Connect with us

Boxing History

Jimmy Wilde – the best of the British

Published

on

Jimmy Wilde vs Joe Conn

Boxing, more than most sports, seems to generate many debates about who was greater than whom. I would do Muhammad Ali Mike Tyson’s battle? Was Marvin Hagler better than Carlos Monzon? Who was the best of the four kings? I usually like to stay away from these discussions, because they seem to lead to quite a lot of vitriol. I understand that thanks to advanced training techniques and preparing the diet, current warriors have an advantage over their counterparts from 100 years ago. However, I also feel that yesterday’s heroes came from more arduous times and there were many more fighters around, which had to be overcome to get to the top.

Considering who was the best of the British, I would say that Ted Kid Lewis was our best warrior, Ken Buchanan, our best boxer, Lennox Lewis, a man who achieved the most, contrary to the best, in the current age, and if someone is looking for the most exhilarating warrior, don’t look further than Nigel Benn. Perhaps the best of this was Jimmy Wilde.

Wilde is constantly on these letters, although I suspect that there are many younger fans, without particular interest in the archaic history of the ring, who wonder why it should be so. It is often claimed that Wilde had 600 professional fights. This is extremely untrue. He was a stand fighter, so he would cross gloves with at least 600 men, but most of them would not be professional boxers. Its detailed professional record is quite unclear and there are many different versions. Some of them contain inaccuracies, while others exclude several significant duels, including a loss. He had over 100 competitions and won the enormous majority of them at a distance. The man could hit with any hand. Nothing was known as “a ghost with a hammer in his hand.”

He often weighed much less than his opponents, even though he competed through his entire career in the lightest division. When he defeated American, Johnny Rosner, in 1916 he weighed 7 pounds (100 pounds) in the World Wagi Flyight competition. In 1916, he knocked out the future British weight champion in 1916, when he lost between 18 and 20 pounds, while in 1919 Wilde in 1919 Wilde issued a close sentence while fighting 14 pounds. One of his most unusual feats was to provide Joe Conn about two stones (28 pounds) in weight and four inches in 1918 and comprehensively transfers before the Londonian detained in 12 rounds.

Conn was then the highest feather scale, and in the next fight he met Tancey Lee for the British title and lasted until the 17th round. Before the competition, Wilde won 12 at the trot, and among his victims there were three men who once had a British title – Sid Smith, Tommy Noble and Curley Walker. He also defeated Welsh fees by Danny Morgan and Idris Jones in the schedule, and both men were the highest caliber.

The idea of ​​matching Wilde from Conn comes from promoter Jacek Callaghan. The show took place at Stamford Bridge, the house of Chelsea FC. It was not a natural match and I suspect that it was carefully produced to allow Wilde to let Wilde to demonstrate a enormous London audience, how versatile he was able to defeat a much heavier man.

I have some excellent photos from the fight – one of which is recreated here. Just look at the size difference. Also consider Conn’s face after hitting Wilde’s left hook. Body language is also revealed. Wilde looks like an aggressor, and Conn appears restraint. The largest British warrior in history? It’s Wilde for me.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Boxing History

Version – Marco Antonio Barrera wins a furious and electrifying rubber match over Erik Morales

Published

on

Marco Antonio Barrera

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.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctlipjgecq

Continue Reading

Boxing History

On this day: Felix Trinidad and Fernando Vargas are sharing, fouls and exhilarating violence

Published

on

Felix Trinidad

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.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngk4rafo574

Continue Reading

Boxing History

When Jack Johnson visited Great Britain

Published

on

Jack Johnson

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.

Jack Johnson had to chase his fight with Tommy Burns

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.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

OUR NEWSLETTER

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending