George Latka, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Known as the “Boxing Professor” in the 1930s, George Latka covered
every spectrum of the ring in his illustrious career, which spanned seven
decades.
As a fighter (amateur and professional), referee, instructor and, at
times, an actor in boxing movies, Latka has never seen a punch he
couldn’t take.
“I’d say I was an exceptionally good defensive fighter,” Latka said,
when pressed to describe his specialty in the ring as a 5-foot-6,
135-pound lightweight.
After a long career that included 159 amateur fights and 55
professional bouts, Latka hung up his golden gloves in 1944 and became a
referee for 30 years.
As a professional, Latka’s contract was owned by movie star George
Raft. Latka’s only disappointment is that he never got a title fight, but
he faced four former world champions, including Sammy Angott, and never
lost.
Latka, who fought Angott to a “controversial” draw in San Francisco,
also went toe to toe with former world champions Willie Pep, Petey Scalzo
and Richie Lamos. His last fight (and victory) came in 1944 against
Lamos, the 1941 National Boxing Association featherweight champion.
When Latka fought Angott to a draw, it was a non-title fight, but at
least one San Francisco-based sportswriter thought Latka had won. “I got
a newspaper decision,” Latka said. “Back then, the newspapers really
covered boxing well and their decisions carried a lot of weight.”
Latka, who lost only five pro fights in his career, also fought in the
first televised bout against Jimmy Garrison from the Hollywood Legend
Stadium in 1940. It was during television’s experimental stages.
Previously, fight fans could only see highlights on a newsreel at
theaters.
Latka, who later played bit roles in movies such as “Matilda” and
“Raging Bull”, earned his nickname the “Boxing Professor” when, as a
student at San Jose State on a boxing scholarship, he became the boxing
coach at the University of Santa Clara.
“I’d say fighting four former world champions, and not losing to any
one of them, is as good as it gets,” Latka proudly said of his boxing
highlight.
Latka, who once judged a Muhammad Ali-Ken Norton heavyweight bout in
the 1970s, was instrumental in helping to launch the boxing program at
Costa Mesa-based Save Our Youth in 1994. It wasn’t a long stint at SOY,
but Latka helped kids stay off the streets and out of gangs by teaching
them a competitive spirit and the fundamentals of boxing.
“Some of those kids could’ve been top-notch fighters, but I was
running out of gas, spending too much time there,” Latka said. “I loved
the organization; it was great.”
Latka, born in Kalamazoo, Mich., and raised in Pueblo, Colo., is part
of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the millennium.
It’s the fourth hall of fame of which Latka is a member; he’s also in
the World Boxing Hall of Fame (based in Los Angeles), Orange County
Sports Hall of Fame and San Jose State Athletic Hall of Fame.
Latka, an 85-year-old Huntington Beach resident, was named Senior
Citizen of the Year in Huntington Beach five years ago and rode in the
city’s annual Fourth of July Parade.
Latka was born Nov. 12, 1914, as the 10th of 12 children, and is the
only sibling still alive. His parents emigrated from Czechoslovakia to
America and worked in the steel mills, including the largest in the West
at the time in Pueblo.
“I had a great boyhood,” said Latka, who would hunt, fish and swim,
while growing up within eyeshot of Pikes Peak in Colorado.
Latka and his wife, Trudie, are inseparable these days. Latka has two
children and 22 grandchildren or great grandchildren.
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