Former junior welterweight champion Aaron Pryor dies

By our correspondents
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October 11, 2016

LOS ANGELES, California: Boxing Hall of Famer Aaron Pryor, remembered for scintillating duels with Nicaraguan Alexis Arguello, died on Sunday at the age of 60 after a long battle with heart disease.

“We are heartbroken and sad to announce that our beloved Aaron passed away at home surrounded by his family at 5:57 am” Frankie Pryor, his widow, said in a statement from the family home near Cincinnati, Ohio.

“He was known around the world as ‘The Hawk’ but to our family he was a beloved husband, father, grandfather, brother, uncle and friend.”

Pryor built a 39-1 record with 35 knockouts during a career that was interrupted by drug addiction.

Pryor’s first bout against Arguello is still considered one of the greatest fights in boxing history. He scored a 14th-round knockout to win the match.

The two fighters squared off in a rematch on September 9, 1983 in Las Vegas. Pryor knocked out Arguello in the 10th round and then announced his retirement.

He returned nine months later, however, successfully defending his title for the final time by defeating Gary Hinton with a 15-round split decision.

It would be 29 months before he fought again as addiction led to the loss of his title due to inactivity.

Upon his return to the ring, he was knocked out in the seventh round by journeyman Bobby Joe Young in August of 1987. He retired for good in 1990.