Tyson fight cancelled

Published 12:00 am Tuesday, February 18, 2003

LAS VEGAS -- Mike Tyson's fight with Clifford Etienne was called off Monday, following a week of erratic behavior that once again raised questions about the boxing future of the 36-year-old former heavyweight champion.

After waiting for days for Tyson to give them some sort of signal on his willingness to fight, Tyson's handlers finally pulled the plug on the scheduled Saturday fight after the fighter missed a flight to Memphis for the second day in a row.

The official word was that Tyson was too sick to fight. But even before he became ill on Friday, Tyson had left his trainer waiting for him at the gym for three straight days and had gotten a large tattoo on the left side of his face.

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Tyson's manager, Shelly Finkel, still held out hope earlier Monday that Tyson would get on a plane to Memphis, but after Tyson missed the plane for a second day in a row he and the Showtime cable network had little choice but to cancel the fight.

There were no immediate plans to reschedule the bout.

Trainer Freddie Roach said he talked briefly to Tyson on the phone Monday, who told him a doctor was at his house examining him. Roach has not seen Tyson since he began skipping workouts last Wednesday, the day after he got his new tattoo.

Once the most fearsome heavyweight around, Tyson has shown little indication tn fight in recent years and has lost three of his last nine fights, two by knockout.

Tyson has fought an average of only five rounds a year in the last 5 1/2 years -- and eight of those came while he was taking a beating in his fight last June against heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis.

''Everybody should just throw up their hands and let this guy live whatever life he has. Forget about putting him in the ring,'' rival promoter Bob Arum said. ''It's almost cruel now.''

The bout with Etienne was supposed to be both a comeback fight and a tuneup fight for a possible June 21 rematch with Lewis. But unless Tyson's fight with Etienne is quickly rescheduled, Lewis would likely look elsewhere for a June opponent.

''You can't analyze it on a rational basis,'' Arum said. ''If he's displeased with what he was getting paid he should have let someone know early on. First of all, you don't tattoo your face.''

Jay Larkin, who heads boxing for the Showtime cable network, said on Sunday that it might be possible to reschedule a Tyson fight for late March.

Showtime had planned an elaborate night of entertainment and was planning to sell the entire evening of events on pay-per-view for nonsubscribers.

Ticket sales in Memphis had reportedly been decent, though they were helped by a 2-for-1 sale on many of the seats.

Brian Young, one of the local promoters, said 10,700 tickets had been sold for the fight, but that ticket sales dried up over the weekend as speculation mounted that Tyson would not fight.

Just hours before the fight was officially called off, Young was still optimistic it would happen. Etienne was due into town Monday night, and Young said he was hopeful Tyson would arrive soon after.

''Memphis loves Mike Tyson,'' he said. ''We're expecting 14-15,000 people dying to see Mike Tyson on Saturday.''