Leotis Martin

Leotis Martin
Born
Leotis Martin

(1939-03-10)March 10, 1939
DiedNovember 20, 1995(1995-11-20) (aged 56)
Other namesOtis Lee
Statistics
Weight(s)Heavyweight
Height6 ft 0+12 in (1.84 m)
Reach76 in (193 cm)
StanceOrthodox
Boxing record
Total fights36
Wins31
Wins by KO19
Losses5
Draws0

Leotis Martin (March 10, 1939 – November 20, 1995) was an American boxer, he was the inaugural NABF Heavyweight Champion. A fairly-skilled heavyweight and a good punch, he beat rated contenders Alvin Lewis, Thad Spencer, Karl Mildenberger, and Sonny Banks, but is perhaps best known for his knockout victory over former-Heavyweight Champion, Sonny Liston. Unfortunately, Martin was forced to retire shortly after the Liston win due to a detached retina. The Ring Magazine listed Martin 68th on its list of the "100-Greatest-Punchers of all Time".

Amateur career

Martin was the 1960 Chicago and Intercity Golden Gloves 160-pound champion and the 1961 160-pound Intercity Golden Gloves Champion (alternate). He also was the United States National AAU 165-pound champion in 1960 and 1961.

Professional career

From February 1964, when Martin fought on the Liston-Clay world heavyweight championship fight undercard, to June 1967, Martin fought 15 times without suffering a defeat. This winning streak qualified him for the WBA heavyweight elimination championship series, after the organization had stripped Muhammad Ali of its world heavyweight crown when he refused induction into the United States Army. On May 10, 1965, he faced Sonny Banks, then one of only two fighters to have knocked Muhammad Ali down for a count. Martin scored a ninth-round knockout over Banks. Martin's jubilation was short lived. Banks never recovered from the blows he received during the fight and died from his injuries.

Although Martin was selected for the WBA title elimination tournament, he was matched, in his first fight, against the ultimate tournament winner Jimmy Ellis. The two fought in the Houston Astrodome on August 5, 1967. Ellis, as was his style at the time, came out sharp, trying to score an early knockout with his sneaky-fast and dangerous right hand. Although unable to knock Martin out, Ellis inflicted a nasty cut on the inside of Martin's mouth, which ultimately caused the fight to be stopped in the ninth round. Scoring was around even at that point. Many had predicted Martin might win the elimination series. Martin had campaigned for a contest with fellow Philadelphian Joe Frazier, but it never happened, mainly due to Martin's loss to Bonavena, who got the Frazier match instead.

Martin rebounded from the Ellis defeat by traveling to Germany to knock out German and European heavyweight champion Karl Mildenberger in seven rounds. Martin appeared to be back in contention for a title shot when he dropped a decision to California heavyweight Henry Clark (record 14-3-2). He then came back from that defeat to upset and knock out Thad Spencer in nine rounds. His title quest, however, was again derailed when Martin travelled to Argentina to meet Oscar Bonavena in his home town of Buenos Aires, where he lost by decision. Bonavena went on to fight Frazier for the world title.

After the Bonavena loss, Martin put together a four-fight win streak, including two wins over Detroit hometown favorite Al "Blue" Lewis. These fine efforts landed him a match with veteran former champion Sonny Liston on December 6, 1969. Liston had resumed boxing after his two stunning losses to Muhammad Ali, and had run off a winning streak of 14 fights with 13 knockouts. Although slowed by age, Liston was still a feared heavyweight.

Martin, who formerly had been Liston's sparring partner, devised a simple fight plan. Rather than attempting to slug with the bigger and heavier Liston, Martin stayed away from him, boxing and waiting for the older man to tire. Despite a close call in the fourth round when Liston caught him with a booming left hook that knocked Martin down, Martin seemed to get stronger with every passing round while Liston weakened. Finally, in the ninth round, Martin hit Liston with a powerful combination that knocked the former champion out. This victory was short-lived, however: Martin had suffered a detached retina during the fight, and was forced to retire before he could capitalize on the biggest win of his career.

After boxing

For the next 26 years, Martin lived a quiet life in the Mount Airy section of Philadelphia. Early in 1995, he retired from Budd & Co. after 31 years as a machinist. In November that year, Martin had a stroke brought on by hypertension and complications from diabetes, and died en route to a local hospital, aged 56.

Martin's death received little coverage in the boxing media.

Professional boxing record

36 fights 31 wins 5 losses
By knockout 19 2
By decision 12 3
By disqualification 0 0
Draws 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
36 Win 31–5 Sonny Liston KO 9 (12) 06/12/1969 International Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas Won inaugural NABF Heavyweight Title; Martin forced to retire due to torn retina after the bout
35 Win 30–5 Roger Russell UD 10 18/11/1969 Spectrum, Philadelphia
34 Win 29–5 Wendell Newton KO 7 (10) 28/10/1969 Blue Horizon, Philadelphia
33 Win 28–5 Alvin Lewis SD 10 26/02/1969 Detroit Olympia, Detroit
32 Win 27–5 Alvin Lewis TKO 9 (10) 26/11/1968 Detroit
31 Loss 26–5 Oscar Bonavena UD 10 07/09/1968 Estadio Luna Park, Buenos Aires, Argentina
30 Win 26–4 Thad Spencer TKO 9 (10) 28/05/1968 Royal Albert Hall, Kensington, London, England, United Kingdom
29 Loss 25–4 Henry Clark MD 10 27/04/1968 Coliseum Arena, Oakland, California
28 Win 25–3 Karl Mildenberger KO 7 (12) 05/04/1968 Festhalle, Frankfurt, Germany
27 Loss 24–3 Roger Russell SD 10 27/11/1967 Arena, Philadelphia
26 Loss 24–2 Jimmy Ellis TKO 9 (12) 05/08/1967 Astrodome, Houston WBA Heavyweight Title elimination tournament; quarter-finals; Ellis-Martin, Quarry-Patterson, Bonavena-Mildenberger, Terrell-Spencer
25 Win 24–1 Billy Daniels PTS 10 06/06/1967 Toledo, Ohio
24 Win 23–1 Lee Carr KO 2 (10) 29/05/1967 Arena, Philadelphia
23 Win 22–1 Ulric Regis TKO 5 (10) 29/05/1967 Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
22 Win 21–1 Remington Dyanti TKO 3 (10) 26/02/1967 Baltiska Hallen, Malmö, Sweden
21 Win 20–1 Mariano Echevarria RTD 3 (10) 03/02/1967 Gothenburg, Sweden
20 Win 19–1 Roberto Davila PTS 10 22/12/1966 Lima, Peru
19 Win 18–1 Amos Johnson KO 3 (10) 05/12/1966 Arena, Philadelphia
18 Win 17–1 Von Clay PTS 8 06/12/1965 Arena, Philadelphia
17 Win 16–1 Curtis Bruce TKO 6 (10) 14/10/1965 Philadelphia
16 Win 15–1 Sonny Banks KO 9 (10) 10/05/1965 Arena, Philadelphia Banks dies of injuries sustained in this bout.
15 Win 14–1 Don Warner KO 1 (?) 19/04/1965 Arena, Philadelphia
14 Win 13–1 Earl Battles KO 3 (?) 29/03/1965 Philadelphia A.C., Philadelphia
13 Win 12–1 Dave Bailey PTS 8 22/02/1965 Philadelphia A.C., Philadelphia
12 Win 11–1 Dave Russell PTS 8 20/04/1964 Arena, Philadelphia
11 Win 10–1 Allan Harmon PTS 6 25/02/1964 Convention Hall, Miami Beach, Florida
10 Loss 9–1 Floyd McCoy KO 2 (8) 30/09/1963 Arena, Philadelphia
9 Win 9–0 Billy Johnson KO 1 (?) 22/07/1963 Convention Center, Las Vegas
8 Win 8–0 Johnny Alford PTS 6 24/06/1963 Convention Hall, Miami Beach, Florida
7 Win 7–0 Frank Davis TKO 2 (?) 24/06/1963 Cambria A.C., Miami Beach, Florida
6 Win 6–0 Monte Monnie McCoy TKO 4 (6) 13/04/1963 Arena, Philadelphia
5 Win 5–0 Buddy Moore PTS 6 05/02/1963 Philadelphia
4 Win 4–0 Joe Washington PTS 6 18/12/1962 American Legion Arena, Reading, Pennsylvania
3 Win 3–0 German Hernandez KO 1 (?) 21/05/1962 Philadelphia
2 Win 2–0 Bob Rutherford KO 4 (?) 23/04/1962 Alhambra A.C., Philadelphia
1 Win 1–0 Bobby Warthem SD 4 26/01/1962 Kenwick Terrace, Sarnia, Ontario, Canada

References