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Diamond Dog
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From A Flame Of Pure Fire: Jack Dempsey and the Roaring 20'S when Dempsey's seemingly mad new manager tries to fix up green Dempsey with post prime Langford: "I've seen Langford. He's to good for me right now. I need more experience..."
Anyone know which Langford fight Dempsey saw or what he mad of Sam? |
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#2 | |
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Dominating a decade
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#3 |
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Champion
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Dempsey almost certainly watched Langford fight during Sam's visit to Denver, in the summer and fall of 1915, against Jack Thompson, Jim Johnson, and Sam McVey. Since Langford went 20 rounds with McVea, and 15 more with Johnson, Jack would have seen a great deal of him. (My old copy of the 1957 Ring Record Book indicates that while Dempsey was also active in Colorado at the time, he had no matches during the weeks Langford was boxing in Denver, so it's reasonable to assume that's when he saw Langford.)
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Champion
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Diamond Dog
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This is great info, thanks. |
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#7 |
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P4P King
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“The Hell I feared no man. There was one man, he was even smaller than I, I wouldn’t fight because I knew he would flatten me. I was afraid of Sam Langford.”
Jack Dempsey |
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#8 | |
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Diamond Dog
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#9 | |
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Champion
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In speaking about his kayo loss to Schmeling, Louis said, "I thought I was hot shit!" Dempsey never believed that about himself. Louis was already a sizable person when he began boxing, but Dempsey, not quite so much. He also probably lost a number of unrecorded fights as Kid Blackie, hardly a background to make somebody overwhelmingly cocky. Sam Langford was a prodigy, but Dempsey had to evolve considerably. Langford wasn't exactly fearless either, explicitly going on record as not wanting to face Jim Jeffries. Sam and Jack both had the sense to know their limits against top-flight competition prematurely. (Later on, Mickey Walker had the same sense not to commit suicide against Panama Joe Gans. There's bravery, then there's stupidity.) As self-effacing as Dempsey could be, he made his fear really work in his favor. While I don't think Langford would have been in the least bit afraid of Dempsey, I expect that Jack would be scared shitless of Sam, and that's probably the worst state of mind for Langford to be facing him in. Dempsey was as dangerous as a cornered animal when scared. |
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#10 | |
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P4P King
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At their respective peaks Dempsey would probably win but it is by no means a given. There is no heavyweight in history that I would not give Langford a good chance against at his peak. That is how highly I rate him. |
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#11 |
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Hardest hitting hw ever
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1916 Langford slaughters the 1916 dempsey
1919 Dempsey wins late had fought stoppage vs a 1910 peak Langford. btw Dempsey was very raw when he refused to match with Langford but at the same time he also turned down Gunboat Smith and Frank Moran- two legit contenders- he told his manager that he was crazy and he didn't want a serious challenge yet |
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#12 |
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Champion
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Maybe, But Dempsey was traveling from State to State at the time. He was often on the road. And the movie theaters were not expension to go to at the time, 25$.
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