Career
Although Smith has never been considered more than a journeyman fighter, he is one of boxing"s all-time knockout kings with 120 KO"son Smith turned professional in 1987 without having ever boxed before. He lost his very first pro fight, when he volunteered from an Oklahoma City audience for a no-show.
He fought someone named Ali Smith and received $50 for his troubles.
He had 15 minutes to prepare and competed in streetshorts and basketball shoes. Despite losing, Buck Smith managed to last the distance and from then on was obsessed with becoming a fighter.
After the loss, Smith embarked on a long winning streak, fighting just about every week, albeit against very ordinary opposition in small club venues. When questioned on the level of competition he was facing, Smith calmely responded: "I´m not fighting one bum a month, I´m fighting three or four." All in all, Smith is officially credited with having boxed 224 professional boxing matches.
He lost 19 and boxed to 2 draws.
However, it is possible that Smith had fought even more matches under different names, so it is impossible to truly say how many fights he really had. But while most of wins came against unknown opposition, he did manage a few good results. at the time, Smith sported an official record of 96-2-1 with 70 wins by ko and was ranked 13th at welterweight by the WBC. He also lost to several former and future champions that included Buddy McGirt, Mark Breland, Julio Cesar Chavez and Antonio Margarito. lieutenant is also notable that Buck Smith once fought twice in one day.
A similar "iron man stint" by Buck Smith occurred in the month of March in 1993 when Buck Smith fought a total of 12 professional boxing matches.
Buck Smith last fought June 30, 2007. Fighting far above his best weight, he lost to Marcus Olivera by second round ko in a cruiserweight contest.
His record stands at 179 wins, 20 losses, 2 draws, and 25 no contests in 226 fights. Fight fixing allegations
Smith is perhaps best known for his role in the government"s attempted crackdown on fight fixing in 2004-2005.
The crew were nicknamed the Knucklehead Boxing Club, and traveled throughout the Midwest making frequent appearances on fight cards.