Mike 'The Body Snatcher' McCallum, boxing hall of famer and three-time champion, dies at 68New Foto - Mike 'The Body Snatcher' McCallum, boxing hall of famer and three-time champion, dies at 68

Mike "The Body Snatcher" McCallumwas so feared for his impeccable technique that the "four kings" of the 1980s declined to fight him. Nevertheless, McCallum won world titles at super welterweight, middleweight and light heavyweight and was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2003. McCallum, the first Jamaican-born champion, died Saturday in Las Vegas at 68. TheJamaica Observerreported that McCallum fell ill while driving to a gym and pulled off the road. He was found to be unresponsive, and was later pronounced dead. In the ring, his attention to detail and faultless technique enabled him to post a 49-5-1 record. McCallum earned his nickname by repeatedly punching the body and head. More often than not, bouts ended in knockouts — he recorded 36 KOs and was never knocked out. The Ring magazineranked him in 2011 as eighth on its list of the "10 best middleweight title holders of the last 50 years." Not that his inability to secure a bout with the "kings," Thomas Hearns, Roberto Duran, Sugar Ray Leonard or Marvin Hagler, spoiled his mood. It was particularly telling that Hearns wouldn't fight McCallum, because they were longtime sparring partners before becoming champions. McCallum was disappointed but remained all smiles outside the ring, consistently carrying himself with a pleasant, if serious, disposition. "None of 'The Four Kings,' wanted anything to do with that guy and I know that for a fact because I tried to make some of those fights," Hall of Fame boxer Lou DiBellatold longtime boxing writer Kevin Iole. "He was the most perfect technical fighter I've ever seen, and he wasn't a pitty-pat guy." Read more:Georgia O'Connor, beloved and unbeaten British boxer, dies at 25 McCallum became the first Jamaican boxer to win a world title whenhe defeated Irishman Sean Mannionby unanimous decision in 1984 at Madison Square Garden for the WBA Junior Middleweight crown. Jamaican Sport Minister Olivia Grange issued a statement upon learning of McCallum's passing, saying, "It is with utter and complete sadness that I learned of the death of Jamaica's three-time World Boxing Champion Michael McKenzie McCallum. "I express my personal condolences to his mother, siblings and his children. On behalf of the Ministry of Sports I take this opportunity to extend our sympathies to the family and friends of this legendary Jamaican." Michael McKenzie McCallum was born Dec. 7, 1956, inKingston, Jamaica, and began boxing as a teenager, racking up as many as 250 amateur bouts before turning pro in 1981. He represented Jamaica at the 1976 Montreal Olympics, reaching the quarterfinals. He boxed professionally until 1997, successfully defending the WBA junior middleweight crown six times, including wins over Julian Jackson, Milton McCrory and Donald Curry before moving up a weight class to middleweight. Read more:Commentary: Thirty years ago Freddie Roach didn't take sage advice, opened Wild Card Boxing Club McCallum defeated Herol Graham in 1989 to become WBA middleweight champion and defended the belt with wins over Steve Collins, Michael Watson and Sumbu Kalambay. He won his third division title in 1994 by again stepping up in weight class and defeating Jeff Harding for the WBC light heavyweight crown. He met his match against James Toney, fighting to a draw Dec. 13, 1991, before losing to Toney twice. McCallum also dropped a 12-round decision to Roy Jones in a 1997 light heavyweight title fight. He retired shortly thereafter and became a successful trainer, taking great pride in teaching his body-punching technique to young boxers. Jones expressed sadness to Kevin Iole, saying, "Man, we lost another beautiful boxing soul. May he rest in peace." Jones also lamented that McCallum was unable to book fights against the four kings. "In the junior middleweight division, everyone always went around Mike McCallum, and that says a lot about him," Jones said. "Not even Marvin [Hagler] ever talked much about fighting Mike McCallum. You don't have to listen to what they say [about him]. You watch what they do and everyone wanted to go around him for a reason." In a post on X, the WBC said: "Rest in Peace to the legendary Mike 'The Body Snatcher' McCallum. Former WBA world champion and one of the most technically gifted fighters of his era. Thank you for the fights, the lessons, and the greatness." Rest in Peace to the legendary Mike "The Body Snatcher" McCallum 🌹🇯🇲Former WBA world champion and one of the most technically gifted fighters of his era. 🥊Thank you for the fights, the lessons, and the greatness. 🙏🕊️pic.twitter.com/hF5IX4OAxT — WBA Boxing (@WBABoxing)June 1, 2025 Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report. This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Mike 'The Body Snatcher' McCallum, boxing hall of famer and three-time champion, dies at 68

Mike 'The Body Snatcher' McCallum, boxing hall of famer and three-time champion, dies at 68 Mike "The Body Snatcher" McCal...
Lions center, 4-time Pro Bowler Frank Ragnow retiring at age 29New Foto - Lions center, 4-time Pro Bowler Frank Ragnow retiring at age 29

Lions center Frank Ragnow is retiring from the NFL at the age of 29 after seven seasons in the league, he announced on his Instagram. The four-time Pro Bowler had been away from the Lions during OTAs, and there wasspeculation that he was unhappy with his contract, but head coach Dan Campbell downplayed his absence. Ragnow was signed through 2026 and was set to make $9.15 million in 2025. "These past couple of months have been very trying as I've come to the realization that my football journey is ending and I'm officially retiring from the NFL," Ragnow wrote. "I've tried to convince myself that I'm feeling good but I'm not and it's time to prioritize my health and my families future. I have given this team everything I have and I thought I had more to give, but the reality is I simply don't. I have to listen to my body and this has been one of the hardest decisions of my life. The Lions organization has been absolutely incredible throughout this process and I can't emphasize this enough how grateful I am for this team and all the fans. It was an absolute honor going to battle for you all." View this post on Instagram A post shared by Frank Ragnow (@frank_ragnow) An injury early in the 2021 season left him with toe problems he needed to manage for much of the past four seasons. He also had battled knee and ankle injuries and played through last season with a partially torn pectoral muscle,according to the Detroit Free Press. Detroit selected Ragnow with the 20th overall pick in the 2018 NFL Draft out of Arkansas. The center played in 96 games for the Lions in his career, playing in at least 14 games per season in six of his seven years with the team. Ragnow was named to the Pro Bowl in 2020, and the past three seasons straight. He earned second-team All-Pro honors in 2020, 2023 and 2024.

Lions center, 4-time Pro Bowler Frank Ragnow retiring at age 29

Lions center, 4-time Pro Bowler Frank Ragnow retiring at age 29 Lions center Frank Ragnow is retiring from the NFL at the age of 29 after se...
Lightning sign 2-time Stanley Cup champion Yanni Gourde to a 6-year contract worth nearly $14MNew Foto - Lightning sign 2-time Stanley Cup champion Yanni Gourde to a 6-year contract worth nearly $14M

Yanni Gourde never really wanted to leave the Tampa Bay Lightning after helping them win the Stanley Cup. Now he might be able to finish out his time in the NHL with them. Gourde signed a six-year deal Monday worth just under $14 million, keeping him under contract through the 2030-31 season at a salary cap hit of $2.33 million. "I wanted to stay in Tampa for a long time," Gourde said on a video call with reporters. "That was the biggest thing for me was getting some term and be able to stay and play in Tampa for the remaining years of my career. That was the biggest part. I'm so excited that we could make this happen." Gourde was a big part of Tampa Bay winning back-to-back titles in 2020 and '21. Seattle took Gourde in the expansion draft that summer coming off the second Cup run, and he played three-plus seasons for the Kraken. TheLightning reacquiredthe 33-year-old center ahead of the trade deadline in March. General manager Julien BriseBois at the time expressed confidence in getting Gourde signed after sending a couple of conditional first-round picks and more to Seattle for him and Oliver Bjorkstrand. "I was hoping it would be a possibility, but you never know until the negotiation starts," Gourde said. "Obviously Tampa's always been at the top of my list when I was in Seattle if I were to get traded again or go somewhere else or sign as a free agent. When March came and I was traded here, I was so excited to come back." Gourde missed several weeks during this past regular season with a sports hernia and subsequent surgery. He also broke a finger in Tampa Bay's first-round loss to defending champion Florida, and despite that early exit believes the team's Stanley Cup window is wide open. "Obviously a disappointing end of the season in the first round, but this group was really good and I really believe in this group," Gourde said. "The biggest aspect is just trying to find a way to win, find a way to perform, find a way to be proud to wear that Tampa Bay Lightning jersey. Obviously the ultimate goal is to win a championship." ___ AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/NHL

Lightning sign 2-time Stanley Cup champion Yanni Gourde to a 6-year contract worth nearly $14M

Lightning sign 2-time Stanley Cup champion Yanni Gourde to a 6-year contract worth nearly $14M Yanni Gourde never really wanted to leave the...
Bill Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way'New Foto - Bill Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way'

WASHINGTON ‒ Former President Bill Clinton insisted in an interview that former PresidentJoe Bidenwas in good shape despite a new book thatchronicled Biden's cognitive and physical declineanddescribed his inner circlelimiting work hours and the access of aides. The book "Original Sin," written by CNN's Jake Tapper and Axios' Alex Thompson, includesinformation from White Houseaides and officials who said he "dropped off considerably," had heavily scripted Cabinet meetings and forgot basic facts. "I thought he was a good president. The only concern I thought he had to deal with was, 'Could anybody do that job until they were 86?' And we've had several long talks. I had never seen him and walked away thinking he can't do this anymore. He was always on top of his briefs," Bill Clinton said in an interview on "CBS Sunday Morning" when asked about the reporting in the book. Clinton added, "I saw President Biden not very long ago, and I thought he was in good shape, but the book didn't register with me cause I never saw him that way." Biden took aim at the book and its authors, jokinglytelling reporterson May 30, "You can see that I'm mentally incompetent, I can't walk ‒ and I can beat the hell out of both of them." Biden was recently diagnosed withStage 4 prostate cancer, and he said he had begun treatment. Clinton said he didn't want to read the book because Biden is not president anymore. "I think he did a good job," Clinton said of Biden. "And I think we are facing challenges today without precedent in our history. And some people are trying to use this as a way to blame him for the fact that Trump was reelected." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way'

Bill Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way'

Bill Clinton defends Biden on health reports: 'I never saw him that way' WASHINGTON ‒ Former President Bill Clinton insisted in an i...
Barack Obama and Steve Bannon agree on something: AI's role in American jobs, politicsNew Foto - Barack Obama and Steve Bannon agree on something: AI's role in American jobs, politics

Former PresidentBarack ObamaandSteve Bannon,a White House strategist during PresidentDonald Trump's first term, are both worried about the same thing: artificial intelligence displacing large numbers of white-collar workers. Obama sounded the alarm on social media this weekend by directing his nearly 130 million followers to two recent articles that dove into the possibility of technological transformations reshaping the U.S. economy - one of which quoted Bannon issuing similar warnings. "At a time when people are understandably focused on the daily chaos in Washington, these articles describe the rapidly accelerating impact that AI is going to have on jobs, the economy, and how we live,"Obama, the former two-term president,wrote on May 30. Thefirst article Obama cited came from Axiosand centered around an interview with Dario Amodei, the CEO of AI startup Anthropic. Amodei warned the news outlet that AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs, leading to unemployment rates of 10-20% in the next one to five years. Amodei told Axios that the mass elimination of jobs could be in the offing, especially at the entry level across the technology, finance, law, consulting and other white-collar professions. Bannon, a former top Trump 2016 campaign and White House aide who is now at podcaster, offered Axios a similar warning, saying AI will be a major issue in the 2028 presidential campaign. "I don't think anyone is taking into consideration how administrative, managerial and tech jobs for people under 30 — entry-level jobs that are so important in your 20s — are going to be eviscerated," he said. The article Obama mentioned also says experts in the AI space believe the U.S. government is not doing a great job of cautioning workers so as not create panic. Trump has not addressed job losses due to AI, though he has championed the need for the US to dominate the AI space. The president also urged the House to pass a sweeping tax and policy package that he's dubbed the "big beautiful bill" and which allocates$500 million to helpmodernize government with the help of AI. That legislation also wouldprevent statesfrom implementing existing regulations - or making new ones - that shape how AI is used or developed. There are currently no federal laws or regulations in the U.S. to regulate AI. Obama also shared a separateNew York Times articletitled "For Some Recent Graduates, the A.I. Job Apocalypse May Already Be Here," which notes that unemployment for recent graduates was heavily concentrated in technical fields like finance and computer science, where A.I. has made faster gains. "Now's the time for public discussions about how to maximize the benefits and limit the harms of this powerful new technology," Obama wrote. This is not the first time Obama has talked about AI having the potential to disrupt the white-collar job market. At theSacerdote Great Names Series at Hamilton Collegein April in Clinton, New York, Obama told the school's president that the more advanced AI models "can code better than let's call it 60%, 70% of coders now.""We're talking highly skilled jobs that pay really good salaries and that up until recently has been entirely a seller's market in Silicon Valley," Obama said. "A lot of that work is going to go away." Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a White House correspondent for USA TODAY.You can follow her on X @SwapnaVenugopal This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Obama and Bannon agree AI will be a white-collar job killer

Barack Obama and Steve Bannon agree on something: AI's role in American jobs, politics

Barack Obama and Steve Bannon agree on something: AI's role in American jobs, politics Former PresidentBarack ObamaandSteve Bannon,a Whi...

 

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