Boxing History
Inside the celebrated Joe Bloom gym
Published
3 weeks agoon

When do you think about the ancient gym, what do you imagine? Floors, walls and chunky windows with dirt, ruined equipment and a shaky, colored with a blood ring? Go back 60 years or more, and this is probably an forthright representation of a typical British boxing gym. But there was one significant exception.
Cambridge Gym at 9 Earlham Street, at Cambridge Circus, in London West End was a bastion of neatness and purity thanks to the eccentric owner Joe Bloom. “You would be overlooked and he would circulate on the floor disinfecting,” a talented feather and featherlight in the 1940s and 1950s once told me. “Woe to anyone who dropped even a diminutive piece of paper on the floor of the beloved Joe gym”, reminded Boxing News “Elderly Timers” Doyen Ron Olver.
Although known as Southern Africa, Bloom was born in London on April 16, 1896. His father was sent to South Africa with Imperial Lithe Horse during the Second Boer War (1899–1902), and when the war ended Joe and his brothers, they joined him. As a newborn man, Bloom was an avid amateur boxer and was interested in medical matters. He joined the ST Emergency Service Organization, he worked in a hospital during World War I, and then continued working with an ambulance, which explains his obsession with hygiene.
In 1932 he returned to Great Britain, planning to work in greyhound races, but instead he entered boxing. The Olympic bronze medalist in South Africa Eddie Peirce was Joe’s first warrior. Bloom brought him to Great Britain in 1933 and directed him to a successful professional career. Soon other South African boxers appeared – Johnny Holt, Johnny Rust, Robey Leibbrandt and many others. Joe found them accommodation, looked after their general matters, and in 1936 he opened his Earlham Street plant. The place quickly became one of the best known in the country. Mecca for South African boxers, was also popular among businessmen and showbiznes stars who want to stay in shape.
Twenty-two world champions performed there at different times-primo Carner, Al Brown, Freddie Miller, Benny Lynch, John Henry Lewis, Henry Armstrong, Freddie Mills, Randolph Turpin, Terry Downes, Sugar Ray Rayson I Sonny poston among them. It was also used for critical indicators.
Norman Giller, currently 81 -year -old, was a regular guest at the Bloom gym at the turn of the 1950s and 1960s, when he wrote for BN under the pseudonym Ross Martin. It reminds: “The gym looked at Palace Theater and Down Shaftesbury Avenue and acted like a boudoir by a very picky, Martinet Joe.
“Joe was quite a figure, knocked and walking when I knew him, and he still had a robust accent Springbok. He was always flawless with freshly rooted wear in the gym, looking more like a doctor than a trainer. Many warriors felt the length of the language, if there was something less than organized. He liked to say:” You can eat dinner from my junior high school. ” When I participated in press conferences, he once insisted that reporters and photographers remove their shoes.
“A proud Jew, Joe, was furious [Jack] Solomons and [Harry] Levene, when after the war, they began to import German boxers. He belonged to anti -fastic movements and undertook [Oswald] Blackshirts Mosley in the celebrated battle at Cable Street from 1936. “
In addition to the spell, when Bloom served as PTI in RAF during World War II, he continued the gym for over 30 years. He was forced to close this place in 1967, when its owner raised the rent from 500 to 2000 pounds a year in accordance with the rising prices of real estate. But he returned to look after the gym control council in Havestock Hill on resident coach George Daly Free. Joe died in London in 1979, at the age of 82.
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Boxing History
Version – Marco Antonio Barrera wins a furious and electrifying rubber match over Erik Morales
Published
9 hours agoon
May 29, 2025
Marco Antonio Barrera in MD 12 Erik Morales
November 27, 2004; MGM Grand, Las Vegas, NV
Mexican warriors Barrera and Morales ended their epic trilogy in a properly urgent style, creating another unforgettable war. Entering in the start, in the case of the Super Feather WBC Morales belt, the series stood with one winner per item. Morales won the initial meeting in Super-Bantam in 2000, and Barrera secured the creation of a rematch in 2002 in a featherweight-the decisions were questioned. Accordingly, the verdict in the rubber match also caused a debate. As in the previous two meetings, bitter enemies got involved in a furious fight, and the electrifying 11 round turned out to be particularly cruel. Ultimately, Barrera went to the top and adapted Morales’s achievement, becoming the three world letter.
Do you know? At that time, WBO Feather Highland Scott Harrison was interested in an observer in Ringside. He hoped to catch the winner.
Watch out for: In the middle of nine, the fighters are involved in the clinch, and Barrera is bursting morale at the back of the head with a legal apparatus. Uninvited by his opponent, Morales refuses to touch Barrera gloves when the judge was asked.
Boxing History
On this day: Felix Trinidad and Fernando Vargas are sharing, fouls and exhilarating violence
Published
21 hours agoon
May 29, 2025
Felix Trinidad in RSF 12 Fernando Vargas
December 2, 2000; Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, NV
A lot was expected about the battle of unification of power between Trinidad and Vargas and, fortunately, did not disappoint. Trinidad, who defended his title WBA, jumped out of the blocks and twice started in the opener twice. Vargas returned a favor in the fourth round, sending Trinidad to a mat. Even worse for Felix, he was also deducted to a low blow. The same violation meant that the next point was taken from Trinidad in seventh place, before Vargas lost the point after a closer south of the border in 10. Constant violence with the view lasted to 12., in which the trio knocking up from Trinidad finally ended to a perfectly exhilarating competition.
Do you know? Former victim of Trinidad, Kevin Lueshing, called Boxing news Offices to discuss a brutal conclusion to fight. He said: “It caused a terrible memory of how he finished me.”
Watch out for: The complete HBO Pay-Per-View transmission is available to watch on YouTube. In Undercard he presents himself like Christa Martin, William Joppy and Ricardo Lopez.

This is the latest in the occasional series about the heavyweight champions of the world and their visits to Great Britain. In previous articles I wrote about Primo Carner and Langford himself, and this week I will look at Jacek Johnson and his British concert tour of 1908. Jackjohnson came to Great Britain on Monday, April 27 from the States, when the German steamer, Kronprinz Wilhelm, did in Plymouth. He was accompanied by his manager, Fitzpatrick himself, and two men immediately followed the train from Plymouth to the Paddington station in London, checked in at the Adelphi Hotel, and in the evening he visited the British Botker, in the field of eight circles, to see 20 rounds.
Johnson was in Great Britain to hunt Tommy Burns, also visiting London, to force him to defend the title, which, as we know, took place in Sydney eight months later. Two men exchanged words in Sporting Press and Burns, who stayed in Jacek’s Castle, in a pub in Hampstead, immediately published 1000 pounds from The Sporting Life, stating that if the Johnson camp was fitting to this amount, the fight was turned on. Fitzpatrick opposed the terms for which Burns insisted on the proposed match and refused to cover money. Johnson challenged the shooting moir, but it was rejected when Moir drew a color line and refused to meet the American.
Johnson spent the majority of this summer, appearing in various music rooms in Great Britain, boxing at exhibitions with a wide British heavyweight, including Jewey Smith, Jam Styles and Fred Drummond. In those days it was quite lucrative for the highest level boxers. Then he was tailored to Ben Taylor (Woolwich) to a 20-round competition in Plymouth. Jack trained on a fight at Regent’s Park and at the Junior High School at the National Sporting Club. He left the Waterloo station on July 30 to go to Plymouth for a fight, which was to take place the next day in Cosmopolitan Gymnasium, Mill Street. A vast contingent of fans welcomed him in the city of Devon, which at that time was the center of the fight of the great importance.
The competition, as you can expect, turned out to be one -sided when Johnson defeated Taylor with ease, raising him 11 times in front of a judge called Halt in the eighth round. After the duel, Johnson praised Taylor at his break, stating that he never met a player during his entire career. Later that night at the Mount Pleasant Hotel gathered at the Mount Pleasant Hotel, near the cosmopolitan, where Taylor founded his training camp, and Jack appeared to give Taylor again congratulations to Taylor for organizing such a good competition.
Johnson took part in a series of exhibitions in Dublin, and then in Bristol, where he participated in the Bristol City Vs Everton football match in Ashton Gate – his first experience in sport. Until September 7, he returned to London and announced that in October he was adapted to Box Mike Schreck at the National Sporting Club. On September 14, Schreck manager Jimmy Kelly was announced that the fight was not turned off because Schreck could not be relied to get to a decent condition for the fight.
Together with Burns in Australia, Johnson remained high and desiccated, without a significant fight, so the National Sports Club organized a competition against Sam Langford, which took place at the club on November 9. What would be a coup d’état – a match between the two best bulky scales in the world – but unfortunately this did not happen. On Monday, September 21, Johnson left the Charing Cross Station on the planned Łódź train at 13.20 to France to start a long journey to Australia, where he finally met and defeated Tommy Burns three months later.

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