Terry Milligan
Boxing
BIOGRAPHY
| Terry Milligan competed in the men’s lightweight boxing at the 1952 Helsinki Olympic Games, reaching the quarter-finals in one of the most creditable performances of the Irish boxing team. Described by respected boxing journalist Denis O’Hara as ‘one of Irish boxing’s all-time greats’, Milligan was a bronze medallist at the 1951 European championships and arrived in Helsinki with the strongest international record of any Irish boxer at those Games.
A member of the Short and Harland Workmen’s Club in Belfast and a close friend and sparring partner of John McNally, their pre-competition sessions at the Olympic gymnasium – in which the two went at each other at full intensity – startled the American and Canadian coaches who shared the facility. Milligan won his opening two bouts with unanimous decisions before facing the nineteen-year-old 1951 European lightweight champion Bruno Visintin of Italy in the quarter-final, losing a unanimous decision that was described by Arthur McWeeney of the Irish Independent as a prime example of aggressive fruitless attacking counting for more than superior boxing craft. |

