Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jack Dillon

Collapse
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Jack Dillon

    How great do you feel Dillon was? I feel he gets pretty underrated, and never really gets mentioned.....

    Some considered him a smaller version of Jack Dempsey. Charley Rose ranked him as the #2 All-Time Light Heavyweight & Nat Fleischer ranked him as the #3 All-Time Light Heavyweight. Thats very impressive, getting rated that high by them.


    A quick bio
    Some called light heavyweight Jack Dillon "Jack the Giant Killer" for his ability to handle the most unstoppable heavyweights of the day. A prolific fighter who traveled the U.S. and Canada setting up fights as often as he could, Dillon had stamina, strength, and intelligence. He turned welterweight pro in his native Indiana at the age of seventeen, but soon moved up to the middleweight division and fought for two years before being handed his first loss, a ten-rounder with Eddie McGoorty.

    In 1912, Dillon scored a third-round knockout against Hugo Kelly, and promptly claimed the world light heavyweight title, uncontested since Philadelphia Jack O'Brien had won it some years earlier. By 1914, Dillon was officially recognized as champion, when he won a decision over Battling Levinsky. Later that year, a referee cut short a Dillon-K.O. Brown meeting after three rounds, saying the fighters were just going through the motions.

    Dillon, who did sometimes carry weaker fighters, was apparently affected by the criticism that followed that bout and began to fight heavyweights who were invariably larger. He defeated such big men as Al Weinert, Tom Cowler, and Fireman Jim Flynn. Dillon defeated Flynn twice, knocking him out in 1916 only a year after Flynn had defeated Jack Dempsey.

    Dillon lost the world light heavyweight title to Battling Levinsky in 1916 in their ninth meeting. Levinsky employed ring science to avoid Dillon's still powerful punches and won on points. Dillon continued to fight for seven years after losing the title. A workmanlike fighter who did not vigorously seek the spotlight, Dillon's aggressive attacking style against bigger men won him a place in ring history. Dillon left boxing in 1923, not much richer than when he started. He retired to Florida where he lived next door to a small restaurant he owned and ran. He died in 1942.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Uppercut! View Post
    How great do you feel Dillon was? I feel he gets pretty underrated, and never really gets mentioned.....

    Some considered him a smaller version of Jack Dempsey. Charley Rose ranked him as the #2 All-Time Light Heavyweight & Nat Fleischer ranked him as the #3 All-Time Light Heavyweight. Thats very impressive, getting rated that high by them.


    A quick bio
    Jack Dillon now there's a name that strikes a chord, he was certainly a great fighter and he was highly rated by the experts. Very interesed to see that Eddie McGoorty ( my "Handle" namesake beat Jack because there was a fight that Dillon was supposed to have that if he had won would have made him a superstar and a name on everyones lips. Dillon was robbed of the chance to be forever famous by the shocking and sudden sickness and death of the just turned 21 yo LES DARCY. This fight was to take place in Memphis, Dillon though famous and very highly regarded was a big betting underdog, it seems that hardly anybody gave Jack a Snowballs as the youngster was thought by most as invincible. Having seen no film of Dillon I am only 3 quarters certain that Darcy would have won, he was like Jack, a very big puncher who knocked out HW's clean with one punch. On film and by reputation Darcy is quick on feet and quicker with his hands A pressure fighter with good boxing skills, and with amazing long reach, that of a man 6ft 2in but only 5.7. tall, he was never knocked down, an amazing chin. If I could see Jack Dillon I could see where his talents lie, what is his full stats, i'd like to know. I wish that Darcy vs Dillon 1 had taken place, if it had, dear young Les would have been alive and even more famous, the Darcy tragedy makes me sadder than any other boxing story than any other.

    Comment

    Working...
    X
    TOP