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Roy Jones Jr. vs. Mike McCallum

Roy Jones Jr. vs. Mike McCallum, billed as Fire on Ice, was a professional boxing match contested on November 22, 1996 for the interim WBC light heavyweight championship.[1] It was Jones' first fight in the light heavyweight division.

Fire on Ice
DateNovember 22, 1996
VenueIce Palace, Tampa, Florida, U.S.
Title(s) on the lineWBC interim light heavyweight title
Tale of the tape
Boxer Roy Jones Jr. Mike McCallum
Nickname "Junior" "The Body Snatcher"
Hometown Pensacola, Florida, U.S. Kingston, Surrey, Jamaica
Purse $2,800,000 $750,000
Pre-fight record 33–0 (29 KO) 49–3–1 (36 KO)
Age 27 years, 10 months 39 years, 11 months
Height 5 ft 11 in (180 cm) 5 ft 11+12 in (182 cm)
Weight 173 lb (78 kg) 175 lb (79 kg)
Style Orthodox Orthodox
Recognition IBF
Super Middleweight Champion
The Ring No. 1 ranked pound-for-pound fighter
2-division world champion
WBC
No. 1 Ranked Light Heavyweight
3-division world champion
Result
Jones Jr. wins via 12-round unanimous decision (120-107, 120-107, 120-107)

Background

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As the current WBC light heavyweight champion Fabrice Tiozzo decided whether to remain a light heavyweight or move up to the cruiserweight division, the WBC organized a match for the interim WBC light heavyweight title between 39–year old number-one contender, Mike McCallum (whom Tiozzo had defeated for the title) and the reigning IBF super middleweight champion Roy Jones Jr., who was making his light heavyweight debut and was also regarded by The Ring as the number one pound-for-pound fighter in boxing. The future hall-of-famer McCallum was the underdog for one of the only times in his professional career and McCallum himself admitted that he "have to utilize everything I have if I'm going to win."[2]

Prior to the fight, controversy arose when the WBC and the Florida State Athletic Commission feuded over whose officials would judge the fight. Neither side budged and, ultimately, two sets of judge's, one from each organization, would score the fight. The official judges were from the FSAC, however the WBC judges would score the fight from the first row of the media section and WBC president José Sulaimán made it known that the organization would go by their judges scorecards, regardless if the FSAC judges ruled in favor of a different fighter then the WBC judges.[3]

The fight

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Jones was not as aggressive as he had been in some of his past fights, choosing to fight McCallum cautiously for the most part. McCallum, though, had difficulty with the younger and quicker Jones and despite throwing 651 punches, 116 more than Jones, he connected with only 209 for a 32% success rate. Jones, meanwhile, landed nearly half of his thrown punches, connecting with 254 of 535 punches for a 47% success rate. Jones also scored the lone knockdown in the fight. Just before the end of the tenth round, Jones connected with a right to McCallum's jaw that put him down on the seat of his pants, however McCallum was able to quickly get back to his feet. The bout went the full 12 rounds and as a result went to the judge's scorecards. The official FSAC judges had Jones winning all 12 rounds and scored the bout 120–107. The WBC judges were also unanimously in favor of Jones, albeit with three different scores of 119–108, 117–110 and 116–111.[4]

Aftermath

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Shortly after his victory, Jones "interim" tag was removed and he was upgraded to full championship status as Tiozzo officially vacated his light heavyweight title and moved to the cruiserweight division. Jones' first light heavyweight title reign would not last long. In his next fight on March 21, 1997, Jones was disqualified after hitting his opponent Montell Griffin as he was down on one knee, becoming Jones' first loss as a professional. Jones, however, would knock out Griffin in a rematch later in the year and held the WBC light heavyweight title (eventually unifying it with the WBA and IBF versions along the way) until 2003 when he moved up to the heavyweight division.

The bout would prove to be the final title fight of McCallum's career. After his loss to Jones, he would fight only one more time, losing by unanimous decision to James Toney in the third fight of their trilogy before announcing his retirement with a 49–5–1 record.

Undercard

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Confirmed bouts:[5]

Jones defeated Barrera by disqualification in round five to win WBO Super Bantamweight title
Cole defeated Charleston by knockout in round one

Broadcasting

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Country Broadcaster
  United Kingdom British Eurosport
  United States HBO

References

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  1. ^ "Roy Jones Jr. vs. Mike McCallum". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
  2. ^ McCallum in for fight of his life vs. Jones, Las Vegas Sun article, 1996-11-14, Retrieved on 2014-02-03
  3. ^ Jones-McCallum `Title' Bout Doesn't Help This Sport's Sorry Situation, Chicago Tribune article, 1996-11-24, Retrieved on 2014-02-03
  4. ^ Jones Jr. Wins W.B.C. Title, N.Y. Times article, 1996-11-23, Retrieved on 2014-02-01
  5. ^ "BoxRec - event".
Preceded by
vs. Bryant Brannon
Roy Jones Jr.'s bouts
22 November 1996
Succeeded by
Preceded by
vs. Ali Saidi
Mike McCallum's bouts
22 November 1996
Succeeded by
vs. James Toney III