John L Sullivan and Peter Jackson

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by BitPlayerVesti, Jun 23, 2018.


  1. BitPlayerVesti

    BitPlayerVesti Boxing Drunkie Full Member

    8,584
    11,095
    Oct 28, 2017
    https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/...duffy&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1

    Just came across this
     
  2. The Senator

    The Senator Active Member Full Member

    570
    857
    Dec 10, 2017
    Fascinating stuff, both from Bit and Janitor. Love to have a good read like this in the morning, helps me get past those hatred "going back to a job I hate" blues on a Monday.
     
    BitPlayerVesti and janitor like this.
  3. Mendoza

    Mendoza Hrgovic = Next Heavyweight champion of the world. banned Full Member

    55,255
    10,338
    Jun 29, 2007
    Sullivan avoided his two best challengers in Jackson and Slavin. He could not use the color line excuse vs. Slavin who was white.

    Many say Sullivan was past it in the mid-1880s.

    His results from 1884 ( age 26 ) to 1887 ( age 28 ) vs some name competition not in the class of Jackson or Slavin fail to show this dynamic puncher.

    Sully's best-gloved win may be Charlie Mitchell in 1883. Mitchell was a middleweight with little power, yet he managed to floor Sullivan. Corbett beat the same man in three rounds as well taking some of the luster off his best win.

    I would pick Jackson or Slavin over Sullivan from 1884-1887
     
  4. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,423
    26,892
    Feb 15, 2006
    You would do well to read some of the previous posts in this thread.
     
  5. mattdonnellon

    mattdonnellon Boxing Junkie Full Member

    8,574
    1,831
    Dec 2, 2006
    Jackson would have zero chance before 1887, he was losing to Farnan and taking 30 rounds to defeat Lees. Slavin was drawing with Jack Burke in 1888, a prior easy victim of Sullivan. You have got the time-line wrong, I feel.
     
    BitPlayerVesti and janitor like this.
  6. mattdonnellon

    mattdonnellon Boxing Junkie Full Member

    8,574
    1,831
    Dec 2, 2006
    I'm going to attempt a year end top ten for 1880- 1892, I would value all your inputs.
     
    BitPlayerVesti likes this.
  7. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,423
    26,892
    Feb 15, 2006
    It might be helpful to look at each year individually.

    You could even set up threads to debate certain years if you wanted.

    You would have to decide what weighting you gave to bare knuckle fights.
     
    BitPlayerVesti likes this.
  8. mattdonnellon

    mattdonnellon Boxing Junkie Full Member

    8,574
    1,831
    Dec 2, 2006
    I think gloves only, no credit whatsoever for LPR?
     
  9. BitPlayerVesti

    BitPlayerVesti Boxing Drunkie Full Member

    8,584
    11,095
    Oct 28, 2017
    If you're going that far back, in my opinion you'd really have to consider bareknuckle fights pretty near fully, else you'd basically not be counting some of the biggest fights.
     
    mattdonnellon likes this.
  10. mattdonnellon

    mattdonnellon Boxing Junkie Full Member

    8,574
    1,831
    Dec 2, 2006
    I get what you are saying and 1880 is going to be pretty pathetic but the likes of Paddy Ryan or Jem Smith did little of note with the gloves. There is however a definite argument for a different thread ie the best fighters 1880-1890, gloves or bare-knuckles.
     
  11. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

    71,423
    26,892
    Feb 15, 2006
    Then things probably don't really get going properly, until Sullivan holds the title, and forces everybody challenge him under Queensbury rules.
     
  12. BitPlayerVesti

    BitPlayerVesti Boxing Drunkie Full Member

    8,584
    11,095
    Oct 28, 2017
    Yeah, but there's other things, like Tom Allen, drew with Jem Stewart, who then lost to Alf Greenfeild, without bareknuckle you lose the significance of all of that.

    Just spotted this on Greenfield's boxrec "Source: Greenfield's Mechanics Delight Boxing Card":lol:
     
  13. Mendoza

    Mendoza Hrgovic = Next Heavyweight champion of the world. banned Full Member

    55,255
    10,338
    Jun 29, 2007
    Not an easy task. Good luck.
     
  14. he grant

    he grant Historian/Film Maker

    25,272
    9,112
    Jul 15, 2008
    Rereading the outstanding "John L. Sullivan and HIs America " by Jerry Eisenberg .. Sullivan is such a fascinating and charismatic figure that it is easy to lose sight that he really possessed very little fighting skill. He was an exceptional bar fighter , street fighter, toughman contestant by today's standards .. if you study his fights as they were he was a storm out of the corner slam till the other falls fighter .. the reviews of the Ryan fight, the Tug Willson fight, the first and second Mitchel fights all pretty much rip him to pieces as a fighter devoid of any skill other than brute power and speed .. I honestly don't think he matches up well against many of the Australian fighters from the same era who actually developed boxing skills .. he was a terrific hero of the day , super charismatic , a true puncher with speed but really fought no one his age, size and of top skill under M of Q till Corbett ..
     
    Last edited: Jan 7, 2019
  15. BitPlayerVesti

    BitPlayerVesti Boxing Drunkie Full Member

    8,584
    11,095
    Oct 28, 2017
    boxrec lists Jake Kilrain as beating Greenfield but with the date and location, newspapers before say it was to take place on Feb 9 1885 in Cambridge.