RIP - Terry Spinks
5 posters
The v2 Forum :: Sport :: Boxing
Page 1 of 1
RIP - Terry Spinks
Terry Spinks, who won boxing gold at the 1956 Olympics at the age of only 18, has died at the age of 74.
East Londoner Spinks, the youngest Briton to win an Olympic boxing gold medal, died at his Essex home after a long illness.
The baby-faced Spinks, who was an apprentice jockey before concentrating on boxing, won flyweight gold in Melbourne having been a late replacement.
Spinks, who clinched the British featherweight crown as a professional, won 41 of his 49 professional fights and was awarded an MBE in 2002.
The son of a West Ham bookmaker, Spinks, who remains the only boxer to be schoolboy, ABA, British and Olympic champion, started boxing at the age of nine with the West Ham Amateur Boxing Club, which later produced two-weight world champion Nigel Benn and British super-featherweight champion Kevin Mitchell.
He was working as a binman when the call came to join Great Britain's Olympic team and only had a week to prepare before leaving for Australia.
Spinks, who was originally overlooked by the selectors because of his age and youthful looks, beat Romania's Mircea Dobrescu in the final.
Spinks turned pro the following year and had a short - in terms of years - career in the paid ranks, retiring at the age of 24.
However, he won the British featherweight title in 1960 with a stoppage of Bobby Neill and defended the Lonsdale Belt twice before losing to Welsh legend Howard Winstone in 1961.
Spinks became a trainer, coaching the South Korean team at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, and raised the alert when he witnessed the Black September terrorists approaching the Israeli quarters.
After a lengthy battle with alcoholism, Spinks fell ill and in later years was looked after by his cousin Rosemary Ellmore and her husband Terry.
A long campaign led by the Ellmores led to Spinks finally being awarded an MBE, fellow Melbourne gold-medalist Dick McTaggart having received one 17 years previously.
Despite his failing health, Spinks, an East End legend, remained a fixture at meetings of the London ex-Boxers' Association until shortly before his death.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/17862729
-----------------------
I was only vaguely aware of Spinks, mainly due to him featuring in the Howard Winstone film 'Risen', but he wasn't portrayed in a very good light there, it certainly seems there was more to him than just being a cocky Cockney.
To have one weeks notice before flying out to Australia and then winning Olympic gold is a pretty amazing achievement.
(Bernard Hopkins now holds the linear version of the 1956 flyweight gold, by the way.)
RIP Terry.
East Londoner Spinks, the youngest Briton to win an Olympic boxing gold medal, died at his Essex home after a long illness.
The baby-faced Spinks, who was an apprentice jockey before concentrating on boxing, won flyweight gold in Melbourne having been a late replacement.
Spinks, who clinched the British featherweight crown as a professional, won 41 of his 49 professional fights and was awarded an MBE in 2002.
The son of a West Ham bookmaker, Spinks, who remains the only boxer to be schoolboy, ABA, British and Olympic champion, started boxing at the age of nine with the West Ham Amateur Boxing Club, which later produced two-weight world champion Nigel Benn and British super-featherweight champion Kevin Mitchell.
He was working as a binman when the call came to join Great Britain's Olympic team and only had a week to prepare before leaving for Australia.
Spinks, who was originally overlooked by the selectors because of his age and youthful looks, beat Romania's Mircea Dobrescu in the final.
Spinks turned pro the following year and had a short - in terms of years - career in the paid ranks, retiring at the age of 24.
However, he won the British featherweight title in 1960 with a stoppage of Bobby Neill and defended the Lonsdale Belt twice before losing to Welsh legend Howard Winstone in 1961.
Spinks became a trainer, coaching the South Korean team at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, and raised the alert when he witnessed the Black September terrorists approaching the Israeli quarters.
After a lengthy battle with alcoholism, Spinks fell ill and in later years was looked after by his cousin Rosemary Ellmore and her husband Terry.
A long campaign led by the Ellmores led to Spinks finally being awarded an MBE, fellow Melbourne gold-medalist Dick McTaggart having received one 17 years previously.
Despite his failing health, Spinks, an East End legend, remained a fixture at meetings of the London ex-Boxers' Association until shortly before his death.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/17862729
-----------------------
I was only vaguely aware of Spinks, mainly due to him featuring in the Howard Winstone film 'Risen', but he wasn't portrayed in a very good light there, it certainly seems there was more to him than just being a cocky Cockney.
To have one weeks notice before flying out to Australia and then winning Olympic gold is a pretty amazing achievement.
(Bernard Hopkins now holds the linear version of the 1956 flyweight gold, by the way.)
RIP Terry.
Union Cane- Moderator
- Posts : 11328
Join date : 2011-01-27
Age : 48
Location : Whatever truculent means, if that's good, I'm that.
Re: RIP - Terry Spinks
Nice touch, Union. Saw this on the news just as I was getting in to work this morning.
R.I.P
R.I.P
88Chris05- Moderator
- Posts : 9661
Join date : 2011-02-16
Age : 36
Location : Nottingham
Re: RIP - Terry Spinks
Thanks for posting this, Union.
Sad loss.
Sad loss.
Mind the windows Tino.- Beano
- Posts : 21145
Join date : 2011-05-13
Location : Your knuckles whiten on the wheel. The last thing that Julius will feel, your final flight can't be delayed. No earth just sky it's so serene, your pink fat lips let go a scream. You fry and melt, I love the scene.
The Galveston Giant- Posts : 5333
Join date : 2011-02-23
Age : 39
Location : Scotland
Re: RIP - Terry Spinks
Union Cane wrote:
(Bernard Hopkins now holds the linear version of the 1956 flyweight gold, by the way.)
I followed the line through on boxrec and was almost about to say that surely Jermain Taylor was the lineal champion but I guess it went Hopkins-Taylor-Pavlik and then back to Hopkins. Should have known better....
Anyway, good article and RIP Terry Spinks.
md_fan- Posts : 146
Join date : 2011-01-27
Similar topics
» Leon Spinks
» Leon Spinks?
» R.I.P. Leon Spinks
» Spinks vs Holyfield at 190 - who wins ????
» How were people taken in by Tyson - Spinks ????
» Leon Spinks?
» R.I.P. Leon Spinks
» Spinks vs Holyfield at 190 - who wins ????
» How were people taken in by Tyson - Spinks ????
The v2 Forum :: Sport :: Boxing
Page 1 of 1
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum