Boxing History
When Jack Johnson visited Great Britain
Published
7 days agoon

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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Jacek Bodell’s record as a lithe weight in 1962–1967, when he challenged the British and the community of the weighty community against Henry Cooper, is unusual because he fought no less than 49 times in these five years. At that time it was a fairly enormous number for every professional, especially in lithe and weighty. The reason he did this can be explained by the fact that his manager was George Biddles from Leicester.
Venerable George in the corner of Jack can be seen during Bodella’s last fight against Danny Mcalinden in 1972. George has been in boxing for over 50 years and was, together with Alex Griffiths, probably the most influential central, involved in the game. He was known that his boxers were working. It is no accident that two men who fought most often in the British history of the Ring, Len Wickwar and George Marsden, were managed by George. The cynic would argue that the more times his boxers fought, the more commission he could take. There may be some truth in this, but many boys asked George to manage them because they knew that they could also earn more on him.
Take, for example, cases of Jeff Tite, Ric Sanders and Roy Davies. All three were vigorous in the overdue 1940s and in the 1950s, and all three competed around the same weight. Tite boxed 82 times in five years, Sanders 109 times in the same number of years, and Davies had 106 competitions in seven years. Between them they won 187 of these 297 matches, so they were not cups, and yet only one of them won the area title. They were such fighters who were biddles bread and butter. They often fought with the same bill, because the breakthrough George was well known to the promoters at the time that they could provide productive, well -conditioned boxers, often in a low time where you can rely. George had a stable full of such boxers.
I am lucky that I have some biddles journals and notebooks in my collection from this period. For example, I see that on June 7, 1948 he matched all three boys on the account in Northampton, and Sanders earns 65 pounds for eight -sized Eric Hall, and both Davies and Tite earned 40 pounds for supporting eight runes against George Frost and Jackie Hart. It was good money in 1948, when the average weekly wage for a working man was about 7 pounds. Biddles, who would accompany three warriors in his car and worked with the house with the house, did not do so badly with his 25 -month commission.
Boxing was the life of George and conducted his operation from his snack bar, properly called the “ring” in Belgrave Gate in Leicester, his hometown. His father, in medium weight, had a decent career as a professional before the First World War during the service in the LeiceStertershire regiment. George was alone in 1924, twice in boxing in Leicester, winning and losing. In 1927 he founded as a manager, initially dealing with Siku Culton from Mansfield, who in a real Biddles style had 157 competitions in nine years as a professional. Over the next 50 years, George could be seen at shows throughout the country, but he had to wait until 1957 before he had his first world champion, Hogan Bassey from Nigeria, providing George with this honor.
If it was a job and experience that you wanted as a warrior, along with constant income, then George was your man. There were only 11 British fighters who fought 300 times, and three of them managed Biddles. For those who want to learn more about this extraordinary man, his life story has been discussed in detail Bn From July to December 1978.

Larry Holmes had one of the best stabs in history, superhuman regenerative powers and intelligence, which shone through his extreme talent. First of all, he was the right guy in the wrong time.
Larry was the fourth of 12 children and this was the poverty of the family, he abandoned the school in the seventh grade and worked in a car wash to provide support. Larry began to box at the age of 19 and quickly found a martial art for his pleasure. He took part in Olympic rehearsals in 1972 in 22 yearsND Bout, but after disqualification, Dane Bobick decided on a professional.
In 1973, Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier, George Foreman and Ken Norton drew attention to the heavyweight at the top with such as Jerry Quarry, Joe Bugner and Ron Lyle, just below. The arrival of Holmes to the landscape became practically unnoticed.
But Ali and Frazier were soon aware of Larry, because he perfected his skills as their sparring partner, also working with Jimmy Newborn and Earnie Shavers, winning the fight after the fight. In 1978, Ali’s legs felt a long career burden, and the phrase and Foreman left over the years. The time has come for the invincible Holmes to hit, and after defeating Shavers in the eliminator, he was adapted to the leader of WBC Ken Norton.
Epic is an abused word, but it sums up this amazing clash; Power and pain collided when supremacy was thrown between two gladiators on the 15 largest rounds of heavyweight history. Holmes, who ignored the torn muscle in his left shoulder, was recognized as the winner of the cards and the legend should be born.
But the society was too busy with a claim for Ali, who after years of sluggish form created a performance that he reminded everyone, as he once was unique when he canceled Leon Spinks to apply for the WBA belt. But Ali did not want to fight Holmes, or at least not yet and he retired.
Larry reversed the challenges of Mike Weavera, Shavers and Scott Ledoux, before 38-year-old Ali left his pension in October 1980 to face Larry. The world wanted another miracle of Muhammad. Of course, it never came when Holmes stuck his friend in 10th Round pension. Holmes attacked Ali as nicely as the boundaries of the prize ring allow, but his public attack on the national hero did not do much his popularity.
Broken condition of the heavyweight title, because the fans were forced to recognize at least one other master for the entire seven -year Holmes spell at the top. He dominated Trevor Berbick over the age of 15, he definitely detained Leon Spinks in three, and the hero’s rock White America, Gerry Cooney, over 13 rounds. This fight, from the racially charged accumulation (mainly to the promoter of Don King) to The Ring Walks (Holmes, Master, came first) was an ugly spectacle and it is not a surprise that Holmes was tired of the audience’s satisfaction.
Larry gave up the WBC belt so that he could throw Marvis Frazier in the round before modeling the newly formed version of the IBF title. Wins on James “Bonecrusher” Smith, David Bey and Carl Williams, and then, with his record at 48-0 (one of the flawless sum of Rocky Marciano), lost points with the ponderous champion Master Michael Spinks in 1985.
Many thought that Holmes deserved a verdict in the rematch, but after losing the divided decision he retired in the cloud of bitterness to convince himself of challenging the peak of Mike Tyson in January 1988. Holmes did not disgrace himself, his stab and movement frustrated the teenage lion, but Larry could not remain out of reach long enough to avoid the defeat of the fourth year.
It seemed that it was such, but with Tyson dropped from perch and the return of George Foreman, who ran a great business, Holmes returned in 1991, at the age of 41. The division almost as good as when it originally entered immediately 20 years earlier, Holmes proved its value, remaining in most decades, many ten -year -old, Olverfel, in 1992 and WBC, Olower. McCall, in 1995. He passed for good for good in 2002-probably more popular at the age of 52 than he was before-Erica Esch overtaken and moved his return record to 21-3.
Read this function when Larry Holmes flew here
Boxing History
That day – George Foreman regains the world heavyweight title 20 years after he lost him with Muhammad Ali
Published
1 day agoon
June 3, 2025
George Foreman in this 10 Michael Moorer
November 5, 1994; MGM Grand, Las Vegas, NV
Boxers who are 45 years ancient should not gain a heavyweight title. Twenty years after losing to Muhammad Ali, seven years after firing the latest return, three years after losing to Evander Holyfield, two years after Alex Stewart hit his face and a year after he was connected by Tommy Morrison, after Tommy Morrison, after 10 years of total processing round).
Do you know? It was reported that Foreman wore the same trunks compared to Moorer, which he had on the day he lost to Ali. Foreman said Bn A few years ago it was not necessarily true: Foreman had several pairs of identical shorts made to fight Ali. The couple he wore against Moorene was one of them. Another: announcer Michael Buffer later said that he gave George Foreman the best possible introduction because he thought it was Foreman’s last fight.
Watch out for: The way Foreman invents the finish. He practices a blow in battle, at the same time playing with Moorer, several times before he actually lands.

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