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'One of the greatest ever': Legend's sudden death rocks sporting world

Boxing Hall of Famer Marvin Hagler is seen here posing for a photo at an event.
Marvin Hagler's death has ushered in a flood of tributes to one of the greatest boxers of all time. Pic: AAP

The boxing world has been left shocked and devastated by news of legendary fighter Marvelous Marvin Hagler's sudden death.

The American Hall of Fame boxing champion was 66.

Reports emerged from the boxing great's wife on Saturday in the United States that the undisputed middleweight champion from 1980 to 1987 had died in his New Hampshire home town.

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In a post on the famed fighter's Facebook page, Kay G. Hagler said her husband passed away at the family home.

"I am sorry to make a very sad announcement. Today unfortunately my beloved husband Marvelous Marvin passed away unexpectedly at his home here in New Hampshire," she wrote.

"Our family requests that you respect our privacy during this difficult time."

TMZ reported that Hagler’s son, James, said his father was taken to a New Hampshire hospital after experiencing chest pains and difficulty breathing.

The same report said the family was notified four hours later that he had passed away.

"Marvelous" Marvin Hagler fought from 1973 to 1987 and delivered some of the most epic bouts in a golden era of the sport, finishing with a record of 62-3 with two drawn and 52 knockouts.

He was one of “The Four Kings,” of the 1980s along with Sugar Ray Leonard, Roberto Duran and Thomas Hearns.

Hagler is widely regarded to be not only arguably the greatest middleweight of all-time but one of the greatest fighters who ever lived.

His death has left fight fans around the world devastating, with tributes to the boxing great streaming in on social media.

Hagler involved in some of the most iconic fights

The southpaw's most heralded triumph came in a 1985 matchup at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas against Thomas "Hitman" Hearns that lasted only a tick over eight minutes but was regarded as a classic.

After a first round filled with power punches in which Hearns suffered a broken right hand, Hagler suffered a cut to the head early in the second.

A ringside doctor examined Hagler in the third round and the fight went on. Hagler wobbled Hearns with a powerhouse right and sent him to the canvas moments later, Hearns rising only to collapse into referee Richard Steele's arms.

Hagler won the World Boxing Council and World Boxing Association middleweight titles in 1980, stopping Britain's Alan Minter in the third round at London's Wembley Arena, and added the International Boxing Federation's inaugural title in 1983.

Pictured here, Marvin Hagler and Sugar Ray Leonard's epic fight in 1987.
Marvin Hagler and Sugar Ray Leonard fought in a boxing classic in Las Vegas in 1987. Pic: Getty

Hagler defended the undisputed crown 12 times, including a 15-round unanimous decision victory over Panama's Roberto Duran in 1983 and his final triumph, an 11th-round knockout of unbeaten Ugandan John Mugabi in 1986.

Over a decade from 1976 to 1986, Hagler went unbeaten with 36 wins and a draw and carried a 16-fight win streak into what proved to be his final fight, a showdown with "Sugar" Ray Leonard in 1987 at age 32.

Leonard, coming off three years of retirement at age 30, captured a controversial 12-round split decision and launched his return to the ring as Hagler bid farewell.

Hagler was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame and after stepping out of the ring served as an actor and a boxing commentator.

with agencies

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