No. 1. Oscar De La Hoya vs. Floyd Mayweather, May 2007 - 2.4 million PPV buys
Promoted by De La Hoya's Golden Boy Productions, it was an HBO box-office hit. De La Hoya makes $23 million, more than twice Mayweather's catch, despite losing the fight.
No. 2. Evander Holyfield vs. Mike Tyson (rematch), June 1997 - 1.99 million PPV buys
Millions watched Tyson if he can win back the heavyweight crown he lost to Holyfield the previous year. But, they saw one of the weirdest fights in history: Tyson is disqualified for biting Holyfield's left ear. Tyson's career plunged rapidly after the fight.
No. 3. Lennox Lewis vs. Mike Tyson, June 2002 - 1.97 million PPV buys
The 35-year-old Tyson took one last attempt at regaining his championship belt. But Lewis disposed him with an eighth-round knockout.
No. 4. Evander Holyfield vs. Mike Tyson (first match), November 1996 - 1.59 million PPV buys
Holyfield’s career was thought to be dwindling at age 34. But he takes the WBC title aggressively that Tyson was always on the defensive before tiring out. The fight was stopped in the 11th round.
No. 5. Mike Tyson vs. Peter McNeeley, August 1995 - 1.55 million PPV buys
Tyson's return after a three-year prison term for **** draws a big curiosity. But he knocked out journeyman McNeeley in just 89 seconds.
No. 6 (tie). Oscar De La Hoya vs. Felix Trinidad, September 1999 - 1.4 million PPV buys
The biggest-selling non-heavyweight fight in history before the De La Hoya- Mayweather fight came. Trinidad won the welterweight title by coming out a close majority decision.
No. 6 (tie). George Foreman vs. Evander Holyfield, April 1991 - 1.4 million PPV buys
Holyfield won the heavyweight crown from James "Buster" Douglas, who won it with a shocking win over Tyson. Holyfield took a unanimous decision against Foreman, a 42-year-old former champion. But Foreman finished the fight and went the distance against the younger champion.
No. 8. Mike Tyson vs. Frank Bruno, March 1996 - 1.37 million PPV buys
Tyson regains the WBC crown stopping Bruno by a third-round knockout.
No. 9 (tie). Manny Pacquiao vs. Oscar de la Hoya, December 6, 2008 – 1.25 million PPV buys
De La Hoya was pummeled by Pacquiao en route to a possible career-ending eighth-round TKO loss. It is a monstrous total in a tough economy and makes the fight the third biggest-selling non-heavyweight fight in history.
No. 10 (tie). Mike Tyson vs. Razor Ruddock (rematch), June 1991 - 1.25 million PPV buys
Their first bout was controversial, which is a technical knockout win for Tyson, with referee Richard Steele blamed for ending the bout prematurely. In the rematch, Tyson easily defeated Ruddock in a 12-round decision.
Promoted by De La Hoya's Golden Boy Productions, it was an HBO box-office hit. De La Hoya makes $23 million, more than twice Mayweather's catch, despite losing the fight.
No. 2. Evander Holyfield vs. Mike Tyson (rematch), June 1997 - 1.99 million PPV buys
Millions watched Tyson if he can win back the heavyweight crown he lost to Holyfield the previous year. But, they saw one of the weirdest fights in history: Tyson is disqualified for biting Holyfield's left ear. Tyson's career plunged rapidly after the fight.
No. 3. Lennox Lewis vs. Mike Tyson, June 2002 - 1.97 million PPV buys
The 35-year-old Tyson took one last attempt at regaining his championship belt. But Lewis disposed him with an eighth-round knockout.
No. 4. Evander Holyfield vs. Mike Tyson (first match), November 1996 - 1.59 million PPV buys
Holyfield’s career was thought to be dwindling at age 34. But he takes the WBC title aggressively that Tyson was always on the defensive before tiring out. The fight was stopped in the 11th round.
No. 5. Mike Tyson vs. Peter McNeeley, August 1995 - 1.55 million PPV buys
Tyson's return after a three-year prison term for **** draws a big curiosity. But he knocked out journeyman McNeeley in just 89 seconds.
No. 6 (tie). Oscar De La Hoya vs. Felix Trinidad, September 1999 - 1.4 million PPV buys
The biggest-selling non-heavyweight fight in history before the De La Hoya- Mayweather fight came. Trinidad won the welterweight title by coming out a close majority decision.
No. 6 (tie). George Foreman vs. Evander Holyfield, April 1991 - 1.4 million PPV buys
Holyfield won the heavyweight crown from James "Buster" Douglas, who won it with a shocking win over Tyson. Holyfield took a unanimous decision against Foreman, a 42-year-old former champion. But Foreman finished the fight and went the distance against the younger champion.
No. 8. Mike Tyson vs. Frank Bruno, March 1996 - 1.37 million PPV buys
Tyson regains the WBC crown stopping Bruno by a third-round knockout.
No. 9 (tie). Manny Pacquiao vs. Oscar de la Hoya, December 6, 2008 – 1.25 million PPV buys
De La Hoya was pummeled by Pacquiao en route to a possible career-ending eighth-round TKO loss. It is a monstrous total in a tough economy and makes the fight the third biggest-selling non-heavyweight fight in history.
No. 10 (tie). Mike Tyson vs. Razor Ruddock (rematch), June 1991 - 1.25 million PPV buys
Their first bout was controversial, which is a technical knockout win for Tyson, with referee Richard Steele blamed for ending the bout prematurely. In the rematch, Tyson easily defeated Ruddock in a 12-round decision.
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