Former heavyweight boxing champion Leon Spinks is in a Las Vegas hospital after a second operation for abdominal problems.
The 61-year-old boxer, who catapulted to fame by beating Muhammad Ali in 1978, had the second surgery in recent days after complications from the first emergency surgery, his wife said.
"It's going to be a long road ahead, but he's strong and he's starting to recover," Brenda Spinks said.
Brenda Spinks said she doesn't know how long her husband will be hospitalised, but that she's optimistic about his recovery.
"There were complications after his first surgery, but everything has been fixed," she said.
Spinks and younger brother Michael both won Olympic gold medals in 1976 in different weight classes and went on to become heavyweight champions. Leon's rise was meteoric - he got a shot at Ali and the heavyweight title on February 15, 1978, after just seven pro fights.
Few in boxing - including Ali - gave Spinks any chance in the fight, but he used his energy and awkward style to frustrate Ali and win a 15-round split decision at the Las Vegas Hilton. But he lost the title back to Ali in their rematch seven months later before more than 60,000 people at the Superdome in New Orleans.
"Ali thought I was a wimp and I had to prove to him I wasn't," Spinks said recently. "I knew I could beat him after watching his fights."
Spinks would get one more chance at the title in 1981 against Larry Holmes, only to be stopped in the third round. He would never become the heavyweight champion again but fought until 1995, finishing with a career mark of 26-17-3.
Spinks, who has slurred his words since his active boxing days, was diagnosed in 2012 with shrinkage in his brain, which doctors said was likely caused by the punches he took during his career.
"My brain has got to let me know I'm doing all right and I've got to do things to help my brain now," Spinks said after the diagnosis.
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