Jimmy Wilde

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Jimmy Wilde
Statistics
Real name
Nickname Mighty Atom
Weight Flyweight
Nationality Welsh
Birth date May 12, 1882
Birth place Pentwyn Deintyr
Death date March 10, 1969
Style 0rthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 149
Wins 131
Wins by KO 99
Losses 3
Draws 2
No contests 13

Jimmy Wilde (May 12, 1892 in Pentwyn DeintyrMarch 10, 1969 in Cardiff) was a former boxer of Welsh origin. Wilde was world Flyweight champion, and he was called by Nat Fleischer and Charley Rose, among others, as The greatest Flyweight ever. His nickname was Mighty Atom, he was also known as the "Ghost with the Hammer in his Hand" and the "Tylorstown Terror".

Contents

[edit] Professional Career

Wilde went undefeated for an amazing amount of 103 bouts, all of which were held in Britain. In the middle of that streak, he annexed the British flyweight championship by beating Billy Padden by a knockout in 18 rounds. He finally lost his undefeated record when he challenged Tancy Lee for the European championship, getting knocked out in the 17th round. With that loss, Wilde also lost his British title.

Record books often show he started boxing professionally in 1911 but it is taken for granted that he had been fighting professionally for at least 4 years before that. Wilde's claim that he had at least 800 fights is probably greatly exaggerated, but it was a great deal more than the 139 listed.

December 26, 1910, was the exact date of Wilde's first professional boxing fight. That day, he boxed Les Williams to a no-decision in three rounds. His first win came on January 1 of 1911, knocking out Ted Roberts in the third round.

Wilde then embarked on a 16 fight knockout winning streak, and on February 14 of 1916, he became world Flyweight champion by beating Joe Symonds for the vacant belt by a knockout in 12 in London. He beat Johnny Rosner by a knockout in 11 to retain the title in Liverpool, and on May 13, he had two fights on the same day, winning both by knockout. His next fight was a rematch with Lee, and he gained revenge by knocking Lee out in the 11th to retain the world title. He finished the year retaining his belt against Young Zulu Kid, also by knockout in the 11th.

In 1917, he retained the title by beating George Clarke by a knockout in four. With that win, he also won the European title and recovered the British title. But that would be his last title defense, as soon he decided to vacate the world title. He kept fighting and winning, and in 1919, he beat Joe Lynch, another boxer who was a world champion, by decision in 15. In 1920 he went undefeated in 10 fights, but then, he lost by a knockout in 17 to former world bantamweight champion Pete Herman, who outweighed Wilde by more than a stone (14 pounds), in 1921 (the bout was originally scheduled as a title defense, but Herman had lost his championship to the aforementioned Lynch the month before; Herman easily regained the bantamweight title from Lynch in July 1921, leading some to suspect that he had left the title behind with Lynch in America intentionally). That was the fight that marked his return to Britain after touring the United States all of 1920. After a win over Young Jennings, he announced his retirement, but returned to the ring out of a sense of obligation to defend his title against Pancho Villa in 1923. After losing by a knockout in seven to the Philippines' first world champion, Wilde announced his retirement.

Wilde died in a hospital near Cardiff and was buried in Barry Cemetery.

[edit] Outside the Ring

Wilde worked in Tylorstown Colliery in 1904 at the age 12. In 1909 Wilde married his wife Elizabeth and was a father by 1912. He left Tylorstown Colliery in 1913 and in 1916 joined the army and was sent to Aldershot as PT instructor.

[edit] Awards and recognition

He had a record of 131 wins, 3 losses, 2 draws and 13 no-decisions, with 99 wins by knockout, which makes him one of the most prolific knockout winners of all time, according to Ring Magazine, publication which also named him the 3rd greatest puncher of all time in 2003.

In 1990, Wilde was elected into the International Boxing Hall Of Fame as a member of that institution's original class.

[edit] External Links

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