• Boxing game

    This can be fun

  • Some movement in a stagnant Heavyweight scene

    Shannon Briggs came back from the history books to regain a version of the world heavyweight title last weekend.  In a dramatic finish to an otherwise dismal contest Briggs blasted WBO champ Sergei Liakovich through the ropes with only seconds remaining in the 12th and final round.  Up to this point Liakovich appeared to be trudging to a comfortable points victory. 

    Briggs won the linear world title and ended George Foreman's career when he got an extremely questionable points decision over the lardy legend.  As one of the worst linear World champs in history Briggs was not expected to challenge for the title again after he lost his title Lennox Lewis back in the late 1990s.  In fact some cruel observers have suggested that Briggs biggest wins in recent years have been in nightclubs.

    The arrival of Briggs as WBO champion is unlikely to take us any nearer to identifying the first undisputed World Heavyweight champ since Lennox Lewis retired in 2003.  We need a tournament between the current champs.  Last night Wladimir Klitschko gave a demonstration of high quality heavyweight boxing as he disposed of Clavin Brock in seven rounds depite being badly cut in the sixth.  Klitschko looks like a world champion Briggs does not.  Of course in boxing looks can be deceptive.  The only way to prove anything is to get these guys in the ring with each other.

    Klitschko, Valuev, Maeskev and Briggs now is the time to prove yourselves true champions by signing up for meaningful contests that will give the boxing public a genuine World Heavyweight Champion for the first time in 3 years.  Will it happen, lets hope so.

    Shannon Briggs v Sergei Liakovich 
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wl4a1PNoxgw

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwOda_TzZ4Y

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-9FRR8JjM8

    Wladimir Klitschko v Calvin Brock
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anZl1n8AQpI

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoXS3yzovCw&mode=related&search=

  • Boxing's balance of power shifts

    Last night the former Soviet Union developed a monopoly on Heavyweight boxing. Oleg Maskaev knocked out Hasim Rahman the only American World title claimant. This may be the end of an era, heavyweight boxing has been dominated by the USA since the heyday of John L Sullivan in the 1880s. Black American domination of the World heavyweight title dates back to Joe Louis' defeat of Jim Braddock back in 1937. The influx of Soviet talent in the past ten years may have brought this hegemony to an end. Now for the first time, the best American heavyweights are also rans with no new blood coming through.

    The discipline required to be a world class boxer is no longer attractive to young Americans, black or white. Overall prosperity and a variety of less intense but equally lucrative options are available in sports such as baseball, football and basketball. Earning a million bucks a year as a ball player is a lot more attractive than fighting for a living, and a lot less dangerous.

    The question now is whether Eastern Europe's stay at the pinnacle is a long term shift. With four champs it looks like they will be around for a while. Of the four champs I can't pick out anyone with the potential to become the undisputed champ yet. Maybe one of them will emerge as the division's dominant force by the end of this. I hope so, my money's on Liakhovich.

  • Boxing enters a new era

    At the end of last year I predicted that Lamon Brewster would emerge as the best heavyweight in the world sometime this year. Well at the weekend a little known Russian called Sergei Liakhovich proved me wrong by comprehensively outpointing Brewster.

    Liakhovich's win follows the 7'3" Nicolai Valuev's capture of the WBA crown from John Ruiz. The Eastern European takeover of the heavyweight division is not finished yet. Ukrainian Wladimir Klitschko fights America's IBF champion Chris Byrd on 22 April and is strongly expected to take the title. WBC title-holder Hasim Rahman has to make a mandatory defence against Kazak fighter Oleg Maskaev at some stage this year. If Klitschko and Maskaev both win we could have the almost unheard of situation where the USA does not even own a share of the World heavyweight title.

    A few non Americans such as Lennox Lewis, Ingemar Johansson, Max Schmeling and Bob Fitzsimmons have managed to wrest the undisputed World heavyweight championship away from the USA. Though only Lewis managed to reign for any length of time. This sudden rise of the white Eastern European heavyweight is a major change. Since the heyday of Joe Louis African Americans have dominated heavyweight boxing. Admittedly the Cold War prevented any Eastern Europeans from competing as professional heavyweights. Even the Great Ali was only ever champion of the Western World.

    In the same period White Americans virtually withdrew from Heavyweight boxing. With the notable exceptions of Jerry Quarry and Gerry Cooney there has not been a competive white American heavyweight since Rocky Marciano retired in 1956. By the late 1980s White heavyweights were joke figures who rarely got anywhere near the world title. There was a perception that 'White men simply couldn't fight'.

    Legendary promoter Bob Arum clarified the point by saying it was White Americans who couldn't fight. Arum pointed out that eastern Europe produced plenty of tough white boxers who could fight. No-one took him too seriously. George Foreman predicted that there would be a Russian World Heavyweight champ by the end of the 20th century, people laughed.

    Well it looks like those guys weren't kidding after all. The question is now whether the USA can respond to this new challenge and reclaim its dominance of Heavyweight boxing. The answer may be no. For decades boxing has been declining in the USA. The power base for heavyweight boxing looks as if it may remain behind the old Iron Curtain for the forseeable future.

  • What if Jack Johnson had lost to Jim Johnson?

    In December 1913 Jack Johnson held on to his World Heavyweight title by means of an extremely dubious draw with his namesake Battling Jim Johnson. At the end of the tenth round of a tedious contest Jack Johnson quit claiming he had broken his arm. The fight was then declared a draw even though standard boxing rules dictated that Jim Johnson should have been declared the winner and new World Champion because Jack Johnson had refused to continue fighting. Today Jim Johnson would have won by a technical knockout. Instead Jack Johnson held on to the World Heavyweight championship until he finally lost to Jess Willard in 1915. Jim Johnson meantime slowly became a footnote in sporting history as the fight between the two Johnsons was the first time two black men had fought for the World Heavyweight title.

    Things could have been different if Jim Johnson had been rightly judged to have beaten his namesake. A stroll through boxing history shows that the lineage of the World Heavyweight title would have been very different during the period 1913 to 1925 if Jim Johnson was retrospectively awarded victory over Jack Johnson. Jim would lose his title to the legendary black boxer Sam Langford in March 1914. Langford would reign for just over a month before in May 1914 he lost to the up and coming Harry Wills a man who was studiously avoided by the White Heavyweight champions Willard and Dempsey. Langford would regain the Championship from Wills in November 1914 before losing it to his great rival Joe Jeanette in April 1915, another man who never got a shot at the official World Championship because of his colour.

    A year later in May 1916 Sam Langford would become the first man to win the World Heavyweight title three times (62 years before Ali offically achieved this goal) by beating Jeanette. In January 1917 Langford lost the title to Bill Tate. However the indomitable Langford took the title back from Tate in May 1917 becoming the only man to win the World Heavyweight title four times. A month later in June 1917 Sam became the only man to lose the title four times when he lost to Fred Fulton. Fulton would be the first white heavyweight champion since Tommy Burns lost to Jack Johnson in 1908. In December 1917 Fulton lost the title to little known Harry "Texas" Tate. In a January 1918 rematch Fulton avenged his defeat to Tate and regained the Championship.

    In a surreal twist Fulton lost to the up and coming Jack Dempsey in July 1918. At this point logic would suggest that the two versions of the World title would merge and Dempsey would become undisputed champ in 1919 when he defeated Jess Willard. This story however has another few twists, in September 1918 Dempsey lost to Willie Meehan, a white journeyman he had frequently struggled with. Meehan's reign as champ was short, Fred Fulton took the crown from him in November 1918. Fulton's third reign as champ was his longest, lasting until July 1920 when Harry Wills beat him to become champion for a second time.

    Wills second reign as champ lasted until January 1922 when he lost to Bill Tate. Tate's second spell as champ lasted until June 1922 when was defeated by Jack Thompson. Thompson's reign was similarly brief, George Godfrey took the crown in December 1922. Godfrey's time at the top was even shorter. Jack Renault beat him in March 1923.

    Renault hardly had time to declare himself champ before he lost to Ted Jamieson in June 1923. Jamieson managed to stay unbeaten until May 1924 when he lost to future World Middleweight champ Tiger Flowers. Flowers then lost the title to his legendary rival Harry Greb in August 1924.

    Greb held the title until Gene Tunney outpointed him in March 1925. Tunney's defeat of Greb meant that when he stepped into the ring with Dempsey in 1926 it was essentially a unification bout between the two rival claimants for the World heavyweight title. Tunney's victory possibly could be construed as proof that his alternative version of the Championship was the more legitimate. Certainly the quality of some of the champions is undeniable: for example Langford, Jeanette, Wills and Dempsey.

    I developed this alternative version of the Linear championship based on actual results recorded in BoxRec. Jim Johnson's first defeat after his draw with Jack Johnson was against Sam Langford. Using the principle that a heavyweight champ cannot have a non title fight. I had the title change hands each time the 'title holder' lost. Obviously this produced a few odd names such as Harry 'Texas' Tate and Willie Meehan but overall the genuine big names of the era all appear on the list, partly because the line follows by coincidence the Coloured Heavyweight Championship. What is significant is the appearance of big name white fighters Fulton, Dempsey, Greb and Tunney.

    I accept that if Jim Johnson had officially got the decision Jack Johnson would have done his utmost to get a rematch. However Jack Johnson was at the peak of his unpopularity in 1913 and I really can't see Jim Johnson's management risking a chump change re-match with Johnson in Paris when they could return the title to the USA and generate a far more profitable match with a white hope or failing that tour the world fighting the likes of Langford and Jeanette.

    The main drive of this piece is to illustrate that Johnson, Willard and Dempsey's title defences barely scratched the surface of the talent operating during the period 1913 to 1925.

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