Timekeeper allows you to keep articles so you can read them when you have the time.
close ad

Mike Tyson: “If I fought Mike Tyson I could beat him”

June 22, 2011

Mr. Tyson, what are your biggest regrets?

Well, there are not many regrets that I have, but there are a few things that I wish I could have changed in my life. Not many, but if I could sneak those few out, I would do it.

What was the greatest moment and the most painful moment of your career?

I never look at a high point in my career. I don’t look at it like there’s one definitive moment of my career and that is what made me. Everybody always says it’s the Spinks fight, but it’s very difficult to say that’s the high point – it only lasted 91 seconds – so it’s hard to say that fight really defined who I was in my career.

Can you explain the attraction you had to boxing? What was it that it gave you?

Some kind of bizarre spiritual thing. I always looked at it as if I was some guy, some barbaric king coming to conquer the Roman Empire. It was something I wanted and I was going to take it.

And one day that desire just disappeared?

Yeah.

Do you still love boxing?

I’m pretty disillusioned with it. I’m not into boxing that much anymore.

Why aren’t you into it anymore?

No excitement. Maybe it’s just me. Maybe there are exciting fighters and I’m just not into it anymore. I’ve just detached myself from it somewhat, because it’s too personal being involved.

Don’t you miss the adrenaline rush of walking into the ring?

No, I never want that again. For me it was a lot of trouble. I felt that I could do anything. The feeling of being invincible, I felt like I could walk down the street and do whatever I wanted. I was just too young for that; I wasn’t experienced enough to deal with that.

Back in your day, heavyweight boxing was big news. Now it doesn’t seem to have the popular appeal that it had before. Why did that change?

Well it doesn’t have the character. Every part of entertainment needs a character. If you don’t have a character…being skillful, that’s nice too, but it’s more than being very skillful. You have to have a personality and boxing doesn’t have a personality.

What’s it like seeing yourself box?

I hate it. Because even if people see knockouts, I see all the mistakes that I made. “Oh my God… I have my hand down, I didn’t move my head, I didn’t do this and that.” When I look at my fights I always say: if I fought Mike Tyson I could beat him. If I look at me from outside, I could certainly beat me.

What is the biggest misconception the public has about your persona?

(Long pause) I don’t know. You have to name a few and I could respond to them.

What about people who think you’re a hero?

I don’t know. I just try to live my life and just be who I am. Like if they really accept me they have to accept me as I am, you know what I mean? My highs and my lows and my vulnerabilities… it’s who I am as a human being. It’s who I am. It’s not for me to put on a front, you know, “This is my acting front, this is my private front.” I’m just an all-out type of individual and that’s what you get.

After fights you sometimes said: “I am like a god in the ring.” Would you agree that you were a little bit of an actor back in those days?

It has a great deal of that involved, because you are in a role. For every particular role you have to be disciplined and in that particular time you have to be that killer. You have to have the discipline to pull if off.

When do you feel the weakest?

What the hell are you talking about?

Was there a moment in your life when you thought about giving up?

No I wasn’t thinking about giving up. Giving up crossed my mind every now and then but then I’d think about the people who would be so happy I gave up and then I’d get pissed off.

When you are furious can anyone control you?

I stop me.

Why did you choose to get a Māori tattoo on your face? Do you have an affinity with the Māori people?

Not really. I didn’t even know who they were at first until someone explained it to me. I saw this tattoo in a book. I thought it was a pretty awesome tattoo and I wanted to have it on my face.

What’s happening with your future? Do you have plans about what you want to do? Do you want to stay close to boxing at all?

No, I am not getting involved in boxing at all. I don’t want to participate in it in any sense, at least not at this point of my life. I have been doing a lot of travelling lately. I am enjoying travelling, seeing the world.

What’s it like being such a recognizable person, especially as you travel the world. Can you disappear?

I don’t know. When I go home I do.

If you don’t box anymore, do you do any other sports for yourself?

No, I don’t do anything. I was never into sports. I started boxing at such a young age but I have never done any other sports my whole life. I am not even a sports fan in particular. I may watch the finals of basketball or the Super Bowl, but I don’t have the patience to watch normal events. I wait for the final till the teams really fight. I wait for the excitement.

Return to Top
Read this interview later
Read this interview later Read this interview later

Short Profile

Name: Michael Gerard Tyson
DOB:
30 June 1966
Place of Birth:
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Occupation: Boxer

Audio Sample

Topics

Comments

write a comment, read comments

12 Responses to this Interview

  1. I didn’t expect Mike Tyson to actually be able to form sentences. I’m surprised.

    • Corey,
      Who are you? You’re a nobody. Tyson was heavyweight champion, his name defines boxing, and an era, and you don’t expect him to form sentences? You fool.

    • Corey is the guy who never became a man

    • Corey, Mike Tyson was always very good at speaking English. If you see his interviews when he was young, you would be surprised how well spoken he was. Besides, he read some serious literature as well, and is considered very well read, both in boxing and literature to a certain extent.
      And this is where the problem is: you have his name, and his history in mind, without any information; and you form an opinion on him, based on pure ignorance. Never do that!

  2. corey… pretty disrespectful and cliche’d comment…

  3. Spencer, I’ll second that.

  4. Corey, wow- He been in movies, tv show, lead a tv series, a pro boxer and gifted champion. What the F have you done. Uuummm nothing. Your offically a douche bag!

  5. I think tyson had the potential to be a great fighter,his lifestyle brought him down.had he not chosen the wrong path he would still been champion.

  6. I like how the majority of the comments are bashing this idiot Corey

  7. Just watched the undisputed truth before I read this interview. Even though he has made some mistakes in his life, he never truly gave up. His rollercoaster-life has given him some wisdom most people don’ t have.

  8. Wow, terrific interview!

Leave a Reply to spencer (Cancel reply)

Latest Interviews