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Billy Papke

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Real name
  
William H. Papke

Wins by KO
  
32

Martial art
  
Boxing

Rated at
  
Middleweight

Name
  
Billy Papke

Division
  
Middleweight


Nationality
  
United States

Role
  
Boxer

Total fights
  
63

Wins
  
40

Height
  
1.75 m

Draws
  
6

Billy Papke Jo Sports Inc

Nickname(s)
  
The Illinois Thunderbolt

Born
  
September 17, 1886 Spring Valley, Illinois (
1886-09-17
)

Died
  
November 26, 1936, Newport Beach, California, United States

Stanley ketchel vs billy papke iv


Billy Papke (born William Papke, and known as "The Illinois Thunderbolt") (September 17, 1886 – November 26, 1936) was an American boxer who held the World Middleweight Championship.

Contents

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Georges carpentier vs wells grundhoven billy papke


World middleweight champion & rivalry with Ketchel

Billy Papke Cyber Boxing Zone Billy Papke

He began his boxing career in 1906, winning 37 and drawing six times. His first loss was a 10-round decision to Stanley Ketchel, his first of four fights with Ketchel. He won the second meeting, and the World Middleweight title, largely by the expedient of punching Ketchel in the face with his right hand when Ketchel stepped forward to shake hands at the beginning of the bout. Two months later, he lost his title to Ketchel and received a terrific beating in the process; Papke's own wife did not recognize him after the bout was over. Papke lost the 4th and final meeting, which was a particularly savage encounter and lasted 20 rounds.

Later career

Billy Papke Billy Papke Jr BoxRec

After Ketchel's murder Papke was one of several middleweights contesting the right to be called World Middleweight Champ. After an October, 1911 loss in Boston to Bob Moha, he briefly retired; but by 1912 he had returned to the ring. He travelled to Paris where he beat future champion Georges Carpentier. It became a non championship fight after Papke exceeded the middle-weight limit at the pre-fight weigh-in. He was beaten by another American, Frank Klaus, when the referee disqualified Papke for breaching the rules, ending his title hopes. He continued fighting until 1919, losing a four rounder to Soldier Bartfield.

Death and legacy

Papke died in 1936; he shot and killed his wife, then committed suicide by turning the gun on himself.

Billy Papke was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2001. He is a key character in the novel, The Killings of Stanley Ketchel, (2005), by James Carlos Blake.

References

Billy Papke Wikipedia