Bonavena began his early career in
New York City under the management of World War II hero and dentist Marvin Goldberg. Following his pro debut on February 1, 1964, he racked up a quick string of early knockouts. Sometimes fighting twice a month, he lost by decision in February 1965, in only his 15th contest, to the highly rated
Zora Folley. Bonavena was far too inexperienced to take on a top veteran like Folley. Three years later he won their rematch by decision. Returning to Argentina, his winning and knockout streak continued. In mid-1966 he was enticed back to New York where the free-swinging Bonavena ran into trouble outside the ring. He called Muhammad Ali a black
kangaroo, and a
chicken for
draft dodging. When, much later, he saw Ali seated ringside at the
George Foreman–
Ken Norton fight, he went over and started a big slanging match. In his pre-fight press conference with Frazier, Bonavena needled effectively by implying that Frazier had a personal hygiene problem. He would start sniffing and grimace. Lawsuits were brought about by reporters with broken cameras; and other such "colorful" behavior. He was always volatile, as trainers soon discovered.
Big name contests, Chuvalo and Frazier Bonavena first came to wide public attention after a fine performance: defeating rated contender and Canadian champion
George Chuvalo, boxing technically better than expected, and later going the distance against the young hard-hitting great
Joe Frazier. In this, their first fight, Bonavena had the future champion down twice in the second round.
WBA elimination contests In 1967, after the
World Boxing Association stripped
Muhammad Ali of the title for refusing to be
inducted into the U.S. military, Bonavena participated in that sanctioning body's 1967 tournament to crown a new heavyweight champion. In a strong performance he decked favoured European champion
Karl Mildenberger four times, winning by a decision in
Frankfurt,
West Germany. But he was himself knocked down twice and clearly outboxed by eventual tournament winner
Jimmy Ellis in the semi-finals in
Louisville, losing by unanimous decision in an upset. Many deemed it the best win of Ellis's career.
World Title shot, the Frazier rematch in 1970. The following year, in 1968, after outpointing
Leotis Martin, he got a rematch with Frazier for the heavyweight title in
Philadelphia. After a grueling fifteen rounds Bonavena lost the rematch by decision, fighting more defensively than previous. He left with a seriously battered face, as photographed in the Ring magazine. In 1969, he got a draw in a rematch with talented
Gregorio Peralta, who he'd outpointed four years earlier for the Argentine title.
Versus Ali In December 1970, he fought Ali at Madison Square Garden, in the former champ's second bout after his three-year layoff. Bonavena absorbed punishment throughout but fought well, getting through with various head and body punches. With just under 1:30 left in the 15th and final round, Ali caught Oscar rushing in and decked him with a perfectly placed left hook. Bonavena got up, but was clearly not fully recovered. Ali decked him twice more, and the fight was automatically stopped under the three knockdown rule, giving Ali a TKO (technical knockout). The ending was somewhat controversial, as Ali stood over Bonavena as Bonavena was getting up, never going to a neutral corner as the rules of boxing require, which allowed Ali to quickly knockdown Bonavena twice more and automatically end the fight. After the second knockdown, the referee appears to be attempting to guide Ali to a neutral corner, but Ali brushes the referee's arm away and pursues a wobbly Bonavena.
Other matches After the loss to Ali in 1970, he had a brutally tough match with underrated
Alvin Lewis, being decked multiple times but eventually winning by disqualification. Bonavena fought intermittently for the next few years. A gregarious party man, he enjoyed life to its fullest, at the cost of his boxing career. Eventually losses to
Floyd Patterson in 1972 and
Ron Lyle in 1974 effectively relegated him to lower contender status, though he did well enough in both matches. In the Patterson fight he broke his left hand early, possibly after decking Patterson in the fourth, and remained an advancing threat to the final bell. It was around 1973 that a match with a then rising
Ken Norton was being planned but never materialized. On February 26, 1976, an overweight and sluggish Bonavena fought what would be his last fight, winning a ten-round decision over the unranked
Billy Joiner in Reno. ==Death==