That is one reason many boxing historians consider the 1976 U.S. team to be the stronger achievement.
The American team in Montreal won five gold medals, one silver medal, and one bronze medal. Lightweight Howard Davis Jr. was also awarded the prestigious Val Barker Trophy as the outstanding boxer of the Olympic Games.
The gold medalists were Leo Randolph at flyweight, Sugar Ray Leonard at light welterweight, Howard Davis Jr. at lightweight, Michael Spinks at middleweight, and Leon Spinks at light heavyweight.
Several members of the team went on to enjoy remarkable professional careers. Leonard became a five-division world champion and is widely regarded as one of the greatest fighters in boxing history. Michael Spinks captured world titles at light heavyweight and heavyweight, while Leon Spinks famously defeated Muhammad Ali to win the heavyweight championship in 1978. Randolph later won the WBA super bantamweight title.
The team’s other medalists also found success. Charles Mooney earned a silver medal but chose not to turn professional. John Tate, who won a bronze medal, later captured the WBA heavyweight title and was recognized as one of the leading heavyweights of his era.
Even some members of the team who failed to reach the medal stand were highly regarded amateurs. Chuck “White Chocolate” Walker, Clint Jackson, Louis Curtis and Davey Lee Armstrong were all talented fighters who helped make the 1976 squad one of the deepest teams ever assembled by the United States.
While the 1984 team produced stars such as Evander Holyfield, Pernell Whitaker, Meldrick Taylor and Virgil Hill, supporters of the 1976 squad point to the level of competition in Montreal and the number of future world champions it produced.
Nearly 50 years later, the argument remains open, but the 1976 U.S. Olympic boxing team still has a strong claim to being the greatest American Olympic boxing team of all time.
Read the full article here

