Horace Gwynne

Horace "Lefty" Gwynne (October 5, 1912 April 16, 2001) was a bantamweight professional boxer from Canada, who competed in the 1930s and won the gold medal at the 1932 Summer Olympics. He was still an amateur when he won the gold medal.

Horace Gwynne
Statistics
Nickname(s)"Lefty"
Weight(s)53 kg (117 lb)
Height1.56 m (5 ft 1 in)
NationalityCanadian
Born(1912-10-05)October 5, 1912
Toronto, Ontario
DiedApril 16, 2001(2001-04-16) (aged 88)
Toronto, Ontario
StanceSouthpaw
Boxing record
Total fights50
Wins40
Wins by KO6
Losses8
Draws2

Born in Toronto, Gwynne left school after grade 8, weighing only 65 lb (29.5 kg). When he started to grow, he began working out in Stokley's Gym in Toronto to lose weight in order to become a jockey.

Amateur career

At age nineteen he won the Canadian amateur flyweight championship in London, Ontario. He entered the 1932 Olympic trials as a bantamweight, a class permitting up to 118 lb (53.5 kg); he weighed 116.

Gwynne won the Canadian amateur bantamweight title, which sent him to the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, despite his having fought only fifteen bouts before the Games. He won the Olympic gold medal match against the German Hans Ziglarski, knocking him down in the second round and winning on points. It took 56 years for another Canadian, Lennox Lewis in 1988, to win an Olympic boxing gold medal.[1]

1932 Olympic results

Below is a list of Horace Gwynne's bouts from the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics:

Pro career

Immediately after the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics, Gwynne turned professional. He won the Canadian professional bantamweight title in 1939 and retired after two more bouts without defending the title. Gwynne's professional record was 40 wins (6 KO), eight losses (1 KO), and two draws. .[2]

Honors

Gwynne has been inducted into the Canadian Boxing Hall of Fame and the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame. He died in Toronto.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.