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A boxer trains in isolation, and the sport per se offers an individual journey. The solitude triggers an appreciation for those who went before. Even some of the greatest looked up to names in the era bygone, drawing inspiration as they create their legacy. Mike Tyson broke the thirty-year-old record of Floyd Patterson by becoming the youngest Heavyweight champion at age twenty. He inspired a generation of boxers and fans as the most formidable knockout artist of the era. But which knockout he took as an example?

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Muhammad Ali remains the signature representative of boxing. Mike Tyson often quotes Ali as one of the greatest influences of his life. In the post-Ali era, boxing and the Heavyweight division, in particular, lacked a face, a symbol to carry forward the greatest’s legacy. Mike Tyson emerged to fill in the vacuum. The youngster refined his techniques at Cus D’Amato‘s workshop. He rode on the back of twenty-five knockouts when he became the WBC Heavyweight champion on November 22, 1986.

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The ‘Iron’ knockout, which a young Mike Tyson held in high regard

If given a chance, one might wonder who the boxing wonder, in his prime, will hand-pick his favorite knockout of all time. During an interview, he was asked, “What was your favorite knockout of all time?” ‘Iron’ Mike responded, “My favorite knockout, I have to recall, is Jersey Joe Walcott, when he was knocked out by Joe Louis in the eleventh round. My reason because a year previous, they fought, and Walcott gave him a beating, outboxed him, outsmarted him, and at the end of the fight, they gave the decision to Joe Luis, which a lot of people felt was [being] justified wrongly.

On December 5, 1947, Joe Louis, then thirty-three, met Jersey Joe Walcott in New York’s Madison Square Garden. Despite being the underdog, Walcott surprised everyone by sending Louis down to canvas twice during the initial rounds. But it took the winds out of everyone upon learning that Louis won by a split decision despite what looked like an apparent underperformance. Hence to dissuade all naysayers and retire as a title holder, Joe Louis agreed to a rematch next year.

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The final steps of a legend

The duo met again on June 25, 1948, in New York’s Yankee Stadium. Like the previous installment, Walcott knocked down Louis in the third round. But ‘The Brown Bomber’ stopped the fight in the eleventh round. Two years later, he came back from retirement to face Ezzard Charles, who defeated him, Louis’ second career loss. Joe Louis continued for one more year, finally bidding goodbye to the sport after Rocky Marciano knocked him out on October 26, 1951.

Read More: “I Used To Be A Cold-Blooded Vegan”: Mike Tyson And Podcaster Joe Rogan Discuss The Benefits Of Eating Meat

Which is your favorite knockout of all time? Please share the details with us in the comments section below.

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Jaideep R Unnithan

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Jaideep R. Unnithan is a Senior Boxing Writer at EssentiallySports and one of the division’s most trusted voices. Since joining in October 2022, he has brought a deep love for the sport into every story, whether reporting on live bouts with the ES LiveEvent Desk or unpacking the legacy of fighters from different eras as part of the features desk. Trained under EssentiallySports’ prestigious Journalistic Excellence Program, which is a specialized training initiative designed to refine top writers' skills through mentorship and advanced sports journalism techniques, Jaideep’s writing reflects a quiet authority shaped by two years of covering boxing’s flashpoints and fault lines. He is drawn to the warrior code of legends like Alexis Argüello and Marvin Hagler, while also staying attuned to the promise of rising stars like Jesse 'Bam' Rodriguez, David Benavidez, and Dmitry Bivol. Jaideep has a special fascination with Naoya Inoue’s old-school grit. Beyond writing, he reads widely, a habit that sharpens his storytelling, whether he’s tracing the rhythm of a classic fight or preparing his next ringside dispatch. Before joining EssentiallySports, Jaideep worked as a client manager and team manager in corporate roles, bringing strong organizational and communication skills to his journalistic career. He has also completed notable certifications, including a Non-Fiction Book Writing Workshop.

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Arijit Saha

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