Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox boxer

Ezzard Mack Charles (July 7, 1921 – May 28, 1975), was an American professional boxer who competed from 1940 to 1959. Known as "the Cincinnati Cobra", Charles was respected for his slick defense and precision, and is often regarded as the greatest light heavyweight of all time, and one of the greatest fighters pound for pound,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> having defeated numerous Hall of Fame fighters in three different weight classes. Charles was the world heavyweight champion from 1949 to 1951, and made eight successful title defenses in under two years.

After losing the world title, Charles continued to fight several top rated heavyweight contenders and made three close but unsuccessful attempts at reclaiming the heavyweight championship. Charles eventually retired from a near two decade long career with a record of 95–25–1. He was posthumously inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame as part of the inaugural class of 1990.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

CareerEdit

Charles was born in Lawrenceville, Georgia, and grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Charles graduated from Woodward High School in Cincinnati where he was already becoming a well-known fighter (greatly inspired by fighters Kid Chocolate and later Joe Louis).<ref>Newsmakers Interview with Ezzard Charles Jr., WKRC Channel 12, Cincinnati, August 17, 2008</ref> Known as "the Cincinnati Cobra", Charles fought many notable opponents in the middleweight, light heavyweight and heavyweight divisions, eventually winning the World Championship in the latter. Although he never won the Light Heavyweight title, The Ring has rated him as the greatest light heavyweight of all time.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Career beginnings and military serviceEdit

Charles started his career as a featherweight in the amateurs, where he had a near perfect record (at one point 42-0 until a 1939 loss to Daniel Warren Eby).<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1938, he won the Diamond Belt Middleweight Championship. He followed this up in 1939 by winning the Chicago Golden Gloves tournament of champions. He won the national AAU Middleweight Championship in 1939.

Charles' professional career began on March 12, 1940, knocking out Melody Johnson in the fourth round. Charles went undefeated in his first 17 fights before being defeated by former NYSAC middleweight champion Ken Overlin. Victories over future Hall of Famers Teddy Yarosz and the heavily avoided Charley Burley had started to solidify Charles as a top contender in the middleweight division, however, during World War II, Charles served in the U.S. military, which would eventually bring his career to a halt.

ReturnEdit

File:Joey Maxim vs. Ezzard Charles 1951.jpg
Charles scores a left hook to the head of champion Joey Maxim

Upon his return from the war, Charles resumed his boxing career. He moved up in weight and went on to dominate the light heavyweight division, scoring many notable wins over leading light heavyweights, as well as heavyweight contenders including Archie Moore (three times), Jimmy Bivins (four times), Joey Maxim (five times) and Lloyd Marshall (twice). The hard hitting Elmer Ray delivered Charles his only loss following his return, which he later avenged.

Shortly after his knockout of Moore in their third and final meeting, tragedy struck. On February 20, 1948, Charles fought a young contender named Sam Baroudi, knocking him out in Round 10. Baroudi died of the injuries he sustained in this bout. Charles was so devastated by the incident that he nearly gave up fighting, but a need to provide for his family along with encouragement from Baroudi's family convinced him to continue.

World heavyweight championEdit

Despite being the top contender for the light heavyweight title held by Gus Lesnevich, Charles was unable to secure a title shot and decided to move up to heavyweight. After knocking out Joe Baksi and Johnny Haynes, Charles won the recently vacated National Boxing Association world heavyweight title when he outpointed top heavyweight contender Jersey Joe Walcott over 15 rounds on June 22, 1949.

File:Ezzard Charles vs Joe Louis 1950.jpg
Charles (left) ducks under a right thrown by Joe Louis (right) during their 1950 title fight

Charles made three title defenses, all ending in knockout (including one over Lesnevich), before facing his idol and former heavyweight champion, Joe Louis, on September 27, 1950. Louis was quickly forced out of retirement due to troubles with the IRS, and at this stage in his career proved no match for the younger Charles, who dominated the fight and won a wide unanimous decision. Charles was now recognized as both the undisputed and Lineal world heavyweight champion.

For these achievements in such a short span of time, Charles was named Fighter of the Year twice consecutively in 1949 and 1950. Four more successful title defenses would follow against Nick Barone, Walcott, Lee Oma, and the new light heavyweight champion Joey Maxim.

Charles vs. MarcianoEdit

Template:See also On July 18, 1951, Charles made his ninth and final title defense in a third fight against Walcott. Having been defeated twice before, Walcott was a 9:1 underdog, but scored a major upset, knocking out Charles with a perfect left hook to the jaw in the seventh round. Charles fought a rematch with Walcott the following year, but lost a controversial decision in their fourth and final bout. If Charles had won this fight, he would have become the first man in history to regain the heavyweight championship. Remaining a top contender with wins over Rex Layne, Tommy Harrison and Coley Wallace, Charles scored a second-round knockout over Bob Satterfield in a heavyweight title eliminator bout on January 13, 1954. Charles was now next in line to challenge the new Heavyweight Champion: Rocky Marciano.

The two stirring battles between Charles and Marciano are regarded as ring classics. In the first bout, held in Yankee Stadium on June 17, 1954, he valiantly took Marciano the distance, going down on points in a vintage heavyweight bout. Charles is the only man ever to last the full 15-round distance against Marciano. Marciano won a unanimous decision. Referee Ruby Goldstein scored the bout 8-5-2 in rounds for the champion. Judge Artie Aidala scored the fight 9-5-1 while judge Harold Barnes' tally was 8–6–1. In their September rematch, Charles landed a severe blow that actually split Marciano's nose in half. Marciano's cornermen were unable to stop the bleeding and the referee almost halted the contest until Marciano rallied with an eighth-round knockout. The fight was awarded The Ring’s 1954 Fight of the Year.

Later careerEdit

Unfortunately for Charles, like many boxers, financial problems forced him to continue fighting. Age and damage sustained during his career caused Charles to begin a sharp decline following his title fights. Over the next four years, he lost on points to heavyweight contenders Tommy "Hurricane" Jackson, Harry Matthews and heavyweight champion of Mexico, Alfredo Zuany. He was also disqualified during a fight against Dick Richardson, who later became the European heavyweight champion. Overall Charles lost 13 of his final 23 fights. Charles retired after his final bout on September 1, 1959. He finished with a final record of 95-25-1 and scored 52 knockout victories.

Fighting StyleEdit

"Ezzard Charles. Who else has been great in every division he fought in?" - James Toney<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Ezzard Charles was one of the greatest ring technicians that ever laced on a pair of gloves. He could seamlessly blend between defence and offense and adapt on the fly.

File:Ezzard Charles 1950.jpg
Charles training for one of his title fights in 1950

Charles fought side on, leaning slightly to the right to take his head off the centre from the line of attack. This increases the distance the opponent's punch has to travel as well, giving him more time to see punches coming. This 'old-school' stance was similar to those of Joe Louis, Charley Burley and Sandy Saddler. Charles parried with both of his hands and smothered opponents on the inside, even against larger men, he was fully capable of trapping the opponent's glove to prevent them from punching on the inside. On the outside range, Charles would stalk his prey, circling leftwards and utilising his lightning-quick probing jab to attack both the head and body to properly gauge the opponent's distance. In his prime, Ezzard would be exceedingly aggressive, often relying on his thunderous power and accuracy to win exchanges. However, some would note that after Sam Baroudi died of injuries during their 1948 fight, Charles is alleged to have become less aggressive and more cautious, although this theory is hotly debated.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Despite being best known for his counter-punching excellence, his varied skillset and high ring intelligence allowed him to excel in many situations. These qualities allowed Charles (a natural middleweight) to triumph against the tough light-heavyweights and heavyweights of the talent-rich 1940s.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

PersonalEdit

Charles was married to Gladys Charles, the couple had three children, Ezzard Junior, Deborah and Leith. Charles was an avid fan of jazz and played a variety of instruments throughout his life. He also spoke fluent Italian, and even held a short conversation with Rocky Marciano in Italian during a televised interview shortly before their first fight.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref> After his title fights, Charles became very close with Rocky Marciano and later was a neighbor and friend of Muhammad Ali when they both lived on 85th Street in Chicago (later in life when Charles suffered from financial difficulties and illness, both men along with other boxing celebrities hosted a fundraiser on his behalf).<ref>Newsmakers interview with Ezzard Charles Jr., WKRC Channel 12 Cincinnati, August 17, 2008</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Charles also starred in one motion picture: Mau Mau Drums, an independent (and unreleased) jungle-adventure film shot in and around Cincinnati in 1960 by filmmaker Earl Schwieterman.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

DeathEdit

In 1968, Charles was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease. The disease affected Charles' legs and eventually left him completely disabled. A fund raiser was held to assist Charles and many of his former opponents spoke on his behalf. Rocky Marciano in particular called Charles the bravest man he ever fought. The former boxer spent his last days in a nursing home. A 1973 commercial showed Charles in his wheelchair disabled by ALS.<ref>Archived at GhostarchiveTemplate:Cbignore and the Wayback MachineTemplate:Cbignore: {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Cbignore</ref> Charles died on May 28, 1975, in Chicago.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was buried at Burr Oak Cemetery in Alsip, Illinois.

LegacyEdit

File:Ezzard Charles.jpg
Commemorative stamp honoring Charles

In 1976, Cincinnati honored Charles by changing the name of Lincoln Park Drive to Ezzard Charles Drive. This was the street of his residence during the height of his career.<ref>Guide to 20th Century African American Resources Template:Webarchive, Cincinnati Historical Society</ref>

In 2002, Charles was ranked No. 13 on The Ring magazine's list of the 80 Best Fighters of the Last 80 Years.

In 2006, Ezzard Charles was named the 11th greatest fighter of all time by the IBRO (International Boxing Research Organisation).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The "Cincinnati Cobra" was a master boxer of extraordinary skill and ability. He had speed, agility, fast hands and excellent footwork. Charles possessed a masterful jab and was a superb combination puncher. He was at his peak as a light-heavyweight. His record is quite impressive. Against top rate opposition like Archie Moore, Charley Burley, Lloyd Marshall, Jimmy Bivins, and Joey Maxim he was an impressive 16-2 combined. Despite being a natural light-heavy he won the heavyweight title and made 9 successful title defenses. Nearly 25% of voters had Charles in the top 10. Half of the voters had him in the top 15. Two thirds of voters had him inside the top 20.

Muhammad Ali said in his own autobiography:

"Ezzard Charles was a truly great fighter and champion. He was the only heavyweight champion, other than a young Sonny Liston, who I think would have really troubled me at my best."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 2007, ESPN online ranks Ezzard Charles as the 27th greatest boxer of all time, ahead of such notable fighters as Mike Tyson, Larry Holmes and Jake LaMotta.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2009, Boxing magazine listed Ezzard Charles as the greatest Light Heavyweight fighter ever, ahead of the likes of Archie Moore, Bob Foster, Michael Spinks and Gene Tunney.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

File:Ezzard Charles Park.jpg
Ezzard Charles Park in Cincinnati

In 2022, a statue honoring Ezzard Charles was unveiled in the former Laurel Park in the West End neighborhood of Cincinnati. The park was renamed to Ezzard Charles Park alongside the unveiling of the statue.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Prominent boxing historian Bert Sugar listed Charles as the seventh greatest Heavyweight of all time.

Professional boxing recordEdit

Template:BoxingRecordSummary

Template:Abbr Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
121 Template:No2Loss 95–25–1 Alvin Green UD 10 Sep 1, 1959 Template:Small
120 Template:No2Loss 95–24–1 George Logan KO 8 (10), Template:Small Jul 30, 1959 Template:Small
119 Template:Yes2Win 95–23–1 Dave Ashley TKO 9 (10) Jul 3, 1959 Template:Small
118 Template:No2Loss 94–23–1 Donnie Fleeman KO 6 (10), Template:Small Oct 27, 1958 Template:Small
117 Template:No2Loss 94–22–1 Alfredo Zuany UD 10 Sep 30, 1958 Template:Small
116 Template:Yes2Win 94–21–1 Johnny Harper UD 10 Aug 28, 1958 Template:Small
115 Template:No2Loss 93–21–1 Dick Richardson Template:Abbr 2 (10) Oct 2, 1956 Template:Small
114 Template:No2Loss 93–20–1 Harry Matthews UD 10 Aug 31, 1956 Template:Small
113 Template:No2Loss 93–19–1 Pat McMurtry UD 10 Jul 13, 1956 Template:Small
112 Template:Yes2Win 93–18–1 Bob Albright RTD 6 (10) Jun 19, 1956 Template:Small
111 Template:No2Loss 92–18–1 Wayne Bethea UD 10 May 21, 1956 Template:Small
110 Template:Yes2Win 92–17–1 Don Jasper TKO 9 (10), Template:Small Apr 21, 1956 Template:Small
109 Template:No2Loss 91–17–1 Young Jack Johnson TKO 6 (10) Dec 29, 1955 Template:Small
108 Template:Yes2Win 91–16–1 Bob Albright SD 10 Dec 22, 1955 Template:Small
107 Template:Yes2Win 90–16–1 Toxie Hall UD 10 Dec 6, 1955 Template:Small
106 Template:No2Loss 89–16–1 Toxie Hall SD 10 Nov 14, 1955 Template:Small
105 Template:No2Loss 89–15–1 Tommy Jackson UD 10 Aug 31, 1955 Template:Small
104 Template:No2Loss 89–14–1 Tommy Jackson UD 10 Aug 3, 1955 Template:Small
103 Template:Yes2Win 89–13–1 Paul Andrews SD 10 Jul 13, 1955 Template:Small
102 Template:Yes2Win 88–13–1 John Holman UD 10 Jun 8, 1955 Template:Small
101 Template:No2Loss 87–13–1 John Holman TKO 9 (10), Template:Small Apr 27, 1955 Template:Small
100 Template:Yes2Win 87–12–1 Vern Escoe KO 3 (10), Template:Small Apr 11, 1955 Template:Small
99 Template:Yes2Win 86–12–1 Charley Norkus UD 10 Feb 18, 1955 Template:Small
98 Template:No2Loss 85–12–1 Rocky Marciano KO 8 (15), Template:Small Sep 17, 1954 Template:Small Template:Small
97 Template:No2Loss 85–11–1 Rocky Marciano UD 15 Jun 17, 1954 Template:Small Template:Small
96 Template:Yes2Win 85–10–1 Bob Satterfield KO 2 (10) Jan 13, 1954 Template:Small
95 Template:Yes2Win 84–10–1 Coley Wallace KO 10 (10), Template:Small Dec 16, 1953 Template:Small
94 Template:No2Loss 83–10–1 Harold Johnson SD 10 Sep 8, 1953 Template:Small
93 Template:No2Loss 83–9–1 Niño Valdés UD 10 Aug 11, 1953 Template:Small
92 Template:Yes2Win 83–8–1 Larry Watson KO 5 (10), Template:Small May 26, 1953 Template:Small
91 Template:Yes2Win 82–8–1 Billy Gilliam UD 10 May 12, 1953 Template:Small
90 Template:Yes2Win 81–8–1 Rex Layne UD 10 Apr 1, 1953 Template:Small
89 Template:Yes2Win 80–8–1 Tommy Harrison TKO 9 (10) Feb 4, 1953 Template:Small
88 Template:Yes2Win 79–8–1 Wes Bascom TKO 9 (10), Template:Small Jan 14, 1953 Template:Small
87 Template:Yes2Win 78–8–1 Frank Buford TKO 7 (10), Template:Small Dec 15, 1952 Template:Small
86 Template:Yes2Win 77–8–1 Jimmy Bivins UD 10 Nov 26, 1952 Template:Small
85 Template:Yes2Win 76–8–1 Cesar Brion UD 10 Oct 24, 1952 Template:Small
84 Template:Yes2Win 75–8–1 Bernie Reynolds KO 2 (12), Template:Small Oct 8, 1952 Template:Small
83 Template:No2Loss 74–8–1 Rex Layne PTS 10 Aug 8, 1952 Template:Small
82 Template:No2Loss 74–7–1 Jersey Joe Walcott UD 15 Jun 5, 1952 Template:Small Template:Small
81 Template:Yes2Win 74–6–1 Joe Kahut KO 8 (12), Template:Small Dec 12, 1951 Template:Small
80 Template:Yes2Win 73–6–1 Joey Maxim UD 12 Dec 12, 1951 Template:Small
79 Template:Yes2Win 72–6–1 Rex Layne TKO 11 (12) Oct 10, 1951 Template:Small
78 Template:No2Loss 71–6–1 Jersey Joe Walcott KO 7 (15), Template:Small Jul 18, 1951 Template:Small Template:Small
77 Template:Yes2Win 71–5–1 Joey Maxim UD 15 May 30, 1951 Template:Small Template:Small
76 Template:Yes2Win 70–5–1 Jersey Joe Walcott UD 15 Mar 7, 1951 Template:Small Template:Small
75 Template:Yes2Win 69–5–1 Lee Oma TKO 10 (15), Template:Small Jan 12, 1951 Template:Small Template:Small
74 Template:Yes2Win 68–5–1 Nick Barone KO 11 (15), Template:Small Dec 5, 1950 Template:Small Template:Small
73 Template:Yes2Win 67–5–1 Joe Louis UD 15 Sep 27, 1950 Template:Small Template:Small
72 Template:Yes2Win 66–5–1 Freddie Beshore TKO 14 (15), Template:Small Aug 15, 1950 Template:Small Template:Small
71 Template:Yes2Win 65–5–1 Pat Valentino KO 8 (15), Template:Small Oct 14, 1949 Template:Small Template:Small
70 Template:Yes2Win 64–5–1 Gus Lesnevich Template:Abbr 7 (15) Aug 10, 1949 Template:Small Template:Small
69 Template:Yes2Win 63–5–1 Jersey Joe Walcott UD 15 Jun 22, 1949 Template:Small Template:Small
68 Template:Yes2Win 62–5–1 Joey Maxim MD 15 Feb 28, 1949 Template:Small
67 Template:Yes2Win 61–5–1 Johnny Haynes KO 8 (10) Feb 7, 1949 Template:Small
66 Template:Yes2Win 60–5–1 Joe Baksi TKO 11 (15), Template:Small Dec 10, 1948 Template:Small
65 Template:Yes2Win 59–5–1 Walter Hafer KO 7 (10) Nov 15, 1948 Template:Small
64 Template:Yes2Win 58–5–1 Jimmy Bivins UD 10 Sep 13, 1948 Template:Small
63 Template:Yes2Win 57–5–1 Erv Sarlin UD 10 May 20, 1948 Template:Small
62 Template:Yes2Win 56–5–1 Elmer Ray KO 9 (10), Template:Small May 7, 1948 Template:Small
61 Template:Yes2Win 55–5–1 Sam Baroudi KO 10 (10) Feb 20, 1948 Template:Small Template:Small
60 Template:Yes2Win 54–5–1 Archie Moore KO 8 (15), Template:Small Jan 13, 1948 Template:Small
59 Template:Yes2Win 53–5–1 Fitzie Fitzpatrick KO 4 (12), Template:Small Dec 2, 1947 Template:Small
58 Template:Yes2Win 52–5–1 Teddy Randolph UD 10 Nov 3, 1947 Template:Small
57 Template:Yes2Win 51–5–1 Clarence Jones KO 1 (10), Template:Small Oct 27, 1947 Template:Small
56 Template:Yes2Win 50–5–1 Al Smith TKO 4 (10), Template:Small Oct 16, 1947 Template:Small
55 Template:Yes2Win 49–5–1 Lloyd Marshall KO 2 (10), Template:Small Sep 29, 1947 Template:Small
54 Template:Yes2Win 48–5–1 Joe Matisi UD 10 Sep 16, 1947 Template:Small
53 Template:No2Loss 47–5–1 Elmer Ray Template:Abbr 10 Jul 25, 1947 Template:Small
52 Template:Yes2Win 47–4–1 Fitzie Fitzpatrick KO 5 (10), Template:Small Jul 14, 1947 Template:Small
51 Template:Yes2Win 46–4–1 Archie Moore MD 10 May 5, 1947 Template:Small
50 Template:Yes2Win 45–4–1 Erv Sarlin UD 10 Apr 14, 1947 Template:Small
49 Template:Yes2Win 44–4–1 Jimmy Bivins KO 4 (10), Template:Small Mar 10, 1947 Template:Small
48 Template:Yes2Win 43–4–1 Oakland Billy Smith KO 5 (12), Template:Small Feb 17, 1947 Template:Small
47 Template:Yes2Win 42–4–1 Jimmy Bivins UD 10 Nov 12, 1946 Template:Small
46 Template:Yes2Win 41–4–1 Oakland Billy Smith UD 10 Sep 23, 1946 Template:Small
45 Template:Yes2Win 40–4–1 Lloyd Marshall KO 6 (10), Template:Small Jul 29, 1946 Template:Small
44 Template:Yes2Win 39–4–1 Shelton Bell KO 5 (10), Template:Small Jun 13, 1946 Template:Small
43 Template:Yes2Win 38–4–1 Archie Moore UD 10 May 20, 1946 Template:Small
42 Template:Yes2Win 37–4–1 Tommy Hubert KO 4 (10), Template:Small May 13, 1946 Template:Small
41 Template:Yes2Win 36–4–1 George Parks TKO 6 (10) Apr 15, 1946 Template:Small
40 Template:Yes2Win 35–4–1 Billy Duncan KO 4 (10), Template:Small Apr 1, 1946 Template:Small
39 Template:Yes2Win 34–4–1 Tommy Hubert UD 10 Mar 25, 1946 Template:Small
38 Template:Yes2Win 33–4–1 Al Sheridan KO 2 (10), Template:Small Feb 18, 1946 Template:Small
37 Template:Yes2Win 32–4–1 Al Barlow PTS 3 Dec 16, 1944 Template:Small Template:Small
36 Template:Yes2Win 31–4–1 Stanley Goicz PTS 3 Dec 13, 1944 Template:Small
35 Template:No2Loss 30–4–1 Lloyd Marshall TKO 8 (10), Template:Small Mar 31, 1943 Template:Small
34 Template:No2Loss 30–3–1 Jimmy Bivins UD 10 Jan 7, 1943 Template:Small
33 Template:Yes2Win 30–2–1 Joey Maxim UD 10 Dec 1, 1942 Template:Small
32 Template:Yes2Win 29–2–1 Joey Maxim UD 10 Oct 27, 1942 Template:Small
31 Template:Yes2Win 28–2–1 Mose Brown KO 6 (10), Template:Small Sep 15, 1942 Template:Small
30 Template:Yes2Win 27–2–1 Jose Basora KO 5 (10), Template:Small Aug 17, 1942 Template:Small
29 Template:Yes2Win 26–2–1 Booker Beckwith KO 9 (10), Template:Small Jul 27, 1942 Template:Small
28 Template:Yes2Win 25–2–1 Steve Mamakos KO 1 (10), Template:Small Jul 14, 1942 Template:Small
27 Template:Yes2Win 24–2–1 Charley Burley PTS 10 Jun 29, 1942 Template:Small
26 Template:Yes2Win 23–2–1 Charley Burley UD 10 May 25, 1942 Template:Small
25 Template:No2Loss 22–2–1 Kid Tunero SD 10 May 13, 1942 Template:Small
24 Template:Yes2Win 22–1–1 Billy Pryor PTS 10 Apr 8, 1942 Template:Small
23 Template:DrawDraw 21–1–1 Ken Overlin Template:Abbr 10 Mar 2, 1942 Template:Small
22 Template:Yes2Win 21–1 Anton Christoforidis TKO 3 (10), Template:Small Jan 12, 1942 Template:Small
21 Template:Yes2Win 20–1 Teddy Yarosz UD 10 Nov 17, 1941 Template:Small
20 Template:Yes2Win 19–1 Pat Mangini KO 1 (10), Template:Small Oct 13, 1941 Template:Small
19 Template:Yes2Win 18–1 Al Gilbert TKO 5 (10), Template:Small Jul 21, 1941 Template:Small
18 Template:No2Loss 17–1 Ken Overlin UD 10 Jun 9, 1941 Template:Small
17 Template:Yes2Win 17–0 Rudy Kozole PTS 10 May 12, 1941 Template:Small
16 Template:Yes2Win 16–0 Joe Sutka PTS 10 Mar 31, 1941 Template:Small
15 Template:Yes2Win 15–0 Floyd Howard KO 7 (10) Mar 10, 1941 Template:Small
14 Template:Yes2Win 14–0 Slaka Cavrich KO 2 (10) Feb 24, 1941 Template:Small
13 Template:Yes2Win 13–0 Billy Bengal Template:Abbr 10 Feb 10, 1941 Template:Small
12 Template:Yes2Win 12–0 Charley Jerome KO 3 (10) Dec 2, 1940 Template:Small
11 Template:Yes2Win 11–0 Marty Simmons PTS 10 Oct 1, 1940 Template:Small
10 Template:Yes2Win 10–0 Billy Hood KO 2 (10) Sep 23, 1940 Template:Small
9 Template:Yes2Win 9–0 John Reeves PTS 4 Aug 5, 1940 Template:Small
8 Template:Yes2Win 8–0 Carl Turner PTS 6 Jun 29, 1940 Template:Small
7 Template:Yes2Win 7–0 Young Kid Ash KO 3 (6), Template:Small Jun 17, 1940 Template:Small
6 Template:Yes2Win 6–0 Frankie Williams Template:Abbr 5 (8), Template:Small Jun 13, 1940 Template:Small
5 Template:Yes2Win 5–0 Charley Banks KO 1 (6), Template:Small Jun 3, 1940 Template:Small
4 Template:Yes2Win 4–0 Charley Banks PTS 6 May 20, 1940 Template:Small
3 Template:Yes2Win 3–0 Remo Fernandez PTS 6 Apr 3, 1940 Template:Small
2 Template:Yes2Win 2–0 John Reeves Template:Abbr 6 Mar 27, 1940 Template:Small
1 Template:Yes2Win 1–0 Melody Johnson Template:Abbr 4 (4) Mar 12, 1940 Template:Small

Titles in boxingEdit

Major world titlesEdit

The Ring magazine titlesEdit

Regional/International titlesEdit

Undisputed titlesEdit

See alsoEdit

Template:Portal

Notes and referencesEdit

NotesEdit

Template:Notes list

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

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