Home News Placing Bernard Hopkins into historical context: Kovalev was 5 when B-Hop turned...

Placing Bernard Hopkins into historical context: Kovalev was 5 when B-Hop turned pro

Credit: Hogan Photos / Golden Boy

When 49-year old Bernard “The Alien” Hopkins (55-6-2, 32 KOs) faces 31-year old Sergey “Krusher” Kovalev (25-0-1, 23 KOs) this weekend in Atlantic City, he will bring more than a pair of gloved fists. Hopkins brings almost 30 years of history with him. The continuing success of  “The Alien” can make it easy to forget just how long Hopkins has been a part of the professional boxing landscape. 

Hopkins was born in 1965 and has seen:

  • Nine U.S. Presidents (Johnson, Nixon. Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush and Obama)
  • The world’s population more than double, from 3.3 billion to over 7 billion
  • The average price of gas rise from 31 cents a gallon all the way up to three dollars and thirty-five cents

A 23-year-old Hopkins turned professional in October 1988.  How long ago was that?

  • Sergey Kovalev was only five years old
  • Mike Tyson was Ring Magazine’s top fighter in the world pound-for-pound
  • Ronald Regan was President of the United States
  • “Rain Man” was the top film of the year

Hopkins earned his first world title shot, a loss to Roy Jones Jr. in May 1993. At that same time:

  • Julio Cesar Chavez Sr. was boxing’s pound-for-pound king
  • Mike Tyson was a prisoner in Indiana
  • The USSR had collapsed
  • “The Bridges of Madison County” topped the New York Times bestseller list

Hopkins began his historic reign as middleweight champion with a seventh-round stoppage of Segundo Mercado for the IBF crown in May, 1995, the same time that:

  • Pernell Whitaker followed Chavez Sr. as the pound-for-pound king while Hopkins quietly built his case
  • Whitney Houston graced the cover of Ebony magazine
  • Montell Jordan’s “This is How We Do It” sat atop the music charts
  • Today’s pop sensations Justin Bieber and Harry Styles were only one-year-old and Miley Cyrus and Selena Gomez were just two

2001 was a banner year for Hopkins as he earned a place in the middleweight unification tournament. He defeated Keith Holmes for the WBC crown in April and set his sights on WBA Champion Felix Trinidad in September at Madison Square Garden.  Their classic encounter was delayed two weeks by the events of 9/11, the then-36 year old Hopkins memorably stopped “Tito” in 12 rounds and tied Carlos Monzon’s record for consecutive title defenses at 14. Hopkins did this while:

  • A 17-year old Sergey Kovalev won the Russian Junior Championships Silver Medal at middleweight
  • Hasim Rahman was the heavyweight champion of the world after knocking out Lennox Lewis
  • The second George Bush had been president for less than a year
  • “The West Wing” won the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series

The year 2004 would be memorable for Hopkins as he rose to the top of the pound-for-pound ranks following Antonio Tarver’s defeat of Jones and in September knocked out Oscar De La Hoya in the ninth round to become the first person to unify four titles in any weight class while at the same time:

  • Manny Pacquiao and Juan Manuel Marquez had just fought to a draw in their first of four fights
  • An electric young speaker at the year’s Democratic National Convention named Barack Obama would be elected to the U.S. Senate just months later
  • LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony and Dwayne Wade had all just finished their rookie seasons in the NBA
  • Michael Phelps won six gold medals in swimming while competing in his first Olympic games

Hopkins finally lost the middleweight crown in 2005 and, at age 41, decided to jump two weight classes to start the next phase of his career. In June 2006, he defeated Antonio Tarver for the Ring Magazine Light Heavyweight title.

In 2009, Sergey Kovalev would turn professional with a first round knockout. By this time, Hopkins had already fought 56 times professionally.

In May 2011, Hopkins defeated Jean Pascal for the Ring Magazine and WBC Light Heavyweight titles.  At age 46, Hopkins broke George Foreman’s record and became the oldest world champion in boxing history.

Throughout the Philadelphia-native and five-time world champion’s illustrious career, only one major sports team from Philadelphia has won a championship, the 2008 Phillies.

In the summer on 2014, Hopkins watched former foes De La Hoya, Trinidad, and Calzaghe go into the International Boxing Hall of Fame together.

Then, he signed to fight Kovalev. Bernard Hopkins belongs to history even as he keeps making it.