| Statistics | |
|---|---|
| Real name | James McLarnin |
| Nickname(s) | Baby Faced Assassin Beltin' Celt Dublin Dynamiter Dublin Destroyer Murderous Mick The Belfast Spider The Jew Killer The Jew Beater Hebrew Scourge The Irish Lullaby |
| Rated at | Flyweight to Welterweight |
| Nationality | Irish/Canadian |
| Birth date | December 19, 1907 |
| Birth place | Hillsborough, County Down, Ireland |
| Death date | October 28, 2004 (aged 96) |
| Death place | Richland, Washington, USA |
| Stance | Orthodox |
| Boxing record | |
| Total fights | 69 |
| Wins | 55 |
| Wins by KO | 21 |
| Losses | 11 |
| Draws | 3 |
| No contests | 0 |
James McLarnin, known as Jimmy McLarnin (19 December 1907; County Down, Ireland – 28 October, 2004; Washington, USA), was an Irish Canadian professional boxer who became two time welterweight world champion and an International Boxing Hall of Fame inductee.
Contents |
Background
McLarnin was born in Hillsborough, County Down, Ireland, into a large Methodist family who emigrated to Vancouver when he was three. He took up boxing at the age of 10 after getting into a fight trying to defend his newspaper-selling pitch. Former professional Charles "Pop" Foster recognised McLarnin's talent at the age of 13. Foster constructed a makeshift gym for McLarnin to train in, sure that he would one day be the champion of the world.
Boxing career
Following a successful start to his career in Vancouver, Foster took McLarnin to San Francisco, where his youthful appearance made it difficult to get a fight until he lied about his age, it is for this reason that McLarnin was known as the "Baby-faced Assassin". Despite his youthful appearance, McLarnin had incredible power with both fists, his right being particularly feared. However, like many similar fighters Mclarnin suffered several hand injuries throughout his career, towards the end of his career McLarnin was forced to become more of a boxer due to this.[citation needed]
McLarnin lost his first title shot on 21 May 1928 in New York against world lightweight champion Sammy Mandell. Though he did go on to beat him twice in the following two years. It would be five years before McLarnin would next get a title shot, during which time he knocked out several top names including Al Singer, Ruby Goldstein, and Sid Terris.[1]
McLarnin's second title shot came against welterweight champion Young Corbett III, McLarnin won by knockout after only 2 minutes 37 seconds. Following his title success, McLarnin fought an epic three fight series with Barney Ross. The first fight, on 28 May 1934, was won by Ross, McLarnin regained his title in their next match four months later. The deciding fight was on 28 May 1935, McLarnin lost his title for the final time to a narrow points decision, for the rest of his life McLarnin claimed he had done enough to retain his belt.
McLarnin retired in November 1936 still at the top his game, he won his last two fights against all-time greats Tony Canzoneri and Lou Ambers. His record was 62 wins, 11 losses, 3 draws, and 1 no decision from 77 contests. In 1996 Ring Magazine voted McLarnin as the fifth-greatest welterweight of all time.
Life after boxing
Unlike many boxers, McLarnin invested his money wisely and retired a wealthy man. He opened an electrical goods store, and also did some acting, golfing, and lecturing, he never returned to the ring despite the large incentives for him to do so.[2]
Death
McLarnin died in 2004, aged 96, and was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
References
- ^ Boxrec. ""Jimmy McLarnin"". Boxrec Fighter Page. http://www.boxrec.com/list_bouts.php?human_id=9024&cat=boxer. Retrieved 13 December 2008.
- ^ Mike Lewis (11 November 2004). ""Jimmy McLarnin"". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2004/nov/11/guardianobituaries.boxing. Retrieved 5 April 2009.
External links
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