Alexander Yagubkin

Alexander Gennadiyevich Yagubkin (25 April 1961 – 7 August 2013) was a Soviet Olympic boxer, who competed between 1979 and 1988. The only Soviet boxer to become the World heavyweight champion (1982), he never turned pro due to political restrictions imposed by the Soviet government. He was ranked the world's #2 amateur heavyweight by the AIBA in 1984,[1] and #1 in 1986.[2]

Alexander Yagubkin
Personal information
Birth nameAlexander Gennadiyevich Yagubkin
NationalityUkrainian
Born(1961-04-25)25 April 1961
Stalino, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Died7 August 2013(2013-08-07) (aged 52)
Donetsk, Ukraine
Sport
SportBoxing
Weight classHeavyweight
ClubAvangard
Medal record
Men's boxing
Representing  Soviet Union
Friendship Games
Bronze medal – third place1984 HavanaHeavyweight
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1982 MunichHeavyweight
World Cup
Silver medal – second place1981 MontrealHeavyweight
Gold medal – first place1983 RomeHeavyweight
Gold medal – first place1985 SeoulHeavyweight
Junior World Championships
Bronze medal – third place1979 YokohamaHeavyweight
European Championships
Gold medal – first place1981 TampereHeavyweight
Gold medal – first place1983 VarnaHeavyweight
Gold medal – first place1985 BudapestHeavyweight
Silver medal – second place1987 TurinSuper heavyweight

Early years

Yagubkin was born and grew up in the Petrovsky district of Stalino (now Donetsk). The city had 11,000 registered boxers by 1984.[3] He took up boxing in 1974 at the age of thirteen with the Avangard Sports Society and won three consecutive Soviet Youth Championships in 1978, 1979 and 1980. In December 1980, in Tomsk, he won the Soviet Championship in 91 kg. Yagubkin has excelled, and Soviet coach Artyom Lavrov said this is a boxer worthy of his success. "In Russian, "amateur" and "like" are expressed by the same word lyubitel. He is a real amateur. He likes what he is doing."[4] "I hope to follow the tradition of the Russian heavyweights," Yagubkin said.[5]

Apart from boxing, he was schooling as an aircraft technician, and later graduated from the Slavyansk Civil Aviation Vocational School. Afterwards, Yagubkin graduated from the Kiev Athletics Institute.[4]

Career

Steve Sneddon of the Reno Gazette-Journal described Yagubkin as "a classic boxer with an educated left jab."[6] As Yagubkin described his style in his own words, "I prefer the technical boxing, rather than the bump boxing." His style has been built around an effective jab. Untypically for a southpaw outboxer, he never got himself prepared for any particular style of his next opponent.[7] "I'm never bothered not knowing an opponent. It's better not knowing him before going into the ring. If you prepare for one thing, it's difficult to change in the ring. A few seconds is enough to see what someone is doing." At the age of 23, he has won 155 of his 168 bouts.[8] After he defeated Canadian Willie DeWitt, Novosti Press Agency praised him, "Yagubkin is known for his staunchness, courage, cold-bloodedness, flexible tactics and desire for victory. Always go with cold-bloodedness. Besides, Yagubkin won on points over deWitt, 21, at the World Cup in Montreal in 1981. DeWitt has a puncher's chance but Yagubkin rates a solid edge in international experience."[9] "He's got a very strong punch. I want to avoid getting hit," said Yagubkin of DeWitt.[10] After DeWitt won a decision a year-and-a-half later, Yagubkin did not complain about the result. Yagubkin only said he had not been at his best.[4] After his two stand-offs versus American Michael Bentt, as Yagubkin beat Bent badly at the World Cup in Seoul, where Yagubkin was regarded as one of the sport's outstanding defensive stylists,[2] Bentt got himself the poster of Yagubkin on a wall in his room.[11] U.S. Team visited Yagubkin in the USSR in 1984.[12][13]

As the American professional boxing promoters negotiated with the Soviet Boxing Federation sending Russian boxers to the U.S. to compete there professionally, they specifically requested for Yagubkin, Miroshnichenko, and Yakovlev. Bob Arum negotiated with the Soviet Ministry of Sport, he wanted them to turn pro on the second Leonard vs. Hearns card. In the words of the Los Angeles Times sportswriter Earl Gustkey, "Yagubkin does have great movement, however, and is a brilliant defensive boxer. He's an accurate puncher, though not a banger. After Adams [Ken Adams, 1988 U.S. Olympic Coach] brings him up to speed on the pro game, it's not hard to imagine Yagubkin running U.S. pro heavyweights ragged and piling up a lot of early wins on decisions. In fact, all three Soviet heavyweights would figure to be in significantly better physical condition than many of the fat U.S. heavyweights on the scene."[14]

But that never happen as the Soviet government dismissed the idea early in 1989, and did not allow the three boxers neither to turn pro, nor to be employed as a sparring partners for the professionals.

Highlights

Retirement and later life

Despite being one of the world's top heavyweights, Yagubkin, who staunchly represented an essentially provincial sports club on the outskirts, turning down all offers to join highly regarded sports societies, for this and some other purely political reasons never made it to the Soviet Olympic boxing squad on three occasions, in 1980: on the pretext that he was way too young and inexperienced, as he was replaced with Pyotr Zayev (who won the silver), in 1984: he qualified successfully, but the Soviet government boycotted the Olympics,[4] and in 1988: on the pretext that he was too old, as he was replaced with Ramzan Sebiyev (who was dropped out in the preliminaries).[15][16] He retired shortly afterwards. Yagubkin won 9 out of 11 fights versus American boxers during the USA–USSR match-ups.

Honours and awards

Death

Yagubkin died of heart failure after repeated cardiac arrest (previous heart seizure roughly a month before his death was relatively mild and went unnoticed, he did not pay much attention) on 7 August 2013 in Donetsk, Ukraine.[17]

References