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Pete Rademacher

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Pete Rademacher
Rademacher in 1961
Born
Thomas Peter Rademacher

(1928-11-20)November 20, 1928
DiedJune 4, 2020(2020-06-04)(aged 91)
NationalityAmerican
Statistics
Weight(s)Heavyweight
Height187 cm (6 ft 2 in)[1]
Reach196 cm (77 in)[1]
StanceOrthodox
Bo xing record
Total fights23
Wins15
Wins by KO8
Losses7
Draws1
Medal record
RepresentingtheUnited States
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 1956 Melbourne +81 kg

Thomas Peter Rademacher(November 20, 1928 – June 4, 2020) was an American heavyweight boxer.[3]As anamateur,he was a gold medalist at the1956 Olympics.[4]Rademacher became the only person to challenge for theworld heavyweight championshipin his first professional bout when he facedFloyd PattersoninSeattleon August 22, 1957.[5][6]He compiled a 15-7-1 record over 23 professional bouts.

A formercollege footballplayer atWashington State,[4][5]Rademacher took up bo xing as a form of rehabilitation during his recovery fromrheumatic fever,which he contracted in military school.[7]

Amateur career

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In his amateur career, Rademacher won 72 bouts and lost 7. He won a series of tournaments, including the 1949 and 1951–1953SeattleGolden Gloves(he lost in 1950 toZora Folley,who was his frequent opponent throughout his bo xing career), and theUS Amateur Championshipas aheavyweightin 1953—avenging his earlier loss to Folley.

He captured theChicagoGolden Gloves, the All-Armychampionship, and theServicechampionship in 1956, before qualifying for theOlympicteam. At theOlympics,he captured a gold medal in the heavyweight division and served as theU.S. flagbearer at the closing ceremony.[2]

1956 Olympic results

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  • Round of 16: bye
  • Quarterfinal: DefeatedJosef Němec(Czechoslovakia) KO 2
  • Semifinal: DefeatedDaan Bekker(South Africa) KO 3
  • Final: DefeatedLev Mukhin(Soviet Union) KO 1 (won gold medal)

Rademacher also attended college, playing offensive line on thefootballteam forWashington State.

Professional career

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Rademacher andFolleyin 1958

After winning the gold medal, Rademacher started saying that he would be able to become world heavyweight champion in his first professional fight. He made his belief public and was able to lure world Heavyweight championFloyd Pattersoninto defending his crown against him in his professional debut. It is the only time to date that a fighter making his professional debut has challenged for the world heavyweight title.

The bout, atSick's Stadiumin Seattle, was refereed by former light-heavyweight championTommy Loughran,who himself had contended for the heavy crown once, vs.Primo Carnera,in 1934. Rademacher dropped Patterson in round two, but Patterson recovered and knocked Rademacher down seven times, defeating him by aknockoutin round six.[1][2][6]Legendary bo xing promoterJack Hurleypromoted the match.

Rademacher foughtZora Folley,Brian London,George Chuvalo,Buddy Turman,and the former world light heavyweight champion,Archie Moore.He lost to Moore, Folley and London but beat Chuvalo,LaMar Clark,and Turman, among others. His last bout was with former world middleweight championCarl "Bobo" Olson,whom he beat by decision.[1]

Personal life

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Rademacher hadFinnishancestry; his maternal grandparents were immigrants fromFinland.[8]He was married to Margaret and had a daughter Susan (born c. 1954–1955).[9]In addition to bo xing, he was a salesman and inventor. He was president of the company Kiefer-McNeil which was founded by fellow Olympian,Adolph Kiefer.[2]Rademacher died inSandusky, Ohioon June 4, 2020, at the age of 91.[10][11]His brain was donated for medical research.[10]

Professional bo xing record

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23 fights 15 wins 7 losses
By knockout 8 6
By decision 7 1
Draws 1
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
23 Win 15–7–1 United StatesBobo Olson UD 10 Apr 3, 1962 United StatesHonolulu Stadium,Honolulu, Hawaii,U.S.
22 Loss 14–7–1 GermanyKarl Mildenberger PTS 10 Jan 20, 1962 GermanyWestfalenhallen,Dortmund,Germany
21 Win 14–6–1 United StatesBuddy Turman TKO 9 (10) Nov 30, 1961 United StatesFair Park Coliseum,Dallas, Texas,U.S.
20 Loss 13–6–1 United StatesArchie Moore TKO 6 (10),2:10 Oct 23, 1961 United StatesBaltimore Coliseum,Baltimore, Maryland,U.S.
19 Loss 13–5–1 United StatesGeorge Logan KO 2 (10),2:40 Aug 17, 1961 United StatesBoise, Idaho,U.S.
18 Loss 13–4–1 United StatesDoug Jones KO 5 (10),0:54 Apr 29, 1961 United StatesSt. Nicholas Arena,New York City, New York,U.S.
17 Win 13–3–1 United StatesDan Vanderford KO 1 (10),2:17 Apr 14, 1961 United StatesArmory,Gastonia, North Carolina,U.S.
16 Win 12–3–1 United StatesHarvey Taylor KO 1 (10),2:47 Feb 22, 1961 United StatesYakima,Washington, U.S.
15 Win 11–3–1 United StatesDonnie Fleeman UD 10 Jan 23, 1961 United StatesSeattle Civic Ice Arena,Seattle, Washington, U.S.
14 Win 10–3–1 GermanyWilli Besmanoff UD 10 Dec 13, 1960 United StatesCleveland Arena, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
13 Win 9–3–1 United StatesKirk Barrow SD 10 Dec 8, 1960 United StatesSpokane Coliseum,Spokane, Washington,U.S.
12 Win 8–3–1 CanadaGeorge Chuvalo UD 10 Jul 19, 1960 CanadaMaple Leaf Stadium,Toronto,Canada
11 Win 7–3–1 United StatesLaMar Clark TKO 10 (10),2:27 Jun 29, 1960 United StatesDerks Field,Salt Lake City, Utah,U.S.
10 Loss 6–3–1 United KingdomBrian London KO 7 (10),0:15 Apr 26, 1960 United KingdomEmpire Pool,London,England
9 Draw 6–2–1 GermanyUlli Ritter PTS 10 Apr 8, 1960 GermanySportpalast,Berlin,Germany
8 Win 6–2 GermanyUlli Nitzschke KO 7 (10) Feb 6, 1960 GermanyFesthalle Frankfurt,Frankfurt,Germany
7 Win 5–2 United StatesJohnny York PTS 8 Dec 9, 1959 United StatesCleveland Arena,Cleveland, Ohio,U.S.
6 Win 4–2 United StatesBuddy Keener KO 1 (10),2:52 Nov 12, 1959 United StatesCity Auditorium, Columbus, Georgia, U.S.
5 Win 3–2 United StatesCalvin Butler UD 10 Sep 29, 1959 United StatesMiami Beach Convention Center,Miami Beach, Florida,U.S.
4 Win 2–2 United StatesRalph Schneider TKO 3 (10) Sep 17, 1959 United StatesGreenville Memorial Auditorium,Greenville, South Carolina,U.S.
3 Win 1–2 United StatesTommy Thompson RTD 5 (10) Aug 23, 1959 United StatesMunicipal Auditorium,Columbus, Georgia,U.S.
2 Loss 0–2 United StatesZora Folley KO 4 (10),1:15 Jul 25, 1958 United StatesOlympic Auditorium,Los Angeles, California, U.S.
1 Loss 0–1 United StatesFloyd Patterson KO 6 (15),2:57 Aug 22, 1957 United StatesSick's Stadium,Seattle, Washington,U.S. For NYSAC andThe Ringheavyweight titles

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdPete Rademacher.Boxrec.
  2. ^abcdPete Rademacher.sports-reference
  3. ^"Pete Rademacher, 1956 Olympic bo xing champion, dies at 91".Houston Chronicle.RetrievedJune 5,2020.
  4. ^ab"Former WSC boxer takes Olympic title".Lewiston Morning Tribune.(Idaho). Associated Press. December 2, 1956. p. 13.
  5. ^abBoni, Bill (August 22, 1957)."Patterson gains four pounds; Pete eager for longer fight".Spokesman-Review.(Spokane, Washington). p. 18.
  6. ^abBoni, Bill (August 23, 1957)."Patterson pounds Pete; all over in 6th round".Spokesman-Review.(Spokane, Washington). p. 1.
  7. ^Borrone, Bert (July 31, 1957)."Suspicion Grows That Marciano Is Using Role As Coach Of Rademacher As Stepping Stone To Comeback Try".Park City Daily News.Bowling Green, Kentucky. p. 13.
  8. ^"Rademacher, Thomas Peter (b. 1928)".historylink.org.RetrievedMay 10,2019.
  9. ^File:Wife and daughter of Pete Rademacher 1957.jpg
  10. ^ab"Pete Rademacher".Kenosha News.Kenosha, WI. June 6, 2020. p. C2.RetrievedDecember 20,2022– viaNewspapers.Open access icon
  11. ^Goul, Matt (June 6, 2020)Olympic bo xing champion Pete Rademacher, 91, dies.cleveland
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