BlackFacts Details

Sugar Ray Leonard

Sugar Ray Leonard is a retired professional boxer who has a boxing record of 36 wins, 3 losses, and 1 draw. Leonard was the first ever boxer to win more than a hundred million dollars in purses, owing to his world titles in five separate weight divisions and high profile fights with Wilfred Benitez, Thomas Hearns, and Roberto Durán.

Sugar Ray Leonard was born on May 17, 1956 as Ray Charles Leonard in North Carolina. His parents, Cicero and Getha Leonard, moved to Washington when Ray was three and then to Maryland when Ray was ten. Ray almost drowned at a creek by his house a few years after moving, and he also survived a car wreck with his mother while he was still in his pre-teens. In his autobiography, “The Big Fight: My Life In and Out of the Ring”, Ray also mentions problems at home, including alcohol abuse and domestic violence. He mentioned being sexually abused by an unnamed ‘prominent Olympic coach’ when he was fifteen years old. The revelation shocked the sporting world as most people believed Ray had a reasonably uneventful childhood.

Ray was ‘goaded’ into boxing by his brother Roger, who started boxing as a teenager. At the age of thirteen, Ray started training with Dave Jacobs and Ollie Dunlap at the Palmer Park Recreation Center. By the age of fifteen, Ray was already fighting in the National Division of the Amateur Athletic Union as an Amateur Boxer. A year later, he lied about his age so that he could take part in the Eastern Olympic Trials, where he made it to the semi-finals of the lightweight division. Ray lost that semi-final to a controversial decision, as it was said that Ray’s opponent, Greg Whaley, was hit so many times in that match that he was not allowed to continue in the trials. Ray then went on to win the National Golden Gloves and the National Amateur Athletic Union Light Welterweight Championship in 1974. In 1976, Ray represented the United States Olympic Boxing team along with Howard Davis, John Tate, the Spinks Brothers, Leo Randolph and Charles Mooney. Leonard won the Olympic

Cuisine Facts

Arts Facts

Rah the Dark Pharaoh

Amazing Grace: President Obama's Bold and Moving Speech on Race in Charleston