Joe Hipp

Summary

Joe "The Boss" Hipp (born December 7, 1962) is a retired professional American heavyweight boxer. A member of the Blackfeet Tribe, he became the first Native American to challenge for a world heavyweight boxing championship on August 19, 1995 when he fought WBA champion Bruce Seldon at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. In May 2009, he was inducted into the American Indian Athletic Hall of Fame.

Joe Hipp
Born (1962-12-07) December 7, 1962 (age 61)
Browning, Montana
Other namesThe Boss
ResidenceYakima, Washington
NationalityAmerican Blackfeet Nation
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight105.0 kg (231.5 lb; 16.53 st)
DivisionHeavyweight
Reach73 in (185 cm)
StanceSouthpaw
Years active18 (1987-2005)
Professional boxing record
Total50
Wins43
By knockout29
Losses7
By knockout6
Amateur boxing record
Total128
Wins119
Losses9
Other information
OccupationAll Nations Foundation, founder
Notable school(s)A.C. Davis High School
Boxing record from BoxRec
Last updated on: October 17, 2009

Professional career edit

Hipp began his professional career with a 4-round decision over Steve Cortez at the Lane County Fairgrounds in Eugene, Oregon on August 29, 1987. For his second fight 2 months later, Hipp travelled to Carson City, Nevada to face Utah native Veti Katoa. The fight was stopped by the ringside doctor after Hipp suffered a broken jaw in the third round.

Hipp rebounded successfully from the defeat by notching 3 consecutive first-round knockout victories before facing Katoa in a rematch at Gardnerville Park in Gardnerville, Nevada on July 2, 1988. Hipp dominated the action on the inside with his hard-hitting, banging style to take a 5-round unanimous decision.

Hipp then took a year-long hiatus from boxing before returning to face Andrew Matthews on the 4th of July of the following year. Outweighing his opponent by over 30 pounds, Hipp punched his way to a first-round stoppage. Exactly two weeks later, Hipp scored a unanimous four-round decision over up-and-coming contender Cleveland Woods in what Ring Magazine referred to as "...the upset of the night" on the card for that evening.

Hipp began another winning streak (including a brutal third-round knockout of Katoa in their third and final meeting) before facing Bert Cooper in Cooper's final bout prior to his fight with Evander Holyfield for the world title one month later. Cooper outslugged Hipp en route to a fifth-round stoppage by referee Joe Cortez.

Hipp again rebounded by winning 3 consecutive contests before facing Tommy Morrison on June 27, 1992 in Reno, Nevada. In a slugfest that saw Morrison break his jaw and one of his hands, Hipp lost by a 9th-round TKO, resulting in broken cheekbones for Hipp. After recovering from his injuries, Hipp fought once in 1993, earning a victory with a ten-round decision in a rematch with Kevin Ford.

Hipp began 1994 with a victory over Alex Garcia for the fringe NABF heavyweight title and finished the year with two more wins. He began the following year by continuing his winning ways with a third-round TKO of journeyman Phillip Brown. This win would lead to Hipp's most important bout, the fight that would land him in the history books as the first Native American to challenge for one of the four recognized heavyweight title belts.

WBA Heavyweight Title Bout edit

On August 19, 1995 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on the undercard of the infamous Mike Tyson v. Peter McNeeley fight (Tyson's first fight after being released from prison for rape), Hipp squared off against Bruce Seldon for the WBA Heavyweight championship. With Seldon well ahead on all scorecards, the fight was stopped in the tenth round by referee Richard Steele after Hipp experienced massive swelling and bleeding on his face.

Career Decline edit

Hipp's career was rather undistinguished afterwards. He fired off a series of victories over third-rate competition before being knocked out by hard-hitting journeyman Ross Puritty on June 15, 1997. Hipp had secured a comfortable lead on the scorecards before Puritty came out swinging for the tenth and final round of their bout. An exhausted Hipp was no match for Puritty in the last round and he suffered his first KO defeat. Hipp racked up three consecutive victories against nondescript competition after the Puritty fight, but then blew out his knee against Jeff Pegues in a fifth-round TKO loss on December 9, 1999.

He attempted a comeback four years later, but that came to an abrupt end in his second fight as he dropped a six-round decision to journeyman Billy Zumbrun on November 14, 2003.

Hipp, referred to as "The Boss" by his loyal fans, returned from another extended layoff to win a six-round decision over Ted Reiter on August 13, 2005, in what was his final fight.

Professional boxing record edit

43 Wins (29 knockouts, 14 decisions), 7 Losses (6 knockouts, 1 decision)[1]
Result Record Opponent Type Round Date Location Notes
Win 43-7   Ted Reiter MD 6 13/08/2005   Lewiston, Idaho, U.S.
Loss 42-7   Billy Zumbrun MD 6 14/11/2003   Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Win 42-6   Chris Brown KO 2 22/08/2003   Spokane, Washington, U.S. Brown knocked out at 2:37 of the second round.
Loss 41-6   Jeff Pegues TKO 5 09/12/1999   Mount Pleasant, Michigan, U.S. Hipp suffered a severe knee injury during the fight causing a stoppage.
Win 41-5   Everett Martin UD 12 25/06/1999   Saint Charles, Missouri, U.S. WBF World heavyweight title.
Win 40-5   Jack Basting UD 10 27/03/1998   Tacoma, Washington, U.S.
Win 39-5   George McFall TKO 2 11/02/1998   Yakima, Washington, U.S.
Loss 38-5   Ross Puritty KO 10 15/06/1997   Biloxi, Mississippi, U.S.
Win 38-4   Marcus Rhode TKO 1 29/03/1997   Bellevue, Washington, U.S.
Win 37-4   Lorenzo Boyd KO 1 10/03/1997   Kansas City, Missouri, U.S. Boyd knocked out at 2:45 of the first round.
Win 36-4   Will Hinton TKO 1 13/12/1996   Tacoma, Washington, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 1:30 of the first round.
Win 35-4   Troy Roberts KO 2 05/10/1996   Yakima, Washington, U.S.
Win 34-4   Fred Houpe TKO 1 23/09/1996   Bellevue, Washington, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 1:55 of the first round.
Win 33-4   Bill Corrigan KO 1 04/08/1996   Sequim, Washington, U.S. Corrigan knocked out at 1:39 of the first round.
Win 32-4   Anthony Moore TKO 5 17/07/1996   Worley, Idaho, U.S. Western States heavyweight title.
Win 31-4   Martin Jacques TKO 1 15/12/1995   Yakima, Washington, U.S.
Loss 30-4   Bruce Seldon TKO 10 19/08/1995   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S. WBA World heavyweight title. Referee stopped the bout at 1:47 of the tenth round.
Win 30-3   Philipp Brown TKO 3 17/04/1995   Moline, Illinois, U.S.
Win 29-3   Rodolfo Marin SD 10 01/11/1994   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Win 28-3   José Ribalta KO 2 10/05/1994   Mashantucket, Connecticut, U.S. NABF heavyweight title. Ribalta knocked out at 1:53 of the second round.
Win 27-3   Alex Garcia UD 12 01/03/1994   Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S. NABF heavyweight title.
Win 26-3   Keith McMurray KO 4 14/01/1994   Saint George, Utah, U.S. McMurray knocked out at 2:52 of the fourth round.
Win 25-3   Kevin Ford UD 10 03/04/1993   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Loss 24-3   Tommy Morrison TKO 9 27/06/1992   Reno, Nevada, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 2:47 of the ninth round.
Win 24-2   Jesse Shelby UD 10 28/02/1992   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Win 23-2   Kevin Ford UD 8 01/02/1992   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Win 22-2   John Morton KO 3 05/01/1992   Reno, Nevada, U.S. Morton knocked out at 3:00 of the third round.
Loss 21-2   Bert Cooper TKO 5 18/10/1991   Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 1:01 of the fifth round.
Win 21-1   Cleveland Woods KO 1 15/07/1991   Irvine, California, U.S. Woods knocked out at 0:27 of the first round.
Win 20-1   Bill Duncan KO 1 02/07/1991   Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.
Win 19-1   David Bey TKO 7 26/02/1991   Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 1:07 of the seventh round.
Win 18-1   Mike Cohen KO 4 14/01/1991   Fife, Washington, U.S. World Boxing Foundation (WBFo) Intercontinental heavyweight title. Cohen knocked out at 2:30 of the fourth round.
Win 17-1   Richard Cade KO 2 16/11/1990   Fort Lewis, Washington, U.S. Cade knocked out at 0:52 of the second round.
Win 16-1   Harry Terrell KO 2 11/09/1990   Fife, Washington, U.S. Terrell knocked out at 2:14 of the second round.
Win 15-1   Gerardo Valero KO 1 26/07/1990   Yakima, Washington, U.S. Valero knocked out at 3:04 of the first round.
Win 14-1   Tracy Thomas UD 10 12/06/1990   Yakima, Washington, U.S.
Win 13-1   Danny Wofford PTS 6 24/04/1990   Reseda, California, U.S.
Win 12-1   Veti Katoa KO 3 16/03/1990   Butte, Montana, U.S.
Win 11-1   Dan Ross KO 1 12/02/1990   Butte, Montana, U.S. Ross knocked out at 2:09 of the first round.
Win 10-1   Marvin Camel TKO 6 02/12/1989   Lacey, Washington, U.S.
Win 9-1   Sean McClain TKO 4 26/09/1989   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Win 8-1   Shaun Ayers UD 10 26/08/1989   Eugene, Oregon, U.S.
Win 7-1   Cleveland Woods UD 4 18/07/1989   Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S.
Win 6-1   Andrew Matthews TKO 1 04/07/1989   Gardnerville, Nevada, U.S. Referee stopped the bout at 0:34 of the first round.
Win 5-1   Veti Kotoa UD 5 02/07/1988   Gardnerville, Nevada, U.S.
Win 4-1   Steve Cortez TKO 1 18/06/1988   Vancouver, Washington, U.S.
Win 3-1   Paul Bradshaw TKO 1 04/06/1988   Albany, Oregon, U.S.
Win 2-1   John Elkins TKO 1 02/06/1988   Portland, Oregon, U.S.
Loss 1-1   Veti Katoa TKO 3 24/10/1987   Carson City, Nevada, U.S.
Win 1-0   Steve Cortez UD 4 29/08/1987   Eugene, Oregon, U.S.

Outside the Ring edit

In 2004, Rocky Mountain College and the Billings Writer's Voice sponsored a poetry reading held by various Native American groups in tribute to Hipp.

In December 2005, Hipp was a FEMA worker for the Hurricane Katrina disaster. Responding to the call, he joined his fellow Blackfeet members who were called upon due to their experience in wildfires and search and rescue missions.

By 2007 Hipp was working for his former manager Ray Frye at a Seattle area sweeping company. He also co-owned a small construction company.

References edit

  1. ^ "BoxRec - Joe Hipp".

External links edit

  • Boxing record for Joe Hipp from BoxRec (registration required)