Al Hostak Explained

Al Hostak
Realname:Albert Paul Hostak
Nickname:The Savage Slav
Weight:Middleweight
Height:6feet
Reach:6feet
Nationality:American
Birth Date:January 7, 1916
Birth Place:Minneapolis, Minnesota
Death Place:Kirkland, Washington
Style:Orthodox
Total:84
Wins:64
Ko:41
Losses:9
Draws:11

Albert (Al) Paul Hostak (January 7, 1916 – August 13, 2006), nicknamed "the Savage Slav," was an American middleweight boxer who fought from 1932-1949. Hostak twice held the National Boxing Association Middleweight title between 1938 and 1940. He was known as a hard puncher and had a record of 64 wins (41 knockouts), 9 losses (3 knockouts), and 11 draws. In 2003, Hostak made The Ring Magazine's list of 100 greatest punchers of all time.[1] [2] [3]

Early career and life

Hostak was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Slovak immigrants who eventually moved to Seattle, Washington when Hostak was two, settling in South Seattle's Georgetown District.[4] Having developed a stutter in his youth, Hostak was drawn to boxing after fighting several of his tormentors. He would begin his boxing career as a 16-year-old in 1932, fighting many of his bouts in nearby White Center. Hostak would go unbeaten for his first 27 bouts in the Seattle area, all four and six-rounders, before losing a decision to Jimmy Best. He would continue to fight preliminary matches through the end of 1936, while he worked as a sparring partner for 1936 middleweight title holder Freddie Steele of Tacoma, Washington.[1] [2]

Rise to prominence

As 1937 began, middleweight champion Freddie Steele's handlers decided to show him on the East Coast away from his home in the Pacific Northwest. With Steele, Seattle's top boxing draw leaving town, Nate Druxman needed to develop another box office attraction, a role Hostak would fulfill in 1937.[2]

Hostak began the year by knocking out Newark middleweight contender Tony Fisher, in two rounds on January 12. A month later he knocked out Leonard Bennett, who had broken Steele's jaw in their first bout. In March and April, Hostak scored second-round knockouts of Johnny Sikes and Young Terry. This set up a bout with Eddie (Babe) Risko on July 13, 1937. Risko lost the middleweight title a year before to Steele, and had lost a rematch as well. Hostak gained national recognition when he knocked out Risko in the 7th round in Seattle. In a clear victory, Risko was floored by Hostak once in the third, and once in the fourth. Catching his opponent flat-footed with no defense, Hostak drove his right with great power into Risko's unguarded chin, followed with two rights to the ribs. Risko went down for the count.[5]

In August, he knocked out Allen Matthews in nine rounds. With three more knockouts in 1937, he stretching his streak to eleven. At the end of 1937, Ring Magazine ranked Hostak the #3 Middleweight in the world.[1]

A match with Steele in Seattle appeared likely for the summer of 1938. Steele suffered a setback in January, when Fred Apostoli stopped him in a non-title bout at Madison Square Garden. In the process, New York recognized Apostoli, not Steele as middleweight champion. Seattle promoter Nate Druxman continued with plans to pit Steele against Hostak that summer.[1]

Taking the NBA world middleweight championship, Freddie Steele, July, 1938

Hostak's bout with Steele was scheduled for July 26, 1938, at Seattle's Civic Stadium. It would be the largest attendance in Seattle's boxing history, with over 35,000 fans. Hostak used his own jab to parry Steeles's. Feinting with his jab to entice Steele to drop his right hand, he connected with a rapid left hook that travelled only eight inches, but knocked Steele down. Though Steele was up quickly from the initial knockdown, Hostak would send him back to the canvas three more times. Steele arose quickly from his third trip to the canvas, but after a stiff right, Steele was counted out by referee Jack Dempsey at 1:43 of the 1st round, officially giving Hostak his first NBA world middleweight championship. Hostak fought again in September 1938, stopping Young Stuhley in three rounds.[1] [6]

Losing the NBA world middleweight title to Solly Krieger, September, 1938

He made his first title defense against Brooklyn's Solly Krieger on November 1, 1938, losing a fifteen round decision before a crowd of 10,000, in Seattle. Hostak broke both of his hands early in the bout. Krieger fought inside against Hostak, pounding his body. In the 14th round, Krieger sealed a majority decision victory, when he knocked down a tired Hostak for the first time in his career. With terrific body blows, and savage and effective infighting, Krieger wrested the championship from Hostak. Krieger employed a successful bob and weave strategy, which puzzled Hostak, and which he could not successfully defend, particularly in later rounds.[7]

Retaking the world middleweight championship, Solly Krieger, June, 1939

After his hands had healed, Hostak returned with a third-round knockout of Johnny Erjavec in Seattle, before facing Krieger before a huge crowd of 22,000 in a world middleweight championship rematch in Seattle on June 27, 1939. In the seven and a half months between their two bouts, Krieger boxed as a light heavyweight having a very difficult time making the 160-pound middleweight limit. Krieger was a shadow of his former self in the rematch, forcing himself to lose weight too quickly, and Hostak knocked him down four times. Hostak forced Krieger to take the lead, but when he took a defensive crouch, Hostak opened him up with blows to the midsection. In the fourth Hostak knocked Krieger to the canvas with a flurry of lefts and rights for a count of nine. On his second trip to the canvas, the referee called a fourth-round TKO. Hostak became the first boxer to regain the middleweight title since Stanley Ketchel in 1908.[8]

After an October 1939 non-title knockout over Charley Coates, Hostak signed for his first bout ever outside of the state of Washington, facing German-Jewish refugee Eric Seelig in Cleveland on December 11, 1939. On December 11, 1935 Seelig fought an NBA world middleweight title match against Al Hostak before an enthusiastic crowd of 10,000 at the Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, losing in a first round knockout of a scheduled fifteen rounds. Seelig sparred cautiously in the opening of the round, but was sent to the canvas from a crushing left hook to the right side of his jaw, and could not resume the bout until a count of nine was completed. A left and right put him to the canvas for the count 1:21 into the first round.[9] [10]

Losing the NBA world middleweight title with injured hands to Tony Zale, July, 1940

Nate Druxman rematched Hostak and Zale for the middleweight title on July 19, 1940, before a crowd of 16,000, at Civic Stadium in Seattle. Once again Hostak injured his hands in the bout, while Zale wore him down with a devastating body attack. Before badly injuring his hands, Hostak had his best round in the fifth when he dished out his heaviest punches, and left Zale groggy.[11] With both of his eyes swollen, and his left hand apparently injured, Hostak was dropped in the 12th for a count of nine and again in 13th rounds, before the bout was stopped 1:20 in the thirteenth by referee Benny Leonard and Zale took the title from Hostak.[1] [12] Zale's rushing attack with left hooks to the head, and occasional uppercuts to the chin, proved too much for Hostak, particularly in the second half of the bout.

Earlier on January 29, 1940, Hostak had unsuccessfully fought a non-title match before a crowd of 11,112 in Chicago against middleweight contender Zale at Chicago Stadium. It may be important to note that Hostak knocked Zale down in the 1st round, breaking two fingers in his left hand in the 5th round.[13] As a result, Zale swept the last five rounds to take a unanimous decision.[1]

Post-championship boxing career

After taking time for his hands to heal, Hostak returned in February 1941 with a knockout win in Chicago, followed up by two more knockouts in April and May in Seattle. He returned to Chicago to face Zale in a third fight on May 28, 1941. Hostak knocked down Zale early, but he was up before a count could be administered. In the 2nd round, Zale pounded Hostak to the body, dropping him eight times, before he was finally counted out. In November, Hostak would make his first and only appearance at Madison Square Garden, against former middleweight champion Ken Overlin. Overlin easily outboxed a befuddled Hostak, who threw very few punches before losing a lopsided decision.[1]

In Hostak's absence from Seattle, another middleweight attraction had been developed by Druxman, Harry (Kid) Matthews of Emmett, Idaho. The two would face each other on September 29, 1942, in Seattle, with Hostak knocking Matthews down twice, but again being outboxed, losing a majority decision. The two would fight to a draw in a November rematch in Seattle. This time both boxers performed more poorly than in their first bout, particularly Matthews, who spent much of the bout in retreat. Hostak's boxing career temporarily ended along with Druxman's after the bout, as both did service in World War II. Hostak joined the Army in 1942, and trained as a paratrooper, serving in the 101st Airborne. His overseas duty included acting as part of the occupying force in Japan, according to his son.[1]

Hostak had two bouts in 1944 while stationed in Houston, Texas, scoring a pair of knockouts. On June 21, 1944, he defeated Glen Lee in a third round knockout for the USA Texas Light Heavyweight championship while serving as a Corporal in the army. Both contestants were serving in the armed forces, and Jack Dempsey, a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy served as referee. The match raised millions in war bonds.[1] [14]

He made his post-war return in June 1946, with four more knockouts against modest opposition. He took on middleweight contender Steve Belloise in Houston in January 1947. He sent Belloise to the mat in the 1st, but was knocked out in the 4th. After a 5th-round TKO over Anton Raadik in August 1947 in Chicago, Hostak avenged his loss to Belloise by winning a decision in Seattle before a crowd of 7,000 on August 26. Hostak put Belloise down for a seven count in the second, and had an edge in eight of the ten rounds with only one to Belloise and one even.[15] With the win, the 31-year-old Hostak again earned a rating and wide recognition as a middleweight contender.[1]

Hostak's resurgence would be short-lived, as he was held to a draw in a mixed decision on October 7, 1947 by George Duke, with many fans thinking Duke had outboxed him.[16] He then lost a split decision in Portland, Oregon, to Jack Snapp, followed by a draw to Paul Perkins. In December 1948, Hostak decisioned Perkins in a rematch, before finishing his career on his 33rd birthday by stopping Snapp in nine rounds in Seattle.[1]

Life after boxing

After boxing, Hostak held jobs as a bartender, a King County Jail guard, and a security guard at the Longacres Race Track. He even taught school-age kids how to defend themselves in fights. Hostak was married to Rose Francis in 1948. He died on August 13, 2006, in Kirkland, Washington, of complications from a stroke that he suffered ten days earlier, and was interred at Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Seattle. He was inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame in 1997.[17] [18] [2]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRoundDateLocationNotes
84Win64–9–11Jack SnappKO9 (10)Jan 7, 1949
83Win63–9–11Paul PerkinsUD10Dec 9, 1948
82Draw62–9–11Paul PerkinsPTS10Nov 26, 1948
81Loss62–9–10Jack SnappSD10Mar 16, 1948
80Draw62–8–10George DukeMD10Oct 7, 1947
79Win62–8–9Steve BelloisePTS10Aug 26, 1947
78Win61–8–9Anton RaadikTKO5 (10)Jun 6, 1947
77Loss60–8–9Steve BelloiseKO4 (10)Jan 22, 1947
76Win60–7–9Benny DrollTKO2 (10)Jan 7, 1947
75Win59–7–9Sam HughesKO1 (10)Nov 12, 1946
74Win58–7–9George EvansKO1 (10)Oct 22, 1946
73Win57–7–9Roman StarrKO4 (10)Jun 4, 1946
72Win56–7–9Glen LeeKO3 (10)Jun 21, 1944
71Win55–7–9George BaratkoKO5 (10)Apr 4, 1944
70Draw54–7–9Harry MatthewsPTS10Nov 6, 1942
69Loss54–7–8Harry MatthewsMD10Sep 29, 1942
68Loss54–6–8Ken OverlinUD10Nov 21, 1941
67Loss54–5–8Tony ZaleKO2 (15)May 28, 1941
66Win54–4–8Atilio SabatinoTKO1 (10)May 5, 1941
65Win53–4–8Ben BrownKO3 (10)Apr 1, 1941
64Win52–4–8George BurnetteKO1 (10)Feb 21, 1941
63Loss51–4–8Tony ZaleTKO13 (15)Jul 19, 1940
62Loss51–3–8Tony ZaleUD10Jan 29, 1940
61Win51–2–8Erich SeeligKO1 (15)Dec 11, 1939
60Win50–2–8Charley CoatesKO3 (10)Oct 26, 1939
59Win49–2–8Solly KriegerTKO4 (15)Jun 27, 1939
58Win48–2–8Johnny ErjavecKO3 (10)Mar 7, 1939
57Loss47–2–8Solly KriegerMD15Nov 1, 1938
56Win47–1–8Young StuhleyTKO3 (10)Sep 19, 1938
55Win46–1–8Freddie SteeleKO1 (15)Jul 26, 1938
54Win45–1–8Chief ParrisKO4 (10)Apr 12, 1938
53Win44–1–8Swede BerglundTKO2 (10)Mar 1, 1938
52Win43–1–8Jack HibbardTKO1 (10)Jan 11, 1938
51Win42–1–8Don La RueKO1 (10)Dec 2, 1937
50Win41–1–8Bob TurnerKO2 (10)Nov 2, 1937
49Win40–1–8Otto BlackwellKO3 (10)Oct 14, 1937
48Win39–1–8Allen MatthewsTKO9 (10)Aug 10, 1937
47Win38–1–8Eddie Babe RiskoKO7 (10)Jul 13, 1937
46Win37–1–8Young TerryTKO2 (10)Apr 13, 1937
45Win36–1–8Johnny SikesKO2 (10)Mar 9, 1937
44Win35–1–8Leonard BennettKO8 (10)Feb 16, 1937
43Win34–1–8Tony FisherKO2 (10)Jan 12, 1937
42Win33–1–8Irish Johnny SmithKO2 (6)Dec 15, 1936
41Win32–1–8Jim NealeyKO1 (10)Nov 10, 1936
40Win31–1–8Don La RuePTS8Oct 6, 1936
39Win30–1–8Mike BazzoneTKO4 (6)Sep 22, 1936
38Draw29–1–8Irish Ed BradleyPTS6Sep 3, 1936
37Win29–1–7Don La RuePTS6Aug 20, 1936
36Win28–1–7Billy LancasterPTS6Jul 30, 1936
35Win27–1–7Sidney BrentPTS6Jul 11, 1936
34Draw26–1–7Jimmy BestPTS6Jan 28, 1936
33Win26–1–6Baby Joe GansPTS8Dec 17, 1935
32Win25–1–6Billy LancasterPTS6Dec 3, 1935
31Win24–1–6Billy LancasterTKO5 (6)Nov 19, 1935
30Win23–1–6Eddie IvoryTKO2 (6)Nov 5, 1935
29Win22–1–6Wild Willie WalkerPTS4Oct 29, 1935
28Win21–1–6Sidney BrentPTS4Jul 30, 1935
27Loss20–1–6Jimmy BestPTS6May 16, 1935
26Draw20–0–6Dick JohnsonPTS6Mar 21, 1935
25Draw20–0–5Cecil JordanPTS6Feb 21, 1935
24Draw20–0–4Johnny FosterPTS6Feb 14, 1935
23Draw20–0–3Jack HibbardPTS6Feb 7, 1935
22Draw20–0–2Jack HibbardPTS4Jan 24, 1935
21Win20–0–1Jimmy IrelandKO2 (4)Aug 21, 1934
20Win19–0–1Eddie FosterKO2 (4)May 22, 1934
19Win18–0–1Jimmy HeffermanPTS4Feb 6, 1934
18Win17–0–1Jimmy Kid SwansonPTS6Feb 1, 1934
17Win16–0–1Bob F JeffriesKO4 (4)Jan 11, 1934
16Win15–0–1Willis OverPTS4Dec 8, 1933
15Win14–0–1Phil BeckPTS4Nov 23, 1933
14Draw13–0–1Jack HibbardPTS6Oct 1, 1933
13Win13–0Alec WebberPTS6Apr 27, 1933
12Win12–0Phil GleasonKO2 (?)Apr 13, 1933
11Win11–0Heinie RobertsPTS4Mar 9, 1933
10Win10–0Eddie UmbertosKO2 (4)Feb 16, 1933
9Win9–0Heinie RobertsPTS4Feb 2, 1933
8Win8–0Heinie RobertsPTS4Jan 19, 1933
7Win7–0Heinie RobertsPTS4Nov 1, 1932
6Win6–0Heinie RobertsPTS4Oct 1, 1932
5Win5–0Allen FranksPTS4Sep 22, 1932
4Win4–0Hank WhartonPTS4Aug 8, 1932
3Win3–0Vern MoenPTS4Aug 1, 1932
2Win2–0Al BrownKO1 (4)Jul 1, 1932
1Win1–0Jimmy SmithKO3 (4)May 20, 1932

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Al Hostak Boxing Record. BoxRec. 6 July 2015.
  2. Web site: Al Hostak BoxRec Bio. BoxRec. 6 July 2015.
  3. Web site: Al Hostak CBZ Record. Cyber Boxing Zone. 6 July 2015.
  4. Web site: United States Census, 1920. Hostak. 1920. FamilySearch.
  5. "Risko Takes Bad Beating From Hostak", The Evening News, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, pg. 12, 14 July 1937
  6. Put down for the last time with a stiff right in "Freddie Steele Kayoed in First", Daily News, New York, New York, pg. 184, 27 July 1938
  7. "Hostak Loses to Krieger", Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles, California, pg. 31, 2 November 1938
  8. Jones, George, "Hostak Stops Krieger to Regain Title", The San Bernardino County Sun, San Bernardino, California, pg. 19, 28 June 1939
  9. Becker, Fred, "Seelig is Stopped in Opening Stanza", The Evening Independent, Massillon, Ohio, pg. 10, 12 December 1939
  10. Left hook to jaw in "Champions Keep Crown in Tilts", Freeport Journal-Standard, Freeport, Illinois, pg. 15, 12 December 1939
  11. "Zale Crumples Hostak to Win NBA Title", The Times San Mateo, California, pg. 6, 20 July 1940
  12. "Tony Zale Beats Hostak", The San Bernardino County Sun, San Bernardino, California, pg. 14, 20 July 1940
  13. Broke two fingers in left hand, in "Hostak Will Lose Crack at Champ", The Columbus Telegram, Columbus, Nebraska, pg. 7, 20 January 1940
  14. "Sports Shorts", The Emporia Gazette, Emporia, Kansas, pg. 12, 22 June 1944
  15. Crowd of 7,000, and he took eight rounds in "Al Hostak Whips Steve Belloise", Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Honolulu, Hawaii, pg. 20, 27 August 1947
  16. Duke may have outboxed him in "George Duke, Hostak Draw", Herald and News, Klamath Falls, Oregon, pg. 8, 8 October 1947
  17. News: Seattle Times Obituary of Hostak. Seattle Times. 6 July 2018.
  18. News: Seattle Post Intelligencer Obituary of Hostak. Seattle Post Intelligencer. 6 July 2018.