Jamaal Bowman Pulls the Alarm: The NFL is 'Afraid' of Shedeur Sanders Because...
'Been Owed This for 5 Years'! Scott Jennings Calls Out Randi Weingarten's Lies...
Up Next for Dem Sen. Chris Van Hollen: Margaritas With Judge Dugan?
Massive Explosion Rocks Iranian Port of Bandar Abbas Causing Widespread Damage, Injuries (...
'This Is a Crime'! CNN Legal Analyst Throws a Wrench In Dems' Narrative...
Milwaukee Democrat Rep Encourages People to Obstruct ICE from Arresting Criminal Illegal A...
Scott Jennings Schools CNN Panelists on Why an Activist Judge’s Arrest Had to...
FOIA Revelation: Biden White House Labeled Libs of TikTok and Gays Against Groomers...
Ken Dilanian Loved Going After Trump but Thinks Arresting Judges Who Break the...
As More Activist Judges Get Arrested Let’s Remind Democrats that ‘No One Is...
Writer and Pop Culture Expert Says Draft Overlooking Shedeur Sanders is Like Whipping...
Epstein Accuser and Abuse Survivor Virginia Giuffre Found Dead by Suicide
Jamie Raskin is OUTRAGED that a Judge Could Face Justice for Allegedly Helping...
Kash Patel's 'No One Is Above the Law' Judicial Perp Walk Pic Is...
Guy Benson Questions 'Dill'-emma: Friend Ousted from Pickleball League Over Politics

Boxing fans and friends mourn the death of the great Bert Sugar

If you were a fan of boxing, even a little bit over the past several decades, you have encountered some of Bert Sugar’s work. He was boxing’s greatest historian, a living compendium of facts and stories that made the sport vastly better. And now he is dead, of cancer, at the age of 74.

Advertisement

Bert Randolph Sugar, the legendary boxing writer and historian, and one of the sport’s most iconic characters, died Sunday afternoon in Chappaqua, N.Y., after a long battle with lung cancer.

Sugar was 74. He was surrounded by family at Northern Westchester Medical Center in Mount Kisco.

With his fedora and ever-present cigar, Sugar was an icon who loved to talk, and he could talk and write about boxing like few others. Few were better ambassadors of the sport than Sugar.

Sugar wrote more than 80 books, and was present at many of the greatest fights in boxing history, including the Ali-Frazier trilogy. He wrote about those fights in a special Muhammad Ali edition for USA TODAY two years ago.

He was best known as the editor and publisher of Boxing Illustrated and Ring magazine.

He was remembered fondly on Twitter as the #BertSugar hashtag trended worldwide in less than an hour after the announcement of his death. Here are some of the wishes left by his fans and friends (and, from the tweets, those two groups intersected quite often).

https://twitter.com/#!/JCLayfield/status/184057183086985216

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/#!/rolandsmartin/status/184056669532200960

https://twitter.com/#!/JTTheBrick/status/184054078823874560

https://twitter.com/#!/AmyKNelson/status/184041283512311809

https://twitter.com/#!/EricRaskin/status/184058853581787138

https://twitter.com/#!/ColemanESPN/status/184057961021313024

https://twitter.com/#!/JoshElliottABC/status/184040173619789824

https://twitter.com/#!/MrFabulous915/status/184052503648813056

And there is this multi-tweet tribute by Steve Kim of Max Boxing that struck us as worth sharing in its entirety.

https://twitter.com/#!/stevemaxboxing/status/184050815487582209

https://twitter.com/#!/stevemaxboxing/status/184051679921053696

https://twitter.com/#!/stevemaxboxing/status/184051951456100353

https://twitter.com/#!/stevemaxboxing/status/184052148684861441

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos