Yorkshire Post

Marvin Hagler

Boxer

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MARVIN HAGLER, who has died at 66, ruled over the middleweig­ht boxing division with an iron fist for much of the 1980s before his reign was ended by Sugar Ray Leonard in one of the most controvers­ial judging decisions of all time.

Hagler made 12 successful defences of the crown he had long coveted, the high point of which was indisputab­ly getting the better of Thomas Hearns in an eight-minute firefight known as ‘The War’.

It was the penultimat­e win of a 67-fight profession­al career that ended after his defeat to Leonard, who came out of retirement in April 1987 to upset the odds at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.

A split-decision loss disgusted Hagler, who retired 14 months later at the age of 34 with a record of 62 wins – 52 by knockout – three defeats and two draws after becoming “tired of waiting” for Leonard to decide on a rematch.

Hagler had already cemented his status as one of the alltime greats and the tangles he, Leonard, Hearns and Roberto Duran had with each other in the 1980s would see them celebrated as the ‘Four Kings’.

However, he arguably had the toughest road to prominence. He was born on May 23, 1954, in Newark, New Jersey, as the oldest of six children to Ida Mae Hagler and Robert Sims, who abandoned the family when Marvin was a child.

Ida Mae eventually uprooted the family following the 1967 Newark riots to Brockton, Massachuse­tts, where the eldest child would discover a penchant for boxing. He was discovered as an amateur by the Petronelli brothers, Goody and Pat, who operated a gym in the city and went on to train Hagler for the entirety of his career.

Hagler often considered himself something of a loner, remarking that wounded birds in his mother’s backyard were “the only friends I could relate to, maybe the only friends I really liked. I was always by myself ”.

That feeling of being a pariah followed him in boxing, where he avenged contended losses to Bobby Watts and Willie Monroe before being granted a shot at the undisputed middleweig­ht title held by the Londoner Alan Minter in September 1980.

Ten months earlier, the suspicion Hagler had of being treated unfairly intensifie­d after his contest against Vito Antuofermo was ruled a draw, and so the American left no room for doubt against Minter.

The British fighter was stopped inside three rounds at Wembley Stadium.

Having taken so long to reach the top of the mountain – the win over Minter was his 54th fight – Hagler was in no hurry to begin the descent, and he stopped 11 of his next 12 opponents. Only the great Duran was able to get to the final bell in 1983.

The 1985 showdown against Hearns at Caesars Palace lasted three rounds but it was carnage.

The pair threw everything at each other and although the blood flowed freely from Hagler’s bald head, it was Hearns who blinked first, wilting against the ropes and then floored as his foe rained down rights and lefts.

Hearns rose rubbery-legged and the fight was stopped. While he was the winner, Hagler looked a shadow of himself when he knocked out John Mugabi in 1986, prompting Leonard to come out of his third retirement.

He would retire again after defeating Hagler, moving to Italy and starring in several films.

Hagler, who legally changed his name to ‘Marvelous Marvin Hagler’ had five children with his first wife, Bertha. He is survived by his second wife, Kay, and the children.

 ?? PICTURE: FOCUS ON SPORT/GETTY IMAGES) ?? IRON FIST: Sugar Ray Leonard and Marvin Hagler fight in 1987 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada.
PICTURE: FOCUS ON SPORT/GETTY IMAGES) IRON FIST: Sugar Ray Leonard and Marvin Hagler fight in 1987 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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