From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Maske vs. Iran Barkley
DateOctober 8, 1994
Venue Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, Germany
Title(s) on the line IBF light heavyweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Henry Maske Iran Barkley
Nickname Gentleman The Blade
Hometown Cologne, Germany The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Pre-fight record 24–0 33–9
Age 30 years, 9 months 34 years, 5 months
Height 6 ft 2+12 in (189 cm) 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 174 lb (79 kg) 172 lb (78 kg)
Style Southpaw Orthodox
Recognition IBF light heavyweight champion 3–division world champion
Result
Maske wins via 9th-round RTD

Henry Maske vs. Iran Barkley was a professional boxing match contested on October 8, 1994, for the IBF light heavyweight title.

Background

Iran Barkley's last title match had occurred the previous February when he defended his IBF super middleweight against James Toney. Toney dominated Barkley, winning every round, before the fight was called off after the ninth round, giving Toney a victory by referee technical decision. [1] Forced to go down the comeback trail, Barkley, now fighting as a heavyweight, landed a fight against light heavyweight contender Adolpho Washington that was broadcast nationally on ESPN on October 20, 1993. Barkley struggled against Washington and by the sixth round, his left eye was swollen shut forcing the referee to stop the fight and award Washington the victory. [2]

Following the loss to Washington, Barkley joined forces with former heavyweight champion Tommy Morrison in April 1994 to start the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based boxing promotional firm aptly named Team Tulsa. [3] Barkley, fighting as a cruiserweight, won his first fight as a member of Team Tulsa, easily dispatching Rick Enis via fourth-round knockout. [4] Following this victory, Barkley was offered a title shot against the undefeated reigning IBF light heavyweight Henry Maske to take place in October 1994 in Maske's native Germany provided Barkley first win his scheduled match against Gary Butler. [5] Barkley would defeat Butler on July 22, 1994, officially putting the Maske–Barkley fight on. Though Maske was a perfect 24–0, he was largely unknown in the United States with his most notable opponent being Charles Williams, whom he had defeated in March 1993 to capture the IBF light heavyweight title. Barkley was unimpressed with the little-known Maske stating "I've seen the tape. What I saw was an out-of-shape Prince Charles. I'll take care of this guy."

The now-34-year old Barkley, whom had to drop 15 pounds to get down from cruiserweight back to light heavyweight, was given little chance to defeat Maske by both his home country and Germany. Las Vegas oddsmakers made Barkley a sizeable 10–1 underdog, while German media, Barkley claimed, had derided him as "soft and washed up" when he had visited the country for a press-tour to promote the fight. Despite this, Barkley remained confident in his abilities proclaiming to the media "Every big fight I've been in, I've been the underdog. I never have cared what anyone else thinks of me. Maske knows what I'm about, he knows my style. I'll jump on him like a grizzly bear and see if he can take it. I don't think he can." [6]

The fight

A badly outmatched Barkley struggled to keep up with Maske and had trouble landing any offense on the champion while Maske landed punches almost at will. Much like his last title fight against Toney, Barkley lost every round as Maske dominated the fight, opening up a big gash on Barkley's lip and hammering him with punches that completely shut his left eye. After Maske had a dominating ninth round in which Barkley offered little offensively or defensively, Barkley's trainer Tommy Virgets informed Barkley that he would stop the fight. Though Barkley insisted on continuing the fight, he was overruled and the fight was stopped with Maske named the winner by technical decision. [7]

Ultimately the fight would prove to be Barkley's final title shot.

Fight card

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. Henry Maske (c) def Iran Barkley RTD 9/12 Note 1
Super Welterweight 154 lbs. Salvador Yanez def. Reiner Gies TKO 2/10
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Željko Mavrović def. Marion Wilson PTS 8/8

^Note 1 For IBF light heavyweight title

References

  1. ^ Toney takes title from Barkley, UPI article, 1993-02-14 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  2. ^ Washington Cuts Down Barkley, The Sun Herald article, 1993-10-21 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  3. ^ Morrison Camp Unveils `Team Tulsa' Plans, Tulsa World article, 1994-04-28 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  4. ^ Barkley Marks His Comeback With Knockout, Tulsa World article, 1994-05-25 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  5. ^ Barkley Gets Opportunity To Win Fourth World Title, Tulsa World article, 1994-07-14 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  6. ^ Team Tulsa's Last-Chance World Tour, Tulsa World article, 1994-10-02 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  7. ^ Barkley Dispatched By Maske, Tulsa World article, 2004-05-09 Retrieved on 2024-07-25
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Maske vs. Iran Barkley
DateOctober 8, 1994
Venue Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, Germany
Title(s) on the line IBF light heavyweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Henry Maske Iran Barkley
Nickname Gentleman The Blade
Hometown Cologne, Germany The Bronx, New York, U.S.
Pre-fight record 24–0 33–9
Age 30 years, 9 months 34 years, 5 months
Height 6 ft 2+12 in (189 cm) 6 ft 1 in (185 cm)
Weight 174 lb (79 kg) 172 lb (78 kg)
Style Southpaw Orthodox
Recognition IBF light heavyweight champion 3–division world champion
Result
Maske wins via 9th-round RTD

Henry Maske vs. Iran Barkley was a professional boxing match contested on October 8, 1994, for the IBF light heavyweight title.

Background

Iran Barkley's last title match had occurred the previous February when he defended his IBF super middleweight against James Toney. Toney dominated Barkley, winning every round, before the fight was called off after the ninth round, giving Toney a victory by referee technical decision. [1] Forced to go down the comeback trail, Barkley, now fighting as a heavyweight, landed a fight against light heavyweight contender Adolpho Washington that was broadcast nationally on ESPN on October 20, 1993. Barkley struggled against Washington and by the sixth round, his left eye was swollen shut forcing the referee to stop the fight and award Washington the victory. [2]

Following the loss to Washington, Barkley joined forces with former heavyweight champion Tommy Morrison in April 1994 to start the Tulsa, Oklahoma-based boxing promotional firm aptly named Team Tulsa. [3] Barkley, fighting as a cruiserweight, won his first fight as a member of Team Tulsa, easily dispatching Rick Enis via fourth-round knockout. [4] Following this victory, Barkley was offered a title shot against the undefeated reigning IBF light heavyweight Henry Maske to take place in October 1994 in Maske's native Germany provided Barkley first win his scheduled match against Gary Butler. [5] Barkley would defeat Butler on July 22, 1994, officially putting the Maske–Barkley fight on. Though Maske was a perfect 24–0, he was largely unknown in the United States with his most notable opponent being Charles Williams, whom he had defeated in March 1993 to capture the IBF light heavyweight title. Barkley was unimpressed with the little-known Maske stating "I've seen the tape. What I saw was an out-of-shape Prince Charles. I'll take care of this guy."

The now-34-year old Barkley, whom had to drop 15 pounds to get down from cruiserweight back to light heavyweight, was given little chance to defeat Maske by both his home country and Germany. Las Vegas oddsmakers made Barkley a sizeable 10–1 underdog, while German media, Barkley claimed, had derided him as "soft and washed up" when he had visited the country for a press-tour to promote the fight. Despite this, Barkley remained confident in his abilities proclaiming to the media "Every big fight I've been in, I've been the underdog. I never have cared what anyone else thinks of me. Maske knows what I'm about, he knows my style. I'll jump on him like a grizzly bear and see if he can take it. I don't think he can." [6]

The fight

A badly outmatched Barkley struggled to keep up with Maske and had trouble landing any offense on the champion while Maske landed punches almost at will. Much like his last title fight against Toney, Barkley lost every round as Maske dominated the fight, opening up a big gash on Barkley's lip and hammering him with punches that completely shut his left eye. After Maske had a dominating ninth round in which Barkley offered little offensively or defensively, Barkley's trainer Tommy Virgets informed Barkley that he would stop the fight. Though Barkley insisted on continuing the fight, he was overruled and the fight was stopped with Maske named the winner by technical decision. [7]

Ultimately the fight would prove to be Barkley's final title shot.

Fight card

Weight Class Weight vs. Method Round Notes
Light Heavyweight 175 lbs. Henry Maske (c) def Iran Barkley RTD 9/12 Note 1
Super Welterweight 154 lbs. Salvador Yanez def. Reiner Gies TKO 2/10
Heavyweight 200+ lbs. Željko Mavrović def. Marion Wilson PTS 8/8

^Note 1 For IBF light heavyweight title

References

  1. ^ Toney takes title from Barkley, UPI article, 1993-02-14 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  2. ^ Washington Cuts Down Barkley, The Sun Herald article, 1993-10-21 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  3. ^ Morrison Camp Unveils `Team Tulsa' Plans, Tulsa World article, 1994-04-28 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  4. ^ Barkley Marks His Comeback With Knockout, Tulsa World article, 1994-05-25 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  5. ^ Barkley Gets Opportunity To Win Fourth World Title, Tulsa World article, 1994-07-14 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  6. ^ Team Tulsa's Last-Chance World Tour, Tulsa World article, 1994-10-02 Retrieved on 2024-07-26
  7. ^ Barkley Dispatched By Maske, Tulsa World article, 2004-05-09 Retrieved on 2024-07-25

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