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Mills Lane, Hall of Fame referee from 1970s-’90s, dies at 85

Mills Lane, a former boxer who became one of the best-known referees over the past half century and a Hall of Famer, died Tuesday morning in Reno, Nevada. He was 85.

Lane’s son, Tommy Lane, told the Reno Gazette Journal that his father had been in hospice care for the past week. The elder Lane had a stroke 20 years ago, which ended his career.

“He took a significant decline in his overall situation,” Tommy Lane told the newspaper. “It was a quick departure. He was comfortable and he was surrounded by his family. …

“You never knew how long he had. We kind of felt like we were preparing for this all along., but there’s no such thing as preparing for this.”

Mills Lane worked many of the biggest fights from the 1970s to the ’90s, reportedly serving as the third man in the ring for more than 100 championship fights.

He was probably best known for the second Mike Tyson-Evander Holyfield fight in 1997 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, the “Bite Fight,” in which Tyson chewed off a portion of Holyfield’s ear. Lane disqualified Tyson the second time he bit Holyfield.

And he worked the Holyfield-Riddick Bowe “Fan Man” fight in 1993, in which a man paraglided into the ring ropes.

Lane also became known for his pre-fight catch phrase of “Let’s Get it on”

“There was no fight we wouldn’t put him in,” Marc Ratner, the former executive director of the Nevada State Athletic Commission, told the Los Angeles Times in 1991 (per BoxingScene.com). “He was as good as any referee in the world. I don’t care if it was a heavyweight fight or smaller guys, when he said, ‘Break’ and got in between guys, the fighters respected him.

“Not all referees have that. He was no-nonsense. He took control. There was an aura about him.”

Lane also was a prosecutor in Washoe County (Nevada) District Attorney’s office for most of the 1970s and ’80s, eventually being elected district attorney. He became a judge in the 1990s, after which he starred in the TV series “Judge Mills Lane.” That lasted three years.

The justice administration building in Reno is named after Lane.

Lane started boxing in the Marines. He fought professionally in the 1960s, compiling a record of 10-1 (6 KOs). He lost his debut and then went undefeated.

Tommy Lane told the Gazette Journal that no funeral service is planned but he added that the family might stage a memorial at some point.

Story originally appeared on Boxing Junkie