Boxing History
Sonny Liston: He loves to be mean
Published
6 months agoon
Before Sonny Poston fought Floyd Patterson, we checked the readers with this intimate view of Sonny on September 21, 1962 …
After a few seconds over him and stuck with icy water, Albert Westphal again began to feel more like his venerable self. Climbing his legs, he crossed the ring from Philadelphia on the still trembling legs, where his winner stood.
“Why are you so unfriendly?” He asked. “I don’t want to be your enemy. Why do you look so mean?”
Sonny Liston was even more related to the language than usual. He folded a huge shoulder on the shoulders of Germany, as if to comfort him. As for the devil, they were fighters, right?
Shouldn’t warriors be mean? Don’t think about being nice, just think about throwing a second guy.
Grave business
For him, the gigantic hefty weight of the Negro, which fights Floyd Patterson next week in the World Heavyweight Championship championships, Fighting is a sedate company that likes, but the company, but it’s not business.
Sonny will tell you that the only time he saw something comical in the fight, it cost him a fight.
“I fought with Marta Marshall and knocked him down. When he got up, he ran to me, barking like a dog. He walked in my head, and I couldn’t laugh. When I laughed, he suited me well and broke my jaw”
Sonny fought in the last six rounds with his lips open and and ended Marshall in the dying seconds of the last round. The murderous left hook ripped his stomach and raised the veteran in the ropes.
Marty looked at Sonny’s face and went straight through the ropes and the ring apron! The judge began the count, but the bell ended the fight, and Marshall made the decision.
This is the only failure of Sonny Listona in 34 professional fights, and he collected 23 knockout over the best hefty wagons. Contrary to his better judgment, Marta Marshall returned there with Sonny and lived to regret him.
Poston stopped him for six, and then banged the decision about Detroit Fighter.
One of the twenty -five children born in the hand in a shaky hut Backwoods near Pine Bluff, Arkansas, Charles Lekon did not have time to learn. I spent his days at work in the fields. When his parents split up, he escaped to St. Louis to join your mother.
Living in the city was so strange for a overgrown boy from Backwoods. At the age of thirteen, he enrolled in the first grade at a school where other children laughed at him and his illiterate manners. A year later he abandoned school.
Poston is crazy on the street with a tough group and one night they pulled a robbery with a gun on the hash connector on the eastern side. One of the clients recognized him and before he managed to spend his participation in $ 37 of the loot, the cops received him.
It was not Listona’s first brush with the law and they threw him a book. He was sentenced to three five years of terms to act simultaneously in the prison state of Missouri in Jefferson City.
To kill the monotony, a great black man started cheating in a prison gym. Soon a word appeared that Poston Kid was the biggest thing on two feet. Father Alois Stevens, a Roman Catholic chaplain, was one of those who heard this word.
Father Stevens began to encourage the juvenile convicted person in his boxing, so one day the priest came to a visit to the sports editorial office of St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Bob Burns.
Burnes sent a coach he knew, Monroe Harrison to see what a child looks like.
Harrison liked what he saw and the application was submitted to the conditional dismissal. This was awarded and after just over two years of the judgment, Charles Lekon was released under the care of Father Stevens, Burnes, Harrison and Gazeta Murzyński, Frank Mitchell.
He moved all the amateur competitions aside to win the title of Golden Gloves, and in 1953 he became a professional warrior. In 15 duels he lost only to Marshall and scored seven knockouts.
During weighing to his first fight, one of his guides gave him instructions. Kid Poston was to fight began to repeat everything that the guy said. “That’s right, sonny,” he would say. “Sonny Boy, do you hear me?”
The promoter raised the nickname and the Sonny Liston was announced when he climbed the ring.
His novel connections had the right fight for novel tickets. He pierced gigantic names such as Mike Dejohn, Nino Valdes, Cleveland WilliamsRoy Harris and Zora Folley and overtook Eddie Machen.
Sonny Liston was the most crucial claimant to the heavyweight master Floyd Patterson. But he had to wait two years before he got a great chance. He had to get rid of the obscure characters who lurk behind the scenes and get a novel manager.
Sonny paid Barone seventy thousand dollars for his contract and hired George Katz as his novel manager. Katz, an forthright man, was henceforth replaced by Jacek Nilon, the Irish-American millionaire, but George is still ten percent.
“I like this guy,” says Nilon of Sonna. “He is a gigantic kid, a vast overgrown child. Has he not haunted enough?”
It is also the opinion of people close to Sonna, not an simple man to meet. Says Morton Witkin, his lawyer. “You can’t dislike Sonny when you meet him. And you can’t get to know him in five minutes.”

Over the past two years, the warrior has spent a lot of time in the company of Father Murphey, who offered assist after one of Sonny’s attacks with the law. Sonny stayed with Father Murphey in Denver in Colorado, learning to read, write and be a good citizen.
One of the most stable influences in today’s life Listona is his attractive wife, Geraldine, a school teacher. For her there is always Charles, never Charley or Sonna. “Baby”, looks after his money, and when he says, go, sonny goes.
Sonny, who does not drink, will sit for hours, watching one of the four television sets in his six -digested house in West Philadelphia, dreams of the day he will be the world champion.
“There are two ways to go through this life … a proper and improper way,” he says. “First, I went wrong and paid for mistakes. Now I’m going in the right way and nothing will change me.”
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Boxing History
Tommy Burns-Jack Johnson and Harry Mallin honored with plaques
Published
4 months agoon
November 3, 2025
IT says a lot about the social importance of boxing that monuments are being unveiled around the world in honor of the great boxers of the last over 100 years. The latest is a plaque commemorating the world heavyweight title fight between Tommy Burns and Jack Johnson. It stands on a footpath in Rushcutters Bay in Sydney, Australia, near the former Sydney Stadium where the 1908 fight took place.
Johnson chased Burns around the world to get the fight. As a black man in the early 20th century, he fought his greatest battle outside the ring, fighting against widespread racism, making securing a shot at the biggest prize in sports a monumental one.
Jack followed Tommy to London, where the latter engaged in several subtle fights, defeating outclassed Brits Gunner Moir and Jack Palmer. Upon arrival, Johnson visited Arthur “Peggy” Bettinson at the National Sporting Club in Covent Garden, and Peggy offered to arrange a world title fight between him and Burns for a fee of $12,500. Burns, however, found the offer ridiculously low and demanded $30,000 to defend against Johnson.
After destroying Wexford’s Jem Roche in the Dublin round, Tommy went to Paris for a few fights and Jack followed him. After knocking out London’s Jewey Smith and Australia’s Bill Squires in the French capital, Burns was tempted to travel to Australia for a rematch with Squires and a fight with another Australian, Bill Lang.
Australian promoter Hugh D. (“Huge Deal”) McIntosh paid Burns handsomely for these two simple defenses and began collecting the $30,000 Tommy was asking for to fight Johnson. Already funded, McIntosh wrote to Johnson in London and offered him $5,000 to challenge Burns for the world crown in Sydney. Even though Jack didn’t like having to accept one-sixth of what the champion was going to receive, the opportunity was too good to pass up.
They met on Boxing Day 1908 in an open-air stadium originally built for the Burns-Squires fight. Twenty thousand fans sat inside the stadium, while about 30,000 stayed outside, climbing trees or telegraph poles to catch a glimpse of the action. The event wowed the world – it was the first time a black man had fought for the world heavyweight crown – but it turned out to be a complete mismatch. In fact, the 5-foot-10, 167-pound Burns had no chance of beating his infinitely more qualified 6-foot-1, 200-pound opponent.
After a prolonged, one-sided beating, Tommy was saved from further punishment when the police stopped the fight in the 14th round. Johnson was declared the winner and the first black world heavyweight boxing champion. Although initially conceived as a short-lived structure, Sydney’s Rushcutters Bay Stadium was later enlarged and covered. It remained an iconic boxing and entertainment venue until its demolition in 1970.
Ten thousand miles away, another plaque was erected in Pimlico, London, honoring Olympic boxing champion Harry Mallin. It is set at Peel House, where Mallin spent most of his working life as a policeman. Arguably the greatest amateur in British history, Harry left the sport with an undefeated record after over 300 fights. He won Olympic gold medals in 1920 and 1924 and five straight ABA titles (1919-23).
After leaving the ring, Harry remained involved with boxing. He managed the British boxing teams at the 1936 and 1952 Olympics and was a life vice-president of the ABA. He served in the Metropolitan Police for five years above normal retirement age, retiring in 1952 with the rank of sergeant-instructor. The Harry Mallin plaque was exhibited by English Heritage last year, but for some reason it seems to have slipped by unnoticed. It is a worthy addition to the growing list of memorials to British boxing heroes.
Boxing History
On this day: Mike Tyson knocks out Michael Spinks in the round
Published
4 months agoon
November 2, 2025
These are the most famed 91 seconds in all of boxing, which took place on this day, Monday, June 1988. 31 years ago on this very day, the peak and seemingly unbeatable Mike Tyson faced a man who, in the opinion of a handful of good judges, was the only remaining fighter capable of testing him; maybe even beat him.
The fight, dubbed “Once and For All,” took place at a swanky hotel owned by a certain Donald Trump, The Trump Plaza. Everyone who was anyone was there – Muhammad Ali, Jack Nicholson, Warren Beatty, Sylvester Stallone and Madonna, to name just a handful of the celebrities in attendance – and the fight was the biggest cash-in in sports history at the time. Unfortunately, those who expected a great fight were disappointed.
Two undefeated fighters who had legitimate claims to the heavyweight throne – Tyson won the WBC/WBA and IBF belts, and Spinks won the lineal title after angering Larry Holmes in 1985 – finally faced each other. Tyson, who was only 21 years ancient (he turned 22 three days after the fight), had a record of 34-0 (30), while the 31-year-old Spinks was perfect with a record of 31-0 (21). Despite these adequate qualifications, the fight turned out to be a huge mismatch/anticlimax.
Spinks, a fighter Tyson admired as a teenager while watching him on TV, seemed completely uninterested in the fight as he climbed the ropes in Atlantic City. Much has been written about Spinks’ apparent fear and even fear of what was about to happen to him. He froze and Tyson sensed that his secretiveness had reached another of his victims. Tyson, who had many distractions outside the ring – chief among them the mess of his marriage to Robin Gives – didn’t let any of them bother him; in fact, he used chaos as additional fuel for his fire. He really wanted to hurt Spinks, and everyone has probably read the story about how Tyson, quite literally, was punching holes in his dressing room wall when Spinks’ manager, Butch Lewis, came in to check his gloves before the fight could start.
The fight was over in the blink of an eye. Tyson was smoking when he left the house and after just a minute he sent his fighter a nasty body shot; Spinks is forced to kneel on the ropes. When he rose, the former delicate heavyweight king, who had made history by becoming the first delicate heavyweight ruler to climb to the top and win heavyweight gold, was free from his misery. A sizzling left-right combination to the head knocked Spinks down, almost through the ropes and out of the ring. Spinks tried to get up but was completely gone and was taken down in just 91 seconds.
Tyson barely celebrated, even though millions of his fans did. Spinks later claimed that he “came to fight like I said” but had absolutely nothing to bother Tyson with. As it turned out, this was Tyson’s last truly great performance. He peaked at the age of almost 22, and although he held the undisputed heavyweight title for almost two years, his skills were very slowly eroded; finally to the point where a huge outsider in James Douglas was able to knock him out in 1990.
But that night against Spinks, Tyson’s defeat seemed almost impossible. Tyson had achieved everything he set out to do when he turned professional less than three and a half years earlier.
Boxing History
Ken Buchanan is the greatest British boxer of all time
Published
4 months agoon
November 2, 2025
AFTER my successful blogs informing you about the greatest warrior of all time, this week it’s the turn of the greatest British warrior of all time. I believe that man is Scottish legend Ken Buchanan.
As I said last week, it’s not about yesterday’s players beating today’s players or vice versa, it’s about what they did in their era against the best that were around, and Ken – I think – outshined them all.
I considered many great fighters, including John Conteh, Randolph Turpin, Ted Kid Lewis, Jack Kid Berg, Carl Froch, Joe Calzaghe, Howard Winstone, Jimmy Wilde and even Lennox Lewis, but none matched Buchanan as my all-time greatest British fighter.
I had the pleasure of fighting on the same list as Ken in 1969 (I say fight, my opponent was fighting, I was just practicing shooting). Ken was 23-0 when he fought for the British Lightweight title against Maurice Cullen. Buchanan won by knockout in the 11th round at the National Sporting Club in Mayfair in front of an all-male audience who were only allowed to cheer during the break between rounds.
He continued to defeat world-renowned fighters such as Angel Garcia, but tasted his first defeat when he lost a 15-round decision in Madrid to Miguel Velazquez, who went on to win the welterweight world title. He defeated Velasquez in a rematch, defeated Chris Fernandez and defended his British title against Brian Hudson.
That year he traveled again, this time to Puerto Rico, to challenge legendary Panamanian Ismael Laguna for the WBA lightweight title, whom he defeated by decision over 15 rounds in scorching heat. The WBA was not recognized by the British Boxing Board of Control at the time and he was unable to defend his title at home. Meanwhile, after 10 rounds at Madison Square Garden, he had determined that Denato Paduano would be ranked number one in the world, and in February the following year he defeated Rubén Navarro in Los Angeles for the WBC title, became the undisputed lightweight champion of the world, and was then allowed to defend in Great Britain. There, he knocked out Carlos Hernandez, the former welterweight world champion, before returning to Madison Square Garden for another unanimous decision over Ismael Laguna. Two fights (and wins) later, he returned to Novel York to defend his title against undefeated Roberto Duran. The legendary Panamanian won after a controversial hit and stop, but he always cited Buchanan as his toughest opponent – praise indeed.
The Scot has fought against the best in the world in places such as Puerto Rico, Panama, South Africa, Japan, Canada, Los Angeles and across Europe, fighting on five different continents. He fought at Madison Square Garden five times and won once, with Muhammad Ali as his main supporter. He was voted the best European fighter to ever fight in the USA. He was the only British fighter to ever win the American Boxing Writers’ Fighter of the Year, defeating the likes of Ali and Frazier that year. He was also inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame, voted BBC Sports Personality of the Year and awarded an MBE by Her Majesty The Queen.
Here’s to it!
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