Jimmy Carruthers | |
Nationality: | Australian |
Realname: | James William Carruthers |
Weight: | Bantamweight |
Birth Date: | 1929 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Paddington, New South Wales |
Death Place: | Sydney, New South Wales |
Reach: | 67inches |
Style: | Southpaw |
Total: | 25 |
Wins: | 21 |
Ko: | 13 |
Losses: | 4 |
James William Carruthers (5 July 1929 – 15 August 1990) was an Australian boxer, who became world champion in the bantamweight division.
Jimmy was the 2009 Inductee for the Australian National Boxing Hall of Fame Veterans category.
Carruthers's boxing career started as an Australian representative at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London. In his first-round match of the bantamweight competition, he fought Fred Daigle of Canada and won on points. He defeated Arnoldo Parés of Argentina in his second match. However, he had sustained an eye injury during his bout with Parés, and had to withdraw from the quarter-final match with the eventual gold medalist Tibor Csík of Hungary.[1]
Carruthers joined the professional ranks in 1950, and was an immediate success. By then, he was being managed by Dr. Jim McGirr, and trained by "Silent" Bill McConnell.
He won the Australian Bantamweight title in 1951 and then the British Commonwealth and Bantamweight Championship of the world the following year.[2] Carruthers became Australia's first universally recognised boxing world champion when he knocked out the guy who had been crowned South Africa's first world champion himself, Vic Toweel, in the first round.[1] Great Australians of the past—including Young Griffo, Mick King, and Les Darcy—had all won world titles, but they had not received international acceptance at the time of winning their respective crowns. After defending his newly won world bantamweight title by knocking out Toweel in the tenth round of their rematch at Johannesburg, and then against the American Henry "Pappy" Gault in Sydney, by a fifteen-rounds decision, it was found that Carruthers was carrying a 30-foot-long tapeworm.[3]
He was matched for a world title bout against the New Zealand Bantamweight Champion Lyn Philp.[4] For unclear reasons the fight never went ahead.
After a non-title bout in Sydney, and a further title defence against Chamroen Songkitrat in Bangkok, Carruthers retired on 16 May 1954. Among the fighters he defeated were South African Vic Toweel (twice); Pappy Gault; Bobby Sinn and Chamroen Songkitrat. He made a brief comeback in Melbourne and Sydney in the early sixties in non-title fights, with his last fight in Wellington New Zealand in 1962 where he lost to Jimmy Cassidy.
He worked on the Sydney docks as a wharf labourer in the 1950s.
Carruthers was married to Myra (née Hamilton) until his death and is survived by four children - Boyd, Ginna, Dimiette and Lukas. During the 1950s he owned the colourful Bells Hotel in Sydney's Woolloomooloo. After that he had a number of businesses, including several vegetarian takeaway and juice bars in Sydney.
In his last years Carruthers suffered from lung cancer and Parkinson's disease. He died on 15 August 1990.[3] In 1995 he was inducted into the World Boxing Hall of Fame.
Result | Record | Opponent | Type | Round | Date | Location | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
25 | Loss | 21–4 | Jimmy Cassidy | DQ | 8 (10) | Jun 18, 1962 | ||
24 | Win | 21–3 | Johnny Jarrett | TKO | 2 (12) | Mar 29, 1962 | ||
23 | Win | 20–3 | Louis Magnifico | KO | 2 (12) | Mar 9, 1962 | ||
22 | Loss | 19–3 | Don Johnson | TKO | 5 (12) | Dec 15, 1961 | ||
21 | Loss | 19–2 | Wally Taylor | PTS | 12 | Nov 20, 1961 | ||
20 | Loss | 19–1 | Aldo Pravisani | PTS | 12 | Sep 11, 1961 | ||
19 | Win | 19–0 | Chamroen Songkitrat | PTS | 12 | May 2, 1954 | ||
18 | Win | 18–0 | Bobby Sinn | PTS | 12 | Mar 29, 1954 | ||
17 | Win | 17–0 | Pappy Gault | UD | 15 | Nov 13, 1953 | ||
16 | Win | 16–0 | Vic Toweel | KO | 10 (15) | Mar 21, 1953 | ||
15 | Win | 15–0 | Vic Toweel | KO | 1 (15) | Nov 15, 1952 | ||
14 | Win | 14–0 | Johnny O'Brien | PTS | 12 | May 12, 1952 | ||
13 | Win | 13–0 | Ray Coleman | PTS | 12 | Apr 7, 1952 | ||
12 | Win | 12–0 | Taffy Sammy Hancock | TKO | 7 (12) | Mar 13, 1952 | ||
11 | Win | 11–0 | Luis Castillo | PTS | 12 | Nov 26, 1951 | ||
10 | Win | 10–0 | Enrique Morales | TKO | 7 (12) | Aug 27, 1951 | ||
9 | Win | 9–0 | Elley Bennett | PTS | 15 | May 14, 1951 | ||
8 | Win | 8–0 | Billy Herbert | TKO | 10 (12) | Apr 2, 1951 | ||
7 | Win | 7–0 | Bobby Scrivano | KO | 1 (12) | Mar 5, 1951 | ||
6 | Win | 6–0 | Bluey Wilkins | PTS | 12 | Jan 22, 1951 | ||
5 | Win | 5–0 | Jim McFadden | TKO | 9 (12) | Dec 11, 1950 | ||
4 | Win | 4–0 | Keith Francis | TKO | 10 (12) | Nov 20, 1950 | ||
3 | Win | 3–0 | Fred Kay | TKO | 12 (12) | Oct 19, 1950 | ||
2 | Win | 2–0 | Ron Wilson | TKO | 5 (12) | Oct 13, 1950 | ||
1 | Win | 1–0 | Ted Fitzgerald | TKO | 3 (12) | Aug 15, 1950 | ||