- Gene Tunney II (September 1927)
After dropping Tunney in the seventh round, Dempsey initially failed to go to a neutral angle, which means that the judge was unable to start the number for five seconds. Tunney got up on the official number of “nine”, but unofficially fell for 14 seconds. Tunney would triumph with a decision, and the long number was remembered as one of the most controversial moments in the history of boxing. - Georges Carpentier (July 1921)
Near between Dempsey and Carpentier is renowned for generating the first gate in sport for a million dollars. Dempsey Ko’d Carpentier in the fourth round. - Luis Firo (sister 1923)
Dempsey vs Firpo is rightly considered one of the most full struggles of all time, despite lasting less than four minutes. Firpo remained five times in the opening round, but he gathered to throw Dempsey through the ropes and the ring. In the second, Dempsey conjured up a blow to gain victory. - Jess Willard (July 1919)
Dempsey also scored seven knocking down in the first round, when he dethroned Willard to become the world king of heavyweight. The wild coronation was completed when Willard failed to be fourth. - Gene Tunney I (September 1926)
In his first fight with Tunney, Dempsey lost the world heavyweight title in points before over 120,000. - Jack Sharkey (Jul 1927)
Between the two losses of Dempsey with Tunney was scintiling in the seventh round of the knockout of his favorite Betting Sharkey, who later complained that the final shot was preceded by a low blow. - Tommy Gibbons (July 1923)
The lonely Gibbons fight was not particularly unforgettable – Dempsey won a relatively unlucky competition on the results cards – but she had mutilating consequences for Guest Shelby, Montana, which was financially ruined after extreme excessive investment. - Bill Brennan II (December 1920)
Dempsey got involved in a cruel war with an aged rival Brennan, about which he apparently had bonds with the Al Capone gangster. Dempsey won through the 12th round of KO. - Billy Mulke III (September 1920)
In the first defense of his world crown, Dempsey sent a friend of the enemy in the third round. The ladies suffered from severe kidney disease, which would be fatal. - Fred Fulton (July 1918)
Opposing DDSMakers, Dempsey instituted as the most vital pretender to heavyweight in the world, rejecting Fulton after just 23 seconds.
Boxing History
Was Dai Dollings the most influential British coach in history?
Published
1 day agoon

What to do Gene TunneyAl Brown, Jimmy McLarnin, Jack Britton, Mike Mctigue, Ted Kid Lewis and Johnny Dundee have in common? Of course: they were all world champions in the pre -war era. Less obvious answer: everyone was trained at some time by Dolls Welshman Dai.
Dollings, who trained masters, swimmers, wrestlers and swingers with the Indian club before focusing on boxers, is one of the largest trainers ever produced. It can be said that his influence extends, at least diagonally, to the contemporary era and Roberto Duran, but today Lalling is practically unknown.
Driving from Swanse, in his youth Dai was a warrior from a certain reputation, and he was also a competing champion. As a boxing trainer, his devotion went beyond training and corner work. He also cooked for his people and was a masseur expert. His first great successes as a coach came with Tom Thomas (winner of the first lane of the medium weight Lonsdale), master of the British featherweight master Spike Robson, youthful Josephu Joseph, Digger Stanley Stanley and the massive heavyweight king. In 1909, Moir said about the dolls: “I don’t think I could find a better trainer than Dai, and he knows me exactly.”
This knowledge of the warrior was one of Dai’s successes. In February 1911 he trained Matt Wells for his nervous victory over Freddie Welsh for British and European delicate awards. Wells and Dollings soon went to America to America, and Dai led his fee through a glorious state campaign, which covered the victory over the prevailing world champion in the featherweight world weight Abe Atell.
But did the dolls just frying in the print glory of Wells? Apparently not. In a letter to Boxing news Posted during the American journey, Wells said: “There is one thing that Wales should be proud of, and this means that they have the best coach in the world in Dai Dollings. It was that allowed me to defeat Freddie Welsh … Dai and I are like brothers. We’re never a look … Americans think that Dai is the best trainer.”
After returning from the USA, Dai continued training fighters in Great Britain, usually at Black Bull Pub-Cum-Cum-Gym in Whenstone. In 1913, he prepared Ted Kid Lewis for his British title of featherweight over Alex Lambert.
But Dai decided to move to America. He settled in Recent York to become a resident of the Grum Grum coach at 116th Street and Eighth Avenue, then a leading gymnasium in the city. There he found a vivid youthful man who wanted to learn from one of the best. This youthful man was the future coach of Hall of Fame, Ray Arcel, who consumed the knowledge of dolls with balmy enthusiasm.
Dai was impressed by the Arcel of the meaning of the study of the nuances of various styles of the warrior. He also taught Ray to treat every boxer who trained as an individual. “Every youthful man who came to me made full study of his personal habits, his temperament,” said Arcel later. “No two people are similar. What you say to one colleague could not lend a hand another guy.”
From Recent York, Dai trained such as Bill Brennan, Jack Britton, Dave Shade, Mike McTigue, Jimmy McLarnin, Johnny Dundee, Harry Wills I, according to some sources, Gene Tunney. When the brilliant Bantamweight Al Brown came to the city from Panama, according to Biographer Brown, Jose Corpas, Dollings told his style, pushing Al from right joy to one of the perfect left stick and ballet work built around the perfect left and ballet work, which became his personal brand.
But perhaps Dai’s greatest heritage came to convey his philosophy and Arcela techniques. Ray used these methods or their variety to direct the next generations of boxers, so that glory as a trainer and Conerman. Jack Kid Berg, Billy Soose, Ezzard Charles, Tony depends, Roberto Duran and Larry Holmes used at least to some extent from Dollings, according to the adopted and adapted by Arcel.
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Boxing History
Editor selection: When Carlos Zaryate, Alfonso Zamora and the invader on his fronts went crazy in Los Angeles
Published
17 minutes agoon
May 3, 2025
It was an exotic fight, with-men, two fighters from the promised land of boxers on an insignificant Inglewood forum. He was out of reach, foreign in every way for a British fight fan. It took me over 30 years to finally watch the fight from 1977 between Carlos Zaate I Alfonso Zamora. The reports were absorbed, the iconic status of the fight protected for a long time against watching the miracle of the fight. They were both world champions in Bantamweight, both undefeated, both adolescent and at some point, the godfather of Mexican boxing, Arturo “Cuyo” Hernandez, managed and managed them. His role is part of the story. They were not only invincible, they were ruthless, able to finish men with almost every blow. Zarys was 25 years aged, WBC champion and undefeated in 45 fights, and 44 ended quickly. Zamora was 23 years aged, WBA master and stopped or knocked on a senseless each of the 29 men he met. It was not an ordinary fight in the times of great boxing history, not a fight that has ever been in danger. In the decade, the decade, a decade, when any nostalgia struggles with the splendor of the day, the two little ones Mexicans shared several rounds of size. They belong, they are history.
However, before the first bell on the night of genius and madness, it is necessary to travel a little further in your schedules. We all know that the biggest fights in history are not the number of cases, they happen because of pride, stupidity, harm, rights and hundreds of external reasons that motivate the warrior.
Hernandez sold a contract for $ 40,000 to the boxer’s father. He never offered ZARAT’s contract for sale. This movement was personal and the plain feud of blood was inevitable from the perceived betrayal. But Hernandez was a ruthless man, and business in boxing is always to be only a business. However, Zamora was a traitor to the Clan, an enemy.
“I liked the boy, still like that. But to get rid of my father, I would sell a Pinto bean sack,” said Hernandez. This is a fight.
Kabala Aged Los Angeles Fight Fight entered this contract, promising each boxer a record bag of $ 125,000. The seventies were probably the last decade in which Los Angeles took place on the highest box of boxing, and when the city delivered itself, it delivered. The fight was agreed to one pound above Bantam’s weight limit, it would be only for the Macho belt and everyone left the ring as a master.
The forum was in a part of the city, often called Little Mexico, and in the night 13,966 tickets sold. This place was sweated, don’t make a mistake. The problem was that we did not deny it – it was expected, and the police were in their characteristic white helmets with their naked desire for confrontation. Crosses in the ring, looking for a pliable head to bury your long sticks. And, like fans, they would not be disappointed.
Richard Steele is the third man.
After only 54 seconds, the opening round is happening something really crazy. The fragility of the blows, the intensity of both boxers is interrupted when a fat man wearing a cozy white vest and a pair of gray fronts and climbs the ropes. The man gets between two boxers, raises his finger, has something to say, is on a mission, and then takes the pose kung fu. It happens that the fight has stopped and Steele just looks. The man just stands there.
Then the white helmets correspond and attack the ring. It’s wild, trust me. Five police of riots evict a man from the ring, the package and sticks him while flying. Then he is pulled and kicked from the ring, and his departure screams Zakopane near Ryki, when the boxers throw blows again. The fight is not even a minute.
Every blow is cruel, they fight, as if there was something bad on the line, and Zarys is hurt in the first. This is the fight of miracles and in the third round of Zamora begins to disappear. Zarys drops his great rival in the third. After the fourth Zamor, it is more than twice as much, she once hit tidy and slow by Zara. I would like to be there in affordable places for this fight.
When Zamora is on the back for the second time in the fourth round. His father climbs through the ropes and throws a moist towel from surrender to his son and lands on his face. However, he does not approach his affected boy. The fight officially ended in 71 seconds of the round. But Zamora SNR has unfinished business and she bursts Hernandez with a blow or two or three. The boxer is still on the floor when the ring is again besieged and the men begin to throw blows at each other.
Riot police return, this time six of them, and they are lost in a swing in a low -circuit 30, which took over the ring. It was the only possible ending.
Zamora lost the title in the next fight, lost three of the next seven and left boxing when he was only 26 years aged. It is rarely mentioned on the lists of Mexican idols.
Zarys lost the title next year with Wilfredo Gomez, lost over 15 rounds with Lupe Pintor in 1979 and gave up in 1988 after losing another fight with Daniel Zaragosis.
Zarys is a great Mexican, he won this fight, and his position will never have doubts. It was a fight that could permanently change man. The fate and life of a comic superhero on the Y fronts remain unknown. What a fight.

Boxing History
Liverpool vs Manchester – great amateur boxing competition
Published
2 days agoon
May 2, 2025
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.

Editor selection: When Carlos Zaryate, Alfonso Zamora and the invader on his fronts went crazy in Los Angeles

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