On This Day In Boxing History!
On This Day In Boxing History 1934-35
A Year Apart Barney Ross vs Jimmy McLarnin 1 & 3!
1975: Ezzard Charles Passes!
Ezzard Charles
Born: July 7th, 1921
Birth Name: Ezzard Mack Charles
Birth Place: Lawrenceville, Georgia
Residence: Cincinnati, Ohio
Pro Debut: March 12th,1940
Alias: The Cincinnati Cobra
Division: Heavyweight
Stance: Orthodox
Height: 6′ 0″
Reach: 73″
Bouts: 121
Rounds: 967
KO’s: 43%
Record: 95-25-1, 52Ko’s
Died: Age 53, May 28th, 1975
Career
National Boxing Association World Heavyweight Championship
June 22nd, 1949
World Heavyweight Champion
September 27th, 1950
International Boxing Hall of Fame : Class of 1990
African-American professional boxer and former world heavyweight champion, Ezzaard Charles, born Ezzard Mack Charles in Lawrenceville, Georgia July 7, 1921. He holds wins over numerous Hall of Fame fighters in three different weight classes. Charles retired with a record of 93 wins, 25 losses and 1 draw.
He was born in Lawrenceville, Georgia, but is commonly thought of as a Cincinnatian. Charles
graduated from Woodward High School in Cincinnati where he was already becoming a well-known fighter. Known as "The Cincinnati Cobra," Charles is best remembered for his wins as a heavyweight, but
most experts feel[weasel words] he was in his prime as a light heavyweight. Although he never won the championship at that weight, Ring magazine has rated him as the greatest light heavyweight of all
time.
Ezzard Charles started his career as a featherweight in the amateurs, where he had a record of
42-0. In 1938, he won the Diamond Belt Middleweight Champion. He followed this up in 1939 by winning the Chicago Golden Gloves tournament of champions. He won the national AAU Middleweight
Championship in 1939. He turned pro in 1940, knocking out Melody Johnson in the 4th round. Charles won all of his first 15 fights before being defeated by veteran Ken Overlin. Victories over future
Hall of Famers Teddy Yarosz and the much avoided Charley Burley had started to solidify Charles as a top contender in the Middleweight division. However, he served in the U.S. military during World
War II and was unable to fight professionally in 1945.
He returned to boxing after the war as a light heavyweight, picking up many notable wins over
leading light heavyweight as well as heavyweight contenders Archie Moore, Jimmy Bivins, Lloyd Marshall, and Elmer Ray. Shortly after his knock-out of Moore in their third and final meeting, tragedy
struck. 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 he almost gave up fighting.
Charles was unable to secure a title shot at light heavyweight, and moved up to heavyweight. After knocking out Joe Baksi and Johnny Haynes, Charles won the vacant National Boxing Association world
heavyweight title when he outpointed Jersey Joe Walcott over 15 rounds on June 22, 1949. The following year, he outpointed his idol and former world heavyweight champion Joe Louis to become the
recognized lineal champion. Successful defenses against Walcott, Lee Oma and Joey Maxim would follow.
In 1951, Charles fought Walcott a third time and lost the title by knockout in the seventh round.
Charles lost a controversial decision in the 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 knocked out Bob Satterfield in an eliminator bout for the right to challenge Heavyweight Champion Rocky Marciano. His
two stirring battles with Marciano are regarded as ring classics. In the first bout, held in June 1954, he valiantly took Rocky 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. In their September rematch, a severely cut Marciano rallied to KO Charles in the 8th round, in a bout that was named
Ring Magazine's "Fight of the Year." Financial problems forced Charles to continue fighting, losing 12 of his final 23 fights. He retired with a record of 96-25-1 (58 KOs).
Charles was also a respected double bass player who played with some of the jazz greats in the 40s
and 50s at such notable places as Birdland. He was very close with Rocky Marciano and a neighbor and friend of Muhammed Ali when they both lived on 85th street in Chicago. 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.
Ezzard Charles died May 28, 1975, in Chicago from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, aged 53, and was interred in the historic Burr Oak Cemetery, in Alsip,
Illinois. 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.
He was elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990.
In 2002, Charles was ranked #13 on 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).
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.
ESPN online ranks Ezzard Charles as the 27th greatest boxer of all time, ahead of such notable
fighters as Mike Tyson, Bernard Hopkins, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Larry Holmes and Jake LaMotta.
In 2009, Boxing Magazine listed Ezzard Charles as the greatest Light Heavyweight fighter ever, beating the likes of Archie Moore, Bob Foster, Gene Tunney.
Prominent Boxing historian, Bert Sugar, listed Charles as the 7th greatest Heavyweight of all
time.
May 28th
1917: Benny Leonard KO9 Freddie Welsh
1922: Lou Duva was born Louis Duva in New York City, New York
1927: Tod Morgan W12 Vic Foley
1929: Mushy Callahan KO3 Fred Mahan
1930: Dick Welsh W6 Young Padilla
1934: Barney Ross W15 Jimmy McLarnin
1935: Barney Ross W15 Jimmy McLarnin
1941: Tony Zale KO 2 Al Hostak
1942: Sugar Ray Robinson W10 Marty Servo
1962: Archie Moore D10 Willie Pastrano
Dick Turner KO6 Willie Davis
1964: Jeff Fenech was born in Marrickville, Sydney, Australia
1973: Jose Luis Lopez was born in Durango, Mexico
1988: Juan Jose Estrada W12 Bernardo Pinango
1989: In Chul Baek KO11 Fulgencio Obelmejies
1993: Jung-Il Byun W12 Josefino Suarez
1995: Tom Johnson W12 Eddie Croft
2005: Rafael Marquez W12 Ricardo Vargas
2008: Anthony Mundine W12 Sam Soliman
2010: Souleymane M'baye W12 Antonin Decarie
2016: Donnie Nietes RTD5 Raul Garcia
Ricky Burns TKO8 Michele Di Rocco
David Avanesyan W12 Shane Mosley
2020: Jimmie Sykes passed
2021: Esteban Bermudez TKO6 Carlos Canizales
2022: Gervonta Davis TKO6 Rolando Romero
Chuckie Mills passed