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Mike Hunter (boxer)

American boxer


Summary

American boxer

FieldValue
nicknameThe Bounty Hunter
weightCruiserweight
Heavyweight
nationalityAmerican
birth_date
death_date
styleOrthodox
total36
wins26
KO8
losses7
draws2
no contests1

Heavyweight |}} Mike Hunter (September 14, 1959 – February 8, 2006) was an American professional boxer who won the USBA Heavyweight title and the International Boxing Federation Continental Americas Cruiserweight title.

Professional career

Known as "The Bounty Hunter", Hunter was a heavyweight boxer during the early-to-mid 1990s. Hunter's boxing career began in Maryland, after a seven-year stint in prison for armed robbery. Hunter's skills caught the attention of actor James Caan, who would manage Hunter for three years, before selling his contract to Bill Slayton. Hunter first became ranked by the major sanctioning bodies in 1990, and would defeat many notable boxers like Dwight Qawi, Pinklon Thomas, Tyrell Biggs, Oliver McCall, Jimmy Thunder, and Alexander Zolkin. By the mid-1990s, Hunter had a drug addiction.

Hunter lost three fights in the last year and a half of his career, before retiring following a loss to Danish Heavyweight Brian Nielsen for the IBO version of the heavyweight title.

Professional boxing record

-
-align=center
Loss
26–7–2 (1)
TKO
5
31/05/1996
-
-align=center
Win
26–6–2 (1)
PTS
10
03/11/1995
-
-align=center
Loss
25–6–2 (1)
SD
10
06/10/1995

| |- |-align=center |Win |25–5–2 (1) |PTS |10

06/05/1995
-align=center
Loss
24–5–2 (1)
UD
10
24/03/1995

| |- |-align=center |Loss |24–4–2 (1) |SD |10

16/12/1994
-align=center
Win
24–3–2 (1)
SD
10
01/09/1994

| |- |-align=center |Win |23–3–2 (1) |PTS |10

19/05/1994
-align=center
22–3–2 (1)
NC
12
04/12/1993
-
-align=center
Win
22–3–2
UD
10
06/11/1993

| |- |-align=center |Win |21–3–2 |SD |12

05/08/1993
-align=center
Win
20–3–2
UD
12
17/01/1993
-
-align=center
Loss
19–3–2
MD
8
22/09/1992

| |- |-align=center |Win |19–2–2 |TKO |3

14/02/1992
-align=center
Win
18–2–2
UD
10
14/12/1990
-
-align=center
Win
17–2–2
TKO
1
31/10/1990

| |- |-align=center |Win |16–2–2 |KO |4

14/08/1990
-align=center
Win
15–2–2
UD
10
12/06/1990

| |- |-align=center |Win |14–2–2 |UD |12

16/03/1990
-align=center
Win
13–2–2
KO
3
31/01/1989
-
-align=center
Win
12–2–2
UD
8
06/12/1988
-
-align=center
Win
11–2–2
KO
4
26/07/1988
-
-align=center
Win
10–2–2
UD
10
22/01/1988
-
-align=center
Loss
9–2–2
UD
8
05/11/1987
-
-align=center
Win
9–1–2
TKO
1
29/09/1987
-
-align=center
Win
8–1–2
KO
1
25/08/1987

| |- |-align=center |Loss |7–1–2 |SD |8 |18/05/1987 | |- |-align=center |Win |7–0–2 |UD |8

28/04/1987
-align=center
6–0–2
PTS
6
20/02/1987
-
-align=center
Win
6–0–1
UD
6
02/01/1987
-
-align=center
Win
5–0–1
TKO
5
02/10/1986
-align=center
-
-align=center
4–0–1
PTS
6
23/08/1986
-
-align=center
Win
4–0
UD
8
11/04/1986
-
-align=center
Win
3–0
UD
6
02/03/1986
-
-align=center
Win
2–0
PTS
4
18/01/1986
-
-align=center
Win
1–0
SD
4
14/12/1985
}

Career after boxing

Hunter returned to the sport in September 2005, working as an instructor and trainer at the Tru Boxing Gym in Hollywood.

Death

On February 8, 2006, Hunter was on the roof of the St. Moritz Hotel in Los Angeles, when he encountered two Los Angeles police officers, who had set up a buy/bust sting operation surveillance. The officers reported that Hunter, who was unprovoked, hit an officer on the head with a gun. The other officer tackled Hunter, with the previous officer eventually joining in the struggle. Hunter broke free, and pointed his gun at the officers, who promptly shot him twice, in the chest and the arm. Hunter was taken to Cedars-Sinai Hospital, where he died. The two officers involved stated that they did not feel that Hunter was aware that they were police officers.

Personal life

His son Michael Hunter, Jr. became US amateur champ in 2007.

References

References

  1. Pelisek, Christine. (February 22, 2006). "The Knockout Shot". LA Weekly.
  2. Kresal, Steve. (February 1, 1989). "Hunter Gets a Knockout, but He’s Still Not Satisfied". [[Los Angeles Times]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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