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John Tate

 
Wikipedia: John Tate (boxer)
John Tate
Statistics
Real name John Tate
Nickname(s) Big John
Rated at Heavyweight
Nationality American
Birth date January 29, 1955(1955-01-29)
Birth place Marion, Arkansas
Death date April 9, 1998 (aged 43)
Death place Knoxville, Tennessee
Boxing record
Total fights 37 (professional)
Wins 34
Wins by KO 23
Losses 3
Medal record
Men's Boxing
Competitor for the  United States
Olympic Games
Bronze 1976 Montreal Heavyweight

John ("Johnny") Tate (January 29, 1955 in Marion, Arkansas – April 9, 1998 in Knoxville, Tennessee) was an American prizefighter and Olympic boxer, who briefly held the World Boxing Association heavyweight title from 1979 to 1980.

Contents

Amateur career

"Big John" Tate captured a bronze medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, losing to Olympic boxing legend Teófilo Stevenson.

Olympic results

Tate lost in the finals of the 1975 National Golden Gloves to Emory Chapman. He lost in the quarterfinals the next year in a split decision to Michael Dokes.He avenged his loss to Dokes in the Olympic Trials by decision, and beat 1976 National AAU Champion Marvin Stinson to advance to the Olympic team.

Professional career

Tate turned pro in 1977 and captured the WBA title on October 20, 1979 by defeating Gerrie Coetzee by decision, succeeding Muhammad Ali, who had relinquished the title that summer. Tate's reign was brief, however, as he lost the title to Mike Weaver just five months later. Tate was leading on all scorecards going into the last round when Weaver landed a punch to the chin that left the champion unconscious on the canvas for several minutes.[1]

Tate came back from the loss on June 20, 1980 against up and coming Trevor Berbick. This was on the undercard of the legendary fight between Sugar Ray Leonard and Roberto Duran. However, the former champion was easily defeated by Berbick. He was knocked out by a punch that caught him on the back of the head and left him unconscious. Tate became the object of ridicule after these humiliating losses.[1] Although he fought until 1988, he was never again taken seriously as a challenger.

Tate's professional career record was 34-3, with 23 wins by knockout.

Outside the ring

Tate's life after his championship reign was brief and troubled, suffering from a cocaine addiction during the 1980s, being convicted on petty theft and assault charges,[2] serving time in prison, and at times panhandling on the streets of Knoxville, Tennessee.[3] He was rumored to have ballooned to over 400 pounds in his post-fighting years.[3]

Death

On April 9, 1998, Tate died of injuries sustained following a one-car automobile accident. It was determined that he suffered a massive stroke, caused by a brain tumor, while driving. The pickup truck crashed into a utility pole. Two other passengers were not seriously injured. The Knox County medical examiner stated that Tate "had been using cocaine regularly in the last 24 hours of his life."

References

Preceded by
Muhammad Ali
Retired
Heavyweight boxing champion (WBA)
1979–1980
Succeeded by
Mike Weaver

External links



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