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Classic Boxing Pictures and Videos

355367 Views 2214 Replies 74 Participants Last post by  john_newman
6
going to import some of what i have found into here if thats alright.

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ezzard charles looking towards an oncoming rocky marciano in their second fight..





rocky graziano v johnny greco



duran v leonard 1





ali v tommy hearns sparring exhibition...



and for those interested...a video clip of it...

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from wikipeadia -

Ketchel vs. Johnson
Ketchel's battle with Jack Johnson has been called by many a modern day "David and Goliath."[citation needed]
In the 12th round Ketchel floored Johnson with a right hand. Johnson got up and knocked out Ketchel with a right uppercut.[citation needed]
Ketchel showed no fear against his larger and stronger foe.[citation needed] He was knocked down several times in the fight and was punished yet kept coming back.[citation needed] Johnson said to his trainer seconds between rounds "That man isn't human."[citation needed] In round twelve of that fight, Ketchel reached Johnson with a right to the chin that sent Johnson to the canvas.[citation needed] The punch shocked Johnson on two levels.[citation needed] One, it came from a much smaller Ketchel.[citation needed] Two, it was rumored that Ketchel and Johnson, when they agreed to the fight, agreed to take the fight to the full 20 rounds and Ketchel would allow Johnson to win in the 20th. The reason for this was each man was interested in making as much money off the fight as possible.[citation needed] A 20 round fight would guarantee boxing fans would pay to go to local theatres to watch the replay of the fight.[citation needed] When Johnson deviated from the alleged plan of "no blood should be drawn," Ketchel, already bloodied, knocked Johnson down, then, in the 12th, Ketchel faced the alleged wrath of Jack Johnson.[citation needed]
Upon regaining his feet, Jack Johnson knocked out Ketchel with a blow full in the mouth.[citation needed] Ketchel did not wake up for many minutes and some of his teeth were knocked out by the blow, some imbedded in Johnson's glove.[4]
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"On March 17, 1910 at the Jeffries Arena in Vernon, California heavyweights Sam Langford and "Fireman" Jim Flynn battled in an important divisional matchup. The "Boston ********" prevailed knocking Flynn out in the 8th round. After the KO, Flynn was placed slumped and dazed on a stool in his corner, while his seconds spent some time attempting to revive him. He eventually got to his feet. here is a photo (enhanced) depicting the end of the fight with Flynn sprawled out on the canvas as the victorious Langford walks away."

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Jofre is received in Brazil afger the title fight against Sanchez.



Jofre with Pelé.
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A teenager Jofre.



With one of the greatest brazilian singers of All Time, Nelson Gonçalves (the guy in the middle).



A bit older now....
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His marriage with Cidinha.



Jofre vs Harada III....now a bit of a friendly match haha
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With his father and trainer, Kid Jofre.


A recent picture......still training !
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excellent additions
March 17,1923 - Dublin.....Mike McTigue beats Battling Siki for the Light Heavyweight Title. McTigue would win the title with a 20 round decision on points...a very controversial one.

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ali spars cody jones prior to the 2nd liston fight...


jones ended up homeless and living on the streets as an old man...
http://snowsuit.net/189/

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this is a clip i had on a disc here i threw up on one of my youtube accounts...i was surprised it wasnt up already...

from the same disc i'll also had these...


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Al Silvani, Machen's trainer, aided by Referee Ted Waltham escort Eddie Machen to his corner after halting action against Floyd Patterson after the bell sounded ending round eleven. 1964...patterson won points over 12.
notice floyd checking of his opponent was ok..





from sports illustrated -

Last Sunday evening, shortly after Floyd Patterson had defeated Eddie Machen in 12 rounds of boxing that would never frighten Cassius Clay back into training, Floyd received two visitors in his Stockholm dressing room. One, wearing a neat, gray Ivy League suit, was Ingemar Johannson. "You too nice, Floyd," said Ingemar. The other, wearing a jaunty bow tie, was Nat Fleischer, the publisher of Ring magazine, who announced triumphantly that Floyd Patterson had moved up, that he was now the No. 2 challenger for the heavyweight championship.

Both were right, of course. Floyd is a nice man, too nice to be a professional fistfighter, but despite this he is also unquestionably superior-just as he has always been-to the five men over whom he had just leapfrogged from his old ranking down in seventh place: Doug Jones, Zora Folley, Cleveland Williams, Ernest Terrell and Machen. It was a little difficult to understand, however, why Floyd was so cheered by Fleischer's statement. For one thing, still above him stand Clay and Sonny Liston, and exactly why Floyd should ever want to fight either of them-he has plenty of money and his health-is a question that not even Patterson can adequately explain. Beyond that, his sudden rise in Ring's form chart had no more relation to reality than his precipitous drop from the top to his place behind Jones, Folley, etc. immediately after his back-to-back and back-on-the-canvas first-round knockouts at the hands of Liston. He was no worse a fighter after his losses to Liston than he had been before, and he is no better a fighter now after his wins over Machen and Sante Amonti, the inept Italian heavyweight he defeated on points in Sweden last January. He is still fast and strong and game-but he still is easy to hit. He still is acutely aware of helplessness, in himself or in others, including those he hurts in the ring. He still lacks the egocentric concentration of the true athlete, the single-minded aggressiveness of the great fighter, the consuming need to conquer or destroy everything in his way.

In the 11th round of the fight last Sunday he caught Machen against the ropes and hit him with a powerful right hand that sliced open Eddie's face and sent him to his knees. The mandatory eight-count rule, which requires that fighters knocked off their feet must take a count of eight before resuming battle, had been waived for the meeting, and Machen popped back to his feet at once, though dazed and with blood streaming down his face. It was an opportunity-an opponent momentarily helpless-that would have been capitalized on immediately by a Rocky Marciano or a Cassius Clay or a Sonny Liston. But Patterson stood quietly by and waited, looking at Machen with a curious half smile on his face. He did not move in for the kill, and Machen quickly recovered.

This was the maneuver-or rather, the nonmaneuver-that upset Johansson. "You take a step back when you should not," he told Patterson in the dressing room. "You had him hurt maybe five, six times. Why you don't move in? You must take a step forward, Floyd." Patterson looked at him enigmatically and did not reply. Later, however, Patterson said, "I was winning the 11th round when I hurt him, and I looked in his face and I saw hurt and defeat. This is a man who has had a hard life. He has been broke and in a mental institution. Should I knock him down further for my own good? I was winning. I didn't have to hurt him." Then he added, "He fought a good fight. He deserves a shot at Clay more than I do. He's broke and he's been down, and he deserves it."

This kindliness of Floyd's, a reflection of his hunger for friendship, for approval, for recognition, has its counterpart in his fear and resentment of disapproval, his touchiness, his moodiness. Before the fight in Stockholm (from which he earned $100,000, as a crowd of 40,000 damp Swedes paid approximately $300,000 dollars to watch on a rainy northern evening), Floyd annoyed even his enthusiastic Scandinavian admirers by sequestering himself like a moody Garbo in a small resort town 300 miles from Stockholm. He strained the abundant friendship most of the Swedish press has for him by making himself very hard to find for interviews. "I spent three days in Ronneby trying to talk to him," one Swedish reporter said, "and finally I got to see him for 20 minutes. Is this the Patterson we liked so well? I do not think so."

"He misses Cus D'Amato," said a man who is close to Patterson, referring to Floyd's first and longtime manager, from whom he is estranged. "He tries to do everything himself now-run the camp, worry about the money, take legal advice, everything. D'Amato used to do all that and keep him away from everyone so that he could concentrate on fighting. And then you have to remember that he was raised by Cus. When Cus first got him he was just a kid who didn't know anything about anything. All he knows and all his attitudes he got from D'Amato, including his suspicions and prejudices and his quickness to resent. He's got all of D'Amato's craftiness without D'Amato's background and intelligence."

In one of his rare colloquies with a member of the press, Patterson said, "I have to prove something. If I could preview a fight and see that I would be destroyed I would still fight. If I had to fight every day for seven days I would do it to prove myself." He focused all of his attention on the task at hand: beating Machen, proving himself. Although his brother Ray, who served as a sparring partner in his camp, could have had a fight on the card with Floyd and Machen, Patterson turned thumbs down on the grounds that he had to give his entire concentration to his own bout and did not want to have to worry about his brother at the same time.
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Archie Moore vs Alejandro Lavorante...1962

and archie was old, very old, here...





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harry will v sam langford 1914

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joe louis with his mother in 1935

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