Jimmy Ellis (boxer)

Boxer

Birthday February 24, 1940

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2014-5-6, Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. (74 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 6 ft 0 in

Weight Heavyweight

#42986 Most Popular

1940

James Albert Ellis (February 24, 1940 – May 6, 2014) was an American professional boxer.

1960

By the mid-1960s, Ellis was fighting heavyweights.

Being a tall natural athletic build he'd had increasing Trouble keeping down to middleweight.

Dr. Ferdie Pacheco, who worked with both Ali and Ellis throughout their careers, called Ellis's development from middleweight to heavyweight one of the most dramatic he could recall.

1961

Ellis turned professional as a middleweight in 1961.

Early in his pro career, he was trained and managed by Bud Bruner.

With Bruner, he compiled a record of 15–5 (6 KOs).

His five losses were decisions to top Middleweight contenders Holly Mims (whom he defeated in a rematch), Henry Hank, Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, Don Fullmer, and George Benton.

This start probably helped his speed of punch, movement and finesse.

1964

At the end of 1964, after losing three out of four fights, Ellis decided to leave Bruner.

He later recalled Bruner fondly.

"I liked him, and I fought a lot of top-rated fighters when I was with him, but eventually I had to move on," Ellis said.

"He did me justice, and we always remained friends."

Ellis wrote a letter to an at first skeptical Angelo Dundee, the trainer of Ali, and asked him to handle his career.

Dundee agreed to be both manager and trainer.

Ellis became a sparring partner for Ali and fought on several of Ali's early pre-world championship undercards.

Six of his first eight fights with Dundee were on an Ali undercards.

1966

By 1966, Ellis was fighting as a heavyweight.

When Ali was stripped of the world title for refusing to enter the military, the World Boxing Association staged an eight-man tournament that featured most of the top heavyweight contenders.

Ellis, who was ranked eighth in the world after eight consecutive wins, was invited to be in the tournament.

Joe Frazier, ranked second by the WBA, chose not to participate in the tournament.

Instead, Frazier fought for the vacant New York State Athletic Commission World Heavyweight Championship, which he won with an eleventh-round knockout of Buster Mathis.

1967

In the opening round of the tournament, Ellis fought Leotis Martin on August 5, 1967, in Houston, Texas.

Ellis, the betting underdog, battered Martin's face into a bloody mask, and the referee stopped the fight in the ninth round.

Ellis met Oscar Bonavena in the second round of the tournament.

The fight took place on December 2, 1967, in Louisville, Kentucky.

Ellis, once again the underdog, dropped Bonavena with a right once in the third round and once in the tenth.

1968

He won the vacant WBA heavyweight title in 1968 by defeating Jerry Quarry, making one successful title defense in the same year against Floyd Patterson, before losing to Joe Frazier in 1970.

He was born one of ten children.

His father, Walter, was a pastor, and Ellis was brought up as a Christian.

As a teenager he worked in a cement finishing factory.

He also sang in the local church choir, later joined by his wife Mary.

He continued church involvement all his adult life.

In his youth he admired the boxer Joe Louis.

Ellis got into boxing as a teenager after watching a friend box a fellow Louisville youngster Muhammad Ali (then known as Cassius Clay) on a local amateur boxing television show called Tomorrow's Champions.

"I had a friend of mine named Donnie Hall, and he fought Ali," Ellis said.

"Donnie lost, and I thought I could maybe be a fighter then."

Ellis went with Hall to Louisville's Columbia Gym, where the coach was a police officer named Joe Martin.

Ellis won 59 of 66 amateur bouts and was a Golden Gloves champion.

He boxed Ali twice as an amateur, with Ali winning the first bout and Ellis winning the second.