Buster Douglas

Boxer

Birthday April 7, 1960

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Columbus, Ohio, U.S.

Age 63 years old

Nationality United States

Height 6 ft 3+1/2 in

Weight Heavyweight

#2516 Most Popular

1960

James "Buster" Douglas (born April 7, 1960) is an American former professional boxer who competed between 1981 and 1999.

1977

He attended Linden McKinley High School, where he played football and basketball, leading Linden to a Class AAA state basketball championship in 1977.

After high school, Douglas played basketball for the Coffeyville Community College Red Ravens in Coffeyville, Kansas, from 1977 to 1978; the 17-year-old was a 6'0" power forward. He is in the Coffeyville Community College Men's Basketball Hall of Fame. He also played basketball at Sinclair Community College from 1979 to 1980 in Dayton, Ohio, before attending Mercyhurst University on a basketball scholarship. He moved back to Columbus to focus on boxing.

1981

Douglas debuted on May 31, 1981, defeating Dan O'Malley in a four-round bout.

He was managed by former Ohio State University assistant football coach John Johnson.

Douglas won his first five fights before coming into a fight with David Bey weighing 20 pounds heavier than he usually had for his previous bouts.

Bey handed Douglas his first defeat by knocking him out in the second round.

Two of his wins were knockouts of Jesse Clark, whom Douglas had also stopped in 1981.

Douglas needed just seven total rounds of fighting in the three bouts combined to score the three KOs.

1982

After six more fights, all of which he won, Douglas fought Steffen Tangstad to a draw on October 16, 1982.

He was penalized two points during the course of the fight, which proved to be the difference on the judges' scorecards.

After the draw, Douglas beat largely journeyman fighters for the next 14 months.

1983

In his last fight of 1983, Douglas was dominating opponent Mike White, but White knocked him out in the ninth round.

1984

On November 9, 1984, Douglas was scheduled to face heavyweight contender Trevor Berbick in Las Vegas.

Berbick withdrew from the bout three days before it was to take place; Randall "Tex" Cobb elected to take the fight on short notice in Berbick's stead.

Douglas defeated the former heavyweight contender by majority decision.

The next year, he fought up-and-coming contender Jesse Ferguson.

After the false start in 1984, Douglas finally fought Berbick in 1989, winning a unanimous decision.

He followed that up with a unanimous decision victory over future heavyweight champion Oliver McCall, which earned him a shot at Mike Tyson for the undisputed heavyweight championship.

1986

Douglas fought just three times in 1986, defeating former champion Greg Page and fringe contender David Jaco in two of the bouts.

This earned him a shot at the International Boxing Federation championship that was stripped from Michael Spinks for refusing to defend it against Tony Tucker.

Douglas started well against Tucker and was ahead on points, but he ran out of stamina and suffered a technical knockout in the tenth round.

After the Tucker defeat and a series of disagreements, James split with his father; the Douglas family was shattered.

James started business from scratch and hand-picked another team for himself, particularly a new trainer.

This helped him win his next four fights.

1987

Almost all observers assumed that the bout would be another quick knockout for the champion; no fighter had taken Tyson beyond the fifth round since 1987.

Many thought it was a tune-up for Tyson before a future mega-fight with undefeated Evander Holyfield, who had recently moved up to heavyweight after becoming the first undisputed world cruiserweight champion in the history of that weight class.

Douglas's chances of lasting deep into the fight against Tyson, let alone winning, were so lightly regarded that only one Las Vegas betting parlor even bothered to establish odds for the fight.

That lone casino, the Mirage, made Douglas a 42-to-1 underdog.

1988

Tyson became the universally recognized champion after knocking out Spinks in one round in 1988.

(Douglas fought on the undercard of that event, defeating Mike Williams by seventh-round TKO.)

1990

He reigned as undisputed world heavyweight champion in 1990 after knocking out Mike Tyson to win the title, handing the undefeated Tyson his first ever loss.

He also defeated heavyweight world champions Oliver McCall, Trevor Berbick, and Greg Page.

Douglas was a 42-to-1 underdog going into his 1990 fight against Tyson, who was undefeated and considered to be the best boxer in the world for his domination of the division over the previous three years.

The Tyson fight was scheduled for February 11, 1990 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo.

1996

Retiring shortly after the loss, Douglas returned to boxing between 1996 and 1999 until he retired a second and final time.

The son of professional boxer William "Dynamite" Douglas and Lula Pearl Douglas, Douglas grew up in Columbus, Ohio, in the predominantly black Linden neighborhood of Windsor Terrace.

His father ran a gym at the Blackburn Recreation Center near Downtown Columbus and subsequently introduced young James To boxing (in the same way James would later bring his son Lamar to the same gym).

2010

Defying expectations, Douglas would knock out Tyson in the 10th round to claim the WBC, WBA, and IBF titles.

He reigned as the world heavyweight champion for eight months until he was defeated by Evander Holyfield in his only title defense.