Fight Record Bill Beynon (Taibach)
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Aboriginal History 4:1
ABORIGINAL HISTORY 4:1 Top: Freddie Clay of Palm Island sweats on the bag, about 1950. Photograph courtesy of Alick Jackomos. Bottom: Jimmy Sharman’s tent, Sydney Show, about 1950. Sharman (holding hat) is flanked by boxer Dave Sands, and his son Jimmy Sharman Jnr. Photograph courtesy of Jimmy Sharman Jnr. 48 PROFESSIONAL ABORIGINAL BOXERS IN EASTERN AUSTRALIA 1930-1979* Richard Broome At first glance the money and prestige available to Aborigines through the sport of professional boxing suggest that boxing might have allowed Aborigines to escape the usual subordinate and outcast condition assigned to them by European-dominated Australian society. This paper attempts to examine the truth of this popular conception of boxing. It also seeks to retrieve the Aboriginal experience of the fight game, for of all sports, only football has rivalled the importance of boxing in Aboriginal community and sporting life and Aboriginal folklore. The examination of the Aboriginal experience in the world of boxing should increase our understanding of race relations in Australia. Professional boxing is a distinctive sport because fighters are in the business of inflicting bodily injury for money in potentially tough physical encounters. The professionals are even distinguished from amateur boxers, because the ‘lily-whites’ are protected from injury by rigid rules and very strict refereeing. It is this fact of institutionalized violence which is at the core of the tight-knit nature of this sporting subculture, centred as it is around inner city gymnasiums where the faithful gather to talk their own jargon and watch the hopefuls go through the rituals of shadow boxing, skipping, bag punching and sparring. -
April-2014.Pdf
BEST I FACED: MARCO ANTONIO BARRERA P.20 THE BIBLE OF BOXING ® + FIRST MIGHTY LOSSES SOME BOXERS REBOUND FROM MARCOS THEIR INITIAL MAIDANA GAINS SETBACKS, SOME DON’T NEW RESPECT P.48 P.38 CANELO HALL OF VS. ANGULO FAME: JUNIOR MIDDLEWEIGHT RICHARD STEELE WAS MATCHUP HAS FAN APPEAL ONE OF THE BEST P.64 REFEREES OF HIS ERA P.68 JOSE SULAIMAN: 1931-2014 ARMY, NAV Y, THE LONGTIME AIR FORCE WBC PRESIDENT COLLEGIATE BOXING APRIL 2014 WAS CONTROVERSIAL IS ALIVE AND WELL IN THE BUT IMPACTFUL SERVICE ACADEMIES $8.95 P.60 P.80 44 CONTENTS | APRIL 2014 Adrien Broner FEATURES learned a lot in his loss to Marcos Maidana 38 DEFINING 64 ALVAREZ about how he’s FIGHT VS. ANGULO perceived. MARCOS MAIDANA THE JUNIOR REACHED NEW MIDDLEWEIGHT HEIGHTS BY MATCHUP HAS FAN BEATING ADRIEN APPEAL BRONER By Doug Fischer By Bart Barry 67 PACQUIAO 44 HAPPY FANS VS. BRADLEY II WHY WERE SO THERE ARE MANY MANY PEOPLE QUESTIONS GOING PLEASED ABOUT INTO THE REMATCH BRONER’S By Michael MISFORTUNE? Rosenthal By Tim Smith 68 HALL OF 48 MAKE OR FAME BREAK? REFEREE RICHARD SOME FIGHTERS STEELE EARNED BOUNCE BACK HIS INDUCTION FROM THEIR FIRST INTO THE IBHOF LOSSES, SOME By Ron Borges DON’T By Norm 74 IN TYSON’S Frauenheim WORDS MIKE TYSON’S 54 ACCIDENTAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY CONTENDER IS FLAWED BUT CHRIS ARREOLA WORTH THE READ WILL FIGHT By Thomas Hauser FOR A TITLE IN SPITE OF HIS 80 AMERICA’S INCONSISTENCY TEAMS By Keith Idec INTERCOLLEGIATE BOXING STILL 60 JOSE THRIVES IN SULAIMAN: THE SERVICE 1931-2014 ACADEMIES THE By Bernard CONTROVERSIAL Fernandez WBC PRESIDENT LEFT HIS MARK ON 86 DOUGIE’S THE SPORT MAILBAG By Thomas Hauser NEW FEATURE: THE BEST OF DOUG FISCHER’S RINGTV.COM COLUMN COVER PHOTO BY HOGAN PHOTOS; BRONER: JEFF BOTTARI/GOLDEN BOY/GETTY IMAGES BOY/GETTY JEFF BOTTARI/GOLDEN BRONER: BY HOGAN PHOTOS; PHOTO COVER By Doug Fischer 4.14 / RINGTV.COM 3 DEPARTMENTS 30 5 RINGSIDE 6 OPENING SHOTS Light heavyweight 12 COME OUT WRITING contender Jean Pascal had a good night on 15 ROLL WITH THE PUNCHES Jan. -
CSAC Laws and Regulations Manual
September 2018 LAWS & REGULATIONS Guidelines and Policies for officials ///// TABLE OF CONTENTS Business and Professions code Contents CSRC WWW.DCA.CA.GOV/CSAC Business and Professions Code .......................... 1 § 18642.5. Necessity to Demonstrate Ability to Perform Prior to Licensure. SECTION 18600–18618 ....................................... 1 § 18645. Advisory Committee on Medical and Safety Standards-Members - Meetings–Term. § 18600. Boxing Act. § 18646. Amateur Boxing, Wrestling and Full Contact § 18601. Legislative Authority. Martial Arts Contests. § 18602. Membership on State Athletic Commission. § 18648. Standards for Licensure. § 18604. Authority to Remove Members. § 18653. License Required by Professional Boxers’ § 18605. Quorum–Majority Vote. Training Gymnasiums–Application and Fee. § 18606. Election of Chairperson. § 18654. Necessity to Report an Injury or Knockout of § 18607. Expenses Professional Boxer. § 18608. Designation as a Board. § 18655. No Chapter Applicability to Contests Under Federal Government Control. § 18610. Seal. § 18656. Inapplicability to Contests by or for Schools, § 18611. Adoption of Rules and Regulations. Colleges, Universities. § 18613. Executive Offcer. SECTION 18660–18679 ..................................... 6 § 18615. Inspectors’ Clinic and Training. § 18660. Contents of License Application–Fee. § 18618. Report on Promoter Assessments. § 18661. Review and Investigations of Application and SECTION 18620–18631 ...................................... 3 Appeal From Denial. § 18620. Terms Defned. -
The Eton Manor Clubs, Once More in the Wick
that many have felt the same, both during the Great War. and also during this spot of bother. The first Reunion Dance, of which an account is given (thin elsewhere, brought home to me how much the old Club means to us all whether one numbers one's period of membership rhe Magazine of by months or years. Las! year both Bill Deane and Johnny Turrell sent me the THE ETON MANOR CLUBS, followmg verse, the truth of which is very apparent in times Rlseholme Street, Hackney Wick, E.' like those through which we are passing and which expresses so well our feelings: - . The copYriSht of all matter, both Engravings and Letterpress, From quiet homes and small beginnings i ••trictly reserved in Great Britain, the Colonies, Dominions Out to the undiscovered ends, and the United States of America. There's nothing worth the wear of winning But laughter and the love of friends. N•. lOO-Vol. XXXIII. JANUARY, 1945. As a result of the Reunion Dance I can assure members that PRICE 2d. the success of our Forces must be due to some other factor than discipline, for Majors and Squadron-Leaders and other officers were treated as though they were two a penny or four for .tuppence! (So returning privates, if there should be any ONCE MORE IN THE WICK left, need not feel shy). That, however, is the atmosphere ~which will always prevail in the Eton Manor Clubs, together Although in the past year Eton Manor has lost many mem with the Manor smile and the Manor spirit. -
Theboxing Biographies Newsletter Volume2 - No10 , 2Nd May, 2008
TheBoxing Biographies Newsletter Volume2 - No10 , 2nd May, 2008 www.boxingbiographies.com If you wish to receive future newsletters ( which includes the images ) please email the message “NEWS LETTER” [email protected] The newsletter is also available as a word doc on request As always the full versions of these articles are on the website My Fighting Life BY GEORGES CARPENTIER 1920 CHAPTER I I BECOME DESCAMPS' PUPIL OUTSIDE my home in Paris many thousands of my countrymen shouted and roared and screamed; women tossed nosegays and blew kisses up to my windows. "Vive Carpentier! ' came from a mighty chorus of voices. Paris was still in an ecstasy of enthusiasm; my contest against Joe Beckett, so swift, sensational, dramatic, incredible, remained the wonder of the moment, and as I looked from my window on to the street below I shook and shivered. My father, a man of Northern France hard, stern, unemotional clutched the hand of my mother, whose eyes were streaming wet. Albert, also my two other brothers arid sister made a strange group. They were transfixed. Francois Descamps was pale; his ferret-like eyes blinked meaninglessly. Only my dog, Flip, now I come to think of it all understood for he gave himself over to howls of happiness. This day of unbounded joy so burnt itself into my mind that I shall remember it for all time. "Georges, mon ami," exclaimed my father, " no such moment did I ever think would come into our lives." And I understood. My life, as I look back upon it, has been a round of wonders. -
A South African Boxer in Britain
To Write as a Boxer To Write as a Boxer: Disability and Resignification in the Text A South African Boxer in Britain By Kurt Campbell To Write as a Boxer: Disability and Resignification in the Text A South African Boxer in Britain By Kurt Campbell This book first published 2019 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2019 by Kurt Campbell All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-5275-3096-5 ISBN (13): 978-1-5275-3096-6 Image Credit: Jules Beau. Gallica Digital Library. TABLE OF CONTENTS Abstract ............................................................................................ viii Acknowledgements ............................................................................ ix Preface to a Bout .............................................................................. xiii Notes on the Monograph ................................................................. xiv Chapter One ........................................................................................ 1 Opening Round Chapter Two ..................................................................................... 22 Locating Modalities of Textual Self-craft -
Brook + Wilder + Taylor + Kovalev
BROOK + WILDER + TAYLOR + KOVALEV MARCH 1 2018 Every week THE AWARD-WINNING WORLD’S BEST FIGHT MAGAZINE EST. 1909 T WWW.BOXINGNEWSONLINE.NE NEVER FORGET Scott Westgarth 1986-2018 9 NO. 74 VOL. £3.49 Est. 1909 WHERE DOES YOUR FAVOURITE BRITISH BOXER RANK? Order today at www.boxingnewsonline.net/shop quoting GBB17 Also available at local newsagents or via the Boxing News app Retail price £7.99 ContMarchen 1, 2018 ts R.I.P SCOTT WESTGARTH 38 Tragedy strikes in a British ring, as 31-year-old loses his life Photos: ACTION IMAGES/ADAM HOLT & ED MULHOLLAND/HBO DON’T MISS HIGHLIGHTS >> 10 BROOK IS BACK >> 4 EDITOR’S LETTER An exclusive interview with Kell, as well This must serve as a wake-up call as a preview of the Rabchenko clash >> 5 GUEST COLUMN >> 16 POWER SURGE A comment from the BBBofC Who will win the world heavyweight title clash between Wilder and Ortiz? >> 26 THE OBSESSION Catching up with Jazza Dickens – >> 20 KEEP ON KRUSHIN’ a man who is addicted to boxing Looking ahead to Kovalev’s collision with his fellow Russian, Mikhalkin >> 30 FIGHT OF THE YEAR! A ringside report from the sensational >> 22 SCOTTISH SUPPORT Srisaket-Estrada super-fly spectacle Taylor prepares to face a late 30 substitute in front of his home fans >> 32 FITTING FINALE Smith sets up a mouth-watering WBSS final with Groves – injury-permitting DOWNLOAD OUR APP TODAY >> 42 AMATEURS For more details visit The Lionhearts head to Liverpool WWW.BOXINGNEWSONLINE.NET/SUBSCRIPTIONS >> 46 60-SECOND INTERVIEW ‘AS I REALLY DEVELOPED IN THE SPORT, I ALWAYS LOOKED UP TO BERNARD -
Yfj. HAS TWO GAMES VERY FAST and CHASES WILLARD SEVENTH CAVALET on CREDIT STRING CARRIES a PUNCH for TITLE MATCH to MEET TRAIN PASO Will a M P Team, by TORK, Dec
S-'- 1 LIFE 10 iL rA5U tltKALU UK I J, KHUKJbA IUIN ana UUIUOOK TRYING TO GET TUB GAME. CODY BASEBALL Kin M'PflRTIflP indoor sports OF THE GANG. BY "TAD FULTD SBEST FOOTBALL i ftoAiT" OF BIG BOXERS ARRANGED FOR TEAM TO VISIT LIKES WORK OF TCE of , AT MIGHT ii i TODAY, GHHISTIIUIS DHf GITYSATURDAYBENNY LEONARD wmm ' smoke 'l .iWM Her sota nK "Will Clash Cantonment Nine Will En - Veteran Referee Declares! Would Undoubtedly Defeat Cavalry Teams AtK Pad - '". gage Fort Bliss in Final j That Lightweight King fi! ?yT"C"GUT- All Contenders for the at Stadium in Afternoon Two Games of Series. Is the Best Ever. I Heavyweight Title. of Holiday. i Yfj. HAS TWO GAMES VERY FAST AND CHASES WILLARD SEVENTH CAVALET ON CREDIT STRING CARRIES A PUNCH FOR TITLE MATCH TO MEET TRAIN PASO will A M P team, By TORK, Dec. .Fred Ful football enthusiasts OODTS crack baseball JACK VBIOCK. on I recently trimmed the Ft. YORK, Dec. 20. Mc 1ST ton has shown himself to be not be left oat In the cold Kid heavyweight In E" spite th" Bliss nine In two decisive battles Partland, recognized in the the best the Christmas dar in of country, barring champion, and Bliss-Cod- y return on the cantonment diamond, will in-- v N"east as one of the best of pres tbe calling off of the if V.' 11 any of again game, arrange 1 .ae HI Paso Saturday and Sunday ent day referees, has advanced a new lard has intention as a contest has been Ie fon tl i n g his title the Minneaotan cavalry regi- s f t en oon, and a combined front of argument to substantiate the con between the Serenth , the logical opponent. -
Bocsio Issue 13 Lr
ISSUE 13 20 8 BOCSIO MAGAZINE: MAGAZINE EDITOR Sean Davies t: 07989 790471 e: [email protected] DESIGN Mel Bastier Defni Design Ltd t: 01656 881007 e: [email protected] ADVERTISING 24 Rachel Bowes t: 07593 903265 e: [email protected] PRINT Stephens&George t: 01685 388888 WEBSITE www.bocsiomagazine.co.uk Boxing Bocsio is published six times a year and distributed in 22 6 south Wales and the west of England DISCLAIMER Nothing in this magazine may be produced in whole or in part Contents without the written permission of the publishers. Photographs and any other material submitted for 4 Enzo Calzaghe 22 Joe Cordina 34 Johnny Basham publication are sent at the owner’s risk and, while every care and effort 6 Nathan Cleverly 23 Enzo Maccarinelli 35 Ike Williams v is taken, neither Bocsio magazine 8 Liam Williams 24 Gavin Rees Ronnie James nor its agents accept any liability for loss or damage. Although 10 Brook v Golovkin 26 Guillermo 36 Fight Bocsio magazine has endeavoured 12 Alvarez v Smith Rigondeaux schedule to ensure that all information in the magazine is correct at the time 13 Crolla v Linares 28 Alex Hughes 40 Rankings of printing, prices and details may 15 Chris Sanigar 29 Jay Harris 41 Alway & be subject to change. The editor reserves the right to shorten or 16 Carl Frampton 30 Dale Evans Ringland ABC modify any letter or material submitted for publication. The and Lee Selby 31 Women’s boxing 42 Gina Hopkins views expressed within the 18 Oscar Valdez 32 Jack Scarrott 45 Jack Marshman magazine do not necessarily reflect those of the publishers. -
¦Riir 0C7-10D Worth
ono-half furiongs.Ooldsboro, Ethelr*d, Vinnutl, There are honorable such a* rU,h' L*ac"trl°11' Torn, exceptions, l Jeffries, Fitssimmons and Sharkey, but as ThaCa'^at 12 a rule the the the surer he Fifth, the Westchester handicap; all and a half greater fighter THE 118; Red Knight, Is to throw away his strength In riotous ASSOCIATION, HARNESS HORSE SPORT !:» £?. aSatu ,^u"f-^aeqQln,Mr"T England. Oxford. 106; ARTFUL GETS A REST living. lTrw O Street N. W. yl: Incantation. | inn ^. i' Zt K£5* £,n* 102! f.eala, Slowly and by the hardest kind of hard for 9#i c<-sier*trome' living Dixon fought his way to the top of Register educational W w W H HH WWW »HWX classes week three year-olds and tipward; the featherweight- class of pugilists. He of October 9. The fall of the Brightwod Driv¬ same conditions, trotted a tnlie without a oaie^Ui'iiraee,,h??dlca?:mile and three-sixteenths.M. Beaoealre. 120; was was a modest lad, never suffering from meeting bobble In 2.21. Special Dispatch to Tht Star. first special proposed by Mr. Fltsger- Inflated white Schedule of classes, in¬ ing Club and Trotting Association closed Catallna, 107; Marnar, Oa- of ftld and she took sick on the morning of vanity. A negro fighting fees, * trlch.H,T,Uh,,Ax103; Benvollo,.3; 8??u 99; Delcanta, 88; Oro, #7; NEW YORK. October 7..The reign men is under a terrible disadvantage. The structors on last Friday evening at dusk. The meeting lx>ula U., 63; 90. -
The Old-Timer
The Old-Timer produced by www.prewarboxing.co.uk Number 1. August 2007 Sid Shields (Glasgow) – active 1911-22 This is the first issue of magazine will concentrate draw equally heavily on this The Old-Timer and it is my instead upon the lesser material in The Old-Timer. intention to produce three lights, the fighters who or four such issues per year. were idols and heroes My prewarboxing website The main purpose of the within the towns and cities was launched in 2003 and magazine is to present that produced them and who since that date I have historical information about were the backbone of the directly helped over one the many thousands of sport but who are now hundred families to learn professional boxers who almost completely more about their boxing were active between 1900 forgotten. There are many ancestors and frequently and 1950. The great thousands of these men and they have helped me to majority of these boxers are if I can do something to learn a lot more about the now dead and I would like preserve the memory of a personal lives of these to do something to ensure few of them then this boxers. One of the most that they, and their magazine will be useful aspects of this exploits, are not forgotten. worthwhile. magazine will be to I hope that in doing so I amalgamate boxing history will produce an interesting By far the most valuable with family history so that and informative magazine. resource available to the the articles and features The Old-Timer will draw modern boxing historian is contained within are made heavily on the many Boxing News magazine more interesting. -
Up Against the Ropes: Peter Jackson As ''Uncle Tom" in America
Up against the Ropes Peter Jackson As “Uncle Tom” in America Susan F. Clark When Peter Jackson, Australia’s heavyweight champion, arrived in America in 1888, he was known as “The Black Prince”; by the time he left for home, 12 years later, he was more often thought of as “Uncle Tom.” How this per- fect fighting machine came to be identified with America’s well-known sym- bol of acquiescence is a story that illuminates the cultural, social, and racial environment of late 19th-century America. It is a narrative that features the highly commercial, image-conscious worlds of boxing and theatre against a background of extreme racial prejudice. Most importantly, it is a cautionary tale that reflects the dangerous and mutable ability of popular entertainments to endow damaging stereotypes with a semblance of truth. Peter Jackson came to the United States looking for a fight. He was a de- termined, disciplined, and talented boxer who was optimistic that he could defeat America’s finest boxers. The battle that Jackson fought in America was one he was ill-equipped to fight, for it had little to do with his technical skill or physical prowess. It was a struggle against America’s long-standing racial schism, which divided Americans by the color of their skin. When Jackson, a novice to American culture, allowed his manager to convince him to be “whipped to death” nightly before packed houses as Uncle Tom in a touring production of Uncle Tom’s Cabin, his battle in America was all but over. Never again would he be taken seriously as a heavyweight contender.