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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Never A Punch In Anger Bowe And Holyfield Hit It Off Despite Their Two Brutal Battles In The Ring

Tim Kawakami Los Angeles Times

In 24 rounds of action, Riddick Bowe and Evander Holyfield have opened cuts and blasted at each other with abandon, ducked para-gliders and exchanged the heavyweight boxing title twice.

And have become friends?

Apparently, yes, if the chuckles and grins throughout this week as the two prepared for tonight’s pay-per-view second rematch at Caesars Palace are any indication.

“I think I like you more and more,” a jovial Bowe told Holyfield after Thursday’s weigh-in.

Joked Lou Duva, Holyfield’s former trainer, “They’re so friendly up there, it looks like they’re going out dancing together tonight.”

Bowe and Holyfield, the dominant heavyweights during Mike Tyson’s prison term, stood together against Tyson and Don King in the battle over this date and could be forgiven if they feel as if they have notched a victory already this week.

Tuesday, a fractured right thumb caused Tyson to cancel his competing bout against Buster Mathis Jr., triggering several days of celebration by the Bowe-Holyfield promotion, which could have been hit hard by the planned Tyson telecast on Fox.

But Bowe and Holyfield, two generally good-natured fighters, who split their two earlier bouts against each other, clearly have a bond that goes beyond the Tyson tension.

“Bowe’s always saying complimentary things,” Holyfield said. “It’s not about who wins - we’re friends. I understand that, too.”

For Bowe and Holyfield, the two 12-round battles they have engaged in, the championships they have won and lost and the battles back from defeat signify their twin status as elite heavyweights who have worked their way to their place in the pay-per-view upper strata.

Holyfield is guaranteed a purse of $8 million for the bout. Bowe’s share will be based on the pay-per-view sales and is expected to easily top $10 million.

If the series doesn’t quite measure up to the legendary Ali-Frazier trilogy of the ‘70s, in the current boxing malaise it towers over the rest of the sport’s usual drudgery.

In November 1992, Bowe was a young and relatively untested challenger, who used his 6-foot-5, 235-pound frame to muscle the smaller Holyfield in an unanimous-decision victory to capture the undisputed title.

In November 1993, Holyfield outworked the bulkier Bowe (who had ballooned up to 280 pounds before the fight and came in at 245), caught a break when the infamous “Fan Man” crashed into the ring ropes during the seventh round, causing a 20-minute delay, and earned his own unanimous decision to win the International Boxing Federation and World Boxing Association titles.

During the delay, Bowe watched his wife, Judy, who was pregnant, getting carried out of the arena on a stretcher after fainting when the para-glider crashed near her seat.

After that, Holyfield lost his titles to Michael Moorer, then ended a short retirement when a congenital heart problem disappeared. Now comes Bowe-Holyfield III, scheduled for 12 rounds.

For various political and practical reasons, this won’t be a title bout (though Bowe holds the lightly regarded World Boxing Organization belt). But in the wake of the Tyson re-emergence and stop-and-start comeback, it might be the most important of the three Bowe-Holyfield bouts.

The winner, clearly, becomes the man Tyson must ultimately face in order to prove his legitimacy.

Bowe weighed in at a surprisingly light 240 pounds for this fight and looked almost stringy with his shirt off. Bowe says he prepared for this fight with Holyfield-like determination.

“Everybody can say how good they are, but the track record has to show it,” Holyfield said. “It’s a proven point. We’re the best two heavyweights fighting today.

“I just want to prove I still have the abilities to beat the best there is.”

The 32-year-old Holyfield, for his part, has predicted not only that he will defeat Bowe, but that he will knock him out.

Bowe, 28, says he appreciates Holyfield’s warrior mentality, and desire, as a relatively little heavyweight who came up from the cruiserweight division, to knock off the bigger man.

“There’s no doubt Bowe is one of the most talented big guys that ever put on the gloves,” Holyfield said. “So when you’ve got a talented big guy with the skills he possesses, I have to be on or get wiped out.

“He has the skills of a little man and the power of a big man. Yes, I can outspeed him, but at some point I have to come into his power range.”

Holyfield’s stubbornness, matched with his fast hands and heavy punches, are what has made the series special, Bowe says.

“I think it’s styles, it’s the heart, and wanting to be the best,” Bowe said. “We all know that Evander Holyfield has no quit in him, and I’ve tried to show people I’ve got no quit in me, no matter what. Evander, you hit him, he’ll hit you back.

“And you have that big man-little man thing. Evander wants to prove he can be the big guy. And I’m out to prove I can beat them all, big and small.”

MEMO: On TV Cox Cable will show the fight on pay-per-view for $44.95. Call 489-9000.

On TV Cox Cable will show the fight on pay-per-view for $44.95. Call 489-9000.