Matthew Saad Muhammad vs Yaqui Lopez (2) 13.07.1980

In the heat of a New Jersey summer on 13 July 1980, the Great Gorge Playboy Club became the stage for one of the most astonishing battles ever waged inside a boxing ring. The WBC Light Heavyweight Champion, Matthew Saad Muhammad, made the fourth defence of his crown against the relentless Mexican challenger Yaqui Lopez. What followed was a display of courage, punishment, and resilience that remains seared into boxing history.

Both men entered at 174 lbs, and from the opening bell, neither took a backward step. Lopez, always the aggressor, worked with precision and volume, forcing the champion to trade rather than retreat. The early rounds belonged to the challenger, his crisp combinations and stamina setting a furious pace. Yet, as so often with Saad Muhammad, the story of the fight was never written until the final act.

By the eighth round, the contest erupted into chaos. Lopez unleashed a savage onslaught—twenty unanswered blows that had the champion reeling and the crowd roaring for a finish. For most fighters, it would have been the end. But Saad Muhammad was not most fighters. Drawing from some inexhaustible reserve of defiance, he steadied himself, met fire with fire, and drove Lopez back with thunderous hooks that seemed to defy human endurance. It was a round so dramatic that The Ring later crowned it the Round of the Year for 1980—and one of the most electrifying in boxing’s long chronicle.

From the ninth onwards, the tide turned decisively. Saad Muhammad, bruised yet unbroken, began dictating the pace, hammering away with combinations that chipped away at Lopez’s resolve. Every round saw the champion regain control, his stamina and heart eclipsing the damage done earlier. The challenger’s bravery never waned, but the punishment mounted.

Then came round fourteen—the dramatic finale. Lopez, weary but still dangerous, was dropped four times under a relentless assault. Each time he rose, driven by pride, only for Saad Muhammad to pour on another wave of power shots. Finally, referee Waldemar Schmidt stepped in at 2:03, ending a contest that had transcended sport and entered the realm of legend.

The judges’ cards—124-123, 125-123, and 125-122—all pointed to a narrow battle before the stoppage, a testament to Lopez’s valiant effort. For his night’s work, Saad Muhammad earned $150,000, Lopez $40,000—but both paid a far greater price in effort and courage.

Named Fight of the Year by The Ring Magazine, the bout stands as one of the greatest title clashes ever staged. On that July night in McAfee, Matthew Saad Muhammad and Yaqui Lopez delivered a war that redefined what heart and heroism in the ring truly mean.