Boxing History
Harry Greb defeated the best and lived with rail life
Published
5 days agoon

Continuing his goats from the boxing series, Dan Morley looks at the career of one of the biggest boxing.
The mythical statement about the greatest all of time is the argument that will take place forever. Many opinions differ about the one who rightly deserves its place among the top -sized peak and it is arduous to compare era, taking into account the natural evolution of sport from the breakthrough 20th age.
However, I believe that there are nine fighters in history, whose work gives them the strongest claim to goat status. Men, whose achievements bordered on mythical, compilating are uncomfortable and dominate in a way that has never been exceeded at the peak of their power, while avoiding any pretenders and remain lively.
Perhaps you have already read about such as Roberto Duran and Willie Pep. In this series I will discuss each of these nine men’s career and say why I think that their claim to “the greatest in history” is so influential. This is not intended to discredit any of the other legendary fighters who are not on this list. I just believe that these people have achieved and the way they did it is only in their own range.
Today I will cover perhaps the most fascinating warrior of all time, “The Pittsburgh Windmill” Harry Greb.
Harry caught
Record: 261-16-19 (49 KO)
Dynamic years: 1913–1926
Harry Greb lived quickly and died juvenile. During 32 years of life, he avoided missiles, ran cars and fought with 299 professional fights, not taking into account his brutal public exhibitions. Greb, in its splendor, was a complete anomaly, constantly fighting in duels from 10 to 20 rounds and beating virtually every main name from welterweight to bulky weight.
It is vital to notice that no film material survived Greb’s fight, but from the accounts of all the great ones who testified it, he was extremely lively (Teddy Atlas states that in today’s landscape he would break the Punch statistics machine) and very elusive.
In his career, he was teeming with fighters and attacked at an inexorable pace at the time of long fights. It is also worth noting that he was not a gigantic blow, which means that his unusual domination in so many weight classes is even more fascinating. He changed his style to the last stages of his career, after terrifying injuries, using more filthy tactics.
His CV is the most impressive, with 33 victories of over 16 different international boxing room, from welterweight masters to one of the greatest heavyweight masters in history.
In total, Greb fought in over 60 fights with world champions and Hall of Famers. Speaking in a contemporary context, he has over 20 wins against Hall of Famers than Mayweather or Pacquiao. The great Jimmy McClarnin is the second in history in various Hall of Famers, defeated from 13, three behind Greb.
At the beginning of his career, learning professional craftsmanship, Greb suffered from most of his failures and draws, refining the record of 53-8-11 after 73 fights. When he reached the peak, “Smoke City Wildcat” went to the absolute path of domination, which was never matched.
Over the next 164 fights in six years he lost only three times and multiplied every defeat. The peak of this summit was his stunning 1919, where he reached a perfect 45-0 record for 12 months, beating many great eras.
Greb intended to expand this series even more, but illness and injuries forced him to remove a few months a year. The almost tax series would ultimately extend to 52-0 before Tommy Loughran defeated him. He answered another over 50 struggle with an undefeated series, which means that he lost only once in over 100 fights, competing through the section of five weight departments.
Over the years, he has sent many of the biggest boxing fighters countless times. He hospitalized the legendary world champion in the heavyweight of Gene Tunney in the first of their five fighting saga, brutalizing “The Fighting Marine” in the only defeat of General he ever suffered during over 80 fights.
Hall of Famers in the fight against Levinsky and Jeff Smith suffered six defeats with Greb, Tommy Loughran Four Four Porads, Tommy Gibbons Two defeats and Leo Hauck Three Porads. During his run, as a medium contender, he was refused to shoot at the title.
Therefore, after dominating in bulky weight, he decided to shoot at the bulky crown of Jacek Dempsey, where he defeated the pretender to the heavyweight of Bill Brennan and leading heavyweight rivalry Billy Myke, Gunboat Smith and Kid Norfolk. Despite the fact that he was a leading pretender to the Crown of the bulky Dempsey, the fight was never made – Greb publicly paired Dempsey, giving the master brutal beating before the crowd.
Finally, after 239 fights, Greb finally became the world medium champion, which he took for two years and 56 fights. Throughout his reign, he defeated the amazing Mickey Walker, the world champion with double weight (which Bert Sugar was among the 10 largest fighters of all time) in the most brutal 15-end war in the 1920s.
Apparently, the couple fought again on the streets later that evening. Two weeks later, Greb defeated one of the best bulky lights in history in Max Rosenbloom within 15 rounds. In the rematch he lost the title with the brilliant medium weight champion Tiger Flowers, winning the first fight, which brings another vital factor of Greb’s career assessment. He never drew a color line.
In the era in which black warriors were simply avoided because of the color of their skin, Greb gave many black era fighters, such as the Tiger Flowers, Kid Zulu, Kid Norfolk and Jack Blackburn, a chance to fight.
After defeating Flowers Greb, his priority was to ensure the safety of Flowers, waiting in front of his door to prevent racial attacks from irate fans, taking the master to his train and ensuring a safe and sound boarding.
After discussing his domination and success, it is worth noting that Greb was also one of the most arduous fighters who ever entered the ring. He was detained only twice in his entire career, one through KO only in his eighth fight Pro, and the other because of the broken arm. What makes Greb legend much fascinating is the fact that he has maintained the inhuman level of activity while dealing with so many grave injuries, but he never lost.
In the first half of his career, Greb suffered a broken hand twice, broken nose twice, broken arm, broken ribs, damage to the ankle ligament, multiple lips, cooking, which became infected, bulky flu, multiple cuts, an ear infection, ear infection, car Turkish bath.
He also had to remain inactive when he served in the navy in the First World War, and many other injuries took place in the second half of his career, in particular permanently blinded by one eye in the fight with the child Norfolk, which he kept secret, until the mystery he kept in the mystery Mystery of his death.
Greb has packed more in 32 years than many in many life, suffering from a great tragedy, losing many siblings and his wife, often called to see local problems in bars, avoiding bullets, when the gunslinger shot at his friends, allegedly grabbing Mob when they proposed, that he would bribe his fights and most famously driving like a maniac, which ultimately led to his fall.
After a car accident that broke his nose, Greb went to the hospital to receive a tiny nose surgery in the procedure that would take his life. He was only 32 years elderly. His great rival, Tiger Flowers, would die the following year, similarly because of the nose surgery at the age of 32.
Having one of the wildest lives of every Pugilist in such a tiny time, he also left heritage, which in my opinion was never exceeded and probably was never matched.
Greb’s victories over Hall of Famers and world champions are as follows:
Gene Tunney, Battling Levinsky 6x, Mickey Walker, Tiger Flowers, Jeff Smith 6X, Frank Moody, Jack Dillon 2x, Billy Myke, Mike O’Do 2x, Tommy Loughran 4x, Maxa Rosenbloom, Jack Blackburn, Mike McTigue 2x, Johnny Wilson 3x, Jakob Bartfield 3x, Bill Brennan 4x and Eddie McGorty. Winning 49 wins from 70 fights that would have against those who were mentioned above.
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Boxing History
Yesterday’s heroes: like Dave Crowley, he appointed a rating
Published
8 hours agoon
February 21, 2025
By Miles Templeton
Ordinary readers will know that I like to remember the ring career of some of the less known British champions since past days. This week it is Dave Crowley’s turn of Clerkenwell.
In the seventies, Dave was still a very well-known former Boxer, regular in London Ex-Boxers Association, a slightly partial actor in the main films with Tony Curtis and Errola Flynna, and a beloved and popular character with some stories to tell.
Dave changed professionals aged 18 in 1929. His father died during the last stages of the Great War, and Dave had to bring money to his family home. Like many others, he began in six runes in petite rooms of London, boxing at the bottom of the bill. Another kid among thousands, boxing for peanuts. But Dave stood out and in two years, after losing only four out of 47 competitions, he completed up to 15 rounds of competitions at the summit.
In 1932 he won the title of Bantamweight in the southern area and for the first time passed the title of British featherweight in 1934 Bn Called “a great battle for the brains”. He drifted in 1935 and early 1936, winning most of his competitions before he decided that the United States was a place for him. I am waiting for another crack in the British title was not for Dave, why simply not go straight to the title of world champion?
In 1936, the World Penal Scale Championships were a hotch-jotion of the confusion, and the Recent York Sports Commission would recognize Mike Belloise as a master, as well as Petey Sarron Association of Boxing. Many masters of the same weight are not only a current invention, but it was.
When Crowley came to the States, he was unknown there. Both Benny Sharkey from Newcastle and Dick Corbett from Bethnal Green were evaluated in the top ten world by the ring, but without even a place for the British master, Tarleton, Dave Crowley was nobody. He had to fight to bet and had to win. In April, he defeated the journeyman, Al Gilette, in Star Casino in Recent York, which brought him an early chance to Belloise in the 10-order on Long Island.
How Crowley managed to get this chance, against the master, is a mystery, but he certainly did not win him. Under the headline “How Dave Crowley created a rating” BN announced that “Crowley made a good impression with fans with his skillful boxing and the desire to transfer the fight to the up-to-date title holder. From the very beginning he took Belloise. “Two men drew, and along with Crowley now installed on the seventh in the ranking, the rematch for the title was natural, and only three months later Dave was counted in ninth place, claiming that he was fouled after exhibiting a huge performance against Belloise in Madison Square Garden.
After returning to these banks, Dave defeated both George Tzelewl and Harry Mizler in the British delicate title of eliminators before convincingly defeated Jimmy Walsh at Anfield Football Ground to win the British title. His reign was low because he had a misfortune to be against Eric Boon, one of the best British masters with this weight. They fought twice and Crowley was knocked out every time.
When the war broke out in 1939, maybe it was the perfect time to cross Crowley, but fought until 1946, taking into account 57 subsequent competitions and winning a delicate title along the way in the southern area. Dave died in 1974, and Eric Boon, paying tribute, said that “Dave was one of the greatest characters in the fighting game.” Leba paid his own tribute using Dave’s image on his ties and blisters.
Boxing History
Yesterday’s heroes: Greg Evans and time of demanding people and demanding rides
Published
20 hours agoon
February 20, 2025
By Miles Templeton
Greg Evans was a particularly colorful warrior from Liverpool in the seventies. Lively in 1976–1982, Greg won 10 and lost 10 with massive weight. The division was of course dominated by a colleague from Liverpudlian and WBC master, John Conteh, as well as Pat Thompson and Francis Hands also from the city and boxing of the same weight, Merseyside certainly contributed to massive weight at that time.
Greg was the champion of ABA ABA in 1976, which he achieved only 22 amateur competitions at the back. When he changed the professional in September 1976, he did it in a substantial concert at Empire Pool in Wembley. Joe Bugner destroyed Richard Dunn in one round at the summit of the bill, and Dave Boy Green, Jim Watt, Vernon Sollas and John L Gardner can also be seen, Greg had many investigations. You should surpass the experienced veteran Manchester, Terry Armstrong, over six rounds to start your professional career.
Greg has ever banned only one man with a loss of record throughout his entire career, far from the situation for future perspectives today. In his third duel he was surprised by Bob Pollard, losing in a tight eight round, but soon he showed a completely different approach when he blew up Warley Tough Man Brian Huckfield in one round at the Liverpool stadium, his first competition in his native city and, which is surprising for the five -foot novice In such a prestigious place, at the top of the bill.
He followed this with eight rounds of the decision about Roy Gumbs in Wembley, and Dave Boy Green lost his challenge in the title of the world in Carlos Palomino as the main star. What were the great cards in this era, with most of the huge ones that take place on Tuesday evening, [i].[i] Night to boxing in those days.
In November 1977, Evans was surprisingly beaten by Vernon Scott, and the loss was bad, a five -curing knockout. After defeating Harry White, the 11th assessed pretender, Greg was then chosen to fight Rab Affleck in the British eliminator of the title. I remember Raba as a banger well and he showed it very clearly in September 1978, when he undressed Evans, stopping him in just two minutes and nine seconds of the first round.
With three losses with only 10 matches and Evans hanging around the lower orders of the British top ten, it seemed to be at a crossroads. He did not meet expectations and needed a lot of win. Under the headline “Billy Blitzed”, Bn He informed exactly about this, the biggest win in his career just seven weeks later, when he took Billy Knight, one hell of a warrior, in less than three minutes. The report states that “for two minutes Knight easily poured Evans, showing his undoubted skills. Then Evans grabbed the knight with his left hook in his head and quickly followed his right to the jaw. Knight knocked down on canvas and could only float at six. “Then Evans ripped off in it, and judge Frank Parkes entered the knight with vitreous eyes and spinning.
Greg’s rollercoaster career then turned down to finish the year. After Harry White’s arrest in the return competition, he did not refrain from Roy Gumbs. Boxing for the first time in the style of Peek-a-Boo traded freely with Willlesden Fighter, with one and then the other, winning Acendoman, before Evans ran out of couple. He was finally detained in a defenseless state in the sixth state. Bad losses for Johnny Waldron and Tom Collins, in the central title of massive lightweight, were to occur, and things did not improve after his final victory in 1981 on Rupert Christie. Greg lost the last three, and then leaned after a miniature but very fun career, in which he mixed with challenging men while there were no straightforward rides.
Boxing History
Sugar Ray Robinson stops Jake Lamotta in a massacre on Valentine’s Day
Published
1 day agoon
February 20, 2025
The largest in history, Sugar Ray Robinson, 30 years aged February 14, 1951 against the 29-year-old master, Jake Lamottafrom Bronx.
14,802 The crowd produced a net gate of USD 138,938 tonight – the Lamotta master took 45 for a percentage of this, earning it 62,522 USD plus USD 1,500 from the sale of television and radio rights, 15 -percentage of Sugar Raya put it on $ 20,840 television.
It was the sixth and last meeting between the couple. Robinson won four out of the previous five, but Lamotta was the first man who defeated Sugar Ray in 41 fights in February 1943.
In our preview, Boxing news He said that it was one great advantage in favor of Lamotta – the fact that he was the only man who defeated Robinson as a professional. If Sugar Ray won, it was expected that he would give up 10th 7 pounds and concentrated on the middleweight division.
Boxing news He stated in his combat report that Lamotta kept his own in the early rounds, and on the fourth he fought furiously, but the straightforward -moving Robinson cleverly avoided turbulent attacks on the body.
After the criminal survival survival in the seventh and eighth round, Robinson cut Lamotty with a furious counterattack on his head and body during the next session. The master made another desperate effort to break through to the 11th, but Robinson, with a nice, wonderful coverage and counteracting, reduced Lamotty’s efforts into wild, unsuccessful explosions.
For the rest of this round and the next session, the blood flowed from the cuts of the face, when the ring rushed forward with powerless blows. Groggy, the helpless Lamotta, fell to his knees, desperately holding his rival to avoid knockout failure when Robinson hit in Wola when the judge intervened.
At the time of detention, Judge Frank Sikora had Robinson before 63-57, Franklin McAdams had 65-55, and Ed Klein was shot by 70-50 for Sugar Ray.
As a result of the beating of Lamota in later rounds, where he consumed such a sedate beating as every man he had ever taken in the ring, without falling on the canvas, the fight became known as “Valentine’s Massacre”.
At the end of this battle, they murmured the murmur of Bronx rebellion: “You never agreed, Ray,” and later he was celebrated for saying: “I fought with a ray of sugar so often, I almost got diabetes.” This win was the first title in the average weight for Robinson, which over the next nine years captured the title four times before he retired in 1965 as the greatest warrior in the history of this sport.
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Yoenis Tellez strives to prove references against Julian Williams
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