 both
How Frasier he described his father as the light and not a shadow was so beautiful 💙💫
The guys a bulldawg !!! Since day one Glad he still has something to prove 💪💯
Loved the ending message
Tyson one of the few special/terrifying fighters who could hit another fighter so fast and hard you honestly think he killed him.
That’s for sure. Frazier scared me how he just crumpled to the floor.
I remember watching the fight and thought I’ve scene guys on the street get killed I thought for sure Marvis was dead.
@@saihemebillings2820 You've seen guys die in the street due to street fights ?
@@TheHumbuckerboy happens more than people think
Velocity, baby. Tyson had it. Tommy Morrison, Lennox Lewis, David Tua, Razor Ruddock, Julian Jackson, Gerald McClellan too. Elite velocity.
Tyson in his prime was just magical brutality.
he took people's soul in the pre-fight stare down. he made his introduction by the announcer sound like a verdict to his opponents.
The real savage 💪🏿💪🏿
A man that respects his father is a man worth respecting
Mike was just sending his opponents into early retirement one after another! These are the best boxing edits on KZhead!
Still can’t get over his voice and the fact that he can knock anyones head off . 😂😂😳
Yep don't judge anybody by their speech. Lol
Mike has always had a knack for using really appropriate statements and at the right time. One of the things that make him legendary.
Marvis is a great guy, an humble and gentleman, he earned 2 millions in his career. Well Done!
I'll say this as a boxing trainer, it never hurts to take time developing a fighter, especially if they have youth on their side. As a trainer it's my duty to instill confidence and self-belief in my charge. He has to have the unshakable belief that he can beat his opponent whoever he is in that moment. Jim Jacobs and Bill Cayton knew exactly what they were doing managing Tyson. Tyson only had 17 amateur fights before turning to the pro ranks. They had the money and clout to be able to secure him the "safe" opponents to build his record and confidence to eventually beat the top dogs, and it worked! The problem why contemporary fighters who appear to have all the tools don't succeed is that the investors in those fighters are looking for as quick a return on their investment. It's all financially driven.
Yes that is true, and it's also reflected in 80's music when record labels took time to properly develop their artists --- these days, it's all about banging out the dumbest generic shit and artists are thrown by the wayside and easily replaced
@@lukebuchwald9252 Spot on
Well said sir. You know your stuff.
People don't realize that Mike Tyson wasn't just one man. His trainers, coaches and management were ALL top notch! Cus and Kevin Rooney made Tyson!
@@octoman_games No doubt!!!