Page 12 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, June 17, 1988 Tyson-Spinks matchup looks THE SPORTING VIEWS to be classic confrontation w_ BY MIKE GREIFENBERG See Dick. See Dick make a lot of money. See Dick pay $1,500 to watch two millionaires attempt to hit each other so hard that one of them will fall and will be unable to get up. It's true that boxing is a silly sport. So silly that on June 27, undefeated heavyweight champion Mike Tyson will make upwards of $18 million dollars to fight undefeated challenger Michael Spinks, who will only make about $13.5 million. Silly, yes, but very exciting and very interesting. Boxing fans have been crying for this bout since Spinks dropped out of HBO Cable Television's Uni- fication Tournament, delaying this clash with Tyson, the tourney's eventual winner. This fight is a classic boxer- slugger confrontation. The fighters' styles and careers also make this fight a classic tortoise vs. hare race. 31-year-old Spinks, the boxer- tortoise, has been fighting pro. fessionally since 1977. He has had 9 31 fights in those eleven years, knocking out 21 of his opponents. He has fought only once in the last 21 months, knocking out equally inactive Gerry Cooney in five rounds. 21-year-old Tyson, on the other hand, is the slugger-hare, racking up 34 victories in his short three-year career, becoming the youngest heavyweight champion in history. 30 of his fights have ended short of /oer the distance, including 25 of those Marvin Hagler, seen here with his estranged wife and current Democratic Presidential candi- fights ending before the fifth round. date Mike Dukakis, decided last week to retire from professional boxing. Each must stick with their own style in order to win. Tyson will L it, C hef have to throw his short, stiff jabs into the face of Spinks, enabling iiuf him to get inside and muscle Spinks The Student's Restaurant { 44 around. This will allow him to set We specialize in serving traditional American breakfasts 3e up his full arsenal of punches, We also serve the following: uad hs including his pulverizing body shots " Hamburgeri eColdSandwiches . and overhand right. If Tyson is able " Fallafel " MexicanODihes g Wm " Hoagies " Humus 1l Jto get inside on Spinks, the fight + Fried chicken " Babaghnooj , will become a brawl and Tyson will Open 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.C win very quickly. 808 S. State St. 662-2028 between Hill & Packard for pick-up kC NAt3 GARDEN Restuat ' Specializing in Szechuan, Hunan & Peking Cuisine CARRY OUT and DELIVERY CrsenacyTesting DINING AND COCKTAILS * Gynecology Mon - Thurs 11:30 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. "*Abortiont-lOpen 7 days Fri. 11:30 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. ~t~ia week Sat. 12:00 p.m. -11:00 p.m. Health Care Clinic Sun. 12:00 p.m.-10:00 p.m. of Ann Arbor 3035 Washtenaw, Ann Arbor 2512 Carpenter " 971-1970 971-0970 There is a very simple plan Spinks must follow if he wants to become champion. He is a better boxer than Tyson, so he can conceiveably win by outboxing the champ. This idea is easier said than done. Tyson has very quick hands and will win any fight unless he is slowed down. Tony Tucker, in the first minute of their fight, backed up Tyson momentarily. Tyson was hesitant for the remainder of the contest because he knew that Tucker could punch. Spinks will have to do the same thing. The main problem with trying this tactic, however, is that in order to land a great punch on Tyson, one will probably take a few punches in return. Therefore, Spinks must quickly gain respect from Tyson, effectively slowing him down enough to be outboxed in a long, drawn-out contest, letting Spinks gain a decision victory. When Tyson is concentrating solely on fighting, he is nearly impossible to beat. In the last few months, however, he has been up to his moving bald spot in dis- tractions. Along with his marriage and impending fatherhood, was the death of his co-manager and friend Jimmy Jacobs. Jacobs' death prompted many hopeful managers to try and get a piece of Tyson and his millions. These managerial problems along with his newfound domestic trials and tribulations could cause Tyson to develop a lax attitude just weeks before the biggest fight of his life. He even sounds apathetic when he talks about his titles, "I don't own the title, I just borrowed it for a while. There's life beyond that." The guess here is that Tyson's problems outside the ring will counterbalance Spinks' inactivity inside the ring. See Dick watch Tyson knock Spinks silly and win on a technical knockout in the fifth round. In middleweight news, Marvelous Marvin Hagler announced his retirement from the sport, saying that the only reason to keep fighting would be for a rematch with Ray Leonard, who beat him last year. "But since Leonard has been playing games, it would probably take another year to work things out," Hagler said about a rematch with his nemesis. This retirement concludes an outstanding career which included 62 victories, 3 losses, and two draws. Sadly, Hagler will probably be remembered for his loss to Leonard than as one of the most lethal middleweights of all time.