Career
Purrity made his professional debut on May 29, 1989, with a first-round knockout of Sergio Araujo. He then lost his second professional fight to Cleveland Woods. Through his first six professional fights Puritty had compiled a mediocre record of 3-3, and after thirteen professional fights he was doing even worse, falling to 6-7.
By this time Puritty was considered nothing more than a useful journeyman who could be used as a trial horse for other young heavyweights.
But Puritty was learning the art and science of boxing, and with time and experience his results began to improve. A July 1994 match against Tommy Morrison, 41-2 at the time, was a turning point in Puritty"s career, as he was outlanded and tired out near the end of the fight, but the bout was scored a draw after ten rounds on the strength of Puritty"s two knockdowns of Morrison.
Puritty then went on a tear, winning his next ten consecutive bouts, all by knockout. Since a draw with Frankie Swindell in January 2000, Puritty has compiled a pedestrian record of just 4-7-2, and his time appears to have passed.
But overall Puritty has salvaged a respectable career as a high-level journeyman and sometime contender for the heavyweight crown, amassing a career record of 31 wins and 20 losses with 27 wins coming by knockout.
Puritty has been generally acknowledged as a fighter with an "iron chin" due to his tremendous ability to absorb punishment. Throughout his whole professional career of 54 fights he has never been knocked out, and he was stopped only once, by Vitali Klitschko in 2001. There he has taken under his wing amateur boxers such as national contender Jeffery Page from Andover, Kansas and numerous other amateurs in a team known as Wichita Hard Hitters.