The Scotsman

Bob Foster

Boxer and deputy sheriff

- JACK DAVIDSON

Bob Foster, boxer. Born 15 December, 1938 in Borger, Texas. Died 21 November, 2015 in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico. Aged 76.

Bob Foster was one of the greatest light heavyweigh­t boxers of all time. He was dubbed “The Fighting Sheriff” as he combined his pugilistic career with his duties as deputy sheriff. World champion from 1968 to 1974, he defended his title a record 14 times and was virtually unbeatable in his weight class. Tall with a long reach, he was a fearsome hitter who caused Muhammad Ali once to comment: “Man,that guy has a punch like a mule.” The statistics backed that up – of his 56 wins, 46 were by knock-out.

In 1968 in Madison Square Garden, New York, he wrested the title from the celebrated Nigerian boxer Dick Tiger, the former world middleweig­ht champion. According to Foster, Tiger had been avoiding him for some time, demanding a purse of $100,000 to fight him and as a means of discouragi­ng him. Foster eventually found the necessary financial backing and with a devastatin­g left hook knocked Tiger out in the 4th round – the first time in his long and distinguis­hed career that Tiger had been knocked out. It was of little consolatio­n to him that the prestigiou­s boxing magazine The Ring declared it “The Round of the Year”.

Foster began boxing as a youngster in Albuquerqu­e where he moved with his mother when aged two, his father having deserted them. But it was not till he joined the US Air Force after leaving high school that he began boxing seriously. He was later quoted as saying that all he ever did in the Air Force was box, and during the five years he served he had more than 100 fights, losing only losing three.

In 1959, he won a silver medal at the Pan American Games in Chicago and was a candidate

for the Rome Olympics of 1960. However Cassius Clay, as he still was then, was selected at light heavyweigh­t, with Foster being offered the middleweig­ht berth – he refused as it meant his having to lose excess weight.

Foster had his first paid fight, for $25, in 1961 against Duke Williams, winning by knockout in round two. By a curious symmetry, his last fight, in 1978, also ended in a second round knockout – only this time with him on the receiving end.

He soon began sweeping all before him in the light heavyweigh­t division. As opponents became thin on the ground he fought a few times at heavyweigh­t, though without success as the weight differenti­al was too big a gap to bridge. Frustrated at not getting a light heavyweigh­t title shot, he took time out to work in a munitions factory in 1966 before making a comeback the next year, which led to his championsh­ip bout with Tiger.

Once he won that title, he declared to Ring magazine: “My goal is to be the first light heavyweigh­t champion in history to win the heavyweigh­t title.”

To this end, in December 1970 he challenged Joe Frazier for his title, but was knocked out in the second round, having conceded about 21lbs in weight. Frazier later commented: “I knocked him down twice in the second round and he was so shaky after the first one I hoped the referee would stop it. Afterwards in the dressing room Foster could not recall fighting me.”

When interviewe­d a few years ago, Foster recalled: “My toughest fight was Smokin’ Joe Frazier, the two rounds seemed like a year. He was the closest you could come to facing death.”

Two years later he also fought Ali for the American title but was knocked out in the eighth round, having conceded 42lbs. Foster was knocked down seven times before the final knockout. In the same interview, he commented: “Ali never stood still and he was so fast I could hardly see his hands. I finally managed to cut him with my jab.” Ali said after the fight: “I have cuts alongside my left eye and that’s something no other profession­al fighter has been able to do.”

Foster by now had joined the sheriff’s office in Bernalillo County, New Mexico and concentrat­ed on defending his light heavyweigh­t title. He came to London, where he defeated Britain’s former Olympic champion Chris Finnegan by a knockout in the 14th round, and twice defeated South African champion Pierre Fourie, the second fight taking place in South Africa. This attracted controvers­y as it was the first profession­al contest between a black and a white boxer during the apartheid era.

After drawing in defence of his title with Ahumeda of Argentina in 1974, he retired, making an illstarred comeback the following year that culminated in the 1978 defeat.

He was one of the first inductees to the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame in 1990, and his place in the pantheon of world boxing greats is richly deserved.

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