Richard Smith (10 February 1886 – 8 January 1950) was a British light heavyweight and heavyweight boxer who was British light heavyweight champion between 1914 and 1916 and again in 1918. He fought under the name Dick Smith.
| Dick Smith | |
|---|---|
| Statistics | |
| Weight(s) | Light heavyweight, heavyweight |
| Nationality | British |
| Born | (1886-02-10)10 February 1886 Woolwich, London, England |
| Died | 8 January 1950(1950-01-08) (aged 63) Dartford, England |
| Boxing record | |
| Total fights | 18 |
| Wins | 6 |
| Wins by KO | 1 |
| Losses | 11 |
| Draws | 1 |
Born in Woolwich, London, Dick Smith served in the armed forces in India where he won several services boxing championships, and he also won police boxing titles while a member of the police force.[1]
As an amateur he won successive A.B.A heavyweight titles in 1912 and 1913.[2]
He had his first professional fight in January 1914, a challenge to Dennis Haugh for his British light heavyweight title, which he lost in a controversial points decision. He met Haugh again two months later, this time winning on points over 20 rounds to take the title.[1] He was due to fight French champion Georges Carpentier in May 1914 but the fight was postponed after Carpentier was kicked by a horse.[3] They were due to fight in November 1914 but the fight was cancelled.[4]
Smith, then a sergeant in the British Army gymnastic staff, then moved up to the heavyweight division, challenging Bombardier Billy Wells for the British heavyweight title in May 1915; He lost after being knocked out in the ninth round.[5] He met Wells for the title again in February 1916, losing by a third-round knockout.[6]
He returned to light-heavyweight for a successful defence of his British title against Harry Curzon in June 1916.[7]
He challenged Wells for the heavyweight title for a third time in August 1916 in front of 11,800 people at St James' Park, Newcastle, this time being stopped in the ninth round.[8]
He made the second defence of his light-heavyweight title against Harry Reeve in October 1916, with Reeve taking the title on a points decision after 20 rounds.[9] Reeve relinquished the title and Smith fought Joe Beckett in February 1918 for the vacant title; Smith won a 20-round points decision to reclaim the title.[10] By December 1918 Smith had risen to the rank of company sergeant major.[11]
In July 1919 Smith met Carpentier in Paris with the EBU heavyweight and the IBU light heavyweight titles at stake; Carpentier won by a knockout in the 8th round.
In March 1920 he fought Beckett for the British heavyweight title, Beckett winning by a 5th-round knockout.[10] In November 1922 he beat Australian heavyweight champion George Cook.[12] In May 1923 he fought Beckett again for the heavyweight title but lost again after being knocked out in the 17th round while ahead on points.[10]
Smith retired from boxing in 1924, his last fight a defeat to Jack Bloomfield attended by the Prince of Wales, after which he ran a pub in Dartford where he displayed his trophies and his Lonsdale Belt.[1] Smith was described as "one of the most scientific boxers of the day".[13]
He was a keen golfer and also worked as a boxing referee.[14]
Dick Smith died on 8 January 1950 at his home in Dartford, aged 63.[1]
British boxing | ||
|---|---|---|
| ||
| British pioneers |
| |
| List of British boxing champions |
| |
| Inaugural winners of the NSC Challenge Belt | ||
| Inaugural winners of BBBofC Lonsdale Belt |
| |
| ||
Boxing | ||
|---|---|---|
| ||
| Rules |
| |
| Terms |
| |
| Punches |
| |
| Styles and technique |
| |
| Related |
| |
| ||
Boxing history | |
|---|---|
|