On this day: Born May 17, 1956:
Sugar Ray Leonard, American boxer
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[May 16, 2020]
By Andrew Downie
(Reuters) - Boxers are often remembered for epic one-off fights or
career-defining rivalries but few faced as many truly brilliant
rivals as Sugar Ray Leonard or beat them with enough regularity to
be considered peerless in a time of greats.
Leonard, who turns 64 on Sunday, won six world titles in five weight
divisions but his career was as much about who he fought and how he
fought them as what he won.
As the 1970s ended, the iconic heavyweight era of Muhammad Ali,
George Foreman and Joe Frazier was over and Leonard was moving to
centre stage along with three other men, whose careers would all be
defined by their rivalry.
Leonard, Roberto Duran, Marvin Hagler and Thomas Hearns fought each
other nine times between 1980 and 1989 in the welterweight or
middleweight divisions.
"Each of the nine bouts between the four men was memorable in its
own way and at least two of them are commonly included on any list
of the greatest fights of all time," George Kimball wrote in his
book Four Kings, a study of their rivalry.
Leonard, who burst on to the scene with a gold medal at the 1976
Olympics, saw boxing as a branch of the entertainment business and
he and his rivals created distinct personas to ramp up the
rivalries.
Hearns was "The Hitman", known for his destructive right hand.
Hagler styled himself as Marvelous Marvin Hagler. Duran, the
unapologetic street brawler, went by the nickname "Manos de Piedra",
or Hands of Stone.
The photogenic Sugar Ray, meanwhile, had the smile and the charm.
Behind the clean-cut image, however, he was drinking heavily, doing
drugs and cheating on his wife.
"I embarrassed myself more often than I care to remember," he wrote
in his searingly honest autobiography.
In the ring, though, Leonard did himself proud and he remembers each
of his rivals in their own way. He called a 1981 win over Hearns "my
defining moment as a fighter".
Beating Hagler in 1987 after three years out of the game with a
detached retina was, he said, his "proudest" moment.
DURAN RIVALRY
Yet even today, more than three decades after they last squared up,
he is most closely linked with Duran.
Before their first fight in June 1980, Duran got inside Leonard's
head with a string of crude jibes aimed at him and his family. It
worked and Duran beat Leonard to take the WBC welterweight title the
American had won less than a year before.
Leonard regained his title five months later in the rematch known as
the 'No Mas' (no more) fight in which Duran simply waved Leonard
away and gave up near the end of round eight.
[to top of second column] |
Born on May 17, 1956:
Actor Hugh Jackman and boxing legend Sugar Ray Leonard pose on the
field before the NFL's Super Bowl XLV football game in Arlington,
Texas, February 6, 2011. REUTERS/Jeff Haynes/File Photo
It remains one of the most unforgettable boxing matches of all time
and it still confounds the victor.
"The No Mas thing was so bizarre," Leonard told Reuters in an
interview. "I was in the ring and I didn’t know what the hell was
going on."
"Duran didn’t say anything... He didn’t say No Mas. I didn’t hear
him say No Mas."
The fight, and its denouement, was so astonishing that a third
decider had to happen.
After beating and drawing with Hearns and overcoming Hagler in a
highly controversial split-decision, Leonard faced Duran again in
1989, beating the 38-year-old to retain the WBC super-middleweight
belt.
It was sweet revenge, and Leonard still credits Duran for much of
his success.
"As crazy as it may sound my first fight against Roberto Duran that
I lost was one of my proudest moments," Leonard said.
"I was contemplating retirement, I was wanting to pack it in after
that fight because, first of all, that fight took so much out of me
against Roberto Duran that I see I don’t need this any more."
"But that fight made me a better fighter. It made me a better
fighter to take on Tommy Hearns in the first fight. That first loss,
it hurt physically and mentally and spiritually but it made me a
better fighter.”
Leonard, who now fronts the Sugar Ray Leonard Foundation to knock
out Type 1 and 2 diabetes, is still friendly with Hearns, who he
said recently floated the idea of the two men fighting again – an
idea he swiftly rejected.
More surprisingly, he has become close buddies with his old nemesis
Duran.
"Of all the people in the world I never thought in a million years I
would be friends with Roberto Duran," he said. "But I am. I love the
guy, I respect the guy, I honour the guy and we are friends, no
question about that."
"He is special to me.”
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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