By Clinton Van der Berg
Altitude and ambition: Remembering the heavyweight heist of the century
The air in Brakpan was thin, but the tension was thick enough to choke on.
Exactly 25 years ago today, the echoes of “Thunder in Africa” still rumble through the halls of South African boxing history. It wasn’t just a fight; it was a high-altitude heist that left the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world staring at the lights of Carnival City Casino, wondering how his working vacation had turned into a career-defining nightmare.
The story began with a signature Rodney Berman move: audacious, expensive, and draped in ambition. While the world expected Lennox Lewis to defend his WBC, IBF, and IBO titles in Las Vegas or London, Berman and Golden Gloves were quietly pulling strings in Johannesburg, with long-time partner Cedric Kushner running things from the U.S.
“People thought we were mad,” Berman later recalled of the R100-million venture. “To bring the undisputed heavyweight champion to a casino in Brakpan was considered a fantasy.”
But Berman, ever the master of the big play, leveraged South Africa’s unique allure and the backing of deep-pocketed sponsors to outbid the global giants. By February 2001, the unthinkable was official: Lennox Lewis was coming to the highveld.
The buildup was a study in contrasts. Hasim Rahman, a 20-1 underdog from Baltimore, arrived in South Africa on March 27. He spent nearly a month acclimatizing to the 1,600m altitude, pounding the local roads and embracing the role of the humble underdog.
Lewis, meanwhile, was operating on a different frequency. He was busy filming a cameo for the movie Ocean’s Eleven in Las Vegas and didn’t arrive until April 10—barely 12 days before the first bell. While Rahman was breathing the thin African air, Lewis was under the Hollywood lights.
“Lewis treated it like a holiday,” Berman noted. “He arrived with a massive entourage, looking more like a movie star than a man coming for a scrap. You could feel the complacency in the camp. They hadn’t respected the altitude, and they certainly didn’t respect Rahman.”
The logistical challenges were immense. To satisfy HBO’s prime-time audience in the United States, the fight was scheduled for 5 a.m. on Sunday, April 22.
The atmosphere was surreal. While the rest of the country slept, Carnival City was a glittering island of celebrity. Ringside was a who’s who of South African and international elite, including Nelson Mandela—who had a deep-seated love for the sweet science—and Hollywood star Will Smith. The guest list was a testament to Golden Gloves’ ability to turn a boxing match into an international event.
But as the sun began to peek over the horizon, the air grew cold. Lewis, despite weighing in at a solid 115 kg, looked sluggish in the early rounds. He was winning on the cards, but Rahman was doing the work, throwing nearly double the punches by the fourth round.
The fifth round remains one of the most shocking three-minute stretches in sports history. Lewis was stalking Rahman, seemingly looking for one big shot to end the night so he could get back to breakfast. He even flashed Rahman a cheeky, overconfident smile moments before the end.
Then, with 46 seconds left in the round, the world shifted. Lewis momentarily dropped his gloves. Rahman, seizing the moment, uncorked a massive right hand that landed flush on the champion’s chin.
Lewis didn’t just fall; he collapsed. He hit the canvas with a thud that seemed to vibrate through the entire arena. He tried to claw his way up, but his equilibrium was gone. As the referee reached the count of 10, the 20-1 underdog was the new king of the world.
HBO’s Larry Merchant summed it up perfectly: “He just drowned in Ocean’s Eleven.”
The controversy didn’t end with the count. In the following weeks, the heavyweight division descended into a legal civil war. Rahman signed with Don King, while Lewis fought tooth and nail in court to enforce a rematch clause.
For Golden Gloves, the event was a bittersweet triumph. It was a logistical masterpiece that put South Africa at the center of the sporting map, but it also served as a gritty reminder of the sport’s unpredictability.
“That night changed everything,” Berman would later say. “It showed that in heavyweight boxing, there is no such thing as a ‘safe’ defense. We gave the world a miracle in Brakpan, even if Lennox didn’t appreciate the gift at the time.”
Lennox Lewis eventually avenged the loss later that year in Las Vegas, but the image of him slumped against the ropes in the early morning light of South Africa remains an indelible part of his legacy.
Twenty-five years on, “Thunder in Africa” stands as a monument to Golden Gloves’ ambition—and the day Hasim Rahman turned the boxing world upside down on the African highveld.
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