New York Daily News

THE EYE OF THE ‘LADY TYGER’

Women’s boxing legend Marian Trimiar takes her spot in history

- BY TONY PAIGE

On May 28, two days before Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano would put on a lightweigh­t title fight for the ages, co-promoter and YouTube influencer Jake Paul thanked the pioneers of women’s boxing, mentioning Christy Martin and Laila Ali.

Wait … what?

Three women — Marian “Lady Tyger” Trimiar, the late Jackie Tonawanda and Cat Davis — were the first female fighters to get their boxing licenses after suing the New York State Athletic Commission in 1978.

What Paul also forgot to mention was that Trimiar sued the Commission first and was forgotten to the waste bin of sports history until she got the call last year.

She was inducted in the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, N.Y. over the weekend.

“I’m grateful and honored for the opportunit­y for the recognitio­n,” says the Julia Richmond (Manhattan) High School graduate.

Due to COVID, the Hall combined three classes this year.

Manhattan resident Trimiar is pleased with the honor, but wants to set the record straight about “receiving” her license. It should have been her proudest moment if it had been managed properly.

“When I got my license, they messed it up when they handed it to (Davis first),” recalls the 68-yearold Trimiar. This is where the Tyger comes out. “Jackie and Cat had no interest in doing anything (to get the license). They jumped on the bandwagon after I went to the state athletic commission. I was doing an exhibition with (former middleweig­ht champ) Vito Antuofermo and got all of that publicity and that’s when they started jumping on the bandwagon.

“That really pissed me off.” Then came the photo-op ceremony to actually receive the license.

“We were all standing together, and they could have issued our licenses at the same time, but they handed it to the white girl first, making it that she was the first to be licensed,” says Trimiar, still with that fighter’s spirit after all these years.

“I’ve been away and out of boxing for thirty years. I let it be the past of my life,” she said.

Her current life is more difficult from her active days as a fighter from 1975-85.

“I’m in a wheelchair and I have a lot of medical issues and I gained a lot of weight and don’t look the part. A lot of people wouldn’t recognize me now,” she says. She shaved her head early in her career. (“People used to call me ‘Kojak.’”) to get noticed until her skills took over. “Been in the wheelchair for approximat­ely twenty years.”

She has had her share of heartbreak­s, but her bubbly personalit­y would make a curmudgeon’s blood-sugar level spike. Even when the topic isn’t pleasant.

“I lost my whole family … my mother, my father, my sister and my two brothers passed when my mother was alive,” she said. She lost her son when he was 22. “I have no one but my home attendant (Monday through Friday) and a couple of true friends.”

Like a bolt of lightning, her voice perks up.

“On the weekends, I’m on my own,” she says with a little laugh. “I used to have a whole village that I could depend on and talk to. I enjoyed Christmas and Easter and the holidays, and I can cook.

“I enjoyed cooking for family and friends. Now, that they’re all gone, there’s no need to cook a great, big 20-pound turkey for myself.”

Now put the hankies away. Don’t feel sorry for her.

She suffers from lymphedema, which causes a swelling in her legs, but that doesn’t keep her down.

“I can still stand and wash my dishes,” she says with that chuckle again.

As a fighter, Trimiar fought in and out of the ring. She battled opponents and the forces that tried to hold her back. She even did a 30day hunger strike in 1987 (losing 30 pounds) to improve conditions for women’s boxing. She targeted promoter Don King, who was

guiding Christy Martin.

“A trainer in Gleason’s gym told me women will never ever be licensed in the state of New York,” she says. “I said you want to bet, and he said okay. It was a 100 dollar bet. We shook on it, and I got my license and he never paid up and I never saw him to pay up.”

Trimiar learned her craft by going up against men in the gym. She even spit out a cracked tooth once and kept on sparring.

She compiled a record of 18-4 with five KOs (never been stopped) and captured the

Women’s World Lightweigh­t title with a victory over Sue “KO” Carlson in San Antonio in 1979, but her reign didn’t last long.

“When I won the championsh­ip, I only got one thousand dollars for it,” she said. “I had my title taken away because I refused to fight for 10, 12 rounds for a thousand dollars (again). It costs money to train, and I had to work, not just work at a job, but work to promote women’s boxing, asking promoters and letter writing.”

The odd thing about her career is Trimiar has fought in Japan and

St. Thomas USVI, even losing a bout to Iran Barkley’s sister, Yvonne, in Philadelph­ia in 1976. But she never fought in the Big Apple.

“Isn’t that something,” she says. “I fought to get my license in New York, but I never did fight in New York.”

Trimiar did fight the exhibition in New York if you want to call it that.

“We weren’t even licensed as amateur boxers,” she says. “Who knows how many unlicensed “exhibition­s” she’s fought?

Trimiar is indeed a pioneer who opened the ring to other female fighters. Of the seventeen fighters going into the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame, eight are W women. hen Taylor and Serrano put on their Fight-of-theYear candidate bout, both women got seven-figure purses. That made Trimiar proud. Remember, she only made a grand for her title fight.

“That’s part of the reward,” she says. “I’m happy to see that something I did helped women today.”

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 ?? AP, KEITH TORRIE DAILY ?? Marian Trimiar of the Bronx demonstrat­es her form at the Mulberry Street Boxing Festival in Little Italy, Sept. 2, 1974 (opposite page) and keeps male counterpar­t Vito Antuofermo at distance in exhibition (l.).
NEWS
AP, KEITH TORRIE DAILY Marian Trimiar of the Bronx demonstrat­es her form at the Mulberry Street Boxing Festival in Little Italy, Sept. 2, 1974 (opposite page) and keeps male counterpar­t Vito Antuofermo at distance in exhibition (l.). NEWS

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