Relentless And Crushing Olympic Hero Felix Savon Rejected Reported $20M For Mike Tyson Fight

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Don King had overseen fights between Muhammad Ali, George Foreman and Joe Frazier, but the fantasy fight between Ali and Teofilo Stevenson, Cuba’s three-time Olympic champion, remained out of his unmistakably tentacle-like reach.

Upon Tyson’s release from prison in 1995 – after serving three of the six years he was sentenced to when convicted of raping Desiree Washington – he remained so widely respected as a fighter that even Holyfield and Lewis were considered incapable of rivalling him as the world’s leading heavyweight.

The heavy-handed Savon had by then already won the first of what would be his three gold medals from three successive Olympic Games and, not unlike his revered compatriot, was considered potentially Tyson’s greatest threat.

Similarly to ‘Iron Mike’, who aged 20 had become the world’s youngest ever heavyweight champion, Savon, at 19, had established himself as a precocious talent when dominating the heavyweight division at the world championships in 1986. Also like Tyson, in his infancy he far from cut a natural fighter – he was a runner, and a rower, and when he told his mother that officials wanted him to box he was told by her not to come home.

 

Had Cuba not boycotted the ‘88 Games in Seoul he may well have won his first Olympic gold even earlier, but at a time when the tension and relationship between Cuba and the US remained delicate, the prospect of their leading fighter confronting America’s was too tempting a marketing opportunity to resist.

Savon, as patriotic as his right hand was potent, supported his country’s socialist regime, and to the extent that he rejected a reported $20m offer made by King to – against his country’s rules – defect and fight as a professional. Frank Warren, however – having seen Tyson retire Frank Bruno and Lewis sign with Panos Eliades – had been convinced that Tyson-Savon remained possible, and sanctioned an associate to travel to Cuba to infiltrate Savon’s inner circle, and ultimately to finally tempt him into a professional ring.

“Tyson was a strong brand, and Cuba was its own strong brand of rebels, revolutionaries and mischief makers, which appealed,” John Duncan, then a sports writer and Warren’s associate, told talkSPORT. “Savon was the unchallenged heavyweight champion with all the echoes of Stevenson, and Tyson was the unchallenged professional champion with all the echoes of Ali. Their status was such that there was a compelling idea to get something that should have happened 20 years before.

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“Tyson-Holyfield I was just before I left [for Cuba]. He’d lost the title but everyone thought, ‘He’ll win it back’. It wasn’t hard to sell Frank Warren on the idea. Frank’s a mischief maker himself, and also has a keen sense of the history of boxing. He’d just gone into that doomed partnership with Don King, so had access to Tyson. There wasn’t the same appeal [around Lewis] at that point.

 

“Savon worked quite hard to be a symbol of what Cuba wanted to present itself as, and Tyson didn’t try too hard to avoid being what people saw America as. Arrogant; violent; unyielding, and terrifying. The issue was whether or not you could ever get near enough to the Cubans to suggest it without getting arrested.”

Savon, a two-time Olympic champion by the time of Tyson’s shock defeat by Evander Holyfield, would win the amateur world championships a remarkable six successive times. His run ended in 1999 when Cuba walked out in protest at alleged refereeing injustices, by when, as the world’s leading amateur fighter, he had recorded victories over, among others, the respected George Kandelaki, Ruslan Chagaev, Kirk Johnson, David Tua, Shannon Briggs and Odlanier Solis.

Savon’s iconic status endures largely because, like Stevenson, he remained loyal to his country and resisted the riches on offer from America. His final fight, a victory over future WBO champion Sultan Ibragimov at Sydney 2000, earned him his third and final Olympic gold.

He celebrated by raising a national flag – given to him personally by Fidel Castro – above his head in triumph. He then left the sport behind 16 years after his first fight with a near-unrivalled record of 269 victories and only eight defeats.

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