Greatest Record In Boxing History

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  • Price had a record of 29-5-3 (11 knockouts) and held decision wins over a young Carlos Palomino and future WBA welterweight titleholder Pipino Cuevas. He was also managed by music legend Marvin Gaye. 'The night before the fight I went to see Diana Ross, who was doing a show in Las Vegas,' recalled Leonard, close to laughter.
  • Jeffries: 'The Boilermaker' was revered as one of the greatest ringman in the history of the sport after he scored huge wins over James J. Corbett, Bob Fitzsimmons, Joe Choynski and Tom Sharkey. 'The Boilermaker' in his prime.
  • Mexican boxer Ruben Olivares is widely considered as the greatest bantamweight champion of all-time. He holds the record for the most wins in unified title fights in bantamweight history, with six.

The 50 Greatest Boxing Fights Of All Time Have Been Named And Ranked. He studied for a B.A. In History at the University of York and followed it up with an M.A. In Multimedia Journalism at MMU.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. refers to himself as TBE or The Best Ever. But while Floyd Mayweather Jr. may be the best boxer in our generation, he isn't the best of all-time and he isn't so by more than a mile.

Boxing existed long before Floyd Jr. was born. In fact, boxing traces its history to ancient Greece when an event similar to boxing was added to the Olympic Games in 688 BC. But the sport did not evolve until the 16th to 18th century mainly in Great Britain prizefights. The forerunner of modern day boxing was introduced in 1867 with the establishment of the Marquess of Queensbury Rules.

Since the start of the 20th century, boxing slowly emerged as a premier sport and later, it became the top fight sport in the planet. Over the decades, we've seen too many great fighters emerge and fade. There are too many of them, all-time greats, Floyd Mayweather Jr. included. But if we talk about the best of the best and the greatest of the greats, there are a handful who deserve in that conversation.

We've listed down the 10 names whom we believe are the best boxers of all-time:

10. Willie Pep

Photo: sweetscience.com

Legend says that Willie Pep once won a round without throwing a single punch. That myth has never been proved or disproved because boxing fights during his time weren't on PPV or TV yet. True or not, that was how Pep wanted to be remembered as a fighter, the one you couldn't hit.

Born as Guglielmo Papaleo on September 19, 1922 in Middleland, Connecticut, USA, Willie Pep turned pro in 1940 and won his first 63 bouts before losing Sammy Angott and then won 72 fights in a row again before losing to Sandy Sadler. Pep boxed a total of 1,957 rounds an became Featherweight world champion twice from 1942-1950. He was known for his speed and finesse but most remember him for his elusiveness and legendary defensive skills.

Pep was seriously hurt in a plane crash in 1947 but he recovered, fought on and won the world title a second time in 1949. He is best remembered for his rivalry with Sandy Saddler, the only fighter who was really able to solve his elusiveness. Saddler won three out of their four bouts.

9.Sugar Ray Leonard

Photo: hobbyDB.com

They say boxing is a sweet science and there may be no else more sweeter than the man nicknamed as Sugar- Sugar Ray Leonard. Leonard isn't just one of the most iconic boxers of the 80's, he is also one of the sport's first superstars. Leonard was the first fighter to earn more than $100M in purse money.

Known for his elite technical skills, supreme ring generalship and unparalleled footwork, Sugar Ray Leonard fought for two decades and won world titles in five different weight classes. After winning gold in the 1976 Olympic Games, Leonard turned pro and stunned Wilfredo Benitez to win the welterweight title in 1979 only to lose it to Roberto Duran seven months later. Leonard would defeat Duran in a rematch more popularly known as 'No Mas'.

Best

After his epic fight with Thomas Hearns in 1981, Leonard retired in 1982 due to a detached retina. He returned to defeat Marvin Hagler for the middleweight title and then in 1989, he defeated Donny Lalonde to win the super middleweight and light heavyweight titles.

8. Jack Dempsey

Photo: BoxingNews.com

Jack Dempsey was the face of boxing at a time when it competed with baseball and horse racings as the favorite past time of the land. The Manassa Mauler had a brawling, devil may care attitude inside the ring. He was all business inside the ring but a handsome and charismatic character outside of it.

He held the world heavyweight title from 1919-1926 although only six fights during that period were considered as title defenses. Dempsey was involved in some of the most classic wars of all-time, including the ones he had with Luis Angel Firpo and Gene Tunney.

Many of his fights set attendance and financial records and he set the first million dollar gate in the history of boxing. When he lost the title to Tunney in 1926, it was in front of 120,000 paying fans, the largest paid spectator attendance in boxing history. He lost to Tunney in a rematch where at one point, the latter was down on the canvass for 14 seconds but counted up to 9 only. Dempsey retired after that loss and set up a restaurant.

7.Roberto Duran

Photo: fightland.com

Roberto Duran will most probably remembered for the two words he uttered when he quit against Sugar Ray Leonard: NO MAS. But the man known as the Hands of Stone was truly more than that. Duran is one of the greatest brawlers and pressure fighters the sport of boxing has ever seen.

Duran's first world title came in 1972 when he won the lightweight belt from Ken Buchanan. He dominated the division for seven years before out working Sugar Ray Leonard for the welterweight title in 1980. Five months later, he quit in their rematch. In 1989, during his 21st year as a professional, he beat Iran Barkley to win the middleweight title.

Duran won world titles in four different weight classes. He is only the second boxer, after Jack Johnson, to fight over a span of five decades. Manos de Piedra (Hands of Stone) retired at the age of 50 in 2002 after figuring in a car accident in 2001. He is considered as the best lightweight boxer of all-time.

6.Mike Tyson

Photo: fightsaga.com

Record

Perhaps the most feared fighter the sport has ever seen, Mike Tyson was the sport's biggest star during the 1990's. Iron Mike was a wrecking machine, he punched his way to becoming the youngest heavyweight champion of all-time at 20 years, 4 months and 22 days old when he knocked out Trevor Berbick in two rounds in 1986.

Tyson would go on to unify the belts and become undisputed champion, becoming the first heavyweight fighter to win the WBC, WBA and IBF titles and the only one, at that time, to unify all of them. Tyson defended his titles nine times before he was shocked by James 'Buster' Douglas in Japan.

Iron Mike would become notorious after he was imprisoned following a rape conviction. After three years behind bars, he was released on parole and went on to recapture the WBC and WBA heavyweight belts. He will never be forgotten though, for biting off a piece of Evander Holyfield's ear during their rematch.

5. Joe Louis

Photo: boxingnewsonline.com

The Brown Bomber is one of the most popular champions of all-time. Joe Louis won the heavyweight title in 1937 and retired as champion in 1949. He held the heavyweight title longer than anybody did at 11 years, 8 months and 7 days and made more successful title defenses than anyone in history at 25.

Louis' legend was enhanced with his two fights with Max Schmeling. He suffered his first career loss by getting knocked out in the 12th round in their first encounter. In their rematch, two years later, Louis dropped Schmeling three times in the fight and the German's trainer threw in the towel after the third knockdown. Louis would become a hero in America with his win over the German.

His cultural effect was felt outside the ring as well. He became a focal point of anti-Nazi sentiments before and during World War II. In sports, he integrated the game of golf, breaking the color barrier in the sport by appearing in a PGA event in 1982.

4. Rocky Marciano

Photo: ringtv.com

Rocky Marciano is one of the most iconic and popular American athletes of all-time. Born as Rocco Francis Marchegiano, he was known for his punching power, relentless attacking style, incredible stamina and granite chin.

Marciano won the heavyweight title with a 13th round knockout of Jersey Joe Walcott in September 1952. He retired undefeated and as world champion after six title defenses in 1956 and is the only undefeated heavyweight champion in the history of boxing. Marciano retired with a record of 49-0 with 43 knockouts. His 87.76% knockout rate still ranks as one of the highest every in the history of the sport.

He died in a plane crash on the day before his 46th birthday when he was a passenger at a Cessna 172 private plane that was heading to Des Moines, Iowa. The plane flew at a time when there was bad weather and at night.

3. Henry Armstrong

Photo: boxrec.com

Henry Armstrong had as many nicknames as he had world titles. Some called him 'Hammerin' Hank' while other dubbed him as 'Homicide Hank'. But the most appropriate nickname for Henry Armstrong Jr. was probably 'Hurricane Hank' as he was a whirlwind of a fighter who overwhelmed his opponents with non-stop action and an avalanche of punches.

Armstrong is the only fighter in history to hold world titles at three different division simultaneously. He became featherweight champion in 1937 and added the welterweight championship the following year and the lightweight belt three months later. He challenged Ceferino Garcia for the middleweight title in 1940 and held Garcia to a draw.

In his career, Armstrong faced a total of 17 world champions and defeated 15 of them. He defended the welterweight title a total of 19 times. His real name was Henry Melody Jackson Jr. but fought under the name Henry Armstrong. Early in his career, Armstrong also fought under the name of Melody Jackson.

2. Sugar Ray Robinson

Who Has The Greatest Boxing Record Of All Time

Photo: latimes.com

Sugar Ray Robinson won the welterweight title in 1946 and defended the belt four times before moving up in weight and winning the middleweight title in 1951. That would be the first of five middleweight title reigns for the legendary Robinson.

Robinson lost just once in his first 123 professional fights, to Jake LaMotta. He wasn't as dominant a champion at middleweight as he was at welterweight but he still managed to win the title five times, including three after a brief retirement of two and a half years.

He attempted to win the light heavyweight title in 1952 but was stopped in the 13th round by Joey Maxim in a fight that had extreme heat conditions that the referee was replaced in the 10th round. That loss was the only stoppage loss of Robinsons's career and he was interestingly up on points when the bout was halted.

1. Muhammad Ali

Photo: espn.com

Boxing History Records

History

After his epic fight with Thomas Hearns in 1981, Leonard retired in 1982 due to a detached retina. He returned to defeat Marvin Hagler for the middleweight title and then in 1989, he defeated Donny Lalonde to win the super middleweight and light heavyweight titles.

8. Jack Dempsey

Photo: BoxingNews.com

Jack Dempsey was the face of boxing at a time when it competed with baseball and horse racings as the favorite past time of the land. The Manassa Mauler had a brawling, devil may care attitude inside the ring. He was all business inside the ring but a handsome and charismatic character outside of it.

He held the world heavyweight title from 1919-1926 although only six fights during that period were considered as title defenses. Dempsey was involved in some of the most classic wars of all-time, including the ones he had with Luis Angel Firpo and Gene Tunney.

Many of his fights set attendance and financial records and he set the first million dollar gate in the history of boxing. When he lost the title to Tunney in 1926, it was in front of 120,000 paying fans, the largest paid spectator attendance in boxing history. He lost to Tunney in a rematch where at one point, the latter was down on the canvass for 14 seconds but counted up to 9 only. Dempsey retired after that loss and set up a restaurant.

7.Roberto Duran

Photo: fightland.com

Roberto Duran will most probably remembered for the two words he uttered when he quit against Sugar Ray Leonard: NO MAS. But the man known as the Hands of Stone was truly more than that. Duran is one of the greatest brawlers and pressure fighters the sport of boxing has ever seen.

Duran's first world title came in 1972 when he won the lightweight belt from Ken Buchanan. He dominated the division for seven years before out working Sugar Ray Leonard for the welterweight title in 1980. Five months later, he quit in their rematch. In 1989, during his 21st year as a professional, he beat Iran Barkley to win the middleweight title.

Duran won world titles in four different weight classes. He is only the second boxer, after Jack Johnson, to fight over a span of five decades. Manos de Piedra (Hands of Stone) retired at the age of 50 in 2002 after figuring in a car accident in 2001. He is considered as the best lightweight boxer of all-time.

6.Mike Tyson

Photo: fightsaga.com

Perhaps the most feared fighter the sport has ever seen, Mike Tyson was the sport's biggest star during the 1990's. Iron Mike was a wrecking machine, he punched his way to becoming the youngest heavyweight champion of all-time at 20 years, 4 months and 22 days old when he knocked out Trevor Berbick in two rounds in 1986.

Tyson would go on to unify the belts and become undisputed champion, becoming the first heavyweight fighter to win the WBC, WBA and IBF titles and the only one, at that time, to unify all of them. Tyson defended his titles nine times before he was shocked by James 'Buster' Douglas in Japan.

Iron Mike would become notorious after he was imprisoned following a rape conviction. After three years behind bars, he was released on parole and went on to recapture the WBC and WBA heavyweight belts. He will never be forgotten though, for biting off a piece of Evander Holyfield's ear during their rematch.

5. Joe Louis

Photo: boxingnewsonline.com

The Brown Bomber is one of the most popular champions of all-time. Joe Louis won the heavyweight title in 1937 and retired as champion in 1949. He held the heavyweight title longer than anybody did at 11 years, 8 months and 7 days and made more successful title defenses than anyone in history at 25.

Louis' legend was enhanced with his two fights with Max Schmeling. He suffered his first career loss by getting knocked out in the 12th round in their first encounter. In their rematch, two years later, Louis dropped Schmeling three times in the fight and the German's trainer threw in the towel after the third knockdown. Louis would become a hero in America with his win over the German.

His cultural effect was felt outside the ring as well. He became a focal point of anti-Nazi sentiments before and during World War II. In sports, he integrated the game of golf, breaking the color barrier in the sport by appearing in a PGA event in 1982.

4. Rocky Marciano

Photo: ringtv.com

Rocky Marciano is one of the most iconic and popular American athletes of all-time. Born as Rocco Francis Marchegiano, he was known for his punching power, relentless attacking style, incredible stamina and granite chin.

Marciano won the heavyweight title with a 13th round knockout of Jersey Joe Walcott in September 1952. He retired undefeated and as world champion after six title defenses in 1956 and is the only undefeated heavyweight champion in the history of boxing. Marciano retired with a record of 49-0 with 43 knockouts. His 87.76% knockout rate still ranks as one of the highest every in the history of the sport.

He died in a plane crash on the day before his 46th birthday when he was a passenger at a Cessna 172 private plane that was heading to Des Moines, Iowa. The plane flew at a time when there was bad weather and at night.

3. Henry Armstrong

Photo: boxrec.com

Henry Armstrong had as many nicknames as he had world titles. Some called him 'Hammerin' Hank' while other dubbed him as 'Homicide Hank'. But the most appropriate nickname for Henry Armstrong Jr. was probably 'Hurricane Hank' as he was a whirlwind of a fighter who overwhelmed his opponents with non-stop action and an avalanche of punches.

Armstrong is the only fighter in history to hold world titles at three different division simultaneously. He became featherweight champion in 1937 and added the welterweight championship the following year and the lightweight belt three months later. He challenged Ceferino Garcia for the middleweight title in 1940 and held Garcia to a draw.

In his career, Armstrong faced a total of 17 world champions and defeated 15 of them. He defended the welterweight title a total of 19 times. His real name was Henry Melody Jackson Jr. but fought under the name Henry Armstrong. Early in his career, Armstrong also fought under the name of Melody Jackson.

2. Sugar Ray Robinson

Who Has The Greatest Boxing Record Of All Time

Photo: latimes.com

Sugar Ray Robinson won the welterweight title in 1946 and defended the belt four times before moving up in weight and winning the middleweight title in 1951. That would be the first of five middleweight title reigns for the legendary Robinson.

Robinson lost just once in his first 123 professional fights, to Jake LaMotta. He wasn't as dominant a champion at middleweight as he was at welterweight but he still managed to win the title five times, including three after a brief retirement of two and a half years.

He attempted to win the light heavyweight title in 1952 but was stopped in the 13th round by Joey Maxim in a fight that had extreme heat conditions that the referee was replaced in the 10th round. That loss was the only stoppage loss of Robinsons's career and he was interestingly up on points when the bout was halted.

1. Muhammad Ali

Photo: espn.com

Boxing History Records

Widely considered as the greatest boxer of all-time, Muhammad Ali is one of the most popular athletes of any sport and the fighter who transcended the game of boxing to a different level. He became the first fighter to win the heavyweight division three times.

Known for his bravado, charisma and showmanship, Ali was born as Cassius Clay but changed his name to Muhammad Ali. He was banned from boxing for three years after refusing to be drafted to the military during the Vietnam War and for saying that the Viets didn't do anything against him. After the ban was lifted, Ali returned to the ring and lost to Joe Frazier in the biggest fight in the history of boxing called 'Fight of the Century'.

He would reclaim the title by defeating George Foreman in 1974. He would lose the belt to Leon Spinks but win it again in a rematch in 1978. Ali lost a total of five times in his career and three of them came in his final four bouts, including two to Larry Holmes and Trevor Berbick, which were a result of an ill-advised comeback. But despite the sour ending to his legendary boxing career, Ali will always be remembered as the fighter who reinvented the heavyweight division with his speed, agility and athleticism. Before him no one fought like him. As he said, he stung like a bee and floated like a butterfly.

If those long-promised time machines ever come out and you get bored of dinosaur safari trips or punching a young Hitler in the ribs, you could do worse than take a ride back to early 2015.

Back then Donald Trump was still a relatively harmless figure of fun, the U.K. was still safely in the E.U. and Gene Wilder, Carrie Fisher and Muhammad Ali were still with us.

Back then, 'The Fight of the Century' was just around the corner and after two exciting fights with Marcos Maidana, you could imagine Floyd Mayweather breaking the record for the most wins by an undefeated fighter with two close Manny Pacquiao fights and maybe a match up against someone like Timothy Bradley, Amir Khan or Keith Thurman.

But just like everything else in the world that has gone batshit insane recently, Floyd will instead break Rocky Marciano's 60-year record against a guy making his boxing debut.

While we settle in for the potentially decades-long wait for someone else to break that record, here are some more to keep an eye on.

Most Professional Fights

The most pro fights on record is 470 by lightweight Len Wickwar (below, via BoxRec) from Leicester, England.

He made his debut at the age of 17 in October 1928 where he knocked out Jim Young Shepherdson. Over the next 12 years he stepped into the ring for an average of around 40 fights a year, or three a month, fending off colourful characters like Spud Murphy, Billy Clinton, Jack Hammer, Dodo Williams and 'Seaman' Frank Read.

Early in his career, he fought three times in one night, defeating Tommy Cann, Len Swinfield and Bobby Wood on points on Feb. 8, 1929.

Forced to take a six year break from the ring to fight in World War II, Wickwar returned to the ring in 1946 for five more fights, bringing his all time record to 340 wins, 87 losses and 42 draws.

Here he is fighting Eric Boon (who looks eerily like Ricky Hatton) with commentary from the most English man in history.

With such a massive number of fights, he may well also hold the records for the most pro wins and the most pro draws.

Wickwar's stablemate, George 'Tish' Marsden from Nottingham, struggled to keep up with only 336 fights (195-101-40) to his name. Oddly enough, both Wickwar and Marsden died on the same day, June 1 1980.

Most Professional Defeats

Although Boxrec only give him a record of 17-33-6, Italian American Joe Grim is rumoured to have had more than 300 fights, the vast majority of which were defeats.

He had a reputation in the opening years of the 20th century as a 'Human Punching Bag' that could not be knocked out. He was described as the Iron Man, although today he be said to suffer from 'Homer Simpson Syndrome.'

After he could not knock the 150 lb. Grim out, Jack Johnson said after facing him that 'I just don't believe that man is made of flesh and blood.'

There were calls at the time for Grim to be banned from the sport, which one paper saying 'to let a giant hammer a poorly conditioned youth is to degenerate the ring into an abattoir.'

Yet Grim's record pales in comparison to some modern-day fighters like Peter Buckley, who won his 300th fight and retired with a record of 32-256-12, and Kristian Laight, who is still active with a record of 12-238-7.

The all-time 'biggest loser' is Reggie Strickland (below, via BoxRec), who retired in 2005 after 18 years as a pro having had 363 fights, 276 of which he lost. He would often lose a fight then be back in the ring within days to lose another and on a few occasions he had nine fights in a single month.

Tallest Titleholder

At 6'6.5″, the 'Pottawatomie Giant' Jess Willard was the tallest fighter to win a world title from 1915 right up until the 6'7″ Vitali Klitschko won a title 89 years later in 2004, closely followed by 7′ Nikolai Valuev the following year.

What is much harder to figure out is the tallest fighter ever to step into the ring. Boxrec lists Jim Cully from Tipperary, who had just six fights in the 1940s, as being 7'2″.

Romanian Gogea Mitu (pictured, top, via BoxRec), listed as 7'4″, who had just three fights in the 1960s, may be the tallest on record, although there are rumours of taller men that have taken part in exhibition bouts.

At 4'10', South African flyweight Baby Jake Matlala is the shortest title-holder in history.

The shortest ever boxer may be 4'8″ Englishman Paul Lowe. A stuntman who appeared in 'Harry Potter,' 'Game of Thrones' and 'Fast and Furious 6,' Lowe was to make his debut in 2009, but after the fight fell through it's not clear if he ever had a pro fight.

Heaviest Titleholder

The 'Beast from the East' Valuev also appears to be the heaviest title-holder in history, reaching a peak weight of 328 lbs. against Monte Barrett, who weighed in at 223 lbs. In his confusion, Barrett decided his best bet was to pick on someone his own size and clocked the referee.

(via ESPN the Magazine)

Eric 'Butterbean' Esch, broke a set of scales at the weigh-in to fight Kirk Lawton in 2013. He weighed 193 kg (425 lbs.) a week earlier. Butterbean retired after just two rounds into the fight against Lawton, who was more than 150lb lighter.

Dustin 'Worm' Nichols may yet beat this record. He weighed 398 lbs. when he retired after one round with Deontay Wilder in 2010.

Oldest Titleholder

Most know that Mike Tyson was just 20 when won the WBC heavyweight belt in 1986, yet the youngest holder of a world title in history is Puerto Rican Wilfred Benítez, who won the WBA junior welterweight belt aged just 17.

Greatest Record In Boxing History In America

The oldest fighter in history seems to be English cruiserweight Steve Ward who turned pro in 1977 and came out of retirement for a bout in 2015 at the age of 59.

The oldest title-holders in history are well known. The current record holder is Bernard Hopkins, who lost his titles to Sergey Kovalev in November 2014, just two months shy of his 50th birthday. Had he managed to overcome Joe Smith, Jr. in December, he would have held a belt at the age of 51 years, 337 days.

Before Hopkins, 45-year-old George Foreman was the oldest fighter to win a title after he knocked out Michael Moorer, who was 19 years younger, in 1994.

Most Knockout Victories

Archie 'The Old Mongoose' Moore is also one of the oldest world champions in history, having beaten Joey Maxim to become the world light heavyweight champion. He said that he was 36 at the time, although his mother suggested that he was in fact three years older than he thought.

If you take his mother's word for it, he would have been 41 when he managed to knock down Rocky Marciano in 1955 and 48 when he fought 20-year-old Cassius Clay in 1962.

What's more impressive though is his record of 132 knockouts from 220 fights. He even managed to knock out final opponent Mike DiBiase in 1963.

Greatest Record In Boxing History 2020

If his mother was right, he finished his career with a knockout only a few months before turning 50.

Longest Fight

The longest fight on record was fought between lightweights Andy Bowen (above, via Wikipedia) and 'Texan' Jack Burke in New Orleans in April 1893.

The fight dragged on for 110 rounds and more than seven hours. As the fight continued into the early hours of the morning, Burke broke both of his hands and wrists.

Eventually the referee declared the fight a draw and decided that the battered Bowen and Burke could split the purse. It was later revealed that both fighters had lost nearly 10 pounds from the lengthy bout.

Burke continued fighting until 1900, but Bowen's life was cut short when at 27 he died in an accident in 1894. He fractured his skull after hitting his head on the wooden canvas after being knocked down by George 'Kid' Lavigne.

Guinness World Records lists the greatest number of rounds as 276 in a fight between Jack Jones and Patsy Tunney in Cheshire, England in 1825. The fight lasted four and a half hours.

Best Boxing Records

In March last year, GWR awarded Aussie businessman Rod Walker (below, via GWR on Twitter) the record for most consecutive boxing rounds, after the 59-year-old completed 127 rounds against 23 opponents (including Nigel Benn and Saiko Bika) in Sydney, Australia.

The charity challenge took over eight and half hours and helped Rod to raise nearly $200,000 for the Sydney-based Fusion Families Program.

Greatest Record In Boxing History 2019

Many of these records are disputed. If you believe you have proof of one being beaten, please let us know (with links) in the comment section.





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