Amir Khan continues to fly the British flag in Vegas - but who else has shone on The Strip?
Iconic moments from the men that took Sin City by storm
Thursday 11 December 2014 17:30, UK
The latest chapter in Amir Khan's Las Vegas story will be written this weekend and before his bout with Devon Alexander, Sky Sports casts an eye over British flag-bearers fighting on the grandest stage...
Amir Khan
Khan has experienced the blur of emotions on the Las Vegas Strip that are a rite of passage for an elite fighter – from the triumph of having his hand raised to being in the grip of a referee’s bear-hug ending a fight, blearily unable to register the rampant reaction of thousands of fight fans.
Four years ago he debuted in Nevada, outlasting future Floyd Mayweather Jr opponent Marcos Maidana for a victory that may yet lead him to Britain's biggest Vegas blockbuster of all against boxing's pound-for-pound king.
Khan returned to the desert city in 2011 to knock out Zab Judah but would not always experience such elation. 12 months later he experienced the harsh realities of prizefighting, wiped out in four rounds at the swift and violent hands of Danny Garcia in his third Mandalay Bay outing.
A rejuvenated Khan beat Luis Collazo earlier this year in the heralded MGM Grand – maybe the most iconic of the Strip's Hotel fight venues – but he is not the first Brit to make the heralded journey for a Stateside scrap...
Ricky Hatton
Even more so than his Manchester mauling of Kostya Tszyu, Ricky Hatton’s legacy may be remembered by the legions of fanatical supporters who turned Las Vegas into a boozy, chanting English pub every time the 'Hitman' crossed the Atlantic. Boasting a support like no other, Hatton wasn’t always able to send his compatriots home happy but ended his career with a 3-2 record in Vegas.
A 2007 IBF and IBO light-welterweight title win over Juan Urango at the Paris Hotel began Hatton’s Vegas adventure, a points victory setting up a unification fight with Jose Luis Castillo in which a Hatton body-shot delivered the WBC belt at the Thomas & Mack Centre.
Hatton next found himself at the MGM Grand as the showbiz and the luxury stepped up – but unfortunately so did the competition. Mayweather, ignoring a 30,000-strong army of Brits invading the weigh-in and the arena, proved a class above inside the ropes, stopping Hatton in the 10th round.
Returning to the scene of the crime, Hatton captured an elusive win at the MGM by forcing Paulie Malignaggi’s team to throw in the towel. But six months later at the same venue, Manny Pacquiao delivered a brutal two-round shellacking, which included two knockdowns before a third left Hatton on the canvas beyond the count of 10.
The Mancunian’s Vegas memories may centre around his flattened body staring up at the bright lights while pound-for-pound greats Mayweather and Pacquiao celebrated but Hatton’s Sin City presence rivals any British boxer of any era.
Naseem Hamed
For such a balletic, charismatic competitor for whom theatrics were as much part of the fight as throwing punches, it is perhaps a surprise that Hamed only graced Las Vegas once. That fateful evening, on the grandest stage at the MGM, was taken notoriously lightly by Hamed despite its apparent allure to a character known for magic carpets, somersaults and expensive cars during entrances.
Hamed was, the story goes, woefully overweight in the months leading up to his 2001 bout with Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera, who trained astutely in a bid to end the Sheffield man’s 35-0 record. A desperate weight loss, not befitting of the fight capital of the world, ended Hamed’s streak and effectively his career. One of Britain’s brightest talents and colourful characters only managed the Nevada pilgrimage once, and it was to his detriment.
Lennox Lewis
The one-time undisputed heavyweight champion sought redemption in Las Vegas three times, each time successfully avenging his only career defeats under the Vegas spotlights.
A unanimous decision over Levi Billups in 1992 in Caesars Palace could not prepare Lewis for the legacy he would eventually leave in the city. A year later, he defended his WBC title at the Thomas & Mack Centre with a points win over Tony Tucker.
Before the London-born, Toronto-raised banger made a third venture to Vegas, he was on the wrong end of a classic upset. Oliver McCall shockingly handed him a first defeat at Wembley in 1994 and it would take Lewis three years to rematch his conqueror in boxing’s grandest city on a famous fight night, remembered largely in sympathy for McCall.
Not long out of rehab, the American barely threw a punch, refused to return to his corner between rounds and was famously reduced to tears. Lewis stopped him in five.
Lewis’ second Vegas rematch saw him crowned the undisputed heavyweight champion in 1999. After previously drawing with Evander Holyfield, the Thomas & Mack Center rematch eight months later ended unanimously in Lewis' favour after 12 rounds.
A year later, stripped of the WBA belt, he beat David Tua in Mandalay Bay but Lewis’ successful Vegas record was set in stone by beating Hasim Rahman at the second attempt. Rahman’s earlier stoppage of Lewis remains one of boxing’s biggest shocks, largely attributed to the Brit’s lack of focus going into the bout. Second time around, Lewis won back his championships with a fourth-round knockout at Mandalay Bay.
He went on to stop a faded Mike Tyson and an emerging Vitali Klitschko elsewhere but Las Vegas remains the place where one of Britain’s finest fighters rectified the only flaws he ever showed.
Frank Bruno
Bruno fought in Vegas twice, both times against a Tyson in his prime, and both times he was viciously sent packing back across the pond. In 1989, after Tyson’s legal troubles scuppered the prospect of seeing him at Wembley, he blasted Bruno out in five rounds at the Las Vegas Hilton. Tyson took two rounds less to win the rematch seven years later, after which he retired on medical advice due to an eye injury.
Joe Calzaghe
It took the undisputed, undefeated super-middleweight champion 44 consecutive wins to finally make the journey to Vegas, but when Calzaghe did, he added an all-time great to his lengthy list of victim. Bernard Hopkins was able to knock down the Welshman but Calzaghe roared back for a split decision win in his penultimate, and possibly most impressive, bout.
Watch Amir Khan v Devon Alexander, live on Sky Sports 1, from 2.00am on Sunday morning.