Holyfield entered as the WBA’s No. 1 contender in only his 12th professional fight. Qawi brought years of championship experience after first winning a world title at light heavyweight before moving up to capture the cruiserweight championship. Despite giving away more than eight inches in height, the veteran champion had repeatedly shown he could neutralize taller opponents by forcing them into close-range exchanges.
Holyfield established his jab early and used his height and reach to land clean combinations from the outside. Qawi refused to let him settle into a rhythm, slipping inside and forcing exchanges where he could pound away with hooks to the head and body. Every time Holyfield created space, the champion closed it again.
By the middle rounds, neither fighter was willing to give ground. Holyfield had never fought beyond eight rounds as a professional, yet he continued throwing combinations despite the oppressive heat inside the Omni, where the arena’s air conditioning struggled to keep temperatures under control. Qawi kept marching forward, digging to the body and making the younger challenger fight at a relentless pace.
Neither fighter was knocked down, yet the momentum swung several times as both absorbed tremendous punishment without taking a backward step. Holyfield produced some of his strongest work during the championship rounds, answering Qawi’s pressure with sharp combinations and finishing the 15th round with the same determination he had shown in the first.
After 15 unforgettable rounds, Holyfield earned a split-decision victory by scores of 144-140 and 147-138, while the third judge favored Qawi, 143-141. The victory gave Holyfield his first world title and made him the first member of the 1984 U.S. Olympic boxing team to capture a professional world championship.
The fight extracted a heavy physical toll. Holyfield was hospitalized afterward for dehydration and reportedly lost significant weight during the bout, illustrating the punishing pace both men maintained from start to finish.
Holyfield went on to unify the cruiserweight division before becoming the undisputed heavyweight champion and one of boxing’s all-time greats. Qawi remained one of the sport’s most respected champions, though Holyfield stopped him in four rounds when they met again the following year.
Nearly four decades later, “Pandemonium” remains one of the finest cruiserweight title fights ever staged. More than a championship victory, it was the night Holyfield proved he possessed the heart, stamina, and determination that would define his Hall of Fame career.
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