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Ex-heavyweight Boxing Champion, Who Defeated Muhammad Ali, Dies Aged 67

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Former world heavyweight boxing champion Leon Spinks, who took the crown from Muhammad Ali in 1978 before losing a rematch, died on Friday, according to his publicists. He was 67.

Spinks died with his wife, Brenda Spinks, at his side, after a five-year battle with cancer. He had been admitted to a Las Vegas hospital in December, according to a statement from The Firm PR to Las Vegas television station KVVU on Saturday.

“His final fight was fought with the same skill, grace and grit that had carried him through so many lifetime challenges,” the statement said.

“Leon fought his battle with numerous illnesses resiliently, never losing his trademark smile. Showing true Spinks determination, he never threw in the towel.”

Spinks finished his career 26-17 with three draws and 14 knockouts, but struggled to recapture the fame that came early in his career in one of the most shocking upsets in boxing history.

With a trademark toothy grin, Spinks fought his way to Olympic gold in 1976 as a US light heavyweight in Montreal and turned professional six months later at age 23.

After only eight professional fights, seven wins and a draw, Spinks was sent into the ring against iconic Muhammad Ali on February 15, 1978 at the Las Vegas Hilton.

Spinks finished his career with a record of 26-17, with three draws and 14 knockouts [File: Robert Galbraith/Reuters]

Title captured from Ali

Spinks won a 15-round split decision over a 36-year-old Ali, who lost world crowns in the ring for the only time in his career, falling to 55-3 as Spinks claimed the heavyweight title in the shortest time of any fighter in history, only 13 months after his pro debut.

It would be the greatest moment of his career.

Seven months later, in a rematch before 70,000 at the Superdome in New Orleans, a fit and formidable Muhammad Ali won a unanimous 15-round decision in what would be the final victory of his legendary career, making him the first three-time champion in heavyweight history.

Spinks had been stripped of the World Boxing Council crown for taking the rematch with Ali rather than face mandatory challenger Ken Norton, so the second fight was only for the World Boxing Association title.

Spinks lost his next fight as well but earned another shot at the crown in 1981 against Larry Holmes, only to be stopped in the third round.

It took nearly five years for Spinks to gain another chance at a world crown but he fought for the WBC cruiserweight title in 1986, stopped in the sixth round by Dwight Muhammad Qawi.

That began a run where he managed only one win and one draw in 10 fights. He lost five of his final eight fights before retiring in 1995.

Spinks’s son, Cory, was an undisputed welterweight champion from 2003 to 2005 and had brief junior middleweight reigns in 2007 and 2009.

Spinks’s younger brother Michael was a 1976 Olympic middleweight champion who was the undisputed light heavyweight champion from 1983 to 1985 and a heavyweight champion from 1985 to 1986.

SOURCE: AGENCIES