Lennox Lewis vs. Francois Botha

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The Homecoming
Date15 July 2000
VenueLondon Arena, Millwall, London, UK
Title(s) on the lineWBC, IBF, and IBO heavyweight titles
Tale of the tape
Boxer United Kingdom Lennox Lewis South Africa Francois Botha
Nickname "The Lion" "The White Buffalo"
Hometown West Ham, London, UK Pretoria, Gauteng, South Africa
Pre-fight record 36–1–1 (28 KO) 40–2–1 (1) (24 KO)
Age 34 years, 10 months 31 years, 9 months
Height 6 ft 5 in (196 cm) 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Weight 250 lb (113 kg) 236 lb (107 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition WBC, IBF and IBO
Heavyweight Champion
TKO

Lennox Lewis vs. Francois Botha, billed as The Homecoming, was a

technical knockout to retain his heavyweight titles.[1]

Background

Following an easy victory over the previously undefeated Michael Grant on 29 April, Lennox Lewis agreed to make his next defense against South African contender Francois Botha. The fight was also announced to take place in Lewis' native London, making it his first championship fight there since being defeated by Oliver McCall in 1994.[2] Botha, meanwhile, was coming off an impressive performance against Mike Tyson in which he dominated the former undisputed champion for four rounds before Tyson was able to land a quick right hand in the fifth round to earn a knockout victory. Botha then fought a close majority draw with fellow heavyweight contender Shannon Briggs and earned an easy first-round knockout victory over journeyman Steve Pannell before landing the championship fight with Lewis. Lewis, however, faced criticism for choosing to face Botha, who was ranked at number nine by the WBC and not ranked at all by the IBF. Though Botha came into the fight as a huge underdog, he remained confident that he could defeat Lewis stating "If I don’t knock him out, it’s going to be a terrible beating."[3]

On the undercard highly regarded contender Wladimir Klitschko (WBC/WBA:3rd IBF:7th) stopped Monte Barrett (IBF:12th WBC:13th) in the 7th round after knocking him down 5 times.

The fight

Like in his previous fight with Grant, Lewis would make short work of Botha. Lewis dominated the duration of the fight, landing 24 of his 47 thrown punches while Botha only managed to land nine punches through the entire fight while opting to take a more defensive approach. With one minute left in the first round, Lewis staggered Botha with a right hook, but Botha managed to stay on his feet and avoid the knockdown. Lewis attempted to capitalize and pursued Botha aggressively in an attempt to gain a knockdown, but Botha was able to weather Lewis' attack by clinching and survived the first round without being knocked down. In the second round, Botha tried to keep his distance from Lewis and offered very little offence in the round. With about 40 seconds left in the round, Lewis was able to land a powerful four punch combination that knocked Botha halfway out of the ring. Botha crawled back in and was able to get back on his feet but was clearly hurt from the exchange, prompting referee Larry O'Connell to stop the fight, handing Lewis his second consecutive second-round knockout victory.[4]

Aftermath

After the bout Lewis responded to Mike Tyson's comments after his victory over Lou Savarese in Glasgow the previous month saying "Tell Mike Tyson to either put up or shut up. He's been talking about what he can eat," before he held up his right hand and said "I'll show him what he can eat."[5]

Undercard

Confirmed bouts:[6]

Broadcasting

Country Broadcaster
 United Kingdom Sky Sports
 United States HBO

References

  1. ^ "Lennox Lewis vs. Francois Botha". boxrec.com/. BoxRec. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  2. ^ Lewis to Fight Botha in London, N.Y. Times article, 2000-05–19, Retrieved on 2013-06-26
  3. ^ Preview of Lennox Lewis-Frans Botha Bout, ABC News article, 2000-07–15, Retrieved on 2013-06-26
  4. ^ Lewis Keeps Title While Tyson Waits, N.Y. Times article, 2000-07–16, Retrieved on 2013-06-26
  5. ^ "For Lewis, the talk turns to Tyson". espn.com. LONDON: Associated Press. 16 July 2000. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  6. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by Lennox Lewis' bouts
15 July 2000
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. Steve Pannell
Francois Botha's bouts
15 July 2000
Succeeded by
vs. Tony LaRosa