Bowe dismissed Golota before the fight and arrived at a career-high weight of approximately 252 pounds, believing a victory would move him closer to a lucrative fight with Lewis. Golota quickly exposed those assumptions.
Using a sharp jab and straight right hands, Golota repeatedly beat Bowe to the punch during the opening rounds. Bowe looked slow, struggled to close the distance, and absorbed clean shots while searching for a single power punch that could change the fight. Golota’s dominance was interrupted only by his repeated fouls.
Referee Wayne Kelly warned Golota several times after low blows in the second round before deducting points in the fourth and sixth. One illegal punch in the fourth dropped Bowe to the canvas in obvious pain, giving the former champion valuable recovery time after absorbing sustained punishment.
Even with the deductions, Golota remained comfortably ahead on all three scorecards entering the seventh round. A clean finish would have produced one of the heavyweight division’s biggest upsets of the decade. Instead, Golota threw another low blow.
Bowe collapsed to the canvas, and Kelly immediately disqualified Golota after his sixth low punch of the fight, awarding Bowe the victory at 2:27 of Round 7. What followed became even more infamous than the fight itself.
Members of Bowe’s entourage rushed into the ring and confronted Golota, touching off a massive brawl involving fighters, trainers, security personnel and spectators. Golota was struck in the head with a walkie-talkie and required 11 stitches. Veteran trainer Lou Duva suffered chest pains during the melee and was taken from ringside on a stretcher, while police worked to restore order after fighting spread into the crowd.
Although Bowe left with the victory, the performance effectively ended hopes of a blockbuster fight with Lewis after he struggled badly against an opponent he had been expected to beat comfortably. The rivals met again five months later, with Golota once again dominating before another disqualification for repeated low blows.
The first meeting remains one of heavyweight boxing’s strangest nights. Golota proved he had the ability to outbox one of the division’s elite fighters, but his refusal to stop throwing low blows transformed a career-defining performance into one of the sport’s greatest acts of self-sabotage, while the post-fight riot ensured the bout would be remembered for far more than the action inside the ring.
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