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Thirty-six years after one of heavyweight boxing’s most disputed nights, debate over Mike Tyson’s first defeat resurfaced when WBC President Mauricio Sulaimán was asked why no immediate rematch with James “Buster” Douglas was ordered in 1990.
The fan question referenced the controversial eighth-round knockdown in Tokyo and suggested the WBC could have stripped Douglas if he refused to face Tyson again.
Sulaimán replied, “That was about 36 years ago. I do remember that Holyfield was the mandatory contender and fought Douglas next; I’m sorry I don’t have details now, but I will look into it.”
One short answer has reopened a familiar argument and, more importantly, shifted the focus back to what the WBC could realistically do once a result is official.
The Long Count And The Knockdown Debate
Tyson dropped Douglas late in the eighth round of their February 1990 undisputed title fight at the Tokyo Dome. The count administered by referee Octavio Meyran has been debated for decades, with footage showing Douglas down for more than 10 seconds before the bell ended the round.
The referee’s count is discretionary, though it is traditionally guided by the ten-second standard.
World Boxing News has previously examined the incident and its fallout in our coverage of the eighth-round controversy and Meyran’s later explanation in his referee statement.
For the rematch question, the central issue isn’t whether fans believe the count was slow. It’s whether the WBC had grounds to step in and change the next move after the fight had been signed off.
Why Holyfield Was Next
At the time, Evander Holyfield was the WBC’s mandatory challenger. When Douglas stopped Tyson in the tenth round, WBC regulations pointed directly to the mandatory defense.
Douglas fought Holyfield next and lost the title later in 1990, matching Sulaimán’s recollection of the sequence.
Any rematch clause would have been a contractual matter between fighters and promoters. The WBC’s job is to uphold its championship order, and mandatories are rarely bypassed without a formal reversal or an official ruling that changes the bout’s result.
Could The WBC Have Ordered A Rematch?
In rare cases, sanctioning bodies can act after serious controversy. But those situations usually require a formal protest process and a clear breach that warrants intervention.
Without a successful appeal or an official change to the result, Douglas remained champion on paper. In that scenario, stripping him to stage Tyson versus another contender for a vacant belt would have risked legal fallout and undermined the WBC’s own ranking structure.
Sulaimán’s reply suggests the WBC viewed Holyfield’s mandatory status as the controlling factor at the time, and he indicated he would look into the finer details behind the scenes.
Some have long argued that the WBC could have delayed Holyfield’s mandatory obligation and ordered a rematch, though that would have required bending its own championship structure.
Why The Question Still Gets Asked
The Tyson-Douglas rematch debate survives because it blends two things boxing fans rarely accept quietly: disputed officiating and a title structure that moves on without looking back.
Sulaimán’s response doesn’t rewrite history. It underscores the likely reason the WBC did not force an immediate Tyson rematch.
As history reveals, Holyfield was next in line, and without a formal reversal of the Tokyo decision, the mandatory route remained in place.
More than three decades later, the count in Tokyo — and the rematch that never materialized — remains one of heavyweight boxing’s most persistent unresolved debates.
About the Author
Phil Jay is the Editor-in-Chief of World Boxing News (WBN) and a veteran boxing reporter with 15+ years of experience. He has interviewed world champions, broken international exclusives, and reported ringside since 2010. Read full bio.



















