Marvelous Marvin Hagler

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"Marvelous" Marvin Hagler (born in Newark, New Jersey, May 23, 1954), is a former American boxer. He finished his career with a record of 62-3-2 with 52 knockouts.

Marvin Hagler
Born
Marvin Nathaniel Hagler

(1954-05-23) May 23, 1954 (age 70)
NationalityUnited States American
Other namesMarvelous
Statistics
Weight(s)Middleweight
StanceSouthpaw
Boxing record
Total fights67
Wins62
Wins by KO52
Losses3
Draws2
No contests0

Early life and amateur career

Hagler was raised in the mean streets of Newark, New Jersey's Central Ward in a single mother household. During the summer of 1967 when Marvin was 13, the Newark Riots occurred July 12-17, with the disturbance epicenter being the Central Ward. Twenty-six people were killed and $10 million worth of property damage was caused by the disorder, which included the destruction of the Hagler family tenement. Following the riots, the Haglers moved to Brockton, Massachusetts where young Marvin soon began boxing training at the Petronelli brother's gym in 1969. In 1973, Hagler became the National AAU 165-pound champion after defeating Terry Dobbs of Atlanta. Hagler was named the outstanding boxer of the tournament, winning four fights, two of them by knockout.

Professional career

Hagler was a # 1 ranked Middleweight boxer for many years before he could fight for the title. He often had to travel to his opponents' hometowns to get fights, and he even boxed against the best that the city of Philadelphia had to offer. He lost decisions to Willie Monroe and Bobby 'Boogaloo' Watts, and had to suffer while watching less deserving challengers receive title shots against Carlos Monzon and Hugo Corro.

This served for Hagler to build upon a strong character. Hagler avenged his 2 defeats by knocking out Monroe and Watts in rematches, and won a 10-round decision over Bennie Briscoe in a classic Philadelphia confrontation, and by this time he had made fans in both Massachusetts and Philadelphia. By then, promoter Bob Arum, a lawyer who had helped in the White House during President John F. Kennedy's tenure, took notice and signed him.

Hagler needed some gubernatorial help, but Arum pulled the strings, and finally, in November 1979, Hagler was in the ring with a world Middleweight champion. Vito Antuofermo gave Hagler a shot, and the fight turned into a Middleweight classic. One of the greatest championship bouts in Middleweight history was unfortunately marred by controversy, and Hagler had to settle for a draw. This only added to Hagler's frustrations.

Antuofermo lost his title later to Alan Minter, who gave Hagler his second title shot. Hagler went to London and beat Minter, who had stated "no black man will take my title",[1] in 3 rounds at the Wembley Arena. At the conclusion of this bout a riot broke out, and Hagler and his trainers had to be carried away to their locker rooms by the police, in the middle of a rain of beer bottles and glasses.

Hagler proved a busy world champion, and he defeated future world champion Fulgencio Obelmejias by a knockout in 8 rounds, and then former world champ Antuofermo in a rematch by knockout in 5 rounds. Both matches were fought at the Boston Garden near Hagler's hometown, endearing him to Boston fight fans. Mustafa Hamsho, who would later defeat future world champion Bobby Czyz, followed, and he was beaten in 11 rounds. Caveman Lee lasted only 1 round, and in a rematch in Italy, Obelmejias lasted 5 rounds. British champion Tony Sibson followed in Hagler's list of unsuccessful challengers, falling in 6 rounds, and Wilford Scypion went in 4. By then, Hagler was a staple on HBO, the Pay Per View of its time.

A fight against Roberto Duran followed and Duran was the first challenger to last the distance with Hagler in a world championship bout. Hagler won a unanimous 15 round decision, although after 12 rounds two of the judges had Duran ahead. Then came Juan Roldan, who became the only man to drop Hagler, scoring a questionable knockdown seconds into the fight, but Hagler got angrier and proceeded to beat Roldan, stopping him in 10 rounds. Hamsho was given a rematch, but was again beat, in three rounds.

On April 15, 1985, Hagler and Thomas Hearns met in what was billed as The War. This fight is widely regarded as one of the most brutal and thrilling boxing matches of all time. Hearns, who was expected to box and take advantage of his superior reach, stood toe to toe with Hagler from early in the first round. The pair fought at a ferocious pace with the crowd giving a standing ovation as the bell sounded to end the 1st round. Hagler who was pressing for such an exchange was happy to fight on the inside, both fighters landed hurtful punches but Hagler appeared to have the advantage with his more solid chin. Hagler, despite a cut to the head, managed to overpower Hearns in the third round, scoring a decisive knockout.

Next was John Mugabi, who was 26-0 with 26 knockouts. Hagler took Mugabi's best shots and came back handily, stopping Mugabi in the 11th in what would turn out to be his last successful defense. Due to the vicious body shots sustained, both men would later urinate blood.

Hagler's next challenger was Sugar Ray Leonard, who won a controversial split decision in Las Vegas on 6th April 1987. The decision remains a subject of debate today among sports fans, some of whom felt Hagler landed the harder shots and controlled the pace of the fight from the fourth round on. The opinion of those fans believing Hagler deserved more from the judges was summed up by veteran British boxing journalist, Hugh McIlvanney, who reported in the British Sunday Times that Leonard's plan was to "steal rounds with a few flashy and carefully timed flurries....he was happy to exaggerate hand speed at the expense of power, and neither he nor two of the scorers seemed bothered by the fact that many of the punches landed on the champion's gloves and arms." [2] The actual fight statistics show Leonard landing 306 punches to Hagler's 291 which attests to the closeness of the contest.[3]

Hagler changed his name legally to Marvelous Marvin Hagler and made some commercials, most notably a commercial for Pizza Hut and, later, Gillette. He thought his decision loss to Leonard was undeserved, and quit boxing tired of the backroom politics of the sport.


Boxing Profile and Legacy

Marvin Hagler is regarded as one of, if not the greatest middleweight boxer ever by most fans and experts. Hagler had one of the longest and most dominant reigns as a champion during the '80s and defeated the best fighters of his era including Tommy Hearns and Roberto Duran.

Hagler was the perfect example of a boxer who had the old school toughness with the perfect techniques. He had one of the best chins in boxing history and was never floored. However due to his tight defense and boxing technique he was also tough to hit and possessed other quality attributes like stamina, speed and power.

Awards and Recognition

Career After Boxing

After the loss to Leonard, he moved to Italy, where he made movies: his roles include a US Marine in the movie Indio and "Indio 2". In 1995, he starred alongside Giselle Blondet in another low budget film. Hagler also does regular boxing commentary for British Television.

Family

  • Half-brother of fellow boxer Robbie Sims
  • Hagler is now living in Italy.
  • Hagler has five children to his first wife, Bertha.
  • Hagler also has a home in Bartlett, New Hampshire, USA.

Trivia

See also

Template:Succession box one to two
Preceded by
-
IBF Middleweight Champion
May 27, 1983–April 6,1987
Succeeded by
vacancy filled by
Frank Tate

Notes

  1. ^ Hulse, Richard. "Alan Minter vs Marvin Hagler: A Blast From The Past". Retrieved 2007-06-10.
  2. ^ The Hardest Game, Hugh McIlvanney, Contemporary Books, 2002
  3. ^ New York Times, Apr 1987