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  • #21
    Originally posted by Yogi View Post
    Cheers, bud.


    Couple more links to sites I've visited on occasion;

    http://eagle.brooklynpubliclibrary.o...sp?Skin=BEagle

    Used to visit that one quite a bit in researching some of the earliest days of gloved boxing. Has coverage of the later days of the bare knuckle era as well.


    Sports Illustrated's Vault has also come in handy on occasion if you're looking to read more modern writings from the 1950's on;

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/
    Good to see you making an appearance Yogi

    Poet

    Comment


    • #22
      Originally posted by poet682006 View Post
      Good to see you making an appearance Yogi

      Poet
      Hey yeah..... YOGI IS GOOD VALUE...... Good to see ya Yogi.

      Comment


      • #23
        Originally posted by McGoorty View Post
        WOW !!! A JAMES FIGG FIGHT FROM ORIGINAL NEWSPAPER :: http://www.boxinggyms.com/news/figg1730/figg1730.htm,,,,http://www.boxinggyms.com/
        Very EARLY 1730 BOXING Report In Newspaper

        COUNTRY JOURNAL: OR, THE CRAFTSMAN, London, Oct. 17, 1730 Pg. 2 news under "London" includes: Wednesday at Mr. Figgs Amphitheatre was fought a decisive Battle between the said Mr. Figg and Mr. Holmes, the Irish Hero, when at the second Bout the latter, in defending his Head, received such a desperate Wound in his left Arm, as obliged him to yield, without having been able to give his adversary one Cut.

        Comment


        • #24
          JACKSON'S OXFORD JOURNAL
          England, Mar. 13, 1790.

          On Wndnesday last the two rival Champions, Ja-
          combs and Payne, met by Agreement at Stoke Gold-
          ing, near Coventry, and after making good their re-
          spective Deposits, adjourned to a Field near the above
          Place, where a Stage was erected, when a terrible
          hard-fought Battle ensued, in which Strength and
          Resolution were as much shown as in any Combat of
          the Kind ever remembered; but after a very hard
          Engagement, which lasted upwards of two Hours,
          and consisted of ninety-five Rounds, Jacombs was
          obliged to give in. Jacombs was the Favourite at
          betting to; but his Conduct, during the Battle, came
          very far behind the cool and manly Behaviour of
          Payne; as it is evident he placed more Dependence
          in throwing his Antagonist on the Railing, and such
          brutal Shifts, than in fair and open Fighting. They
          were both struck off the Stage several Times, during
          the Battle, but caught by the Spectators, who were
          exceedingly numerous.

          After the Battle was decided, another commenced,
          between two much less Men, Kirby and Towe, which
          was also agreed on before; and, after a very spirited
          and skillful Contest, was won by one decisive Blow
          given by the former.

          A Battle was fought on Monday between a Brent-
          ford and a Hounslow Man for Twenty Guineas.
          Johnson was Second to the former; Ward to the
          latter. The former gained the Victory, which he
          would hardly have done, had not his Antagonist
          wanted an Eye, which was against him.

          Comment


          • #25
            JACKSON'S OXFORD JOURNAL
            England, Mar. 13, 1790.

            On Wndnesday last the two rival Champions, Ja-
            combs and Payne, met by Agreement at Stoke Gold-
            ing, near Coventry, and after making good their re-
            spective Deposits, adjourned to a Field near the above
            Place, where a Stage was erected, when a terrible
            hard-fought Battle ensued, in which Strength and
            Resolution were as much shown as in any Combat of
            the Kind ever remembered; but after a very hard
            Engagement, which lasted upwards of two Hours,
            and consisted of ninety-five Rounds, Jacombs was
            obliged to give in. Jacombs was the Favourite at
            betting to; but his Conduct, during the Battle, came
            very far behind the cool and manly Behaviour of
            Payne; as it is evident he placed more Dependence
            in throwing his Antagonist on the Railing, and such
            brutal Shifts, than in fair and open Fighting. They
            were both struck off the Stage several Times, during
            the Battle, but caught by the Spectators, who were
            exceedingly numerous.

            After the Battle was decided, another commenced,
            between two much less Men, Kirby and Towe, which
            was also agreed on before; and, after a very spirited
            and skillful Contest, was won by one decisive Blow
            given by the former.

            A Battle was fought on Monday between a Brent-
            ford and a Hounslow Man for Twenty Guineas.
            Johnson was Second to the former; Ward to the
            latter. The former gained the Victory, which he
            would hardly have done, had not his Antagonist
            wanted an Eye, which was against him.

            Comment


            • #26
              How It Feels to Be Champ
              BY ROCKY MARCIANO ©1955
              Published in THE FIRESIDE BOOK OF BOXING 1961
              EDITED BY W.C.HEINZ

              At about 8:30 on the morning of September 24,
              1952, I woke up in a hotel room in Philadelphia.
              You know how it is when you wake up in a
              strange place, and at first you don't know where
              you are.

              "Something nice happened to me," I thought
              to myself, and then I remembered. "That's right.
              Last night I won the heavyweight championship
              of the world."

              When I tried to turn it seemed like my whole
              body was sore. I had cuts that had been stitched
              over both eyes and another on the top of my
              head, but I was happy as I think anybody can
              be. Jersey Joe Walcott had given me the tough-
              est fight I'd ever had, but I'd knocked him out in
              the thirteenth round, and I was heavyweight
              champion of the world.

              I've had the title now for almost three years.
              In that time I've found out that, in most ways,
              it's everything you think it's going to be, and in
              other ways it's very different.

              It's easy for me to remember what I thought
              it would be like to be champion, because I can
              remember the first night I ever thought I had a
              chance. On December 19, 1949, I had Phil Mus-
              cato down five times and knocked him out in
              five rounds in Providence. This was my twenty-
              fourth win without a loss as a pro and my twenty-
              second knockout, and after the fight I drove back
              to Brockton, like I always did after my Provi-
              dence fights, with my pals Ali Colombo and
              Nicky Sylvester and Snap Tartarlia.

              It was a nice night, clear and cold, but as soon
              as I got into the car I felt something was differ-
              ent. Usually on the way home after the fight we
              laughed and kidded a lot, but this night every-
              body was very serious.

              "You know, Rock," one of the guys said while
              we were driving along, "you haven't got very far
              to go now."

              I said, "To go where?"

              "For the title," one of the others said.

              "Ah," I said. "Take it easy."

              "No," somebody said. "Figure it out. About
              five good wins and you can be on top of the
              heap."

              Then we started figuring who I'd have to get
              by _ Roland LaStarza, Rex Layne, Joe Louis, if
              he made a comeback, Jersey Joe Walcott and
              Ezzard Charles _ and when they dropped me off
              at my house and I went to bed I couldn't sleep.
              I was a kid who never dreamed he could be
              heavyweight champion. I wanted to be a major-
              league catcher, but then I threw my arm out and
              I started to fight just to help my Pop support the
              family. Now I got to thinking what it would be
              like if I could be champion.

              I remember the night Primo Carnera won
              the title from Jack Sharkey. I was nine years old
              at the time, and in the Italian section of Brock-
              ton they had big bonfires burning and they sang
              and shouted around them almost all night long.
              I could remember those fires in the James Edgar
              playground right across the street from our house
              and I figured that gee, if I could win the title, I'd
              come back to Brockton and I'd throw a big
              party for the whole town and every kid would
              be invited and get an expensive gift.

              Right after he won the title Carnera came to
              Brockton to referee at the old Arena that was
              across Pleasant Street from the Brockton Hospi-
              tal. My uncle, John Piccento, took me that night
              to see him, and on the way out Carnera walked
              right by us and I reached out and I touched his
              arm.

              "I saw Carnera and I touched him," I told my
              Pop when I got home. "I really did."

              "How big is he?" my Pop asked me.

              "Bigger than this ceiling," I said, "and you
              should see how big his hands are."

              The year before I licked Muscato and was
              lying there thinking about what it might be like
              to be champion of the world I had met Joe
              Louis for the first time. He was boxing an ex-
              hibition with Arturo Godoy in Philadelphia, and
              I was fighting Gilly Ferron on the card. We were
              all in the dressing room for the weigh-in when
              Joe came in.

              "Say, Joe," my manager, Al Weill, said, "I
              want you to shake the hands with my heavyweight."

              Joe stuck out his hand and we shook. He
              looked like a mountain, and he had on a big,
              beautiful overcoat and a mohair hat, light-brown
              with a nice feather in it. I figured that hat alone
              must have cost fifty dollars, and now I got to
              thinking about the money he must have made.

              When Louis knocked out Max Schmeling in
              2 minutes and 4 seconds in their second fight,
              Ali Colombo and I were talking about all that
              dough. We were just kids talking, but it said in
              the paper that, figuring the purse Louis got for
              the fight, he made over $150,000 a minute,
              which is more than the President of the United
              States gets paid in a year.

              I got to imagining now what it would mean to
              have money like that, not just for the clothes but the
              security and what I could do for my family and
              my friends and others. I thought that boy, when
              you're the heavyweight champion of the world
              it means you can lick any man in the world, and
              wherever you go in the world everything must
              stop and what influence you have.

              There were a lot of things I didn't know then
              that I know now that I'm champion. I didn't
              know that my life would be threatened a couple
              of times. I didn't know that, although you do
              make a lot of money, it isn't what people think
              it is, expenses and taxes being what they are, and
              that you can't begin to do the things with it that
              you dreamed about. I didn't know that being
              heavyweight champion of the world is almost a
              full-time job, and that the influence you have on
              people is sometimes so strong that it worries you
              and can even bring tears to your eyes.

              After I knocked out Joe Louis, for example,
              my mother got a letter that said that, if I came
              home to Brockton for the celebration that was
              planned, I'd be shot. Then, just before my first
              fight with Charles last June, my folks got another
              note from a man who said he was a Charles
              rooter and that if I beat Charles I'd be killed,
              because Charles is a gentleman and I'm a bully.

              The Brockton police found the first letter was
              written by a thirteen-year-old girl. I don't know,
              or care, who wrote the second one, but although
              letters like that don't worry me, they worry my
              mother.

              After that first letter my sisters had to take her
              to Dr. Rocco Del Colliano, in Brockton, and now
              every time I fight he picks her up at the house
              and drives her around all evening until the fight
              is over. I never imagined I'd put my family
              through anything like that, because I never real-
              ized how many people's lives are tied up in a
              fight.

              I had a friend in Brockton named Miles Demp-
              sey, and he was my first real fan. He used to go
              to all my amateur fights, and he was the first guy
              who asked me to arrange for him to buy good
              seats when I started to fight pro. During the ex-
              citement of the sixth round of that June fight
              with Charles he died at ringside of a heart attack.
              In my mind this is a part of that fight.

              When you're the heavyweight champion the
              money, of course, is the big thing you're going
              for, because that's why you become a fighter in
              the first place. Before I started fighting, the most
              I ever made was $1.25 an hour as a manual
              laborer. When I retire, if I'm lucky, I should
              never have to worry about money again, but it
              isn't what you think it is, and your security is
              still a problem.

              Last year, for example, I fought Charles twice.
              At the end of the year, after expenses and taxes,
              I came out with a lot less than $100,000. When
              I fight twice in a year I don't figure to net more
              than about $15,000 out of the second fight, and
              that's not a lot when you've only got four or five
              more years of fighting and when, each time you
              go into the ring, you're risking the heavyweight
              championship of the world.

              I'm not complaining, because I couldn't make
              that kind of money doing any other thing, and
              when you come from a poor family you know
              it's a privilege to pay taxes. It's just that you feel
              that other people don't understand.

              I'll never, you see, be able to afford that big
              party for all the kids in Brockton. That's not im-
              portant, just kind of a foolish dream, but the
              important thing is that you can't do all you want
              for charities and churches and just good people,
              and you have a feeling that they go away not
              liking you because of it. You want to be liked by
              everybody, not just for yourself, but because
              when you're heavyweight champion of the world
              you represent boxing and boxing did everything
              for you.

              There will be a church that needs $10,000 or a
              hospital that needs that much to help build a
              new ward. I'll get a letter from a woman I don't
              even know but she'll write that if I'd give her
              $1,500 her little boy could be made well again.
              How do you think I feel?

              They run at you, too, with all kinds of business
              schemes, but that's only a nuisance, and not like
              the others. There are people who want me to sign
              notes for them or loan them money or sponsor
              them on singing or acting careers. One guy
              wanted to start a band, and another I had never
              heard of wanted me to go halves with him in a
              night club in Buffalo.

              They tried to sell me uranium and copper
              and oil wells, a dairy and an oil route. Any sales-
              man near Brockton, where I'm home only about
              two months a year, tries to get me to buy what-
              ever he's handling, and it might be a carving
              machine or a salad mixer, books, furniture, a
              car or a horse.

              Some of the things you do with your money
              don't pan out the way you dreamed, either. I
              always said that, if I became champion, one of
              the first things I'd do would be to send my Mom
              and Pop back to their home towns in Italy, and
              I used to think a lot about what a great time that
              would be for them.

              Comment


              • #27
                How It Feels to Be Champ
                BY ROCKY MARCIANO ©1955
                Published in THE FIRESIDE BOOK OF BOXING 1961
                EDITED BY W.C.HEINZ

                At about 8:30 on the morning of September 24,
                1952, I woke up in a hotel room in Philadelphia.
                You know how it is when you wake up in a
                strange place, and at first you don't know where
                you are.

                "Something nice happened to me," I thought
                to myself, and then I remembered. "That's right.
                Last night I won the heavyweight championship
                of the world."

                When I tried to turn it seemed like my whole
                body was sore. I had cuts that had been stitched
                over both eyes and another on the top of my
                head, but I was happy as I think anybody can
                be. Jersey Joe Walcott had given me the tough-
                est fight I'd ever had, but I'd knocked him out in
                the thirteenth round, and I was heavyweight
                champion of the world.

                I've had the title now for almost three years.
                In that time I've found out that, in most ways,
                it's everything you think it's going to be, and in
                other ways it's very different.

                It's easy for me to remember what I thought
                it would be like to be champion, because I can
                remember the first night I ever thought I had a
                chance. On December 19, 1949, I had Phil Mus-
                cato down five times and knocked him out in
                five rounds in Providence. This was my twenty-
                fourth win without a loss as a pro and my twenty-
                second knockout, and after the fight I drove back
                to Brockton, like I always did after my Provi-
                dence fights, with my pals Ali Colombo and
                Nicky Sylvester and Snap Tartarlia.

                It was a nice night, clear and cold, but as soon
                as I got into the car I felt something was differ-
                ent. Usually on the way home after the fight we
                laughed and kidded a lot, but this night every-
                body was very serious.

                "You know, Rock," one of the guys said while
                we were driving along, "you haven't got very far
                to go now."

                I said, "To go where?"

                "For the title," one of the others said.

                "Ah," I said. "Take it easy."

                "No," somebody said. "Figure it out. About
                five good wins and you can be on top of the
                heap."

                Then we started figuring who I'd have to get
                by _ Roland LaStarza, Rex Layne, Joe Louis, if
                he made a comeback, Jersey Joe Walcott and
                Ezzard Charles _ and when they dropped me off
                at my house and I went to bed I couldn't sleep.
                I was a kid who never dreamed he could be
                heavyweight champion. I wanted to be a major-
                league catcher, but then I threw my arm out and
                I started to fight just to help my Pop support the
                family. Now I got to thinking what it would be
                like if I could be champion.

                I remember the night Primo Carnera won
                the title from Jack Sharkey. I was nine years old
                at the time, and in the Italian section of Brock-
                ton they had big bonfires burning and they sang
                and shouted around them almost all night long.
                I could remember those fires in the James Edgar
                playground right across the street from our house
                and I figured that gee, if I could win the title, I'd
                come back to Brockton and I'd throw a big
                party for the whole town and every kid would
                be invited and get an expensive gift.

                Right after he won the title Carnera came to
                Brockton to referee at the old Arena that was
                across Pleasant Street from the Brockton Hospi-
                tal. My uncle, John Piccento, took me that night
                to see him, and on the way out Carnera walked
                right by us and I reached out and I touched his
                arm.

                "I saw Carnera and I touched him," I told my
                Pop when I got home. "I really did."

                "How big is he?" my Pop asked me.

                "Bigger than this ceiling," I said, "and you
                should see how big his hands are."

                The year before I licked Muscato and was
                lying there thinking about what it might be like
                to be champion of the world I had met Joe
                Louis for the first time. He was boxing an ex-
                hibition with Arturo Godoy in Philadelphia, and
                I was fighting Gilly Ferron on the card. We were
                all in the dressing room for the weigh-in when
                Joe came in.

                "Say, Joe," my manager, Al Weill, said, "I
                want you to shake the hands with my heavyweight."

                Joe stuck out his hand and we shook. He
                looked like a mountain, and he had on a big,
                beautiful overcoat and a mohair hat, light-brown
                with a nice feather in it. I figured that hat alone
                must have cost fifty dollars, and now I got to
                thinking about the money he must have made.

                When Louis knocked out Max Schmeling in
                2 minutes and 4 seconds in their second fight,
                Ali Colombo and I were talking about all that
                dough. We were just kids talking, but it said in
                the paper that, figuring the purse Louis got for
                the fight, he made over $150,000 a minute,
                which is more than the President of the United
                States gets paid in a year.

                I got to imagining now what it would mean to
                have money like that, not just for the clothes but the
                security and what I could do for my family and
                my friends and others. I thought that boy, when
                you're the heavyweight champion of the world
                it means you can lick any man in the world, and
                wherever you go in the world everything must
                stop and what influence you have.

                There were a lot of things I didn't know then
                that I know now that I'm champion. I didn't
                know that my life would be threatened a couple
                of times. I didn't know that, although you do
                make a lot of money, it isn't what people think
                it is, expenses and taxes being what they are, and
                that you can't begin to do the things with it that
                you dreamed about. I didn't know that being
                heavyweight champion of the world is almost a
                full-time job, and that the influence you have on
                people is sometimes so strong that it worries you
                and can even bring tears to your eyes.

                After I knocked out Joe Louis, for example,
                my mother got a letter that said that, if I came
                home to Brockton for the celebration that was
                planned, I'd be shot. Then, just before my first
                fight with Charles last June, my folks got another
                note from a man who said he was a Charles
                rooter and that if I beat Charles I'd be killed,
                because Charles is a gentleman and I'm a bully.

                The Brockton police found the first letter was
                written by a thirteen-year-old girl. I don't know,
                or care, who wrote the second one, but although
                letters like that don't worry me, they worry my
                mother.

                After that first letter my sisters had to take her
                to Dr. Rocco Del Colliano, in Brockton, and now
                every time I fight he picks her up at the house
                and drives her around all evening until the fight
                is over. I never imagined I'd put my family
                through anything like that, because I never real-
                ized how many people's lives are tied up in a
                fight.

                I had a friend in Brockton named Miles Demp-
                sey, and he was my first real fan. He used to go
                to all my amateur fights, and he was the first guy
                who asked me to arrange for him to buy good
                seats when I started to fight pro. During the ex-
                citement of the sixth round of that June fight
                with Charles he died at ringside of a heart attack.
                In my mind this is a part of that fight.

                When you're the heavyweight champion the
                money, of course, is the big thing you're going
                for, because that's why you become a fighter in
                the first place. Before I started fighting, the most
                I ever made was $1.25 an hour as a manual
                laborer. When I retire, if I'm lucky, I should
                never have to worry about money again, but it
                isn't what you think it is, and your security is
                still a problem.

                Last year, for example, I fought Charles twice.
                At the end of the year, after expenses and taxes,
                I came out with a lot less than $100,000. When
                I fight twice in a year I don't figure to net more
                than about $15,000 out of the second fight, and
                that's not a lot when you've only got four or five
                more years of fighting and when, each time you
                go into the ring, you're risking the heavyweight
                championship of the world.

                I'm not complaining, because I couldn't make
                that kind of money doing any other thing, and
                when you come from a poor family you know
                it's a privilege to pay taxes. It's just that you feel
                that other people don't understand.

                I'll never, you see, be able to afford that big
                party for all the kids in Brockton. That's not im-
                portant, just kind of a foolish dream, but the
                important thing is that you can't do all you want
                for charities and churches and just good people,
                and you have a feeling that they go away not
                liking you because of it. You want to be liked by
                everybody, not just for yourself, but because
                when you're heavyweight champion of the world
                you represent boxing and boxing did everything
                for you.

                There will be a church that needs $10,000 or a
                hospital that needs that much to help build a
                new ward. I'll get a letter from a woman I don't
                even know but she'll write that if I'd give her
                $1,500 her little boy could be made well again.
                How do you think I feel?

                They run at you, too, with all kinds of business
                schemes, but that's only a nuisance, and not like
                the others. There are people who want me to sign
                notes for them or loan them money or sponsor
                them on singing or acting careers. One guy
                wanted to start a band, and another I had never
                heard of wanted me to go halves with him in a
                night club in Buffalo.

                They tried to sell me uranium and copper
                and oil wells, a dairy and an oil route. Any sales-
                man near Brockton, where I'm home only about
                two months a year, tries to get me to buy what-
                ever he's handling, and it might be a carving
                machine or a salad mixer, books, furniture, a
                car or a horse.

                Some of the things you do with your money
                don't pan out the way you dreamed, either. I
                always said that, if I became champion, one of
                the first things I'd do would be to send my Mom
                and Pop back to their home towns in Italy, and
                I used to think a lot about what a great time that
                would be for them.

                Comment


                • #28
                  THE DETROIT FREE PRESS
                  SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1946

                  Robinson Gets Off Floor to
                  Win Welterweight Title
                  Tommy Bell
                  Also on Mat
                  in Hard Bout

                  Body Punishment
                  Turns Tide For Ray

                  NEW YORK - (UP) - Ray
                  (Sugar) Robinson became wel-
                  terweight champion of the
                  world by winning the unanimous
                  decision over Tommy Bell at
                  Madison Square Garden after
                  15 rounds of hard fighting in
                  which each was floored once.
                  Robinson, stream-lined Harlem
                  Negro, rose from the canvas in
                  the second round and came on to
                  take the most important decision
                  of his career, after blasting Bell
                  to the floor in the 11th.
                  _ Robinson and the slender, broad-
                  shouldered Negro from Youngs-
                  town, Ohio, were fighting for the
                  World welterweight crown which
                  was left vacant when Marty Servo
                  retired from the ring because of
                  nose injuries on Sept. 25.

                  A CROWD of 15,670 paid wit-
                  nessed a thrilling battle until
                  Robinson's salvo of body blows in
                  the seventh round slowed up his
                  23-year-old opponent and left him
                  in such fatigued condition that
                  Bell was lucky to last the distance.

                  However, the surprising Bell,
                  who had gone into the ring a
                  5-1 underdog, rallied in the 13th
                  round and threatened again to
                  give Sugar Ray trouble.

                  The gross gate was $82,948.
                  Rain and snow pared down both
                  attendance and gross gate.

                  ROBINSON, who had waited
                  five long years for a shot at the
                  147-pound crown, made the most
                  of his opportunity. He gamely
                  came back after being floored for
                  a count of eight by Bell's left
                  hook in the second round.

                  After he slowed up his oppo-
                  nent with body blows in the sev-
                  enth, he gave Bell a terrific bat-
                  tering that was climaxed by
                  Bell's knockdown in the 11th.

                  In that session, Robinson belted
                  him groggy with a series of head
                  hooks and then sent him to his
                  haunches on the canvas for a
                  count of eight.

                  VIRTUALLY no one in the Gar-
                  den believed that Bell could sur-
                  vive the terrific battering he suf-
                  fered in the 12th, as Robinson -
                  eager for the kill - tore after him
                  with an all-out attack that had
                  blood-smeared Tommy staggering
                  about helplessly.

                  Robinson, in registering his
                  second victory over Bell, had a
                  much harder fight in the early
                  going than in their first engage-
                  ment at Cleveland nearly two
                  years ago when Ray had Tommy
                  on the floor in the ninth, en route
                  to a 10-round decision victory.

                  Robinson registtered his 74th
                  victory in 76 professional fights,
                  and it was one of the hardest
                  won triumphs of his career.

                  IT WAS the sweetest one too,
                  for it finally gave Ray the official
                  recongnition as champion, after be-
                  ing called "uncrowned king of the
                  welterweights" since 1941.

                  Robinson, scaling 146 1/2 pounds
                  to Bell's 146, grew so tired from
                  punching Tommy after the 12th
                  round that his fatigue permitted
                  Bell to make his surprising rally
                  in the 13th, and prevented Bell
                  from being kayoed in the 14th
                  or 15th.

                  Comment


                  • #29
                    Another newspaper report of [B]SUGAR RAY ROBINSON's WW World Title. -------[/BFITCHBURG SENTINEL
                    DECEMBER 21, 1946

                    GIVE ROBINSON
                    CROWN AT LAST
                    _ NEW YORK, Dec. 21 (AP) - At
                    long last they've crowned the un-
                    crowned champion of the welter-
                    weights - Sugar Ray Robinson - and
                    it happened just about in time, too,
                    because the sugar man isn't nearly
                    so sweet in the swat department
                    now as he was once.
                    _ It took five years for the Harlem
                    stringbean to get his shot at the
                    147-pound bauble - five years while
                    the welterweight champions gave
                    him plenty of that blank stare and
                    he had to go roaming around knock-
                    ing over assorted ear-scramblers of
                    various shapes and sizes, and wait
                    for the big one. And when he final-
                    ly got the ticket to the title taffy-
                    pull last night, he arrived on sched-
                    ule in Madison Square Garden with
                    a 15-round decision over Tommy
                    Bell to take the championship Mar-
                    ty Servo abdicated when he retired
                    with an aching nose in September.
                    _ But those five years of waiting -
                    durig which the uptown beanpole
                    had 75 fights, won 73, lost one (to a
                    middleweight) and tied another -
                    apparently took something out of the
                    sugar man that he isn't going to get
                    back, like losing the last pot of the
                    night in a seven-card stud game.
                    _ He showed against Tommy that
                    some of the fire has gone out. This
                    isn't taking a thing away from Tom-
                    my the Thumper, mind you, be-
                    cause the T-shouldered swatter out
                    of Youngstown, Ohio was a fancy
                    fighting man in there last night,
                    and a crowd of 15,670 customers who
                    chipped in to a pot of $82,948 liked
                    him. Some even booed the decision,
                    although it was unanimous and the
                    Associated Press score card made it
                    8 rounds for Ray, 5 for Tommy and
                    2 even.
                    _ Bell laid an assortment of large
                    left hooks on Ray's whiskers
                    that did the Harlem Hammer no
                    good at all. And one of them even
                    dumped Robinson right on his pretty
                    silk panties for a long, long seven-
                    count in the second round which
                    took years off the lives of the chalk
                    players who liked Ray 1 to 5 on
                    the board. And after Tommy him-
                    self hit the deck in the 11th and had
                    lumps raised on him in the 12th as
                    Robinson tried to put the squeezer
                    over, the Ohio Hot-Shot came
                    charging right back to take the 13th
                    and 14th.]

                    Comment


                    • #30
                      LEOMINSTER DAILY ENTERPRISE
                      SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1946

                      Ray Robinson
                      Beats Bell
                      For Crown
                      _ _ _ _BY SID FEDER
                      _ NEW YORK, Dec. 21 (AP) - At
                      long last they've crowned the un-
                      crowned champion of the welter-
                      weights - Sugar Ray Robinson - and
                      it happened just about in time, too,
                      because the sugar man isn't nearly
                      so sweet in the swat department
                      now as he was once.
                      _ It took five years for the Harlem
                      stringbean to get his shot at the
                      147-pound bauble - five years while
                      the welterweight champions gave
                      him plenty of that blank stare and
                      he had to go roaming around knock-
                      ing over assorted ear-scramblers of
                      various shapes and sizes, and wait
                      for the big one. And when he final-
                      ly got the ticket to the title taffy-
                      pull last night, he arrived on sched-
                      ule in Madison Square Garden with
                      a 15-round decision over Tommy
                      Bell to take the championship Mar-
                      ty Servo abdicated when he retired
                      with an aching nose in September.
                      _ But those five years of waiting -
                      durig which the uptown beanpole
                      had 75 fights, won 73, lost one (to a
                      middleweight) and tied another -
                      apparently took something out of the
                      sugar man that he isn't going to get
                      back, like losing the last pot of the
                      night in a seven-card stud game.
                      _ He showed against Tommy that
                      some of the fire has gone out. This
                      isn't taking a thing away from Tom-
                      my the Thumper, mind you, be-
                      cause the T-shouldered swatter out
                      of Youngstown, Ohio was a fancy
                      fighting man in there last night,
                      and a crowd of 15,670 customers who
                      chipped in to a pot of $82,948 liked
                      him. Some even booed the decision,
                      although it was unanimous and the
                      Associated Press score card made it
                      8 rounds for Ray, 5 for Tommy and
                      2 even.
                      _ Bell laid an assortment of large
                      left hooks on Ray's whiskers
                      that did the Harlem Hammer no
                      good at all. And one of them even
                      dumped Robinson right on his pretty
                      silk panties for a long, long seven-
                      count in the second round which
                      took years off the lives of the chalk
                      players who liked Ray 1 to 5 on
                      the board. And after Tommy him-
                      self hit the deck in the 11th and had
                      lumps raised on him in the 12th as
                      Robinson tried to put the squeezer
                      over, the Ohio Hot-Shot came
                      charging right back to take the 13th
                      and 14th.
                      _ For five years Ray had been the
                      "uncrowned champion of the wel-
                      terweights" and with a bow in the
                      direction of Joe Louis, a lot of the
                      wise-boy beachcombers along Ja-
                      cobs Beach have been tabbing him
                      as the greatest fighter, pound for
                      pound and inch for inch, mashing
                      noses today. And the other welters
                      were so anxious not to take tea
                      with him that he was forced to
                      roam out among the bigger boys
                      and try on middleweights just to
                      get the exercise.


                      LEOMINSTER DAILY ENTERPRISE
                      SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1946

                      Comment

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