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Encyclopedia > Richard Steele (boxing referee)
There is also the Irish politician Richard Steele

Richard Steele (born 1944) is a former member of the United States Marine Corps and famous boxing referee. Steele was a teammate of future world Heavyweight champion Ken Norton in the Marines. He began his career as an amateur boxer while with the Marines, compiling a record of 12 wins and 3 losses before launching a professional career. He had 16 wins and 4 defeats as a professional fighter.


Steele began referring fights in the 1970s, and he went on to referee in 167 world title fights around the world. In 1983, he referred his first major fight, when Aaron Pryor knocked out Alexis Arguello in ten rounds in their rematch. Other fights Steele refereed included Marvin Hagler and Thomas Hearns, Julio Cesar Chavez vs. Meldrick Taylor I, and the fight where Sugar Ray Leonard made his comeback after a three year lay-off in 1987 to beat Hagler.


Steele was sometimes involved in controversy, but none bigger than the one that happened after Chavez-Taylor I. With Taylor ahead on the scorecards and seconds away from inflicting Chavez his first defeat, he was dropped by a Chavez punch to the chin. He got up, but Steele decided to stop it with two seconds left in the fight. This defeat affected Taylor emotionally very much, and it proved to be the beginning of the end as a professional boxer for him. Many fans that saw the fight still argue as to whether the fight should have been stopped or not , considering the very short time left in the bout. Steele defended himself by declaring he just tried to protect Taylor from more punishment and he did not know how much time was left in the fight.


Outside the boxing rings, Steele has made a name for himself as a community conscious person, opening a gym, the Richard Steele Boxing Center in Las Vegas, and helping out with Salvation Army charities. In 1999, he was given an award by South African president Nelson Mandela for refusing to referee fights in South Africa while the Apartheid laws were still in use there.


Steele, considered by autograph experts to be a good autograph signer overall, retired in 2001 from referring.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Richard Steele - Hall of Fame Referee (698 words)
Richard Steele Boxing Club is open to at risk youth in Henderson, Nevada as well as the surrounding Las Vegas area.
It is for all age level competition and training, with the possible eventual aspiration of Olympic and/or professional boxing in the future but with the specific goal of empowering and inspiring children to gain a respect for the strategy of problem solving through a respect for qualitative improvement of thinking and understanding through training (education).
Richard Steele Boxing Club welcomes donations of any size that will be used to serve the at risk youth of Henderson and Las Vegas, Nevada and continue to provide an outlet for children to improve their life skills for future success.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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