Mike Tyson vs Alex Stewart 08.12.1990

Atlantic City, December 8, 1990 – Like a thunderclap over the Jersey coast, Mike Tyson’s fists spoke louder than any critic could, thundering through Alex Stewart in a jaw-dropping 2 minutes and 27 seconds. Billed as The Hard Way Back, this fight was more than a bout—it was a statement. Tyson, still smouldering from the infamous upset at the hands of Buster Douglas earlier that year, tore through Stewart like a man on a mission.

The Convention Centre crowd barely had time to settle into their seats before Tyson launched into a savage assault. Within ten seconds of the opening bell, Stewart was tasting the canvas, floored by a blistering right hand. Though he bravely beat the count, he had stepped into a hurricane he wouldn’t escape.

Tyson, 218 pounds of focused fury, wasn’t content with a single knockdown. Like a predator zeroing in on wounded prey, he charged again, unleashing a fusillade of hooks and overhands. At the 1:05 mark, another brutal right hand dropped Stewart for the second time. Still, the referee allowed him to continue, giving the fans a brief glimpse of Stewart’s toughness—but not for long.

Under the three-knockdown rule, Stewart’s fate was nearly sealed. Tyson needed only one more punctuation mark, and he delivered it emphatically. A crisp left exploded against Stewart’s jaw, sending him to the canvas a final time. The referee, Frank Cappuccino, mercifully waved it off.

This wasn’t just a win—it was a ferocious reminder that the Tyson mystique was still very much alive. With this emphatic TKO, Tyson recorded his 19th first-round knockout and improved to 38-1, bulldozing yet another opponent before fans could even break a sweat.

For Stewart, once a feared knockout artist himself, the night was a harsh lesson in levels. Despite entering with 26 knockouts in 27 fights, he had no answer for Tyson’s relentless pressure and unrivalled explosiveness.

The win also marked Tyson’s final appearance under the HBO banner, as he and promoter Don King pivoted to Showtime following disputes with broadcaster Larry Merchant. What remained clear, however, was that Tyson wasn’t done chasing the heavyweight summit.

And if Tyson’s demolition of Stewart proved anything, it’s that the road back might be hard, but Tyson was still ready to walk it—one devastating punch at a time.