Antonio Tarver

Boxer

Birthday November 21, 1968

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Orlando, Florida, U.S.

Age 55 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6 ft 2 in

Weight Light heavyweight Cruiserweight Heavyweight

#18980 Most Popular

1968

Antonio Deon Tarver (born November 21, 1968) is an American former professional boxer and boxing commentator.

1995

Tarver also triumphed at the 1995 Pan American Games and 1995 U.S. National Championships, winning gold in both.

He remains the only boxer in history to have won gold at the Pan Am Games, World Championships and U.S. Nationals all in the same year.

1996

As an amateur, Tarver represented the United States at the 1996 Olympics, winning a bronze medal in the light heavyweight division; he eventually lost to Vassiliy Jirov from Kazakhstan, whom he had previously defeated at the 1995 World Championships to win gold.

1997

In boxing he competed from 1997 to 2015, and held multiple light heavyweight world championships, including the WBA (Unified), WBC, IBF and Ring magazine titles, as well as the IBO light heavyweight and cruiserweight titles.

Tarver made his professional debut at the age of 28 on February 18, 1997, with a second-round knockout of Joaquin Garcia at the legendary "Blue Horizon" in Philadelphia.

Tarver won his first 16 fights, 14 by knockout, before stepping up his level of competition.

1998

After taking most of his first 16 fights in either his native Florida or at the "Blue Horizon", for his 11th fight he met veteran Rocky Gannon in Chester, West Virginia, on August 30, 1998.

Tarver knocked out Gannon in the second round.

2000

On February 29, 2000, Tarver scored a knockout against Ernest M-16 Mateen in Las Vegas.

2002

In 2002, Tarver defeated former two-weight world champion Reggie Johnson by split decision to win the NABF & USBA light-heavyweight titles, and a guaranteed title shot at Roy Jones.

He then scored a fifth round stoppage over Harding in a rematch that was on the undercard of the rematch between Shane Mosely and Vernon Forrest.

Tarver was trailing on the scorecards until the 4th round, when he sent Harding to the canvas with a barrage of unanswered power shots; Harding was also floored twice in the 5th round, leading to the stoppage.

2003

On April 26, 2003, Tarver received his first world title shot, when he faced former WBC champion Montel Griffin for the WBC & IBF light-heavyweight titles that had been vacated by Roy Jones Jr.., who had gone on to defeat John Ruiz for the WBA heavyweight title the previous month.

After dropping Griffin in the first and last rounds, Tarver was crowned champion after winning a unanimous decision.

Next, rather than remain at heavyweight, Jones planned to return to light-heavyweight and regain his belts.

Given little chance of winning, Tarver took a weight-drained Jones the distance and lost the fight and WBC title by a majority decision on November 8, 2003, in Las Vegas (Tarver had relinquished the IBF title a few days earlier in anticipation of being unable to make a mandatory defense.)

2004

In a rematch on May 15, 2004, in Las Vegas, Tarver upset the odds to regain the WBC title and win the WBA (Super) title by knocking Jones out in the second round.

In fifty previous fights, Jones had only been sent to the floor once, leaving most observers shocked at the result.

Tarver became a mainstream celebrity after his rematch win over Jones, making appearances at late-night shows, appearing on the cover of both Ring and KO Magazine, being spotted by television cameras as a spectator at various boxing fights, and co-hosting ESPN's "Friday Night Fights" for one telecast.

Later in 2004, the WBC decided to strip Tarver of the world title after he decided against fighting their mandatory challenger, instead choosing to fight IBF title holder Glen Johnson December 18 in Temecula, California; Tarver had already been removed as Super Champion by the WBA in their July rankings.

Johnson himself had been stripped of his IBF title before the bout with Tarver for not fighting his mandatory challenger.

Both fighters were celebrated for their decision to fight each other rather than bow to the pressure from what has become known as "The Alphabet Soup" sanctioning bodies (WBC, WBA, WBO, and IBF).

Tarver, considered a favorite to win the fight, suffered an upset loss to Johnson by way of a split decision in a fight that he did not appear to be in top shape for.

Tarver avenged the loss six months later with a unanimous decision, out-boxing and out-working the aggressive Johnson at the FedEx Forum in Memphis, Tennessee to regain The Ring championship.

2005

In their third fight, Tarver won a unanimous decision over Roy Jones Jr.. on October 1, 2005, in Tampa, Florida, almost knocking Jones down in the 11th round but also finding himself in trouble at times during the fight.

2006

Outside of boxing, Tarver starred as Mason "The Line" Dixon, the heavyweight champion in the 2006 film Rocky Balboa.

On June 10, 2006, Tarver faced former undisputed world middleweight champion Bernard Hopkins for Tarver's The Ring title at The Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Hopkins, a 3-to-1 underdog, dominated the fight, outboxing Tarver to win a unanimous decision.

The fight was scored 118–109 by all three judges.

Tarver was knocked down in the 5th round.

Tarver's record would now stand at 24 wins and 4 losses, with 18 wins coming by way of knockout.

2007

Tarver returned to the ring nearly one year after his loss to Hopkins, defeating Albanian-fighter Elvir Muriqi on June 9, 2007, by way of a majority decision.

In his next fight, held at Foxwoods Resort Casino on December 1, 2007, Tarver registered a win over Danny Santiago by way of a 4th round TKO.

Tarver then regained the IBF title by outpointing Clinton Woods.

2008

On October 11, 2008, Tarver faced rising star Chad Dawson for Tarver's IBF title.

The fight took place at Palms Casino in Las Vegas.

Tarver lost the fight via unanimous decision, with wide margins of 118–109 and 117–110 (twice).

2011

Later that year, Tarver suffered his first loss when he was knocked down in the 11th round by Eric Harding, en route to a unanimous decision on June 23 in Biloxi, Mississippi.

This was an IBF title elimination bout, where the winner would face Roy Jones Jr..