Igor Yakovlevich Vysotsky was a Soviet boxer who competed from 1971 to 1980. He is best remembered for twice defeating triple Olympic Champion Teófilo Stevenson, being the only boxer out of more than 200 Stevenson’s opponents to ever knock him out, while never competing in the Olympics himself. He was the Soviet Heavyweight Champion in 1978, regarded as the #1 Soviet heavyweight in the late 1970s from an American standpoint, and had an amateur record of 161-24. He stood 5 feet 1114 inches tall and weighed roughly 202-213 lbs at his peak.
He was born on September 10, 1953, and passed away on April 2, 2023.
Continue reading to find out what killed him.
Igor Vysotsky’s cause of death: How did Igor Vysotsky die?
The cause of death for Igor Vysotsky has not yet been revealed. There is no information about Igor Vysotsky’s cause of death. We will notify you of Igor Vysotsky’s death cause as soon as we have it from the appropriate source.
Meanwhile, Igor Vysotsky was born into an exile settlers’ family. His father, Yakov Antonovich Vysotsky, a Soviet Jew and amateur boxer, was a Soviet Naval Infantryman serving with the Red Navy during World War II, fighting the Germans and being taken prisoner of war.
He was said to have been employed as a human-dummy sparring partner for German Heavyweight Champion Max Schmeling when imprisoned at a POW camp. He attempted to flee numerous times, with the ninth attempt succeeding. But, Yakov Vysotsky was transferred to a Soviet filtration camp, and then to the Far Eastern region of the USSR, to a GULAG camp in Kolyma, where he met Meeta Joganovna Suve, an exiled Estonian woman whom he married and she became the renowned boxer’s mother.