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Alan Minter

Alan Sydney Minter (17 August 1951 – 9 September 2020) was a British professional boxer who competed from 1972 to 1981. He held the undisputed middleweight title in 1980, having previously held the British middleweight title from 1975 to 1976, and the European middleweight title twice between 1977 and 1979. As an amateur, Minter won a bronze medal in the light-middleweight division at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

Alan Minter
Minter in 2005
Born(1951-08-17)17 August 1951
Penge, Bromley, London, England
Died9 September 2020(2020-09-09) (aged 69)
Guildford, Surrey, England
NationalityBritish
Other namesBoom Boom, Minty
Statistics
Weight(s)Middleweight
Height5’10”
Reach71 in (180 cm)
StanceSouthpaw
Boxing record
Total fights49
Wins39
Wins by KO23
Losses9
No contests1
Medal record

Early life edit

Minter was born in Penge, Bromley, Kent, to his German-born mother Anne Minter,[1] and his father Syd Minter, a plasterer.[1][2] His family moved to Crawley, West Sussex, and he joined Crawley Boxing Club at aged 11,[3] training under John Hillier and Dougie Bidwell.[4]

Amateur career edit

Minter took part at the 1970 European Junior Championships at the middleweight division, but in the very first fight he was stopped in the 2-nd round by Vyacheslav Lemeshev (USSR).[5] Because Minter was the 1971 Amateur Boxing Association of England Middleweight Champion, he was selected to box for UK in the Olympics 1972.[6] He won a bronze medal at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games in the light-middleweight classification, losing in the semifinal to Dieter Kottysch of West Germany by a 3-2 marginal decision which was hotly disputed.[6] Kottysch went on to win the gold medal.[6]

1972 Olympic results edit

Minter's results at the 1972 Munich Olympics are as follows:[7]

  • Round of 64: bye
  • Round of 32: Defeated Reggie Ford (Guyana) by second-round knockout
  • Round of 16: Defeated Valeri Tregubov (Soviet Union) by decision, 5–0
  • Quarterfinal: Defeated Loucif Hamani (Algeria) by decision, 4–1
  • Semifinal: Lost to Dieter Kottysch (West Germany) by decision, 2–3 (was awarded bronze medal)[8]

Professional career edit

Minter began his professional career with 11 straight wins,[9] the first against Maurice Thomas in London on 31 October 1972, winning by knockout in the 6th round.[10] Minter won his first five fights by knockout until 16 January 1973, when Pat Dwyer went the distance, Minter taking the fight on points.[9] Minter won his next five fights, three by knockout,[9] before being defeated for the first time after the referee stopped the fight in the eighth round against "Scottish" Don McMillan due to bad cuts suffered by Minter. Two more wins followed before facing Jan Magdziarz, who beat him twice in a row (once in the eighth and once in the sixth) again due to cuts.[9]

1974 was a mixed year for Minter, beating Tony Byrne by a decision in eight,[9] losing in two to Ricky Torres (again on cuts),[9] having a third fight with Magdziarz, resulting in a no contest,[9] closing the year with a win against Shako Mamba in Hamburg, Germany.[9]

In 1975, he won four fights in a row, including another bout in Hamburg and, by the end of the year, he challenged Kevin Finnegan for the British Middleweight title, winning it by a 15-round decision.[10]

In 1976, he won six fights, to extend his streak to ten consecutive wins.[9] Among the boxers he beat were Billy Knight by a knockout[9] and Finnegan once again, by decision in 15,[9] both in defence of his British title,[9] along with former world title challenger Tony Licata,[9] knocked out in six and United States Olympic Games Gold medal winner Sugar Ray Seales,[9] in five rounds. These wins gave Minter a ranking among the top ten Middleweight challengers.[9]

In 1977, he won the European Middleweight title by beating Germano Valsecchi by a knockout in five in Italy.[10] But in his next fight his winning streak ended when he lost to former world title challenger Ronnie Harris by a knockout in eight.[9] Minter returned to top ten challenger status by upsetting the former World Welterweight and Light Middleweight Champion Emile Griffith with a ten-round decision win in Monte Carlo,[9] but then he lost his European title to Gratien Tonna by a knockout in eight at Milan.[9] He closed '77 with a third 15-round decision win over Finnegan to retain his British title.[9]

1978 was a sad year for Minter, although he won all three of his bouts. On 15 February, at the Muhammad AliLeon Spinks I undercard in Las Vegas, Nevada, he won his first bout in the United States by knocking out Sandy Torres in five.[9] Then, he went to Italy once again to regain his European Middleweight title by knocking out Angelo Jacopucci in twelve rounds.[9] Jacopucci died a few days afterwards, due to injuries sustained in the bout.[11] Minter finished his year by avenging his loss to Tonna with a six-round knockout.[9]

In 1979, Minter won all four of his fights, two of them by knockout. On 16 March 1980, in Las Vegas, he was given a shot at World Middleweight Champion Vito Antuofermo's title at Caesars Palace. He won the title by a 15-round split decision[10] in which the judges' scorecards varied wildly. A Venezuelan judge had Minter losing the fight, while the British judge (Roland Dakin) had Minter winning 13 of the 15 rounds. In a rematch held three months later in London on 28 June, Minter retained the world title by a TKO in eight rounds.[9]

On 27 September 1980, Minter's short run as world champion came to an abrupt end when he was stopped on cuts in the third round against 'Marvelous' Marvin Hagler at Wembley Arena in London.[12] The fight was controversial owing to a racist remark Minter made during the build-up, which Minter had later tried to clarify, and then by a crowd riot once the referee had agreed with Minter's corner that he was unable to continue, with chairs, bottles and glasses being hurled into the ring after the decision.[13]

Minter beat fringe contender Ernie Singletary in London, in 1981,[9] but after losses to future Hagler challengers Mustafa Hamsho in Las Vegas[9] and Tony Sibson in London,[9] he retired for good.[10]

He left boxing with a record of 39 wins, 9 losses and 1 no contest, with 23 wins by knockout.[9][10]

Death edit

Minter died of cancer in September 2020, in Guildford at the age of 69.[11][14]

Professional boxing record edit

49 fights 39 wins 9 losses
By knockout 23 8
By decision 16 1
No contests 1
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
49 Loss 39–9 (1) Tony Sibson TKO 3 (12), 1:59 15 Sep 1981 Wembley Arena, London, England For European middleweight title
48 Loss 39–8 (1) Mustafa Hamsho SD 10 6 Jun 1981 Caesars Palace, Paradise, Nevada, US
47 Win 39–7 (1) Ernie Singletary PTS 10 17 Mar 1981 Wembley Arena, London, England
46 Loss 38–7 (1) Marvin Hagler TKO 3 (15), 1:45 27 Sep 1980 Wembley Arena, London, England Lost WBA, WBC, and The Ring middleweight titles
45 Win 38–6 (1) Vito Antuofermo RTD 8 (15) 28 Jun 1980 Wembley Arena, London, England Retained WBA, WBC, and The Ring middleweight titles
44 Win 37–6 (1) Vito Antuofermo SD 15 16 Mar 1980 Caesars Palace, Paradise, Nevada, US Won WBA, WBC, and The Ring middleweight titles
43 Win 36–6 (1) Doug Demmings PTS 10 23 Oct 1979 Wembley Conference Centre, London, England
42 Win 35–6 (1) Monty Betham TKO 2 (10), 1:05 26 Jun 1979 Wembley Arena, London, England
41 Win 34–6 (1) Renato Garcia TKO 9 (10), 2:40 1 May 1979 Wembley Arena, London, England
40 Win 33–6 (1) Rudy Robles PTS 10 6 Feb 1979 Wembley Conference Centre, London, England
39 Win 32–6 (1) Gratien Tonna RTD 6 (15) 7 Nov 1978 Empire Pool, London, England Retained European middleweight title
38 Win 31–6 (1) Angelo Jacopucci KO 12 (15) 19 Jul 1978 Municipal Stadium, Bellaria, Italy Won vacant European middleweight title
Jacopucci died of injuries sustained in this bout.[15]
37 Win 30–6 (1) Sandy Torres KO 5 (10), 1:57 15 Feb 1978 Las Vegas Hilton, Winchester, Nevada, US
36 Win 29–6 (1) Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 8 Nov 1977 Empire Pool, London, England Won vacant British middleweight title
35 Loss 28–6 (1) Gratien Tonna TKO 8 (15), 1:10 21 Sep 1977 Palasport di San Siro, Milan, Italy Lost European middleweight title
34 Win 28–5 (1) Emile Griffith PTS 10 30 Jul 1977 Stade Louis II, Monte Carlo, Monaco
33 Loss 27–5 (1) Ronnie Harris TKO 8 (10), 3:00 12 Apr 1977 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
32 Win 27–4 (1) Germano Valsecchi KO 5 (15) 4 Feb 1977 Palasport di San Siro, Milan, Italy Won European middleweight title
31 Win 26–4 (1) Sugar Ray Seales TKO 5 (10), 2:14 7 Dec 1976 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
30 Win 25–4 (1) Tony Licata TKO 6 (10), 1:30 9 Nov 1976 Empire Pool, London, England
29 Win 24–4 (1) Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 14 Sep 1976 Royal Albert Hall, London, England Retained British middleweight title
28 Win 23–4 (1) Frank Reiche TKO 8 (10) 24 May 1976 Olympiahalle, Munich, West Germany
27 Win 22–4 (1) Billy Knight TKO 2 (15), 3:00 27 Apr 1976 Royal Albert Hall, London, England Retained British middleweight title
26 Win 21–4 (1) Trevor Francis TKO 8 (10), 1:05 20 Jan 1976 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
25 Win 20–4 (1) Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 4 Nov 1975 Empire Pool, London, England Won vacant British middleweight title
24 Win 19–4 (1) Peter Wulf KO 6 (10) 30 May 1975 Hamburg, West Germany
23 Win 18–4 (1) Larry Paul PTS 10 25 Mar 1975 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
22 Win 17–4 (1) Tony Allen PTS 8 10 Feb 1975 Hilton on Park Lane, London, England
21 Win 16–4 (1) Henry Cooper KO 1 (8), 2:25 20 Jan 1975 Hilton on Park Lane, London, England
20 Win 15–4 (1) Shako Mamba PTS 8 30 Nov 1974 Munich, West Germany
19 NC 14–4 (1) Jan Magdziarz NC 4 (10) 29 Oct 1974 Royal Albert Hall, London, England NC after both boxers were disqualified for inactivity
18 Loss 14–4 Ricky Ortiz TKO 2 (10) 21 May 1974 Empire Pool, London, England
17 Win 14–3 Tony Byrne PTS 8 26 Mar 1974 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
16 Loss 13–3 Jan Magdziarz RTD 6 (8) 11 Dec 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
15 Loss 13–2 Jan Magdziarz TKO 3 (8) 30 Oct 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
14 Win 13–1 Ernie Burns TKO 5 (8) 2 Oct 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
13 Win 12–1 Octavio Romero PTS 8 10 Sep 1973 Empire Pool, London, England
12 Loss 11–1 Don McMillan TKO 8 (8), 0:45 5 Jun 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
11 Win 11–0 George Aidoo TKO 5 (8) 9 May 1973 York Hall, London, England
10 Win 10–0 Frank Young PTS 8 27 Mar 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
9 Win 9–0 Harry Scott PTS 8 13 Mar 1973 Empire Pool, London, England
8 Win 8–0 Gabe Bowens TKO 7 (8), 1:55 20 Feb 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
7 Win 7–0 Pat Brogan TKO 7 (8) 30 Jan 1973 York Hall, London, England
6 Win 6–0 Pat Dwyer PTS 8 16 Jan 1973 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
5 Win 5–0 Mike McCluskie KO 5 (8) 8 Jan 1973 Piccadilly Hotel, Manchester, England
4 Win 4–0 Ronnie Hough TKO 5 (8) 11 Dec 1972 Hilton on Park Lane, London, England
3 Win 3–0 Anton Schnedl TKO 7 (8) 5 Dec 1972 Royal Albert Hall, London, England
2 Win 2–0 John Lowe TKO 3 (6) 14 Nov 1972 Empire Pool, London, England
1 Win 1–0 Maurice Thomas TKO 6 (6) 31 Oct 1972 Royal Albert Hall, London, England

[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Remembering Alan Minter". boxingnewsonline.net. 15 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Alan Minter obituary". Thetimes.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Crawley Boxing club history". crawleyboxingclub.co.uk. 15 September 2020.
  4. ^ "Crawley Boxing Club mourns passing of John Hillier, trainer of World champion Alan Minter". crawleyobserver.co.uk. 11 January 2018.
  5. ^ "1.European Junior Championships - Miskolc, Hungary - November 8-14 1970".
  6. ^ a b c . sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  7. ^ "Light-Middleweight (≤71 kilograms), Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  8. ^ "Boxing; British Olympians who challenged and conquered the world". ilfordrecorder.co.uk. 6 April 2020.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "Alan Minter ID# 11467". boxrec.com. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  10. ^ a b c d e f "Boxing Speakers - Alan Minter". primeperformersagency.co.uk. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Alan Minter: British boxing legend dies at 69". BBC News. 10 September 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  12. ^ "Alan Minter, British boxing great who became world champion, dies aged 69". The Guardian. 10 September 2020. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  13. ^ "Boxing Speakers - Alan Minter". thefightcity.com. 27 September 2019.
  14. ^ Benson, Michael (10 September 2020). "Boxing news: Former undisputed middleweight champion Alan Minter dies of cancer aged 69". Talksport.
  15. ^ "Doctor Convicted In Boxing Death (Published 1983)". The New York Times. 29 January 1983. Retrieved 14 March 2021.

External links edit

  • Boxing record for Alan Minter from BoxRec (registration required)
  • Alan Minter profile at Cyber Boxing Zone
Sporting positions
Amateur boxing titles
Previous:
John Conteh
ABA middleweight champion
1971
Next:
Frank Lucas
Regional boxing titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Bunny Sterling
British middleweight champion
4 November 1975 – 1977
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
Kevin Finnegan
Preceded by
Germano Valsecchi
European middleweight champion
4 February 1977 – 21 September 1977
Succeeded by
Gratien Tonna
Preceded by
Kevin Finnegan
British middleweight champion
8 November 1977 – 1979
Vacated
Vacant
Title next held by
Kevin Finnegan
Vacant
Title last held by
Gratien Tonna
European middleweight champion
19 July 1978 – 1980
Vacated
World boxing titles
Preceded by WBA middleweight champion
16 March 1980 – 27 September 1980
Succeeded by
WBC middleweight champion
16 March 1980 – 27 September 1980
The Ring middleweight champion
16 March 1980 – 27 September 1980
Undisputed middleweight champion
16 March 1980 – 27 September 1980

alan, minter, alan, sydney, minter, august, 1951, september, 2020, british, professional, boxer, competed, from, 1972, 1981, held, undisputed, middleweight, title, 1980, having, previously, held, british, middleweight, title, from, 1975, 1976, european, middle. Alan Sydney Minter 17 August 1951 9 September 2020 was a British professional boxer who competed from 1972 to 1981 He held the undisputed middleweight title in 1980 having previously held the British middleweight title from 1975 to 1976 and the European middleweight title twice between 1977 and 1979 As an amateur Minter won a bronze medal in the light middleweight division at the 1972 Summer Olympics Alan MinterMinter in 2005Born 1951 08 17 17 August 1951Penge Bromley London EnglandDied9 September 2020 2020 09 09 aged 69 Guildford Surrey EnglandNationalityBritishOther namesBoom Boom MintyStatisticsWeight s MiddleweightHeight5 10 Reach71 in 180 cm StanceSouthpawBoxing recordTotal fights49Wins39Wins by KO23Losses9No contests1Medal record Men s amateur boxingRepresenting Great BritainOlympic Games1972 Munich Light middleweight Contents 1 Early life 2 Amateur career 2 1 1972 Olympic results 3 Professional career 4 Death 5 Professional boxing record 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editMinter was born in Penge Bromley Kent to his German born mother Anne Minter 1 and his father Syd Minter a plasterer 1 2 His family moved to Crawley West Sussex and he joined Crawley Boxing Club at aged 11 3 training under John Hillier and Dougie Bidwell 4 Amateur career editMinter took part at the 1970 European Junior Championships at the middleweight division but in the very first fight he was stopped in the 2 nd round by Vyacheslav Lemeshev USSR 5 Because Minter was the 1971 Amateur Boxing Association of England Middleweight Champion he was selected to box for UK in the Olympics 1972 6 He won a bronze medal at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games in the light middleweight classification losing in the semifinal to Dieter Kottysch of West Germany by a 3 2 marginal decision which was hotly disputed 6 Kottysch went on to win the gold medal 6 1972 Olympic results edit Minter s results at the 1972 Munich Olympics are as follows 7 Round of 64 bye Round of 32 Defeated Reggie Ford Guyana by second round knockout Round of 16 Defeated Valeri Tregubov Soviet Union by decision 5 0 Quarterfinal Defeated Loucif Hamani Algeria by decision 4 1 Semifinal Lost to Dieter Kottysch West Germany by decision 2 3 was awarded bronze medal 8 Professional career editMinter began his professional career with 11 straight wins 9 the first against Maurice Thomas in London on 31 October 1972 winning by knockout in the 6th round 10 Minter won his first five fights by knockout until 16 January 1973 when Pat Dwyer went the distance Minter taking the fight on points 9 Minter won his next five fights three by knockout 9 before being defeated for the first time after the referee stopped the fight in the eighth round against Scottish Don McMillan due to bad cuts suffered by Minter Two more wins followed before facing Jan Magdziarz who beat him twice in a row once in the eighth and once in the sixth again due to cuts 9 1974 was a mixed year for Minter beating Tony Byrne by a decision in eight 9 losing in two to Ricky Torres again on cuts 9 having a third fight with Magdziarz resulting in a no contest 9 closing the year with a win against Shako Mamba in Hamburg Germany 9 In 1975 he won four fights in a row including another bout in Hamburg and by the end of the year he challenged Kevin Finnegan for the British Middleweight title winning it by a 15 round decision 10 In 1976 he won six fights to extend his streak to ten consecutive wins 9 Among the boxers he beat were Billy Knight by a knockout 9 and Finnegan once again by decision in 15 9 both in defence of his British title 9 along with former world title challenger Tony Licata 9 knocked out in six and United States Olympic Games Gold medal winner Sugar Ray Seales 9 in five rounds These wins gave Minter a ranking among the top ten Middleweight challengers 9 In 1977 he won the European Middleweight title by beating Germano Valsecchi by a knockout in five in Italy 10 But in his next fight his winning streak ended when he lost to former world title challenger Ronnie Harris by a knockout in eight 9 Minter returned to top ten challenger status by upsetting the former World Welterweight and Light Middleweight Champion Emile Griffith with a ten round decision win in Monte Carlo 9 but then he lost his European title to Gratien Tonna by a knockout in eight at Milan 9 He closed 77 with a third 15 round decision win over Finnegan to retain his British title 9 1978 was a sad year for Minter although he won all three of his bouts On 15 February at the Muhammad Ali Leon Spinks I undercard in Las Vegas Nevada he won his first bout in the United States by knocking out Sandy Torres in five 9 Then he went to Italy once again to regain his European Middleweight title by knocking out Angelo Jacopucci in twelve rounds 9 Jacopucci died a few days afterwards due to injuries sustained in the bout 11 Minter finished his year by avenging his loss to Tonna with a six round knockout 9 In 1979 Minter won all four of his fights two of them by knockout On 16 March 1980 in Las Vegas he was given a shot at World Middleweight Champion Vito Antuofermo s title at Caesars Palace He won the title by a 15 round split decision 10 in which the judges scorecards varied wildly A Venezuelan judge had Minter losing the fight while the British judge Roland Dakin had Minter winning 13 of the 15 rounds In a rematch held three months later in London on 28 June Minter retained the world title by a TKO in eight rounds 9 On 27 September 1980 Minter s short run as world champion came to an abrupt end when he was stopped on cuts in the third round against Marvelous Marvin Hagler at Wembley Arena in London 12 The fight was controversial owing to a racist remark Minter made during the build up which Minter had later tried to clarify and then by a crowd riot once the referee had agreed with Minter s corner that he was unable to continue with chairs bottles and glasses being hurled into the ring after the decision 13 Minter beat fringe contender Ernie Singletary in London in 1981 9 but after losses to future Hagler challengers Mustafa Hamsho in Las Vegas 9 and Tony Sibson in London 9 he retired for good 10 He left boxing with a record of 39 wins 9 losses and 1 no contest with 23 wins by knockout 9 10 Death editMinter died of cancer in September 2020 in Guildford at the age of 69 11 14 Professional boxing record edit49 fights 39 wins 9 lossesBy knockout 23 8By decision 16 1No contests 1No Result Record Opponent Type Round time Date Location Notes49 Loss 39 9 1 Tony Sibson TKO 3 12 1 59 15 Sep 1981 Wembley Arena London England For European middleweight title48 Loss 39 8 1 Mustafa Hamsho SD 10 6 Jun 1981 Caesars Palace Paradise Nevada US47 Win 39 7 1 Ernie Singletary PTS 10 17 Mar 1981 Wembley Arena London England46 Loss 38 7 1 Marvin Hagler TKO 3 15 1 45 27 Sep 1980 Wembley Arena London England Lost WBA WBC and The Ring middleweight titles45 Win 38 6 1 Vito Antuofermo RTD 8 15 28 Jun 1980 Wembley Arena London England Retained WBA WBC and The Ring middleweight titles44 Win 37 6 1 Vito Antuofermo SD 15 16 Mar 1980 Caesars Palace Paradise Nevada US Won WBA WBC and The Ring middleweight titles43 Win 36 6 1 Doug Demmings PTS 10 23 Oct 1979 Wembley Conference Centre London England42 Win 35 6 1 Monty Betham TKO 2 10 1 05 26 Jun 1979 Wembley Arena London England41 Win 34 6 1 Renato Garcia TKO 9 10 2 40 1 May 1979 Wembley Arena London England40 Win 33 6 1 Rudy Robles PTS 10 6 Feb 1979 Wembley Conference Centre London England39 Win 32 6 1 Gratien Tonna RTD 6 15 7 Nov 1978 Empire Pool London England Retained European middleweight title38 Win 31 6 1 Angelo Jacopucci KO 12 15 19 Jul 1978 Municipal Stadium Bellaria Italy Won vacant European middleweight titleJacopucci died of injuries sustained in this bout 15 37 Win 30 6 1 Sandy Torres KO 5 10 1 57 15 Feb 1978 Las Vegas Hilton Winchester Nevada US36 Win 29 6 1 Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 8 Nov 1977 Empire Pool London England Won vacant British middleweight title35 Loss 28 6 1 Gratien Tonna TKO 8 15 1 10 21 Sep 1977 Palasport di San Siro Milan Italy Lost European middleweight title34 Win 28 5 1 Emile Griffith PTS 10 30 Jul 1977 Stade Louis II Monte Carlo Monaco33 Loss 27 5 1 Ronnie Harris TKO 8 10 3 00 12 Apr 1977 Royal Albert Hall London England32 Win 27 4 1 Germano Valsecchi KO 5 15 4 Feb 1977 Palasport di San Siro Milan Italy Won European middleweight title31 Win 26 4 1 Sugar Ray Seales TKO 5 10 2 14 7 Dec 1976 Royal Albert Hall London England30 Win 25 4 1 Tony Licata TKO 6 10 1 30 9 Nov 1976 Empire Pool London England29 Win 24 4 1 Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 14 Sep 1976 Royal Albert Hall London England Retained British middleweight title28 Win 23 4 1 Frank Reiche TKO 8 10 24 May 1976 Olympiahalle Munich West Germany27 Win 22 4 1 Billy Knight TKO 2 15 3 00 27 Apr 1976 Royal Albert Hall London England Retained British middleweight title26 Win 21 4 1 Trevor Francis TKO 8 10 1 05 20 Jan 1976 Royal Albert Hall London England25 Win 20 4 1 Kevin Finnegan PTS 15 4 Nov 1975 Empire Pool London England Won vacant British middleweight title24 Win 19 4 1 Peter Wulf KO 6 10 30 May 1975 Hamburg West Germany23 Win 18 4 1 Larry Paul PTS 10 25 Mar 1975 Royal Albert Hall London England22 Win 17 4 1 Tony Allen PTS 8 10 Feb 1975 Hilton on Park Lane London England21 Win 16 4 1 Henry Cooper KO 1 8 2 25 20 Jan 1975 Hilton on Park Lane London England20 Win 15 4 1 Shako Mamba PTS 8 30 Nov 1974 Munich West Germany19 NC 14 4 1 Jan Magdziarz NC 4 10 29 Oct 1974 Royal Albert Hall London England NC after both boxers were disqualified for inactivity18 Loss 14 4 Ricky Ortiz TKO 2 10 21 May 1974 Empire Pool London England17 Win 14 3 Tony Byrne PTS 8 26 Mar 1974 Royal Albert Hall London England16 Loss 13 3 Jan Magdziarz RTD 6 8 11 Dec 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England15 Loss 13 2 Jan Magdziarz TKO 3 8 30 Oct 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England14 Win 13 1 Ernie Burns TKO 5 8 2 Oct 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England13 Win 12 1 Octavio Romero PTS 8 10 Sep 1973 Empire Pool London England12 Loss 11 1 Don McMillan TKO 8 8 0 45 5 Jun 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England11 Win 11 0 George Aidoo TKO 5 8 9 May 1973 York Hall London England10 Win 10 0 Frank Young PTS 8 27 Mar 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England9 Win 9 0 Harry Scott PTS 8 13 Mar 1973 Empire Pool London England8 Win 8 0 Gabe Bowens TKO 7 8 1 55 20 Feb 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England7 Win 7 0 Pat Brogan TKO 7 8 30 Jan 1973 York Hall London England6 Win 6 0 Pat Dwyer PTS 8 16 Jan 1973 Royal Albert Hall London England5 Win 5 0 Mike McCluskie KO 5 8 8 Jan 1973 Piccadilly Hotel Manchester England4 Win 4 0 Ronnie Hough TKO 5 8 11 Dec 1972 Hilton on Park Lane London England3 Win 3 0 Anton Schnedl TKO 7 8 5 Dec 1972 Royal Albert Hall London England2 Win 2 0 John Lowe TKO 3 6 14 Nov 1972 Empire Pool London England1 Win 1 0 Maurice Thomas TKO 6 6 31 Oct 1972 Royal Albert Hall London England 9 See also editList of middleweight boxing champions List of WBC world championsReferences edit a b Remembering Alan Minter boxingnewsonline net 15 September 2020 Alan Minter obituary Thetimes co uk Retrieved 14 March 2021 Crawley Boxing club history crawleyboxingclub co uk 15 September 2020 Crawley Boxing Club mourns passing of John Hillier trainer of World champion Alan Minter crawleyobserver co uk 11 January 2018 1 European Junior Championships Miskolc Hungary November 8 14 1970 a b c Alan Minter Olympic Results sports reference com Archived from the original on 18 April 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2018 Light Middleweight 71 kilograms Men Olympedia Retrieved 10 September 2020 Boxing British Olympians who challenged and conquered the world ilfordrecorder co uk 6 April 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Alan Minter ID 11467 boxrec com Retrieved 9 August 2020 a b c d e f Boxing Speakers Alan Minter primeperformersagency co uk Retrieved 9 August 2020 a b Alan Minter British boxing legend dies at 69 BBC News 10 September 2020 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Alan Minter British boxing great who became world champion dies aged 69 The Guardian 10 September 2020 Retrieved 10 September 2020 Boxing Speakers Alan Minter thefightcity com 27 September 2019 Benson Michael 10 September 2020 Boxing news Former undisputed middleweight champion Alan Minter dies of cancer aged 69 Talksport Doctor Convicted In Boxing Death Published 1983 The New York Times 29 January 1983 Retrieved 14 March 2021 External links editBoxing record for Alan Minter from BoxRec registration required Alan Minter profile at Cyber Boxing ZoneSporting positionsAmateur boxing titlesPrevious John Conteh ABA middleweight champion1971 Next Frank LucasRegional boxing titlesVacantTitle last held byBunny Sterling British middleweight champion4 November 1975 1977Vacated VacantTitle next held byKevin FinneganPreceded byGermano Valsecchi European middleweight champion4 February 1977 21 September 1977 Succeeded byGratien TonnaPreceded byKevin Finnegan British middleweight champion8 November 1977 1979Vacated VacantTitle next held byKevin FinneganVacantTitle last held byGratien Tonna European middleweight champion19 July 1978 1980VacatedWorld boxing titlesPreceded byVito Antuofermo WBA middleweight champion16 March 1980 27 September 1980 Succeeded byMarvin HaglerWBC middleweight champion16 March 1980 27 September 1980The Ring middleweight champion16 March 1980 27 September 1980Undisputed middleweight champion16 March 1980 27 September 1980 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alan Minter amp oldid 1175335310, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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