The fight took place on the undercard of Mike Tinley vs. Ray Ray Gray, with veteran referee Frank Cappuccino assigned to the contest. Tyson weighed approximately 215 pounds, while the taller Alderson entered at around 226 pounds. The size advantage made little difference once Tyson closed the distance.
Tyson immediately took the center of the ring and stalked Alderson behind his trademark bob-and-weave movement. Alderson worked behind his jab from long range, but Tyson slipped inside repeatedly and landed compact left hooks and right hands to the head.
Tyson landed several hard left hands during the opening round, bloodying Alderson’s nose early. He also briefly switched to a southpaw stance before returning to orthodox. Alderson spent much of the round backing away and covering up while Tyson continued landing the cleaner punches.
Between rounds, Tyson’s corner instructed him to attack the body more aggressively. He immediately followed those instructions in the second round.
Tyson mixed hooks to the body with short combinations upstairs, repeatedly forcing Alderson onto the defensive as the punishment mounted. A deep cut opened over Alderson’s left eye, further limiting his offense.
Tyson scored two knockdowns during the second round with heavy combinations, each time forcing Alderson to rise and continue. Although Alderson returned to his feet both times, he had absorbed sustained punishment to the head and body.
At the end of the second round, Alderson’s corner decided he had taken enough punishment, and the bout was stopped, giving Tyson a second-round technical knockout victory. The win improved Tyson to 5-0 with five knockouts, while Alderson suffered the first loss of his professional career.
Tyson’s victory was the fifth of an extraordinary 15 fights he would have in 1985. Fighting at a pace rarely seen among heavyweight prospects, he remained active almost every two or three weeks while trainers Cus D’Amato and Kevin Rooney continued refining his peek-a-boo style against progressively tougher opposition.
The rapid schedule accelerated Tyson’s rise through the heavyweight rankings. Over the next 16 months, he defeated a string of increasingly experienced opponents that included Jesse Ferguson, James Tillis, Mitch Green, Marvis Frazier, Jose Ribalta and Alfonso Ratliff before challenging Trevor Berbick for the WBC heavyweight title in November 1986.
Tyson stopped Berbick in two rounds to become the youngest heavyweight champion in boxing history at 20 years and four months old, beginning a reign that eventually saw him unify the WBC, WBA and IBF championships.
Alderson’s professional career proved much shorter. The defeat dropped him to 4-1, and he boxed only a handful of additional times before leaving the sport. Years later, he reportedly spoke fondly of sharing the ring with Tyson and eventually reunited with the former champion during a friendly meeting.
Tyson’s victory over Alderson was the fifth of 19 consecutive knockout wins to begin his professional career. Sixteen months later, he stopped Trevor Berbick to win the WBC heavyweight title, becoming the youngest heavyweight champion in boxing history at 20 years and four months old.








