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He then ran off 5 consecutive wins
before again losing to Rossi by UD,
this time on July 21, 1990 at the
Palazzo del Ghiaccio, Marino, Italy.
But he put up a better effort, and
Rosi was a legitimate champion; he
was very strong, always in shape,
unorthodox and had decent speed.
Then on May 18, 1991, at the
Pallazzo dello Sport, Verbania,
Italy he beat Lindell Holmes, 44-5
coming in, by 11th round knock out
to win the IBF Super Middleweight
Title, his second world title. After
defending it successfully by
knocking out John Jarvis (25-2 at
the time), he positioned himself for
his fateful meeting with the
"Blade," and I don't mean someone in
a dark alley. A fight was set for
January 10, 1992 with none other
than Iran "The Blade" Barkley, 27-7
coming in, at the Paramount Theatre
in New York City...Barkley's home
turf.
Whether a case of no due diligence
or simply underestimating the
opponent, Barkley, the underdog
coming in, should not have been
taken lightly. He was definitely one
to be weary of given his past
performances. Still, probably
thinking the Blade simply would be
another, albeit bigger name notch on
his belt, not to mention an easy
payday, Van Horn unwisely offered
him a shot at his title....an
unexpected opportunity for a guy who
would go on to finish as a five time
world champion and who made his
bones with a third round knockout
win over Thomas Hearns in1988.
However, in 1989, he had lost a SD
and MD to Roberto Duran (fight of
the year) and Michael Nunn,
respectively. And his disastrous
encounter with Nigel Benn, where he
suffered a brutal first round ko,
must of have emboldened the Van Horn
camp to think the Bronx fighter was
ripe for the picking.
As for the fight, it was an
anti-climatic no contest, as Iran
savaged "The Schoolboy" and
dispatched him decisively in two
short rounds blasting him from
pillar to post. Van Horn came in
with no game plan and clearly was in
the wrong place at the wrong time.
You could see the confusion on his
face as he entered the ring to loud
boing. He was in the Blade's house
now and would be lucky to get out
alive.
Incredibly, Barkley, who had been
destroyed in his fight with Nigel
Benn and recovering from retina
surgery, had captured another world
title. His wins over Van Horn and
then Thomas Hearns for a second time
earned Iran titles at super middle
and light heavyweight, respectively,
and gave him comeback fighter of the
year award for 1992 in Ring
magazine.
He would go on to finish with a
record of 43 -19 -1 with (28 ko's)
and a so-so undefeated percentage of
70%....which is one of many indices
I use when evaluating a fighter who
has fought a minimum of 40 bouts.
The formula is as follows:
X = total number of fights
Y = total number of fights minus
total number of defeats
Z (or undefeated percentage) is
determined by dividing y by x.
Thus, z = y divided by x
After six wins over minimal
competition, the Schoolboy retired
in 1994 with a record of 53- 3- 0.
During his career, he fought such
opponents as Lindell Holmes (whom he
beat for for the IBF Light
Middleweight Title), Gianfranco Rosi
(twice), Nicky Walker, Robert Hines
(whom he defeated for IBF Light
Middleweight Title), Luis Santana,
Elio Diaz, Norberto Sabater (twice),
and, of course, Iran Barkley. He
would book-end his career with two
2-round stoppage wins.
His undefeated percentage was an
extremely impressive 89%, but
clearly Barkley's level of
opposition was far superior. Names
like Olajide, Hearns (twice), Duran,
Nunn, Kinchen, Kalambay Scypion,
Robbie Sims, Sabater, Tinley, were
pre-Van Horn opponents, while name
like Maske, Gannon, Robert Folley,
Toney and Adolpho Washington and
even Gerrie Coetzee would dot his
resume later.
But enough about percentages and
opponents. What you had here was a
simple case of a tough, albeit naive
school boy from Kentucky meeting a
much tougher and street smart city
boy from the Bronx who sensed an
opportunity and jumped on it. When
the Schoolboy met up with the Blade,
it was no contest!
"If you think Barkley was mad before
the fight, wait until he sees how
many people are taking part of his
purse." Bob Arum, after his fighter,
Iran Barkley, beat Darrin Van Horn
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