Top 20 greatest heavyweights of all time: From Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk to Mike Tyson and Muhammad Ali

Deciding the greatest heavyweight boxer of all time is not an easy task, but we at talkSPORT.com have decided to give it a go anyway. To make it more manageable, we have stuck to the last 50 years to come up with a top 20 list of the best heavyweights of the modern era. Oleksandr Usyk is the only man to beat Tyson Fury, and he’s done it twiceGETTY From Mike Tyson to Tyson Fury, all of the greatest male heavyweights are on this list. A few are still active, so could find their places changing, while many retired years ago. So, here we go… 20. Michael Moorer (Career: 1988-2008 | Record 52-4-1, 40 KOs | USA) A top light-heavyweight who upset Evander Holyfield in 1994 to become the first southpaw heavyweight champion. Unfortunately, best known for losing the title to an ancient George Foreman, which is a shame as Michael Moorer was a surly, enigmatic but undeniably skilful fighter. 19. Chris Byrd (Career: 1993-2009 | Record: 41-5-1, 22 KOs | USA) A middleweight at the 1992 Olympics, even Chris Byrd knew he wasn’t really a heavyweight. Which makes the slick southpaw’s achievements in mixing it with far bigger guys – beating David Tua and even Vitali Klitschko (admittedly via injury) while winning two world title belts – very impressive. 18. Deontay Wilder (Career: 2008-present | Record 43-4-1, 42 KOs | USA) It’s been a dramatic fall from grace for Wilder – who now has to grudgingly accept that Fury is the bigger, better heavyweight. ‘The Bronze Bomber’ did show off his extraordinary power and tremendous heart in losing their thrilling trilogy fight – but his most recent fights have led to calls to hang up the gloves. A one-round KO win over Robert Helenius was his only in-ring action in two years before he suffered a shocking upset loss to Joseph Parker in Saudi Arabia in December 2023. The defeat wrecked his chances of a clash with Anthony Joshua and he was left distraught after he was then KO’d by Zhilei Zhang. While a possible road to redemption is now unclear, he’s still one of the hardest punchers to ever grace boxing and has 42 KOs to his name. Wilder may have missed his chance to rule the roost in the heavyweight divisionGetty 17. Jimmy Young (Career: 1969-1990 | Record: 35-18-3, 1 N/C, 11 KOs | USA) Don’t judge Jimmy Young on his record, Lost four of his first 11 fights and, by the 1980s, was sadly a journeyman. But at his 1970s peak, this elite boxer beat George Foreman, Ron Lyle and lost some highly dubious decisions (including to an ageing Muhammad Ali in 1976). Underrated. 16. Michael Spinks (Career: 1977-1998 | Record: 31-1, 21 KOs | USA) Hard to rank as his heavyweight career was so short, but ‘The Jinx’ – an all-time great at 175lb – pulled off a famous win when he ended Larry Holmes’s long, unbeaten reign as heavyweight champ. Unfortunately, most fans now know him for his final fight and sole career defeat: 91 seconds with an angry Mike Tyson. Ouch. Spinks was a dangerous heavyweight, but Tyson made light work of himSports Illustrated - Getty 15. Tim Witherspoon (Career: 1979-2003 | Record: 55-13-1, 38 KOs | USA) ‘Terrible Tim’ lived up to his nickname both ways: he could be a fearsome opponent or he could be flat-out awful. Unlucky to lose a split decision to Larry Holmes, the slippery ’Spoon won world title belts and beat the best of the rest. He never got the shot at Mike Tyson he always craved (and some say Don King made sure that was the case). 14. Anthony Joshua (Career: 2013-present | Record 28-4, 25 KOs | Britain) It’s too soon to rank Oleksandr Usyk’s place on this list – and there’s no shame in losing to an all-time cruiserweight great – but Joshua’s lacklustre display in the first fight, in particular, hurts his standing. He still boasts impressive wins over Dillian Whyte, Joseph Parker and Andy Ruiz Jr (in their rematch). But AJ looked lost between styles to the point where his KO power was barely a factor in either of his fights vs Usyk. Joshua begun a comeback trail and made a massive statement in a dominant victory over Otto Wallin in December. However, all his hard work was undone in stunning fashion when he was brutally knocked out by fellow Brit Daniel Dubois in September. But there will be no chance of immediate redemption for Joshua against Dubois because the new IBF champion is set to face Joseph Parker in February 2025. So, Joshua is going to have to bide his time before he can properly start climbing the rankings again. Dubois dominated and KO’d Joshua, to the surprise of many in the boxing worldGetty 13. Ken Norton (Career: 1967-1981 | Record: 42-7-1, 33 KOs | USA) Famously gave Muhammad Ali fits in their trilogy, officially losing 2-1 (though many scored the decider for Ken Norton), this awkward, muscular heavyweight was a top contender during the golden era of the 1970s. His slugfest with a prime Larry Holmes is a classic fight and proof of his elite abilit

Feb 19, 2025 - 15:16
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Top 20 greatest heavyweights of all time: From Tyson Fury and Oleksandr Usyk to Mike Tyson and Muhammad Ali

Deciding the greatest heavyweight boxer of all time is not an easy task, but we at talkSPORT.com have decided to give it a go anyway.

To make it more manageable, we have stuck to the last 50 years to come up with a top 20 list of the best heavyweights of the modern era.

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA - MAY 19: Oleksandr Usyk of Ukraine beats Tyson Fury (not seen) of United Kingdom to become the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on May 19, 2024. (Photo by Mohammed Saad/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Oleksandr Usyk is the only man to beat Tyson Fury, and he’s done it twice
GETTY

From Mike Tyson to Tyson Fury, all of the greatest male heavyweights are on this list.

A few are still active, so could find their places changing, while many retired years ago.

So, here we go…

20. Michael Moorer (Career: 1988-2008 | Record 52-4-1, 40 KOs | USA)

A top light-heavyweight who upset Evander Holyfield in 1994 to become the first southpaw heavyweight champion. Unfortunately, best known for losing the title to an ancient George Foreman, which is a shame as Michael Moorer was a surly, enigmatic but undeniably skilful fighter.

19. Chris Byrd (Career: 1993-2009 | Record: 41-5-1, 22 KOs | USA)

A middleweight at the 1992 Olympics, even Chris Byrd knew he wasn’t really a heavyweight. Which makes the slick southpaw’s achievements in mixing it with far bigger guys – beating David Tua and even Vitali Klitschko (admittedly via injury) while winning two world title belts – very impressive.

18. Deontay Wilder (Career: 2008-present | Record 43-4-1, 42 KOs | USA)

It’s been a dramatic fall from grace for Wilder – who now has to grudgingly accept that Fury is the bigger, better heavyweight.

‘The Bronze Bomber’ did show off his extraordinary power and tremendous heart in losing their thrilling trilogy fight – but his most recent fights have led to calls to hang up the gloves.

A one-round KO win over Robert Helenius was his only in-ring action in two years before he suffered a shocking upset loss to Joseph Parker in Saudi Arabia in December 2023.

The defeat wrecked his chances of a clash with Anthony Joshua and he was left distraught after he was then KO’d by Zhilei Zhang.

While a possible road to redemption is now unclear, he’s still one of the hardest punchers to ever grace boxing and has 42 KOs to his name.

Boxer landing a punch on another boxer during a match.
Wilder may have missed his chance to rule the roost in the heavyweight division
Getty

17. Jimmy Young (Career: 1969-1990 | Record: 35-18-3, 1 N/C, 11 KOs | USA)

Don’t judge Jimmy Young on his record, Lost four of his first 11 fights and, by the 1980s, was sadly a journeyman.

But at his 1970s peak, this elite boxer beat George Foreman, Ron Lyle and lost some highly dubious decisions (including to an ageing Muhammad Ali in 1976). Underrated.

16. Michael Spinks (Career: 1977-1998 | Record: 31-1, 21 KOs | USA)

Hard to rank as his heavyweight career was so short, but ‘The Jinx’ – an all-time great at 175lb – pulled off a famous win when he ended Larry Holmes’s long, unbeaten reign as heavyweight champ.

Unfortunately, most fans now know him for his final fight and sole career defeat: 91 seconds with an angry Mike Tyson. Ouch.

Mike Tyson knocks down Michael Spinks in a boxing match.
Spinks was a dangerous heavyweight, but Tyson made light work of him
Sports Illustrated - Getty

15. Tim Witherspoon (Career: 1979-2003 | Record: 55-13-1, 38 KOs | USA)

‘Terrible Tim’ lived up to his nickname both ways: he could be a fearsome opponent or he could be flat-out awful. Unlucky to lose a split decision to Larry Holmes, the slippery ’Spoon won world title belts and beat the best of the rest.

He never got the shot at Mike Tyson he always craved (and some say Don King made sure that was the case).

14. Anthony Joshua (Career: 2013-present | Record 28-4, 25 KOs | Britain)

It’s too soon to rank Oleksandr Usyk’s place on this list – and there’s no shame in losing to an all-time cruiserweight great – but Joshua’s lacklustre display in the first fight, in particular, hurts his standing.

He still boasts impressive wins over Dillian Whyte, Joseph Parker and Andy Ruiz Jr (in their rematch). But AJ looked lost between styles to the point where his KO power was barely a factor in either of his fights vs Usyk.

Joshua begun a comeback trail and made a massive statement in a dominant victory over Otto Wallin in December.

However, all his hard work was undone in stunning fashion when he was brutally knocked out by fellow Brit Daniel Dubois in September.

But there will be no chance of immediate redemption for Joshua against Dubois because the new IBF champion is set to face Joseph Parker in February 2025.

So, Joshua is going to have to bide his time before he can properly start climbing the rankings again.

Daniel Dubois knocks down Anthony Joshua in a boxing match.
Dubois dominated and KO’d Joshua, to the surprise of many in the boxing world
Getty

13. Ken Norton (Career: 1967-1981 | Record: 42-7-1, 33 KOs | USA)

Famously gave Muhammad Ali fits in their trilogy, officially losing 2-1 (though many scored the decider for Ken Norton), this awkward, muscular heavyweight was a top contender during the golden era of the 1970s.

His slugfest with a prime Larry Holmes is a classic fight and proof of his elite ability.

12. Riddick Bowe (Career: 1989-2008 | Record: 43-1, 1 N/C, 33 KOs | USA)

‘Big Daddy Bowe’ had the skills, frame and power to be a true all-time great but preferred hitting the fridge than hitting the gym (we can relate).

He still boasts an amazing record and won his epic trilogy with Evander Holyfield 2-1, but there should have been so much more to come from this gifted, troubled heavyweight.

11. Wladimir Klitschko (Career: 1996-2017 | Record: 64-5, 53 KOs | Ukraine)

An impressively lengthy title reign and boasted a rare combination of balletic footwork and brutalising power.

However, he was stopped in several fights he should never have lost early in his career and the younger Klitschko was a dominant champion but in a rather weak heavyweight era.

Wladimir Klitschko holding his boxing championship belts.
Klitschko was one of the most dominant heavyweights alongside his brother
AFP - Getty

10. Vitali Klitschko (Career: 1996-2012 | Record: 45-2, 41 KOs | Ukraine)

The opposite to his younger brother (except for the Herculean size), Vitali had fewer silky skills but owned an iron jaw.

Both of his defeats were excusable, coming via cuts (against Lennox Lewis in a war) and a shoulder injury – and he battered everyone else he faced. An awkward heavyweight to fight and indeed rank.

9. Mike Tyson (Career: 1985-2005 | Record: 50-6-2 N/C, 44 KOs | USA)

Ferocious, quickfire, sawn-off wrecking machine who got to 37-0 was one of the most feared heavyweights who ever lived.

Critics will say ‘Iron Mike’ peaked early and never defeated a great opponent in their prime, but his early dominance was a marvel to behold even if it did all start unravelling at age 23.

Unfortunately, many people will remember him for his latest and probably final appearance in the ring.

The 58-year-old took on Youtuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul and lost to his fellow American while barely throwing a punch.

Mike Tyson holding three championship belts.
Tyson became the youngest heavyweight champion in history at age 20
Getty
Mike Tyson boxing Evander Holyfield.
Holyfield’s fights with Tyson are legendary, with the former winning both during their 1990s heyday
getty

8. Evander Holyfield (Career: 1984-2011 | Record: 44-10-2, 1 N/C, 29 KOs | USA)

Teak-tough cruiserweight great stepped up and mixed it with the best heavyweights of his era, having memorable rivalries with Riddick Bowe, Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis.

Unfortunately the ‘Real Deal’ knew no quit inside the ring, nor outside of it as his career went on far too long, even before 2021 reared its ugly head.

7. Tyson Fury (Career: 2008-2025 | Record: 34-2-1, 24 KOs | Britain)

Gigantic, versatile with amazing powers of recovery and newfound pop on his punches: Fury would be a challenge for any heavyweight in history.

He showed in his trilogy win against Wilder that he can triumph even when not in tip-top shape but his allure has somewhat diminished in recent outings.

Fury was knocked down against former UFC fighter Francis Ngannou and then missed the opportunity to become undisputed heavyweight champion in his defeat to Usyk in May 2024.

‘The Gypsy King’ then faced Usyk again in a rematch just before Christmas in the same year, but it was the same result for Fury.

Usyk was awarded the win on the scorecards and outclassed his opponent, who has now retired from boxing.

For just how long that lasts, remains to be seen…

Oleksandr Usyk and Tyson Fury boxing.Getty
Fury finally met his match in the form of Usyk[/caption]

6. Oleksandr Usyk (Career: 2013-present) | Record: 23-0-0, 14 KOs | Ukraine)

It seems strange to say that someone who has fought in the heavyweight division just seven times is one of the greatest to step in the ring, but that is the case with Usyk.

The Ukrainian’s CV as a heavyweight is very impressive, beating Joshua and Fury twice after previously dominating the cruiserweight division.

All four victories were totally comprehensive as well, and Usyk dismantled two of Britain’s best modern-day boxers.

There are many fighters with much more power than Usyk, but there is no one who can match his footwork and skill, which is why he would be a match for any heavyweight in history.

By beating Fury for the first time, he became the undisputed champion of the division.

He was then stripped of the IBF belt for refusing to fight the mandatory challenger to beat Fury once more.

No one would have complained if Usyk decided he was going to retire after that, but he wants to unify the division again by beating the winner of Dubois and Parker.

If he does that, he could easily move up this list.

Oleksandr Usyk holding three heavyweight boxing championship belts.
Usyk has beaten the best the heavyweight division has to offer
Mark Robinson/Matchroom

5. Joe Frazier (Career: 1965-1981 | Record: 32-4-1, 27 KO’s | USA)

One half of the greatest trilogy boxing has ever seen and an awesome fighter in his own right.

‘Smokin’ Joe’ was the first man to defeat Muhammad Ali, owned a pulverising left hook, an exceptional will to win and lost to only two heavyweights: Ali in memorable rematches and George Foreman.

Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier boxing in Madison Square Garden.
Ali had three legendary fights with Frazier, the first of which is known as ‘The Fight of the Century’ in New York at the legendary Madison Square Garden
Getty Images - Getty

4. Lennox Lewis (Career: 1989-2003 | Record: 41-2-1, 32 KO’s | Britain)

Lewis had the perfect combo of size, skill and power.

He could also be his own worst enemy, fighting down to the level of his opponent, particularly in his two upset defeats.

But at his best, when utilising his sublime jab and crushing right hand, he was a match for anyone.

Lennox Lewis boxing Mike Tyson.
Lewis is the last undisputed heavyweight champion
AFP

3. George Foreman (Career: 1969-1997 | Record: 76-5, 68 KO’s | USA)

Two amazing careers in one for this formidable puncher. The angry, younger Foreman wrecked foes as great as Joe Frazier and Ken Norton in two rounds apiece.

The charming, older Foreman took a bit longer to KO Michael Moorer and shock the world by winning back the world title at age 46.

Unreal.

George Foreman training with a punching bag.
In his prime, Foreman was a dominant champion who possessed one of the hardest punches in boxing
Getty

2. Larry Holmes (Career: 1973-2002 | Record: 69-6, 44 KO’s | USA)

The ‘Easton Assassin’ was underrated in his era, not as flashy or popular as the No. 1 on this list. But he sure could box.

A sharp jab, boxing brain, size and miraculous powers of recovery got Larry Holmes to 48-0 and 20 heavyweight title defences before he finally lost a decision to Michael Spinks, a few weeks shy of his 36th birthday.

1. Muhammad Ali (Career: 1960-1981 | Record: 56-5, 37 KO’s | USA)

Forget the fame, social impact, good looks, charisma and unique style that saw this 6ft 3in Adonis float around the ring like a featherweight: Muhammad Ali’s list of conquered foes puts him top of this list alone.

From dazzling Sonny Liston with his brilliance to shocking George Foreman with his resilience, the three-time world champ is a clear No. 1.

Muhammad Ali boxing in London.
There’s a reason he is still known as ‘The Greatest’
Getty

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