Heavyweight Legend Mike Tyson is considered by many as the scariest boxer of all time.
At the height of his powers, 'Iron Mike' pronounced a frightening waste interview before ruthlessly ran out by his petrified opponents.
Mike Tyson enjoyed a historic 37-Fecht-winning run before he suffered a monumental upset loss against Buster Douglas in February 1990.
Many people believe that Peak Tyson was once the scariest hunter, but the man himself believes that the honor belongs to another heavyweight icon.
Heavyweight Muhammad Ali champion is about Sonny Liston and taunted him to get up during their title fight. Ali hit Liston in one minute in the first round during their fight at the Central Maine Youth Center in Lewiston, Maine.
Mike Tyson once mentions the boxer 'Boxer'
Mike Tyson recently sat down for a chat with NBA legend Shaquille O'Neal.
During their conversation, Tyson made a spot-on prediction for Dustin Poirier vs. Max Holloway 3.
The 58-year-old also revealed who he thinks is the 'scariest' hunter of all time after he has received the label over the years.
“Listen, Sonny Liston is the scariest hunter ever lived,” Tyson was full.
“Sonny Liston would come to a city, say he is in St. Louis, and he is coming to Chicago, the police [like] “Listen, you can't come.”
He hit around four agents, broke their jaw, grabbed their gun, they hit him with the night stick over his head …
“There is no hunter like Sonny Liston. Sonny Liston is a monster.”
Who is Sonny Liston?
Liston came from a rough background and learned how to box in prison before he became Pro in 1953.
'The Big Bear' became known as a vicious knock-out artist when he collected a 35-1 record, that Back-to-Back first round Stop page wins on heavyweight Champion Floyd Patterson.
The government of Liston was ended by Muhammad Ali, known as Cassius Clay for their first fight in February 1964.
A shoulder injury led Liston to retire after six rounds and set up a Rematch of May 1965.
Ali has freaked Liston famous in one round to end their rivalry and to make one of the most iconic boxing images of all time.
Liston won 15 of his next 16 fights, but did not succeed in becoming a champion again for his early death in December 1970.
