Brian Curvis
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Brian Nancurvis (14 August 1937 – 9 January 2012), who fought under the name Brian Curvis as a professional, was a boxer from Swansea,
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who was active from 1959 to 1966. He fought as a
Welterweight Welterweight is a weight class in combat sports. Originally the term "welterweight" was used only in boxing, but other combat sports like Muay Thai, taekwondo, and mixed martial arts also use it for their own weight division system to classify th ...
, becoming British welterweight champion in 1960. He retired as undefeated champion and is the only welterweight to have won two Lonsdale Belts outright. The four defeats in his professional career were all to foreign boxers; he was never beaten by a British boxer.


Amateur career

Curvis was the fourth son of Dai Nancurvis, who had been a bantamweight fighter in the British Army, and had opened a gym in Swansea on leaving the forces. All of Curvis' brothers were fighters, most notably Cliff Curvis who became British and Commonwealth welterweight champion. He began his amateur career during his National Service and while representing the army Curvis won the A.B.A. welterweight title. In 1958, while still an amateur in the Armed Forces, he was selected to represent England in the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, which that year was held in
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, Wales. Fighting under his birth name of Brian Nancurvis he was beaten in the semi-finals securing a bronze medal.


Professional career

He had his first professional fight on 2 June 1959 at the Empire Pool,
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, winning by technical knockout against Harry Haydock. He won all of his first thirteen fights, and then fought the
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, George Barnes for the Commonwealth welterweight title that he held. The fight was held at the
Vetch Field The Vetch Field was a football stadium in Swansea, Wales. It was used for football matches and was the home ground of Swansea City until the club moved to the newly built Liberty Stadium in 2005. Opened in 1912, the ground held around 12,000 ...
, Swansea in May 1960, and Curvis won on points over fifteen rounds. Three fights later in November 1960, he fought Wally Swift holder of the British welterweight title, at the same time defending his own Commonwealth title. The fight was in
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, and Curvis continued his winning run by taking a fifteen-round points decision. In May 1961, he had a re-match with Swift in Nottingham for the two titles, and again won on points. In October 1961, he defended both titles against Mick Leahy at the old Empire Pool, winning by a knockout in the eighth round. In February 1962, he defended his titles against Tony Mancini at the Royal Albert Hall, winning by a technical knockout in the fifth round. In his next fight, his twenty-fourth, Curvis suffered his first defeat, losing to the American, Guy Sumlin by a technical knockout in the eighth round. However he gained revenge over Sumlin with a points victory two fights later. In February 1963, he defended his titles against Tony Smith, at the Royal Albert Hall, scoring a technical knockout in the ninth round. In July 1964, he defended his titles against Johnny Cook, at
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, and won by a technical knockout in the fifth round.


World title attempt

In September 1964, Curvis, who had only been beaten once, fought the WBA and WBC, world welterweight champion, American,
Emile Griffith Emile Alphonse Griffith (February 3, 1938 – July 23, 2013) was a professional boxer from the U.S. Virgin Islands who won world titles in three weight divisions. He held the world light middleweight, undisputed welterweight, and middleweight ...
, for his title. The fight was held at the Empire Pool,
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. Although it went the full distance, Curvis was knocked down in the sixth, tenth and thirteenth rounds by body punches, and lost a unanimous points decision.


Remaining career

Curvis continued to fight, suffering a defeat against Willie Ludick in
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In November 1965, he defended his British and Commonwealth titles for the sixth time, against the
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, Sammy McSpadden in Cardiff, winning by a technical knockout in the twelfth round. In April 1966, he challenged for the vacant European welterweight title, fighting the Frenchman,
Jean Josselin Jean Josselin (6 January 1940 – 7 February 2021) was a French welterweight boxer. He competed at the 1960 Olympics and won a bronze medal at the 1961 European Amateur Boxing Championships. After that he turned professional and won his first 1 ...
in the Palais des Sports,
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. He was forced to retire in the fourteenth round. Curvis fought one more fight, defeating Des Rea in
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in September 1966, before retiring from the ring as undefeated British and Commonwealth welterweight champion. For his six successful title defences he won two Lonsdale Belts outright, the only welterweight to do so. In 1960, he was named as
BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year The BBC Cymru Wales Sports Personality of the Year is a televised sporting competition, broadcast on BBC Two every year; and the most prestigious annual Sport in Wales, sport award in Wales. It was first awarded in 1954, and is currently organise ...
.


See also

*
List of British welterweight boxing champions List of British welterweight boxing champions is a table showing the boxers who have won the British welterweight title. The title has been sanctioned by the National Sporting Club since 1909, and later by its replacement British Boxing Board of ...


References

* * * * Maurice Golesworthy, Encyclopaedia of Boxing (Eighth Edition) (1988), Robert Hale Limited, {{DEFAULTSORT:Curvis Brian 1937 births 2012 deaths Boxers from Swansea Welsh male boxers Welterweight boxers Deaths from leukemia Boxers at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for England Commonwealth Games medallists in boxing