Iconic Sports Writer's False War Claims Revealed

Boxing writer claimed to have been awarded medals for combat in the Korean War.

ByABC News
May 1, 2008, 2:12 PM

May 1, 2008— -- An acclaimed journalist may have faked the Korean War heroics which helped make him a legendary figure in the world of sports writing.

At today's annual Boxing Writers Association of America Awards, the "Pat Putnam Perseverance Award" is scheduled to be presented. The award is given in honor of the legendary boxing writer who also claimed to have survived 17 months as a prisoner of war in Manchuria and to have received the prestigious Navy Cross medal. Recent research shows Putnam never was a POW and that his war stories of earning the Navy Cross and four Purple Heart medals were all products of his imagination.

Putnam, who made his name covering Muhammad Ali and died three years ago, claimed he had been held captive for 17 months during the Korean War and that he was wounded multiple times earning him four Purple Hearts. There is no record that Putnam was ever wounded in battle or was a POW, according to the Marine Corps History Division. Additionally, he never earned the Navy Cross, according to military historian Doug Sterner who runs a database of valor awards recipients.

Since his death, an award known as the "Pat Putnam Perseverance Award" has been presented by the Boxing Writers Association of America. Last year, the Pat Putnam award was presented to Muhammad Ali. This year's BWAA awards ceremony takes place today in Los Angeles.

Putnam's daughter told ABCNews.com that her father always was a story-teller. "He was Irish and could tell a story," said Colleen Putnam. "Maybe this one he yarned. I don't know."

Putnam said her father's war stories began when someone asked him about the scars on his back that were from a car accident. "He said he was in the war, and it grew and grew. Maybe my father didn't know how to stop it."

Ed Schuyler, a retired Associated Press boxing writer who was a dear friend of Putnam's, said he was shocked to learn that Putnam 's stories were false. "He was a wonderful man. I am stunned by it. I believe it started like a lark and then went on and on," Schuyler told ABCNews.com.