Johnny Owen
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Johnny Owen | ||
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Ring Record | ||
Career span | 1976–1980 | |
Total bouts | 28 | |
Wins | 25 | |
Knockouts | 10 | |
Draws | 1 | |
Losses | 2 |
Johnny Owen (January 7, 1956 – November 4, 1980) was a successful professional boxer from Wales. His fragile appearance and astonishing abilities earned him many epithets, including ‘the Bionic Bantam’ and ‘the Merthyr Matchstick’. During his brief career, he held the Bantamweight Championships of Great Britain and Europe and became the first ever Welsh holder of the Bantamweight Championship of the Commonwealth. He challenged champion Lupe Pintor for his version of the World Bantamweight title in September 1980, losing a tortuously difficult contest by way of twelfth round knockout. Owen never regained consciousness, fell into a coma and died seven weeks later. A statue commemorating his life and career was unveiled in Merthyr Tydfil in 2002.
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[edit] Early life & career
Johnny Owen was born John Richard Owens, the fourth of a family of eight children to working class parents Dick and Edith Owens in Merthyr Tydfil on January 7, 1956. He began to box at the age of eight, dropping the 's' from his surname on entering a local competition and finding that he was not the only 'Johnny Owens' taking part. He was never the most gifted of fighters, but quickly learned how to compensate for his shortcomings by sheer doggedness and determination. His ferocity - often thought surprising in one so slight - and incredible stamina built by long hours running amidst the steep hills of South Wales, brought him moderate success during a lengthy amateur career, spanning some one hundred and twenty six fights. He finally turned professional in 1976, opening his account with a points victory over fellow Welshman George Sutton, in Pontypool, on September 30.
[edit] Title hunter
Owen enjoyed an auspicious start to his professional career, lifting the Bantamweight Championship of Wales after just six contests and knocking out the handy Paddy McGuire to claim the British title after only ten. Guided by manager and trainer Dai Gardiner, Owen steadily grew to dominate the domestic bantamweight scene and by the end of 1978 felt ready to take on his first, big, international test.
His encounter with Paul Ferreri to contest the vacant Bantamweight Championship of the Commonwealth, delivered one of the finest performances of Owen’s entire career. Ferrari, Italian born and resident in Australia, had held the title before – not to mention a clutch of other belts – and was widely expected to be a difficult, if not insurmountable obstacle to the comparatively inexperienced Welshman’s ambitions. Yet – and almost improbably – an enthralling encounter ensued. Ferreri’s shots were clean and hard and both men brought enormous skill to bear on a fight that went the full distance of fifteen hotly disputed rounds. Towards the end, the Australian began to wilt, his punches seeming to have little effect on an opponent relentlessly piling on the pressure. The judges saw the contest Owen’s way and he was proclaimed the first Bantamweight Champion of the Commonwealth that Wales ever had.
Owen’s victory paved the way for a shot at the division’s European title, held by Juan Francisco Rodriguez of Spain. It was the Welshman’s eighteenth contest and his first overseas and continues to be regarded by his supporters as a travesty. The fight took place in the champion’s backyard in Almeria amid a series of spectacular allegations of foul play by the challenger’s camp. Rodriguez was said to have exceeded the weight limit and his camp to have engaged in gamesmanship designed, amongst other things, to disrupt Owen's sleep. It didn’t stop there. During the contest itself, the champion was stated to have elbowed and butted his way through the rounds, whilst his seconds were believed to have smeared his gloves with an agent for the purpose of obscuring his opponent's vision. As if that wasn’t enough, the challenger – who had appeared to dominate the contest – was supposed to have been the victim of a hometown decision and, adding insult to injury, the Spanish boxing authorities withheld his purse – apparently an act of spite inspired by an incident that took place in England, some months before.
Until the meeting with Lupe Pintor, this was Owen’s sole professional defeat and was avenged a little less than twelve months later. With the European Championship once more at stake, Rodriguez journeyed to Ebbw Vale and acquitted himself bravely on the way to being relieved of his crown. Four months later and Owen successfully defended his British Championship for the third and final time, winning a Lonsdale Belt outright in the process. An impressive record behind him, his next outing would be to Los Angeles and an encounter with the reigning World Champion.
[edit] One too many
A typically belligerent Mexican slugger, Lupe Pintor had edged a controversial split decision over stable mate and long-time champion Carlos Zarate to lay claim to his WBC World Bantamweight title. Zarate may have retired in disgust, but Pintor proved to be a worthy successor and few rated Owen’s chances when they came together at the Grand Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles on September 19, 1980.
Two hundred Welsh fans made it to the venue and were swamped by a partisan and, at times, outrageously hostile Hispanic and Mexican crowd hurling abuse and cans of urine. Ringside, there were some who expressed concern when they cast their eyes over Owen’s skeletal frame and astonishment when he seemed to be holding his own against the assertive champion. When the bell rang to signal the end of the eighth round, most observers had the Welshman ahead, but he was tiring fast and, in the ninth, suffered the first knockdown of his professional career. The momentum of the whole fight suddenly lurched in the champion’s direction and from the tenth, he handed Owen a terrible beating. Catastrophe came with twenty five seconds of the twelfth round still to go. A final, thumping right sent the challenger thudding to the canvas and Pintor had retained his title.
Owen, whom it transpired had an unusually delicate skull, never regained consciousness and, despite extensive surgery, slipped into a coma. He was pronounced dead on November 4, 1980, aged twenty-four.
[edit] After
Pintor’s blows were never established as the cause of death and Owen’s family, far from blaming the World Champion, telegraphed him shortly after their loss and encouraged him to go on fighting. Twenty years later, a memorial to Johnny Owen was unveiled in Merthyr Tydfil. At the request of the late fighter's father, the unveiling was performed by Lupe Pintor.
[edit] Other
The Pintor fight is featured in the controversial mondo film Faces of Death 2, released in 1981.
[edit] Sources
- Boxing: The Champions (Ken Jones & Chris Smith, The Crowood Press, 1990), pages 180-3.
- Welsh Warriors. A complete online source
- Johnny Owen: Champion of Half the World by Duncan Higgitt of the Western Mail is an excellent source of anecdotal evidence: .
- This extract from The Big If, by Rick Broadbent, details the atmosphere before the Pintor fight: .
- For more on Owen's statue in Merthyr Tydfil
- Details of Owen's ring record drawn from the Boxing Records Archive