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Wednesday Nov 12, 2008

Should he keep fighting? Does he have any other choice? Well, selling his Mega Mansion would seemingly be an easier route to solvency, but who are we to say? We just hope he doesn't get hurt.

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Holyfield Is Fighting For His Xanadu

By Bernard Fernandez

          In Xanadu did Kubla Khan

      A stately pleasure-dome decree.


           ---Samuel Coleridge



      Sadly, it has come to this for Evander Holyfield, proud warrior of so many epic battles won and lost.

      On Dec. 20, at some yet-to-be-determined venue in Switzerland, the aged (Holyfield turned 46 on Oct. 19) and the enormous (7-foot, 320-pound Russian Nikolay Valuev) will square off in an oddity of a prizefight that doesn’t even qualify as a circus act. Even the clowns with the bulbous, red noses, fright wigs and oversized shoes occasionally make it into center ring to entertain kids in an actual circus. No, this is more of a freakish sideshow attraction, the bearded lady throwing down with, well, the hairy giant. Feel free to stare in utter bewilderment.

      Oh, sure, some bejeweled trinket – Valuev’s WBA heavyweight championship belt – is on the line, but titles and title-holders these days are as devalued as most people’s incredibly shrinking 401k accounts. If the plodding Valuev were a foot shorter and 110 pounds lighter, which is to say nearly normal-sized, it’s difficult to imagine him winning a barroom fight with the neighborhood drunk.

      As Elvis Presley once sang in “Big Boss Man,” one of his lesser-known songs, “Well, you ain’t so big. You just tall, that’s all.”

      For many, Valuev’s emergence as a heavyweight worthy of the public’s consideration is reminiscent of the rise to prominence by Italy’s Primo Carnera, the “Ambling Alp,” in the 1930s. Carnera was gargantuan by the heavyweight standards of the era -- 6-51⁄2 and 265 pounds or so for many of his bouts – which dwarfed his opponents, most of whom would be cruiserweights today. He was big, he was slow, he was relatively unskilled, but far better fighters lost to him because he leaned on them, wore them down, made size the determining factor in a sport where adherence to weight classes supposedly ensures some measure of competitive balance.

      Carnera even held the heavyweight title briefly, but I don’t necessarily think of him whenever I watch Valuev stalk around like the star of a B-movie frightfest. I think of Boris Karloff as Frankenstein’s monster. All that’s missing from Valuev’s fights are the electrode bolts in his neck and angry villagers chasing him with pitchforks and torches.

      This screed, however, is not about Valuev’s overactive pituitary gland and, uh, pugilistic shortcomings. It’s about Holyfield’s debasement of his legacy in pursuit of some fast cash to continue funding his vanishing empire. It’s also about the boxing hierarchy’s belief that the public is so gullible, so naïve, that it will pay to see a “championship” bout that is more worthy of our pity than our fervor.

      A decade ago, the 6-2 1⁄2, 215-pound Holyfield would have taken a step-ladder into the ring and chopped down Valuev as if the Russian behemoth were a rotting, hollowed-out tree. On Dec. 20, the far greater likelihood is Valuev will finally put an end to “The Real Deal’s” boxing career in the more or less same manner that Trevor Berbick ended Muhammad Ali’s and Joey Archer ended Sugar Ray Robinson’s. It’s never pretty when once-great fighters far overstay their time.

      Holyfield, of course, will claim that he still has a fire in his inner furnace, that he still can win the undisputed heavyweight championship if he’s just allowed to continue his flagging career. He’ll insist that no one but he should determine when that career is finished. But the words will sound more empty than ever before, because no one is buying his cover story any longer.

      Not that any of what is said will make a difference because Evander Holyfield’s last marketable asset, his good name, is losing value faster than most people’s stock portfolios. He reportedly will receive $750,000 for the matchup with Valuev, a relative pittance that once upon a time would pay for maybe a half-round of his professional acumen.

      That amount – remember, taxes must come out of it and his cornermen must be paid – should be enough to cover a couple of months of child-support payments and maybe the most recent landscaping bill for his palatial estate in Fairburn, Ga.

      But the pages of the calendar inexorably turn and Holyfield will discover that there are no more fights to be fought, no more multimillion-dollar paychecks to be cashed. All that will be left are humiliation, foreclosure and perhaps even incarceration for failure to pay debts that at some point will pile higher than the top of Valuev’s head.

      And he will have no one to blame but himself for the mess. At least Mike Tyson, who also went through hundreds of millions of dollars until he was worse than broke, could claim he had been systematically bilked out of chunks of his fortune by promoter Don King, co-managers John Horne and Rory Holloway, and a platoon of leeching hangers-on.

      For Holyfield, the path to financial ruin was paved by his apparent need to constantly procreate, and to build for himself a personal Xanadu which would demonstrate to the world that the onetime minimum-wage worker (before he turned pro, he pumped gas at an Atlanta airport for $2.65 an hour) had not only made it big, but massively so.

      Only last month, Holyfield avoided possible jail time by agreeing to come current with the terms of his child-support payments for one of his 11 children. Toi Jenese Irvin, the mother of Holyfield’s 11-year-old son, Evan, in June had filed a petition for contempt in Fayette County (Ga.) Superior Court, claiming that Holyfield had missed two child-support payments totaling $6,000. Making matters worse for Holyfield, a Utah consulting company sued him for failing to repay a $550,000 debt.

      Creditors still are circling Holyfield like vultures over a parched, half-dead man crawling in the desert, but at least he has temporarily staved off one threat. In October he agreed to put $100,000, within three years, toward Evan’s education fund. He also agreed to pay for the boy’s private-school tuition in addition to maintaining the $3,000-per-month child support the court had mandated.

      “I do love my kids,” Holyfield said after both parties reached the accord. “I do want them to get a better education than I did, and I do all I can to support them.”

      So why would a fighter who earned $248 million in purses – $107 million of which came during a dizzying six-fight stretch from 1996 to ’99 – be taken to court on a chump-change matter of a few thousand dollars in late child-support payments?

      “I’m not broke,” Holyfield said in explaining why he keeps finding himself in arrears. “I’m just not liquid.”

      That is a way of saying that the bulk of Holyfield’s money is tied up in his mansion, a 109-room monument to conspicuous consumption that stands on a 235-acre tract of Georgia’s priciest real estate. With the cost of the land, it took Holyfield nearly $60 million to construct his stately pleasure-dome. Since then he has taken out two additional mortgages, totaling $5 million.

      The cost of maintaining such an estate is considerable, as you might imagine, and then there’s the matter of child support, which some have estimated socks Holyfield to the tune of $500,000 annually.

      But don’t think that Holyfield’s considerable expenses are restricted to his sumptuous home and his children. He has contributed substantial sums to evangelical causes, a college fund for minority students and a community center.

      So why doesn’t Holyfield just sell his home, which was and is his principal asset? That would liquefy his financial situation in a hurry.

      “To suggest he get rid of it … that’s just not going to fly with him,” said Holyfield’s former accountant, Sam Gainer. “That’s his trophy, his symbol of success.”

      It also isn’t easy to unload a $60 million home in suburban Atlanta, where the list of prospective buyers probably would be restricted to Ted Turner, Coca-Cola Inc. CEO Muhtar Kent and maybe Falcons rookie quarterback Matt Ryan. Like rapper M.C. Hammer discovered when he built his mansion on the Oakland side of the Bay area, then tried to sell it when hard times set in, real estate really is about location, location, location. If Holyfield’s spread was in Beverly Hills or Malibu, you’d have to figure it would be more easily snapped up by someone else with an exorbitant  lifestyle of the rich and famous.

      For those on the outside looking in, it’s easy to find fault with the way Holyfield has handled his wealth. Several business ventures tanked, and he did not ask his second wife, pediatrician Janice Itson Holyfield, with whom he had one child, to sign a prenuptial agreement. The lack of such came back to bite Holyfield worse than Mike Tyson ever did when, during divorce hearings, Mrs. Holyfield testified she had come to discover that her husband had fathered two more children out of wedlock, with two different women.

      Talk about your irreconciliable differences.

      When the wolf is at your door, even if that door is thick and expensive, you do what you can do to keep the beast at bay. Holyfield kept fighting, with mixed results. He stunk out Madison Square Garden in losing a 12-round unanimous decision to fringe contender Larry Donald on Nov. 13, 2004, in the process looking more shot than Sonny Corleone in the toll-booth scene in “The Godfather.” Saddened by what he had witnessed, Ron Scott Stevens, then head of the New York State Athletic Commission, indefinitely suspended Holyfield’s boxing license for “diminished skills and poor performance.”

      Holyfield argued that he was being held to a higher standard because of who and what he once was, that fighters far less capable than he were allowed to ply their trade in New York and elsewhere. Texas officials agreed, which led to Holyfield kicking off a tour of the Lone Star State in which he posted a four-bout winning streak against such second-tier opponents as Jeremy Bates, Fres Oquendo, Vinny Maddalone and almost-42-year-old Lou Savarese to partially refurbish his reputation. If he couldn’t be heavyweight champion of the world again, by golly, he at least could lay claim to being heavyweight champion of Texas.

      But Holyfield did get another shot at a sliver of the world title. In his most recent ring appearance, on Oct. 13, 2007, he was in Moscow where he dropped a unanimous decision to then-WBO titlist and Barney Rubble lookalike Sultan Ibragimov, a defeat that seemingly dropped the curtain on Holyfield’s 24-year parade of peaks and valleys.

      Now Valuev and his manager, Boris Dimitrov, are raising that curtain again, reluctantly drawing on the remnants of Holyfield’s reputation for what should be the last time. But even they seem embarrassed to be doing so.

      In October, as Holyfield was being mentioned as a possible challenger to Valuev, Dimitrov said, “We have nothing but respect for Evander Holyfield and we revere his amazing accomplishments. I don’t want to insult Mr. Holyfield, but he is nearly 46. Nikolay doesn’t want to box him. That will be ridiculous.”

      As is often the case in boxing, circumstances dictated that the ridiculous become reality. The guy Dimitrov preferred as Valuev’s dance partner was serial quitter Andrew Golota, who refused to come out for the second round of his Nov. 7 bout with Ray Austin in Chengdu, China. Decide for yourself if Holyfield is an upgrade over “The Foul Pole,” but, even running on empty, he poses more of a threat to Valuev than Golota ever would.

      The shame of it is, Holyfield should be more remembered by fans for his epochal trilogy with Riddick Bowe, for his two winning performances against Tyson, for any number of fights in which his courage and indomitable will were there for all to see. Now the puncher is becoming a punch line. How do you make a small fortune? Easy. By starting out with a large fortune and whittling it down.



ALXZANDR:  This fight is a disgrace!!!! i wouldnt watch this fight if it were literally in my backyard and i was being paid to. there are so many other fighters in the top 20 who i know arent title contenders but should have been given a chance before Holyfield. WHY????
Wednesday Nov 12, 2008
pudge muller:  what kind of a writer are you man? you are horrible i mean terrible. try less flash and more information presented intelligently if you want people to believe you. I think that this fight will be competitive, if valuev decides to fight unlike sultan. I hope you give holyfield and his fans a big apology if and when he wins.
Wednesday Nov 12, 2008
Bob Costas:  Let Holyfield take steroids and he could win this!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
paulbo:  Amazing how some people NEVER give up on Holyfield. At one time, I admired those people for their loyalty. Now I consider them downright stupid. What's it going to take to finally convince those people Holyfield is finished? Even if he's dominated and knocked out brutally, people will STILL believe in him when it comes time for his next fight. Fact is, the guy will never stop selling tickets until a new generation of fight fans come along who never saw vintage Holyfield and are not impressed by his awe-inspiring name. Wake up, Holyfield fans! Take the name out of the equasion for just a minute. If his name wasn't Holyfield, you'd know he was finished.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
rudy:  I agree w/pudge, bad read and agonizing just to finish the piece. 'Date/Epic Movie' type bad, just throwing out popular references left and right. Holyfield is Holyfield, the dude doesnt know the meaning of word quit. The Real Deal never stopped trying in those hellacious battles he's went through, and at 46 he wont stop trying to get another HW belt. Sad though, because it's an uphill battle he probably wont win and its ugly to see this happening to such a great warrior.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
gabriel:  Pudge i agree with u. i am not a fan of holyfield but this article just went beyond boxing to personal attacks. sport writter should stick to the sport not on reporting on personal issues, the author seem to envy holyfield huge mansion.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Robert Curtis:  Good piece, Bernard. Yeah, there are a few cheap shots and snarky barbs mixed in with the facts and salient details, but I do worse on a regular basis. You have to remember the Real Deal is boxing royalty and as such deserves some due deferrence. Unless you're scheduled to step into the ring with him and represent yourself, trash talking is inappropriate. I get a little cranky and harsh about some fighters. But I just can't bash Holyfield. The man is a great samurai who has outlived his trade. I watch his great fights over and over again, but they ended in the early nineties. Evander's most intimate friends and advisors were pleading with him to stop over a decade ago. I don't think the man is ever going to quit this side of utter enfeeblement. That's the kind of stubborn knock-down drag-out warrior he is. Ali and the original Sugar had to go out the hard way too. Archie Moore played long and hard also, but he had his "escapology" working for him. The best we can do is pray that Evander doesn't get hurt. Drop the insults and send him some good moonbeam love vibes.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
PeteSteward:  I was hoping that Holyfield would Retire Rich like Holmes and Foreman but that doesn't seem to be the case. I such a HUGE fan of his to me he's Greatest Fighter sine Ali ,utterly Fearless. Believe it not I like Holyfield in this fight Because Valuevs Size & Lumbering style will allow Evander to throw combonations at will he won't have to look for the giant like he did for Sultan. Plus for all of his Size Valuev is not a puncher this could be an upset folks. And one more thing I'am getting SICK AN TIRED of the writers treament of Valuev like he's freak show HE'S NOT he's just reallllllllllllly BIG. Valuev has been nothing but a gentlemen and a sweetheart when he's bieng interviewed. He beat john Riuz a legit top contender for the last decade took the WBA Strap a legit World Title. It's one for unpressional fans to talk smack against Valuev but paid so called professional journalist that a disgrace. Give the man his due!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Len Gilman:  In Court the Judge will tell the Jury if you find the witness has lied on one item you can assume they lied on all items. Holyfield spent 20 million on his house not 60 million. You and all these other scribes crying about Holyfield still fighting. He wants to fight let him fight. If your not interested don't watch or write. Just stop whining.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Ben O'connor:  dont care about the piece guys thats just talk about this ridiculous fight, if you can call it that!!! absolute discrace!!! holyfield is finished!!! dont think he will get out of the first 4 rounds! joke fight. i would honestly rather see tyson holyfield 3!!!!! honestly!!! 2 words for ya.............LARRY..............DONALD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Aaron:  Holyfield should do a sparring exhibition with Ali. Think of the money they'd bring in, Ali can still spar a little, right?
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Radam G aka Humble PRG checking out a pseudodivision of contenders in Asia:  Great controversial piece, Fightwriter B-Fern! Are you being "Firm, but Fair?" That will be in the eyes of the beholder. Holy be the final shock of the Year of the Upset. I'm with my man. I hope that he sip from B-Hop's foundation of youth and make everybody B-wrong. May-B he will surprise us all and kayo the hairy giant and sell the hair. It will help him pay that child support of son Evan. May-B Holy has a giant solution. This giant is a bully. Why is he even fighting a golden oldie? B-cause this giant is tunning up for B-Hop, but I hope that Holy gets himself some coconut juice and grape seed oil and that Oat Tree Russian timberly stupid! Holla!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Fistic Fury:  This fight is pointless, there is only one possible outcome, Valuev retains. It doesn't even offer a betting man like myself anything because the odds will be terrible on the only possible outcome.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Pea Brain:  People mock Jones' decline. Holyfield is a baffoon of the highest order. Jones went 12 with a pound for pound guy, Holyfield got dominated by Toney- a guy Jones dominated. I watched the Vinnie Maddalone fight and I am still trying to figure out how I get that 45 minutes of my life back. If he refuses to quit give him a plastic belt and tell him he's the WGA champion, he won't know the difference or better yet let Calzaghe slap him silly.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Big Daddy:  Radam Gibberish must be delusional .. What the hell is an "Oat Tree"? I don't know what's more embarrassing for Boxing, this "Fight' or the DLH-Manny FARCE. Valuev by ... nevermind .. Who Cares?
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Jonald:  Without question, Valuev has more skill than Carnera. Hey look, it's not his fault that the state of the game is where it is. I don't blame him one bit for being who he is. What do you expect, a guy in that frame to be like a 1987 Mike Tyson? The guy's got a GRANITE chin and excellent stamina. His punches aren't too accurate, that's his biggest weakness in my eyes. That said, he didn't want the Holyfield fight (at least those were the reports when this was initially broken by Rafael at espn), but in a time-honored tradition, a great ex-champion is always given a paycheck to take a beating (or be a Plausible Loser). The guy's got no shot. He's 46 and hasn't looked good in forever. I hate the cliche but...it is what it is. As for Holyfield's finances, it amazes me that a guy wouldn't just pay cash for a say $5mm dollar house and then just have the operating expenses, which he could handle with ease. These numerous children to numerous different women is disturbing. And puzzling. Is it ego? I don't get it. With that much money squandered, it won't get any better for Evander. It wouldn't surprise me to see him broke before P-E Obama's 1st term is up. With that much money, he could have drawn well into 6 figures a year and not touched the principal. And then of course he could supplement that with other things. He's the BRAND Evander Holyfield. He's marketable, or at least he was. I remember when Bowe was going downhill in a hurry and it was always mentioned that Holyfield was wise with his cash and was loaded. Guess they spoke too soon...Valuev TKO in 5. Peace.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
donputo69 playing madden 09:  holyfield is fighting for aaahhhhhh...hhhmmmmmmm..hummmmmm...aaahhhhhhh....never mind....valuev by a very very very sad devastating knockout...then evander "HOLYFUNKADELIC" holyfield will retire for good....and it will be about time...holla back!!!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Alban:  As the writer said, he made a lot of money but entourages, taxes, fees, 11 kids, a gazillion women and wives do ruin it for you. Business adventures also fail. You can understand how it happened, just look at the stock market these days.
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Fistic Fury:  There is nothing wrong with the article, you just too far up Evanders A DOUBLE S !!!!!
Thursday Nov 13, 2008
Radam G aka Humble PRG eating moose and flying back to Cali USA:  Big Daddy is a ragamuffin with a lot of estrogen and two X chromosomes. I wonder if he knows what that is. Somebody should check dudette for estrus. He keeps stalking me, and I don't roll with that type. Holly has a chance. Holla!
Friday Nov 14, 2008
andy from newcastle:  Who knows eh, who knows. Toonoy
Friday Nov 14, 2008
hitfan:  I suspected many years ago that Holyfield kept fighting well beyond his prime because he needed the money. Say what you will about the one-hit wonder Buster Douglas, but he lives comfortably to this day from his 2 big paychecks (Tyson and Holyfield). He did make a comeback a few years later but then quickly retired when he was not successful.
Thursday Nov 20, 2008
Homer Gibbins:  After the fight is over and Evander is declared the winner, those who disbelieved can kiss off. Evander is still the best that boxing has to offer.
Friday Dec 5, 2008

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