Early life and career
John Michael Ertl was born on March 21, 1897, in Dunaföldvár, Austria-Hungary. His family of at least four children emigrated to America around 1910 when Ertle was around thirteen, and soon settled in St. Paul, Minnesota. Ertle's brother Mike also became a successful boxer. As a youth, Johnny worked shining shoes, and later bought himself a membership to the YMCA where he received his early boxing training. His manager, Mike McNulty claimed Ertle was herding cows to make extra money when he acquired him as a boxer in 1913. By one account, a key to Ertle's success were his powerful arms and broad 38" chest which comprised a reach that may have been as long as 65 inches, far longer than average for his 4' 11" height. His first pro fight came under the careful watch of his manager, Mike McNulty, on October 31, 1913, in a secret fight card in St. Paul, where he made his home. Since boxing was still illegal in Minnesota at the time, and Johnny was just 16, news of the bout had to be kept quiet. But the lightning fast style and vicious hooks Ertel scored on Joe LaScotte's ribs and jaw aroused public interest. He knocked out LaScotte in the 3rd round and picked up many more local fans, when he did the same to LaScotte in a fourth round rematch the following month.Official Minnesota Boxing Hall of Fame - endorsed by the Minnesota State Boxing Commission – Johnny ErtleLoss to Memphis Pal Moore, 1915
In a controversial, but important bout on April 6, 1915, Ertle lost to bantamweight great Memphis Pal Moore in Moore's hometown of Memphis in an eight-round newspaper decision. Moore, who enjoyed a six-inch advantage in height, would earn the King's Bantamweight Trophy three years later, and eventually remove any claim to the world bantamweight championship from Ertel in 1918. A few in the audience believed the hometown referee was partial to Moore. In a somewhat close bout, the ''Racine Journal-News'' gave Moore five rounds, with three to Ertle and two even. Moore used his advantage in reach and height to hold off Ertle with his left jab followed by right crosses. Ertle's rights and lefts repeatedly fell short due to his disadvantage in reach and Moore's illusiveness. Williams staggered Ertle several times in the fifth, sixth, and seventh rounds, likely turning the final decision in his favor.Wins over bantam champ Eddie Coulon
In a bout which announced Ertle's ascendancy as a top bantamweight contender, on May 4, 1915, Ertel fought a ten-round no-decision bout with 1911-14 world bantamweight champion Eddie Coulon, at the Elite Rink in Milwaukee. Impressively, several local papers considered the bout an easy win for the young Ertle, only eighteen at the time. Three months later, Ertel won another newspaper decision at the Auditorium in St. Paul against Coulon before an audience of 3,000. Coulon, one of Ertel's most accomplished opponents, fought several top rated bantamweight including hid childhood friend Pete Herman and Memphis Pal Moore.World Bantam champion, September 1915
With McNulty in his corner, Ertle took theWin over "Young Zulu Kid", 1916
On March 14, 1916, Ertle defeated future contender for both the American and world flyweight titles, Italian boxer Young Zulu Kid, in a ten-round newspaper decision at the Broadway Gym in Brooklyn. In the eighth, Ertel broke away and battered the Kid with blows to the jaw and body with almost no return, and in the ninth and tenth, he continued to build a strong lead in points scoring. In an atypical match, both boxers were only 4' 11" in height, though Ertel held a seven-pound weight advantage and likely a reach advantage as well, which he used to help secure his world bantamweight claim. On September 4, 1916, Ertle lost to Jewish boxer Benny Kaufman in a newspaper decision at the Olympia Club in Philadelphia. After a harsh right to the jaw in the first, Ertle went on the defensive for several rounds until the fourth when he went into a rally. In that round, Kaufman quickly recovered and continued to take the aggressive, winning the subsequent two rounds easily on points. Ertel did not display his characteristic energy in the bout after his harsh treatment in the first. One reporter gave Kaufman every round including the fourth.Draw with Joe Lynch, 1916
Ertle drew with future world bantamweight champion Joe Lynch on October 10, 1916, in a close no decision bout in a ten-round newspaper decision at the Pioneer Club in Brooklyn. Ertel held a lead in the first two rounds, but Lynch rallied and by waging a two fisted attack came back on points scoring. Ertle went out into the lead again in the seventh with several successive blows, but Lynch came back to even the scoring. Despite a disadvantage in reach, with Lynch seven inches taller, Ertle performed well against the future champion. On November 27, 1916, Ertle fought another no-decision bout against Dick Loadman at the Lyric Theatre in Baltimore, losing in the opinion of many newspapers, but Ertel did not give up his claim to the title. Though there were no knockdowns in the bout, Loadman showered Ertle with blows against which his opponent could find no consistent defense. The bout was well fought and the first five rounds featured scientific sparring and footwork. Minneapolis's ''Morning Tribune'' could not give a single round to Ertle, and noted he was forced to cover through much of the fighting. Loadman would fight top talent in his career, but usually lose against past or future champions. On February 16, 1917, Ertle defeated Pekin Kid Herman, of Pekin, Illinois, in a close ten-round newspaper decision at the Auditorium in Milwaukee. Several newspapers, however, considered the bout a draw, or a close win by Herman, who gained momentum in the last four rounds, rocking Ertle with lefts and rights in the seventh and eighth, though still taking punishment in both rounds. The ''Milwaukee Free Press'' gave the bout to Ertle for his slight lead in the first six rounds, and for briefly putting Herman to the canvas in the second with a right uppercut to the chin. Before a crowd of 3,000, on July 31, 1917, Ertle defeated Irish bantamweight Roy Moore at St. Paul's Lexington Park in no-decision bout that most newspapers ruled a draw or a slight edge for Ertle. The bout was billed as a defense of Ertle's world bantamweight title. Moore performed well in the eighth, ninth, and tenth rounds, deserving a draw or having a slight edge in the opinion of Minneapolis's ''Morning Tribune''. In the opinion of several newspapers, Ertle deserved the decision for landing cleaner blows. Two months later on September 11, Ertle defeated Moore in a ten-round no-decision bout, which he won in the opinion of the ''Chicago Tribune''. The ''Des-Moines Register'' gave Ertle seven of the ten rounds, with three even, and not a single round to Moore.Close bout with Jack Kid Wolfe, 1917
Ertel met 1922 world junior featherweight champion,Kid Williams rematch, 1917
Ertle drew withLoss Bantam title, April, 1918
Ertle clearly forfeited all claims to the world bantamweight title on April 10, 1918, when he lost toSecond loss by knockout, November 1918
In a disappointing loss on November 9, 1918, Frankie Burns, a top bantamweight contender, knocked out Ertle in the seventh round in Weehawken, New Jersey. Burns, with an advantage in both reach and height, easily wore down Ertle throughout the bout. The New York ''Sun'' wrote that Burns had the upperhand from beginning to end with Ertle unable to land more than a half dozen solid blows. Burns's straight lefts to the head kept Ertle's head bobbing, and even in close in fighting, Burns dominated with blows to the body that forced Ertle to clinch. With a fusillade of right and lefts, Burns toppled Ertle into the ropes 1:15 into the seventh round. Having fallen to the canvas, Ertle was just able to rise on his knees after a count of five. As he swayed on his knees his seconds threw in the towel, realizing he should not continue the fight. Burns was a formidable opponent, with boxing journalist Nat Fleischer once rating him the eighth greatest bantamweight of all time, but the loss changed the direction of Ertle's career. With his second knockout in only six months, little hope of his taking the championship remained. Ertle defeated Frankie Daly on points on April 18, 1919, in a rare twelve round points decision at the Albaugh Theater in Baltimore. Enjoying a comfortable margin on points, the ''Baltimore Sun'' gave Ertel six rounds, with only two to Daly and four even. There was only one brief knockdown when Ertle scored with a right to the chin. Ertle showed best in his powerful left and right hooks, though he also dealt effective uppercuts to the body in close, and his rapid fire shots to the body were strong and effective. In an action filled bout, both boxers took punishment, but Ertle's blows were more accurate and showed considerably more power.Loss to bantam champ Pete Herman, 1919
One of Ertel's most accomplished bantamweight opponents was Pete "Kid" Herman, reigning world bantamweight champion, whom he lost to in a fifth-round technical knockout in Minneapolis on May 23, 1919. According to a few boxing historians, including Ertel's manager Mike McNulty, Etle's actual loss of the title did not occur until his loss to Herman, a reigning champion. Herman was rated as the second greatest bantamweight in history by sports writer Nat Fleischer, and was a 1997 inductee to the International Boxing Hall of Fame. The world bantamweight championship was technically at stake, but according to Minnesota law, Ertle would have had to knock out Herman or win by a disqualification to take the title from him. The close bout was stopped because of Ertle's cut eye, but the ''Minneapolis Tribune'' wrote that he had at least a small margin on points until the fourth round. In the fourth, however, Herman sent Ertle to the canvas with a right cross for a count of four. Another right cross put Ertle to the canvas before the bell interrupted a count of nine. Only a few seconds into the fifth, Herman put Ertle down again with a right cross, and the referee called the match. Ertle lost to American flyweight champion contender Frankie Mason on June 20, 1919, in a ten-round newspaper decision in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Mason landed more clean blows, and demonstrated better ring craft than Ertel. On August 11, 1919, Ertle lost to Mason in a fifteen-round points decision at Oriole Park in Baltimore. In the opening rounds, Mason used a well-directed left jab to ward off the advances of Ertel. In the fifth, sixth, and seventh, Mason caught Ertel against the ropes in neutral corners and delivered blows without much return. Losing badly by the tenth, Ertle put up little resistance. In the fifteenth, Ertle suffered badly and took blows repeatedly, unable to defend himself. After his loss of any championship claim to Memphis Pal Moore, Ertel moved away from his manager Mike McNulty and his career suffered. Many of the opponents selected by his new management were too skilled for Ertle, and his record suffered particularly in 1919–20. After his bouts with Mason, Ertel attempted to retire from boxing. On April 27, 1920, he married Augusta Winkey and moved to a farm near Watertown, Minnesota. In Watertown, Ertle tried to make a living farming, but returned to the ring after the birth of his daughter, Marie. Around 1922, Ertle and his wife moved to Stillwater, Minnesota, where he remained the rest of his life.Loss to Kid Williams, boxing decline, 1920
Kid Williams spoiled Ertle's comeback in a decisive twelve round victory on August 13, 1920, at Oriole Park in Baltimore. Before a record open air crowd, Williams brought a staggering Ertle close to a knockout at least a half dozen times, though the diminutive St. Paul boxer remained on his feet. Ertle was down in the third from an uppercut from Williams, and was badly battered about the face and eyes by the end of the twelfth. His match with his nemesis had been postponed five times before finally taking place. After his marriage and his brief retirement from boxing in 1919, Ertel met Joey Schwartz in a ten-round draw bout on points on March 17, 1922, at the Armories in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. A Detroit paper noted "Ertle, who is only 24 years old, beat all of the American and foreign bantams in 1918 and 1919. His height, four foot, 11 inches and his aggressive style made him a great favorite with fight fans everywhere." The spirited bout was close and judges disagreed on who held the most points, so the referee was required to secure the draw decision. Fighting as a featherweight on January 26, 1923, he showed a few glimpses of his old form and convincingly defeated Saph McKenna in a ten-round newspaper decision, the night's main event at the Auditorium in St. Paul. Though his Stillwater fans cheered him, even his hometown papers were critical of his performance. The ''Minneapolis Marning Tribune'' gave six of the ten rounds to Ertle with only one to McKenna, and admitted he easily outpointed his opponent, but noted that he appeared slow compared to the championship form of five years earlier. McKenna was considered off form, using his height and reach advantage to fight at long range, though he looked awkward and missed with many of his blows. Ertle may have had McKenna close to a knockout in several rounds, but was unable to deliver a final blow. He recovered well from a strong blow to the face in the third that had him dazed and groggy, but he lacked the speed of his former days and though they landed with frequency, he had less sting and accuracy in his blows. In one of his last bouts on May 7, 1923, Ertle lost to Carl Tremaine in a ten-round points decision at Ontario's Windsor Armory. Remaining in front in the first five rounds, Tremaine built a strong lead in points using his greater reach and speed to his advantage. In the sixth, Tremaine scored with a left hook to the jaw, but Ertel quickly recovered and continued to score points in the remaining rounds. In his last convincing win on April 5, 1923, Ertle scored a twelve-round newspaper decision over Johnny Andrews, at the Coliseum in Toledo, Ohio. Ertle scored knockdowns in the first, second, and eighth rounds. The first two knockdowns came from right crosses, and led to long counts of nine.Life after boxing
In 1916, Ertle was featured playing himself in a short documentary film, ''Selig Athletic Film Series Feature #4'' with two prominent wrestlers, and Jewish boxer and one time opponentPrimary boxing achievements and honors
, - , - He was inducted into the Minnesota Boxing Hall of Fame in 2011.References
External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Ertel, Johnny 1897 births 1976 deaths Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to the United States World bantamweight boxing champions Bantamweight boxers American male boxers