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In Las Vegas, 30 years ago, prisoner 922335, not long released from the Indiana Youth Center, boxed an unknown club fighter in a bout that shattered pay-per-view records. Mike Tyson v Peter McNeeley may be, in a competitive field, the most audaciously staged mismatch in boxing history. Its global success, despite only 89 seconds of action and a farcical ending, set the tone for the sport’s development in the modern era.
Promoted simply as “He’s Back”, the contest was Tyson’s return after a three-year imprisonment for rape, but the former undisputed heavyweight champion’s popularity seemed to have increased. Among those ringside at a sold-out MGM Grand sat Madonna, Nicolas Cage, Jerry Seinfeld, Denzel Washington, Jim Carrey, Pamela Anderson, Eddie Murphy and an alarmingly human-coloured Donald Trump. All in attendance to see something akin to a ritual sacrifice.
“Tyson brought out a crowd unlike anything I’ve ever known,” says the sportscaster Jim Gray, who covered the fight for Showtime. “Mike would even say: it goes from billionaires to the pimps and the drug dealers, to the chairman of the board and the highest celebrity. Mike was very proud he attracted everybody – and everybody did come out that night. We haven’t seen anything like it since.”
McNeeley, the chosen fall guy to help Iron Mike shake off his ring rust, certainly enlivened the buildup. “I am going to wrap Mike Tyson in a cocoon of horror,” he said, during a barrage of pre-fight bluster that included poetry, bold predictions and lame gags. But it was his brooding opponent who was expected to provide the punchline.
“McNeeley was being billed as an up-and-coming fighter with a 36-1 record, most of his wins by knockout,” says Steve Albert, the commentator who called the fight in the US. “But when you looked at his list of opponents, you just shook your head.”
Even considering the 29-year-old Tyson’s long layoff, the gulf in class pointed to dangerous matchmaking.
“You’re not going to put Tyson in there with a top-notch contender in his first fight back, but this wasn’t a Rocky movie – it was a sanctioned fight,” says Albert. “It had the feel of an exhibition match, which was a disservice to the fans in the arena, the TV viewers and the media, including us, the ringside announcers.
“Tyson-McNeeley was not only a way to reintroduce Tyson: it was about money and TV ratings. And it was also about seeing Tyson knock somebody – anybody – out.”
View image in fullscreen Nearly 30 years after his fight with Peter McNeeley, Mike Tyson was back in the ring at the age of 58 to fight YouTuber Jake Paul. Photograph: Kevin Jairaj/USA Today Sports
Fans did not even get to see that. After an in-ring stare down, the underdog kept to his pre-fight promise and rushed at Tyson, swinging bar-room haymakers. He soon found himself on the canvas, but instantly got up and started jogging around the ring. “He went down, but then he jumped right up like a jack-in-a-box,” Tyson later recalled. “This guy was skipping around the ring and charging back at me. I couldn’t believe this shit.”
After a few clumsy exchanges, McNeeley was felled, this time more seriously. “It was a double left hook, followed by a vicious right uppercut,” says Albert. “It was vintage Tyson. McNeeley was badly hurt, but he got up … and then came the chaos and confusion.”
The abrupt ending involved McNeeley’s cornermen piling into the ring, despite their charge being gamely ready to go on, causing a disqualification. The messy finish provoked howls of derision from the crowd. The Nevada commission withheld the purse of the defeated fighter’s manager, Vinnie Vecchione, pending an investigation.
“It was the easiest $25m Tyson ever made,” says Albert. “McNeeley’s corner probably did their guy a favour. But after the fight there was speculation that somebody in his camp had made a million-dollar bet that the fight wouldn’t last 90 seconds – the official time was 89 seconds of the first round. It just became another bizarre tale in boxing folklore.”
The event’s promoter, Don King, somehow kept a straight face when claiming: “This night has been something we can all be proud of.”
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It was certainly a financial hit, earning a then record $96m in TV income, with 1.52m homes ordering it in the US.
“True worldwide phenomenons have an appeal that it doesn’t matter what they’re doing,” says Gray. “Mike still has that appeal. Look at that Jake Paul fight. Tyson is an A-lister, but he has the appeal of everyman; trials and tribulations, redemption … back then, it was him coming out of jail. But everybody loves to see a hurricane. They didn’t know what to expect.”
View image in fullscreen Floyd Mayweather Jr beating MMA fighter Conor McGregor generated a huge payday but was another mismatched contest. Photograph: Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
McNeeley cashed in on his notoriety with adverts for AOL and Pizza Hut, in which he was knocked out by a slice of stuffed crust. Tyson’s comeback continued as a money-making machine but – despite winning two versions of the world title – he never recovered the aura of invincibility shattered by his 1990 defeat by Buster Douglas and his career ended with a series of limp losses.
If the victory against McNeeley was ultimately unsuccessful in launching a second great act in Tyson’s career, it proved something more instructive: that people will pay to see a spectacle above a competitive contest. It paved the way for Floyd Mayweather Jr v Conor McGregor, Tyson v Paul, YouTube boxers and the modern trend of social media influencers profiting by throwing themselves into the arena. For Tyson, it showed that despite the defeats, the crimes, the personal turmoil, his grip on the public remained as strong as when he burst on to the scene in the 1980s.
“I love Tyson, I’ve loved him for ever, because he’s the most honest athlete I’ve ever dealt with,” says Gray. “He knows he has his flaws. He’ll take his medicine when he’s wrong, he doesn’t try to blame others, and he’s trying to be better tomorrow than he was yesterday.”
In the yesteryear of 1995, Tyson tested his drawing power in boxing’s greatest nonevent and he discovered that while he may be fallible as a fighter, his ongoing mystique remained bulletproof.
Steve Albert’s book A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Broadcast Booth is out now; Jim Gray hosts the podcast Let’s Go! and wrote Talking to GOATs.
I’ve found it a delight to write this list of 50 summer wardrobe updates for men, as browsing for menswear is one of my favourite pastimes. I love keeping up to date with what’s trending and finding ways to recreate it on a budget. I’m always looking for under-the-radar independent brands and trawling the secondhand market for a bargain. And not just for myself – I regularly receive messages from friends and family asking for help choosing a birthday gift or deciding what to wear to a specific event, and (nearly) always happily oblige.
The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.
It’s what I do professionally, too. As a stylist and menswear writer with years of experience in helping guys dress their best, I spend a great deal of time looking at clothes online. I know which high-street retailer sells the best jeans; I know where to find good tailoring; what’s worth buying vintage; where to go for high-quality T-shirts; and the brands to shop for the best trainers.
So naturally when this commission dropped in my inbox, I gladly accepted. You’ll notice I’ve included quite a bit of butter yellow. It’s the colour of the season (remember Timothée Chalamet’s Givenchy suit at this year’s Academy Awards?) There’s a breezy linen shirt you could wear with black trousers and some retro sports shorts that would pair well with a simple T. I’ve also covered this year’s swimwear of choice, as well as some summer season accoutrements – such as sunglasses and jewellery – and everything in between.
My top tip? When you’re scrolling through the list, go for pieces that don’t feel like a departure from your personal style. Sure, it’s always good to push yourself to try new things, but you want to feel like the new things you buy merge with your current wardrobe – that way, they’re much less likely to end up at the charity shop in a matter of months.
I’ve also listed some inexpensive hacks to help keep your clothes looking their best and lasting longer, as well as a handful of grooming tips that can make a big difference with minimal effort required.
The best part? Everything costs £100 or less. You, and your summer wardrobe, can thank me later.
1 Buy a vintage silk tie
From spring/summer 2025 fashion shows to TikTok, neckties have made a comeback. Wear with a full suit for a wedding, or a shirt and jeans for a preppy smart-casual look. If you search secondhand, you can get designer options made with luxurious silks for a fraction of the price.
Giorgio Armani tie
£35 at Rokit
Christian Dior tie
£40 at Rokit
Yves Saint Laurent tie
£45 at Rokit
2 Invest in a checked shirt
Even though checks are in the spotlight this season – everyone from Burberry to Fendi offered their own take – it’s a timeless pattern that you can wear over and over. The easiest way to opt in is with a shirt. Scandi high-street hero Arket has you covered with this relaxed-fit Oxford.
Relaxed cotton shirt
£67 at Arket
Checked classic poplin shirt
£95 at Gant
3 Go for a boxy-fit top
View image in fullscreen Bad Bunny sports the boxy fit at the 2025 Met Gala. Photograph: Udo Salters/Patrick McMullan/Getty Images
All the guys are going for a boxy fit this year. Jacob Elordi. Bad Bunny (above). Barry Keoghan. The slight crop and squarer shape will give your outfit stronger proportions than a regular fit, making it feel more elevated and considered. You could opt for a shirt, a sweatshirt, a jacket or a knit – but if you’re trying it for the first time, maybe a T-shirt is the easiest way to go.
Boxy heavyweight terry sweatshirt
£39 at Weekday
£39 at H&M
S/S Catalogue T-shirt
End of preview. Expand in Data Studio

My Custom News Corpus

This is a custom corpus created by scraping articles from The Guardian website using the newspaper3k library.

Dataset Description

This dataset contains cleaned text from various news articles. Each row in the dataset represents one article, with the content stored in the 'text' column.

How to Use

You can load this dataset directly from the Hugging Face Hub:

from datasets import load_dataset

dataset = load_dataset("aizwal9/my-custom-news-corpus")
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