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Boxing History

Working volume: Boom boxer

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Working volume: Boom boxer

When we slowly move out of the whole series of blockades and professional boxing, both internal and external, they begin to gather again, it is not surprising that our little hall promoters are again demanding stage shows. September already looks like it will be a very busy month, and this is great news for the hordes of newborn boys, ticket sellers and journeymen, whose careers have been largely suspended over the last 18 months.

Over the past 40 years, the number of promotions taking place throughout Great Britain usually ranged between 200 and about 280 per year. The last year, in which over 300 professional tournaments took place, took place in 1955 and throughout the entire period in 1961–1976 there were fewer than 200 shows each year. Throughout the Second World War, there were never less than 400 shows, and in two years, 1940 and 1942, over 500. After the war there was a boom and often there were over 1,000 events taking place annually in Great Britain. This ended with the introduction of entertainment tax in 1953, when the promoters had to pay the government even a third of profit, which tried to fix the post -war economy with a cripple, and the boxing in a compact hall never really regained.

In the case of a truly astronomical number, you should return to the 1930s, and in particular years in 1930–1934. During this five years there have never been less than 4,000 shows a year, in 1931 and 1933. Over 5,000. It was possible to see two or even three professional tournaments taking place the same day in cities such as Preston, Sheffield, Leeds and Barnsley. In much smaller places, such as Ryton and Colne in Lancashire, in the same evening there were competing promoters regularly put to concerts towards a enormous and enthusiastic audience. Professional boxing could be seen throughout the UK, often in places that have been starved from sport for the last 70 years; Norfolk, Suffolk, Cornwall, Devon and Cumbria, in which he noticed little, were all habitats, with hundreds of newborn boys fighting at licensed tournaments in places such as Penzanka, Truro, Cirborne, Newton ABBOT, DIS, SPALDING, Lowing, Great Yarmouth, Whitehaven, Vormon and Vormon Penrth. In larger industrial areas, such as southern Wales and northeast, hundreds of tournaments were held a year, in Newcastle, in St James Hall, you could watch a professional boxing six nights a night a week in 1933 and 1934.

World economic depression, which began in 1929 and lasted in the 1930s, was responsible for this boom in sport in Great Britain. I used to talk to many warriors from this period and while most of them enjoyed a ring career, almost everyone told me that they boxed because they had to be so challenging. The handbags they fought for, often less than 1 £, at least helped put food on the table, and this period was not called “hungry thirty”. Nowhere was there so striking in the southern WALIA, where most coal mines tried to remain economically profitable, and tens of thousands of miners were released many times, professional boxing provided some kind of income of many newborn boys who spilled gloves, even if there were not so many people who could afford to arrive.

Now, when Pandemia finally goes back, it would be wonderful to see how boxing is subjected to another mini-booom and for this magical in total 300 programs that will be violated again, so everyone behind our organizers of compact apartments, so that it needs to happen because they need our support.

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Boxing History

Liverpool vs Manchester – great amateur boxing competition

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Robbie Davies of Liverpool

Ordinary readers of this column will know that I have a weakness for amateur boxing, especially for the Golden Age of Sport in Great Britain, the 1950s to the 1980s, when amateur boxing was the most competitive and the standard was so high. They will also know that I regret the changes introduced to the ABA structure, and aged regional competitions lose their identity to a gigantic extent. London divisions, which I wrote about in June 2019, were very hard to win, and the same applies to the Northwestern Poviat Championships.

At that time, the northwestern poviats were divided into two regions, east and west. This meant that the boys from Liverpool, in the western area, began to compete directly with those from Manchester, in the eastern area. It would be hard to find two English cities that have a greater competition, which was reflected in boxing, when the appropriate masters from two cities often met in the north-west finals. Of course, there were many other boxers from various parts of Cheshire and Lancashire, who won these finals, including Frankie Taylor (Lancaster), George and Ray Gilbody (St Helens), Kelvin Travis (Oldham) and Steve Hill (Blackpool), but boys from two cities dealing with the dominance of this event.

The championships were often held at the Liverpool stadium and in Belle Vue in Manchester, with Preston Guildhall and Kirkby Sports Center, as well as the list of masters sounds like who to who to who of British Greats – John ContehAlan Rudkin, Joey Singleton, George Turpin, Terry Wenton, John Lynch and Robbie Davies from Merseyside and Phil Martin, Ray Shiel, Alan Tottoh, Kenny Webber, Eddie Copeland and Lee Hartshorn from Cotton City.

Let’s go back to one of these championships and try this opportunity. On March 15, 1973, the championships were held at the Liverpool stadium before a huge crowd of almost four thousand. In the heavyweight Les McGowan from Speke, which was at that time rated first in Great Britain, he had to withdraw due to a back injury. This opened the door of Paul Sykes, a boy Wakefield, who recently enlisted to Liverpool Club, Golden Gloves ABC. Sykes destroyed the former master of NW, Terry Connor, in two rounds to win the title of West and did a similar job at 19-year-old Barry Peacock in Manchester (Cavendish ABC) to win the title. Finally, he lost to Garfield Mcewan in the ABA semi -final, and Mcewan won the title of ABA this year before he became a decent professional.

Two other warriors from Liverpool, Joe Lally and Robbie Davies, also won their titles in a welterweight and lightweight weight, respectively. Both were great punchers, and Davies was particularly destructive when he sent another Mancunian from the Cavendish club, Carlton Lyons, for one round. Carl Speare, who as a professional fought with Larry Paul, Billy Knight and Maurice Hope, won his only championships of NW, via Outhustling Terry Dolan (BDS) during full course, and George Gilbody, one of the greatest amateurs in this era, won in Bantamweight through Walker, Keith Howard (Ardwick).

Another unique talent, Southpaw John Lynch from Kensington, won in a featherweight, defeating Paul Dykes (Brookdale Park), and Tony Carroll and Steve Hill were outstanding winners in featherlight and lightweight, respectively. Among these names there were many future specialists and everyone went through a hard series of competitions to become a northwestern champion in a hard era. From 1957, two teams from the eastern and western areas competed for Jacek M. Peel’s memorial trophy, awarded the area, which had the most winners, and Liverpool Lads never lost him. In 1973, they triumphed nine duels to one, but only one of their representatives, John Lynch, won this year by ABA.

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Boxing History

Ear fight. When Mike Tyson bit Evander Holyfield

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Mike Tyson

Commentator Sky Ian Darke was in Las Vegas in June 1997, unaware that Mike Tyson was on the edge of the destruction of his reputation forever. Below is his journal of events, which ended with the most infamous disqualification in the history of boxing.

Sunday, June 22, 1997

I don’t remember who said Las Vegas makes Blackpool look like Venice, but they were not wrong. After 14 hours of flying Glenn McCrora and I came to discover that Elderly Sin City in the desert fell to the novel depth without taste. Our hotel opposite MGM had an electric chair, where you can pay 2 USD for “fried live”. The loud mountain queue is located just outside the bedroom window. Try and don’t go as usual to get to the west coast, fighting for sleep as overdue as possible. You still wake up in the middle of the night and fall asleep in the afternoons.

Monday, June 23, 1997

Mission Impossible – get one interview with Mike Tyson. Over the years, repeated efforts to go through the official channels have proved hopeless. The only hope is him when Golden Gloves Gym leaves after training. We come to find closed doors and ordinary gloomy difficult to guard. Rory Holloway, co -author of Tyson, Rory Holloway. We ask if Mike will speak on British television because he has so many fans there. GROVELING helps – does it do it? “I don’t ask him,” Holloway stops.

“But you have no objection if it’s okay?”

“To you, what you do. I can’t stop him.”

You are gathering that seeing Tyson is like an attempt to organize an audience with the Pope. In the end it emerges, it looks gloomy. “Hi Mike, I wonder if you could spend three minutes on Sky Sports from Great Britain?”

“I don’t know about three minutes,” he will pay back. You think we asked him to surpass nine-o’clock-new. And that’s how we throw the camera. “Interview” is monosylbical. The truth is that Tyson hates the media. He is usually contemptuous and disregarded even the most reasonable and polite investigation. The camp here has an impenetrable mentality – some may say that persecution.

Tuesday, June 24, 1997

Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield They are completely different animals in the same jungle. Evander is helpful and available as Mike Nie -SPRING. Holyfield works in the ring set up in a media tent and does not leave until everyone who wants to talk to him did not do it. The man is a pure class, it is clear that Tyson still does not keep any terror for him. Indeed, many of us wonder if this is the opposite after the beating Tyson took care of the first fight.

Wednesday, June 25, 1997

Press conferences are one of the huge sets of every week of fighting in Vegas. There are 1,500 media in the city. Mike Marley, director of Don King advertising, says that for all the accreditation of 10 was reversed. The Russians are here, and broadcasters in three Chinese dialects. As usual, Glen McCrory and Bob Mee have a lottery about how long Don King will take to present everyone. The record is 53 minutes on Akinwande-Welch. This time Don holds it up to 18 minutes. According to his standards, this is almost “without comment”. The most significant most significant stock exchanges between Christa Martin, a women’s boxing star and the only women who defeated her, Andrea Deshong. Deshong: “I will give you a boxing lesson.” Martin: “It’s nice to see you in a dress, you looked like women for the first time. I’m going to run shoes to chase you faster than you’ve ever been prosecuted … except your girlfriend!” There are more. Tyson bored and placid Holyfield are tamed in comparison. Then the coach of Lennox Lewis, Manna Steward, says that Holyfield seems “too relaxed and the edges are missing.” Eddie Futch says that after seeing the warriors this week he changed his mind and chooses Tyson.

Thursday, June 26, 1997

Weighting. This fight is so great that ESPN, All Sports Channel, show it live. Tyson is his lightest than prison- but he looks older, his skin looks gloss. Holyfield is his heaviest in history. It seems that Tyson suggests his look when they pose for photos, significant? Later, the Nevada Commission is taking place in front of the world media to hear the protest of the Tyson camp about the judge Mitch Halpern. Can you imagine how the British boxing control council does it? Manager Tyson, John Horne, believes that Tyson will be “physiologically affected”, having the same man who stopped him last time. Is this a tip on the mental state of Tyson? If he is worried about the same director, how does he feel about the same opponent? Elderly Tyson would only worry if the judge could not count until 10. Quite rightly, the commission throws out protests 4-1.

Friday, June 27, 1997

Christmas Eve. I am not sleeping at the news that Halpern has subsided. The Tyson camp has its own, Halpern was placed in an impossible position in which he would certainly have to subconsciously bend back to be candid to Tyson. Mills Lane is developed to “get”. He couldn’t know much what central role he was supposed to play in the drama. The survey of the best American boxing writers gives Tyson only six votes for 23. However, bookmakers still have Holyfield at the age of 13-8 years. This may be the first registered instance of generosity from the layers of Vegas opportunities.

Saturday, June 28, 1997

Fight. Boxing ability to dream of some novel sensational endings is inexhaustible. Both Glenn McCrora and I are terrified by the outraged behavior of Tyson. The words “coward” and “Łobuz” come to mind. Who would have thought Tyson would lean to make a “real offer” for a “real meal”? There is no doubt that Holyfield intends to defeat him, Tyson knew about it- so he gave up, hoping that he would be able to demand an ambiguous result. In my opinion, he threw out all claims that can be considered one of the best massive in history. As Glenn said on the air: “Cus d’Amato would turn in the grave.” Then we are caught in Stampeded to escape the reported shootings at the MGM casino. What a night!

Sunday, June 29, 1997

American recipients had a field night: “Bite of the century”, “Fight of the Ear” and so on. We’re going home at dawn. Sky Sports is again on Monday evening … at York Hall, Bethnal Green. It’s a long way from Vegas …

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Boxing History

Boxer players Boxing news

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boxing footballers

The country is in the middle of football. As a nine -year -old, I watched England defeated Western Germans to win the World Cup in 1966. I write it, about 55 years later, we finally defeated the Germans again in the knockout stages of a enormous tournament.

There were not many footballers who also bamped professionally, but in recent years two men broke this form. Curtis Woodhousewho played three times in the Premier League in Birmingham City, he became the champion of the British weight in 2014 after defeating Darren Hamilton in Hull. “The Driffield Destroyer” won 24 out of 31 professional competitions and is the most successful British boxer who also played high -level football.

Leon McKenzie played in all four leagues in 1995–2013, including the spells from Crystal Palace and Norwich City. While playing in Norwich Leon seven times in 37 Premier League performances. Leon is the son of Clinton McKenzie, who in my opinion was one of the best boxers of his generation. I remember well what stimulating he was, never-Say-Die Clinton, and his two wars from Colin Powers in 1979 and Des Morrison in 1981 were included in my last series emphasizing the 50 largest British fights of the 20th century. Leon inherited some of his father’s ring skills and proved it by winning eight of 11 professional competitions in 2013–2017. Favorite in York Hall, Leon Boxing for both English and southern titles Super Middleight, and his boxing career was good.

I managed to find a few examples of professional players who also bothering money, especially in the 1920s and the 1930s, but only two of them played international football. The first of them was Ted Ditchburn, who was a member of the World Cup team in England in 1950. During the long and outstanding career of Tottenham Hotspur, for which Ted kept the goal for 418 times in 1939–1958, he also played in England six times. I recently discovered three competitions for teenage Eddie Ditchburn from Northfleet, boxing in Rochester and around in the early 1930s. Eddie was the son of master Kent, Harry Ditchburn from Chatham, who boxed at a decent level before the great war, winning 19 out of 40 fights. Eddie’s student fights were for salary, and then left the ring and became a home brand on the football field.

Francis “Tom” Hoddinott [pictured above left] He came from the Brecon hills and was a tough man. He learned to box while serving in the army in India, and after returning he became a professional footballer. Tom has been the star of Watford since 1919. He was chosen to represent Wales twice in 1921 in matches with Scotland and England, after which he made a lot of money to Chelsea. He finished his career in the football league in Crystal Palace in 1926. During professional playing football, Tom also had a parallel boxing career in medium weight. In the summer of 1919, just before the league debut, volume twice in Maesteg in 10 and 12-Runder, winning both points.

After establishing an international footballer, then he again lit up in 1922, losing points to Sonna Bird from Chelsea in Fulham Baths. Bird was one of the best British medium weight of the 20th century and Tom gave him a challenging fight. Tom buckled three more times in Wales in the 1920s, winning twice before he bowed from the ring in 1930, when he retired in the 10th round of the 15th round against Jimmy McMurray in Victoria Hall in Southend. In total, he won four out of eight competitions, and died at the age of 85 in 1980. The photo on the directed page shows how sparring with Andrew Newton from Marylebone, another highest average weight of this period.

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