Date | September 19, 1998 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBA/IBF Heavyweight Championships | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Boxer | Evander Holyfield | Vaughn Bean | |
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Nickname | "The Real Deal" | "Shake and Bake" | |
Hometown | Atlanta, Georgia | Chicago, Illinois | |
Pre-fight record | 35–3 | 31–1 | |
Weight | 217 lb | 231 lb | |
Style | Orthodox | Orthodox | |
Recognition |
WBA/IBF Heavyweight Champion |
IBF #1 Ranked Heavyweight |
Evander Holyfield vs. Vaughn Bean, billed as "The Power and the Glory", was a professional boxing match contested on September 19, 1998 for the WBA and IBF heavyweight titles.
WBA and IBF heavyweight champion Evander Holyfield had embarked on one of the more successful comebacks in boxing history. Holyfield had lost two of his last four fights before landing a WBA heavyweight title shot against Mike Tyson. Though Holyfield came into the fight as an overwhelming underdog (Odds opened at 28–1 in favor of Tyson before dropping to 6–1 by the time of the fight) Holyfield was able to score one of the biggest upset victories in the history of the sport after defeating Tyson in the 11th round by technical knockout. In 1997, Holyfield would successfully defend his newly won title after Tyson was disqualified for biting both of his ears. After that, Holyfield agreed to a unification match with IBF heavyweight champion Michael Moorer, who had previously defeated Holyfield over three years prior to capture the WBA and IBF titles. Hoylfield would avenge his previous loss to Moorer, gaining five knockdowns over him before the fight was stopped after the eighth round. With Holyfield now once again in possession of two of boxing's major heavyweight titles, talks for a unification match with Lennox Lewis, who held the WBC heavyweight title, began. However, the two sides were unable to reach a deal and Lewis moved on to face lineal heavyweight champion Shannon Briggs Left with little choice, Holyfield was matched up against the WBA's number one contender and mandatory challenger Henry Akinwande. Before the match could take place, Akinwande was diagnosed with hepatitis B and the bout was postponed and eventually cancelled. Instead, Holyfield moved on to face another mandatory challenger Vaughn Bean, who was the IBF's number one contender. Bean came into the fight with a 32–1 record but nearly all of his wins were against low quality fighters with losing records. The combined records of the fighters Bean had faced was an abysmal 152–294–14 and only four of the fighters he had faced had a winning record by the time of his fight with Holyfield. His only loss, however, was a close majority decision against then-IBF heavyweight champion Michael Moorer in what would be Moorer's second and final successful defense before dropping the IBF title to Holyfield in his next fight.