Bowe turned
professional after his Olympic loss. Highly regarded trainer
Eddie Futch took on the job of developing Bowe, as he saw the talent. Eddie would say that Bowe had more potential than any boxer he had ever trained. Bowe turned professional in March 1989 and knocked out
Lionel Butler. His then manager, Rock Newman, kept Bowe active, fighting 13 times in 1989, beating journeymen — the most notable being Garing Lane, whom he beat twice. In September 1990, Bowe made his first step up in class, fighting faded ex-champion
Pinklon Thomas, whom he dominated until Thomas gave up after eight rounds. The following month, Bowe knocked out
Bert Cooper in two rounds, which added to his reputation and high ranking. In March 1991, Bowe knocked out 1984 Olympic Super Heavyweight Gold medalist
Tyrell Biggs. In Bowe's next fight, ex-champion
Tony Tubbs appeared to outbox and outsmart Bowe in a close bout, only to have the judges award Bowe a unanimous decision. In August 1991, Bowe knocked out future world heavyweight champion
Bruce Seldon in one round.
Fights against Elijah Tillery Bowe fought two interesting bouts against
Elijah Tillery in 1991. Their first fight, at the
Washington Convention Center, drew attention for its bizarre conclusion. Bowe dominated the first round and dropped Tillery. After the round ended, Tillery walked toward Bowe and taunted him, and Bowe responded by punching Tillery. Tillery then threw several low kicks at Bowe, who then unleashed a flurry of punches on Tillery as he lay on the ropes. Bowe's trainer Rock Newman grabbed Tillery from behind on the ring apron and pulled him over the ropes as Bowe continued to throw punches. Tillery somersaulted over the ropes, and was quickly detained by security. After order was restored and the fighters returned to the ring, Tillery and Bowe continued a war of words, and minor incidents continued until the ring was cleared. Tillery was controversially disqualified for kicking Bowe, with Bowe getting the win, much to the surprise of the television announcers. The referee, Karl Milligan, had stepped between the two fighters to separate them and stepped forward as he did so, inadvertently missing the action behind him after the bell between the combatants. The fighters fought a rematch two months later at Convention Hall in Atlantic City, with Bowe dominating and stopping Tillery in four rounds.
Bowe vs. Coetzer In July 1992, he knocked out South African
Pierre Coetzer in the seventh round of a
WBA heavyweight title eliminator. The victory made him the
mandatory challenger to undisputed heavyweight champion
Evander Holyfield.
World heavyweight champion In November 1992 he fought reigning champ Evander Holyfield for the undisputed heavyweight title. Bowe won a unanimous decision in an entertaining fight, flooring Holyfield in the 11th round. However, it was the tenth round most boxing fans will remember. The epic brutal back and forth exchanges helped make it
Ring Magazine's "
Round of the Year." Commentator Al Bernstein exclaimed, "That was one of the greatest rounds in heavyweight history. Period!" A couple of weeks earlier in London, Bowe's old Olympic rival,
Lennox Lewis, knocked out Canadian
Donovan "Razor" Ruddock in two rounds, establishing himself as the World Boxing Council's number one contender. The Bowe-Holyfield and Lewis-Ruddock fights were part of a mini-tournament, whereby all four fighters agreed the two winners would meet each other for the undisputed world heavyweight championship. Bowe's manager Rock Newman made a proposal: the $32 million purse HBO was offering should be split 90–10 in Bowe's favor, an 'absurd' offer which Lennox Lewis rejected. Lewis's manager,
Kellie Maloney (known as Frank Maloney at the time), rejected another offer of two million for Lewis to fight on a Bowe undercard, citing his distrust of the Bowe camp after the aforementioned financial negotiations. Bowe responded by holding a press conference in which he dumped the WBC world heavyweight championship belt into a trash can and relinquished it in order to protest the actions of the WBC and WBC President
José Sulaimán concerning the fight payoff. Bowe's first defense of his remaining titles came on February 6, 1993, when he fought 34-year-old former champion
Michael Dokes at
Madison Square Garden and knocked him out in the first round. In February 1993, Bowe met Pope
John Paul II during the pope's general audience at the
Vatican, a day after Bowe completed a goodwill mission to
Somalia. In Bowe's next fight, May 22, 1993, at
RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C., Bowe knocked out
Jesse Ferguson in the second round to retain the title. This set up a rematch with Evander Holyfield. In the rematch with Holyfield, Bowe looked overweight. He had entered training camp at 266 lbs and weighed in at 246 lbs, eleven pounds heavier than in the first fight with Holyfield. Bowe and Holyfield exchanged hard punches. Bowe ended up losing the belts to Holyfield by a majority decision. This fight was also known for a bizarre stunt in which parachutist
James "Fan Man" Miller dropped into the open air arena, landing in the ropes by Bowe's corner. This surreal scene delayed the fight in the seventh round by nearly a half-hour. Bowe stated afterwards he thought the bout should have declared a 'technical draw' or a 'no contest' owing to the unfair delay.
After title loss In August 1994, Bowe fought two comeback fights. He faced the much smaller
Buster Mathis Jr and, after struggling to connect with his bobbing and weaving target, hit Mathis while he was down with what was ruled an accidental blow, and the bout was ruled a 'No Contest' by referee
Arthur Mercante Sr. In December 1994, Bowe punched
Larry Donald at a prefight press conference, later beating him by 12 round unanimous decision for the WBC Continental Americas Heavyweight title, giving the 16-0 heavyweight contender Donald his first loss.
WBO heavyweight champion and Holyfield rubber match In March 1995, Bowe won the
WBO version of the world heavyweight championship by knocking down England's
Herbie Hide six times en route to scoring a sixth-round knockout. In June 1995, after a heated build up, Bowe defended the WBO heavyweight title against his archrival in the amateurs,
Jorge Luis González, At the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. The prefight hype contained bizarre trash talk, which included Gonzalez declaring a desire to eat Bowe's heart and likening himself to a
lion while making Bowe out to be a
hyena. Bowe won by sixth-round knockout over Gonzalez. He vacated the WBO championship soon after. After the Gonzales fight, Bowe fought a rubber match with Evander Holyfield, their third and final meeting. Holyfield knocked Bowe down during the fight, but Bowe maintained his composure, and persevered to score an eighth round stoppage victory. On January 11, 1996, Bowe was officially no longer the WBO champion.
Bowe vs. Golota I and II After defeating Holyfield in the third bout of their trilogy, Bowe was matched against undefeated heavyweight contender
Andrew Golota at the
Madison Square Garden in an
HBO Boxing event. Bowe's weight problem again resurfaced, as the favorite entered the ring at a career high of 252 lbs. Though ahead on points, Golota was penalized several times for low blows to the testes, and was finally disqualified in the seventh round after a combination of punches to Bowe's testicles. Seconds after Golota was disqualified, Bowe's entourage rushed the ring, attacked Golota with a two way radio (Golota traded punches with one of them, requiring 11 stitches to close the wound caused by the radio) and assaulted Golota's 74-year-old trainer
Lou Duva, who collapsed in the ring and was taken out of The Garden on a stretcher. The entourage began rioting, fighting with spectators, staff and policemen alike, resulting in a number of injuries before they were forced out of the arena in what evolved into a lengthy televised ring spectacle. The fight made many sports shows, including
SportsCenter, and there was a good amount of public interest in a rematch. The rematch was on
Pay Per View. Golota, after dropping Bowe in the second round, and being dropped himself later, was leading on the scorecards, only to be disqualified in the ninth round, once again for deliberately punching Bowe repeatedly in the testes. Despite not having another riot, this fight also proved to be controversial, with an unsuccessful protest filed by Golota's camp to try to overturn the fight's result. This fight was featured on
HBO's documentary
Legendary Nights: The Tale of Bowe-Golota.
Return to boxing On September 25, 2004, after seven and a half years away from boxing, Bowe returned with a second-round knockout over Marcus Rhode. In a second comeback fight, in April 2005, an overweight Bowe narrowly defeated journeyman Billy Zumbrun by ten round split decision. Bowe declared bankruptcy in 2005. On December 13, 2008, with the help of new manager Bob Bain, Bowe, 41, returned to the ring for the first time in over three and a half years on the undercard of the
Wladimir Klitschko versus
Hasim Rahman world heavyweight title bout in
Mannheim,
Germany and won an eight-round unanimous decision over
Gene Pukall.
Legacy and reputation Riddick Bowe's boxing record stands at 43 wins and 1 loss, with 33 knockouts. In the autobiography of veteran former referee
Mills Lane, ''Let's Get It On'', who had officiated at some of Bowe's fights, he professed that Bowe could have been one of boxing's greatest boxers but foolishly squandered the opportunity through immaturity and lack of discipline.
BoxRec ranks Bowe as the 28th greatest fighter among boxers that had their last professional boxing match at heavyweight. Noted for his
in-fighting skills,
jab and
combination punching, Bowe's first fight with
Evander Holyfield is considered one of the greatest world heavyweight title fights of all time. Following this victory, he met
Nelson Mandela during a visit to South Africa. Bowe's trainer at the time,
Eddie Futch, lamented that upon his return, Bowe failed to ever achieve the same physical condition for his subsequent fights. In 2017,
The Ring magazine ranked Bowe as the 19th best heavyweight of all time in a poll of a panel of 30 trainers, matchmakers and members of the boxing media. The consensus was that Bowe, described as both a "super talent" and a "super waste", only had one great fight, when winning the title from Holyfield, and ultimately disappointed in squandering his obvious natural ability due to laziness. Bowe's reputation suffered because of the weak challengers he faced as champion (an aging
Michael Dokes and also
Jesse Ferguson) before losing the title to Holyfield in their rematch. He is also widely criticized for relinquishing the WBC title rather than defending it against
mandatory challenger Lennox Lewis, thus fracturing the undisputed championship until Lewis unified the titles in 1999. Bowe is the first boxer in any division to hold all four major versions of the world championship (
WBA,
WBC,
IBF, and
WBO) during his career, an accomplishment emulated in the heavyweight division only by
Tyson Fury and
Oleksandr Usyk. Bowe's sole loss, to
Evander Holyfield in 1993, was avenged in 1995, meaning that he finished their trilogy 2-1 ahead. With the exception of a 1994 no-contest with
Buster Mathis Jr., Bowe defeated every opponent he faced as a professional. Alongside
Gene Tunney,
Rocky Marciano,
Sultan Ibragimov and
Nikolai Valuev, Bowe is one of five former heavyweight champions to have never suffered a stoppage defeat during his career. ==Professional kickboxing career==