Boxers who mouthed gems of wit and wisdom
SHARM DE Alwis
Mohamed Ali aka Louisville Lip might well be the Poet Laureate of the
boxing fraternity but gems of wit and wisdom have been mouthed by quite
a few others who trade in cauliflower ears.
My own favourite is that of Max Baer when he met 'Man Mountain' Primo
Carnera and a double knock-down resulted for Baer to quip "First up is a
sissy." Max Baer had the finest physical equipment any pugilist could
wish for but he never took boxing seriously even though he, like Carnera,
wore the heavy-weight crown briefly.
"Where's mah yellow streak now, Tahmmy?" would taunt Jack Johnson as
he played around with champion Tommy Burns like a cat would with a ball
of knitting wool. Jake La Motta's "I met Sugar Ray so often that I
nearly got diabetes" is certainly very much posh and ranks with the best
of George Bernard Shaw or Oscar Wilde. La Motta was not even of Irish
stock.
Ugly Bear
Mohamed Ali would also jibe his opponents before and during the
fight. He would label Sonny Liston as the 'Ugly Bear' and often gave
deadly predictions in rhyming two-liners as to when the fight would end
with his opponent on the canvas.
'Thrilla in Manila' and 'Rumble in the Jungle' are his compositions.
His repertoire was not confined to opponents alone. With his title
confiscated and he barred from the ring for his conscientious stand
against enlisting in the US Army, his defence was "I got no quarrel
against them Vietcong."
Light-weight champ Jimmy Carter's own description of his glove
artistry was "They call me in-fighter, they call me come-out fighter,
but maahn, if you want to know, I am a street fighter - the best you
ever saw."
Sam Langford even though he had gone semi blind, when he was to
battle Iron Hague would say, "I don't need to see him; just let me feel
him and the man will hit the canvas." In his earlier days he had given
Jack Johnson such a torrid time in 1906 that Johnson never gave him a
fight when he was champ. Sam McVey and Joe Jeanette were also studiously
avoided by the champ.
Now and then fists did the talking. The tight-lipped Joe Louis made
only one comment in his long career and that was prior to his second
bout with Jersey Joe Walcott who had earlier gone the distance of
fifteen rounds. Louis only said "Wait for it Mr Walcott" and Walcott was
carried out in the 11th round.
With Joe Louis, Joe Walcott and Ezzard Charles whipping up a frenzy
within and without the ring, the question reporters asked was "Why did
Marciano have to come along and spoil everything?" With the shortest
reach of 67 inches that any heavy-weight champion ever had, Marciano
demolished his opponents with his right hand which he adoringly called
'Suzy Q' and retired undefeated.
first champion
James Figg, the first champion of England was illiterate but had
artistic admirers.Byron was not only a keen follower of the sport, he
had his own gym and a coterie of trainers despite the fact he was
afflicted with a club foot.
The first fight reporter was Homer [around 1,100 BC] who decribed in
the Iliad the battle between Epheus and Enryalus when the winner's prize
was a mule and to the loser was given a drinking cup. The poem,
translated by Alexander Poe ended with "The bleeding hero pants upon the
ground." The advent of Jack Dempsey in to Boxing in 1918 heralded drama,
poetry in motion and the million dollar gate. A man more given to deeds
than words when he was asked if he could have beaten Joe Louis, only
said, "I saw something." That 'something' was Joe's innate inability to
avoid a low right hand punch which all his opponents from the lighter
Tommy Farr and Billy Conn to Schmelling to Walcott exploited.
new era
Boxing gloves and the new era of the sport were the brain chiled of
the Marquis of Queensberry, the main character of the horrific tale of
Oscar Wilde and his imprisonment which evoked 'The Balald of Reading
Jail'. Kumar Sangakkara is not the only sportsman who has a fondness for
literature. Gene Tunney who dethroned Jack Dempsey when he was rusty
after three years of inactivity was an avid reader of the classics.
Kingsley Moonemalle, Trinity's Bog House Shelley, who won the Best
Boxer's Cup at several Open Meets was soul-stirred on viewing Justin
Deraniyagala's 'The Nude' and penned a poem all of which I censor except
Shakespeare miscalled it 'The Act of Darkness'...
Indeed
That in my need
I might spill my seed
Creatively with genius like
you, like Poe
Who will disturb for a
hundred years and more..."
Countless portraits and studies have been made of boxer and the sport
from'The Fighting John L' (Sullivan) to Lord Byron in the gym by deft
artists and some have inspired songs like 'The Kid's Last Fight'.
full houses
There have been boxers who were Stage Actors like John L. Sullivan
whose appearances would result in full houses and, to a lesser degree,
James J.Corbett (both world champions).
Some have inspired the cinema industry: Rocky Graziano's life is
depicted in 'Somebody up there Loves Me' and he was a regular celebrity
in Martha Ray's Tv show. Tom Hickman, the 'Gasman', a whirlwind puncher
is featured in William Hazlitt's classic, 'The Fight'.
Boxing, being a manly sport has had the paradox of girlish names of
some pugilsits - Cinderall man was James Braddock, Orchid Kid was
Carpentier who was also dubbed Gorgeous Georges, Tiger Flowers and the
two Sugar Rays.
All in all, boxing is a sport that spreads its aura far beyond the
ropes and punch drunk as some pugilists have been, quite a few have
sipped at the fount of knowledge. |