"I'm going to box him. I'll feint with my left, for every time I've seen Joe a left makes him step back and blink his eyes before he can get set again...if I can hit him I think I can knock him out. Anyway, he marks up easy. Didn't he get a bad eye from Abe Simon? And the guys who hit him - Galento and Braddock - showed he knocks down pretty easy. Trouble is, most of the guys he fought were scared stiff. They thought just because it was Louis who hit them, they had to go down. If that guy Simon could get up to the thirteenth round, I'm a cinch." "Maybe it sounds crazy to you, but I'm a few days away from the greatest dream i've ever known. I mean the chance to meet Joe Louis. I've been dreaming of this chance ever since I was a middleweight and whatever happens I'm ready for it. I know it may sound ****eyed, but i've got the answer. In the first place I'm moving up and Louis is moving back. In the second place I know I can outspeed and outbox, I believe I can outthink him. I know this too. I can take a harder punch than you fellows think I can take. And I can also punch harder. I may not knock Louis's brains out but when I tag him he'll know it." "Joe doesn't like the things i've been saying about him? What am I supposed to do, ask the great Joe Louis for permission to talk? My answer to Joe is "nuts". Say, you don't suppose the Brown Bomber could be getting cold feet and start to crack up already, do you?" "He can't think under pressure and he knows it. He showed this every time he met a man who wasn't a rulebook fighter. Schmeling started hitting him with right hands in the second round of their first fight, and kept hitting hi with those sucker punches until Louis was out. In twelve rounds Louis lacked the savvy to put his left hand up and block those punches." "I got him." - To his corner, after the eighth. "You're in a fight tonight, Joe." - To Joe Louis at the beginning of the ninth. "I'm going to knock that sonofa***** out." - To his corner at the end of the twelfth. "I let you down. I let you all down." To his corner after the knockout loss. "I'll bet this is the first time a fella ever lost a fight because he had too much guts. After the twelfth, I thought I had him and I simply couldn't do anything else but go out after him. Then it happened...what's the sense in being Irish if you can't be dumb? I have no alibis. He beat me. He's a great fighter." "All they say about his hitting is true. His punches feel like a kick mule, and they really hurt when they land." "Hello mother. I hope you're alright. I'm okay." Into the radio mic after the fight. The chat Billy and Joe had it at the signing for the fight: "Hello Joe, how are you?" "Hello Billy, how do you feel? You look like you're gaining weight?" "I am Joe, weigh about 180. I saw your pictures the other day of the Baer fight." "You did? You training at Pompton?" "Yes." "You don't trian much in the country, do you?" "No, not very often, I always trained at Pioneer for my fights around New York." "Pompton is okay. Everything is together." "I hear you got quite the farm." "Yes. Nice place."
The greatest light heavyweight of all time was Henry Maske. There in did it for you Seamus. You can sleep in secure in the legacy of the better-than-ok-one and whatever else you need to be happy.
I think figuring out whom the best Lt Heavyweight of all time.. is THE hardest weight class to do it in. I still think Conn gets the nod, But, Maske.. Charles.... Add in Moore, Spinks, Moorer, Foster, Jones. Yeah..... tough class indeed!
Joe and Billy arranged to watch the film of their fight one time. As soon as the fight started, Louis left the room and went into the bar to drink brandy. Every now and then Louis would come to the door and holler out, "Hey, Billy, have we got to the 13th round yet?" Conn just laughed and watched himself punch the bigger man around, until finally, when they did come to the 13th, Joe called out, "Goodby, Billy." Other times when they watched it Billy would disappear before the 13th round and ask his mate if the result was the same when he came back. "Yep" said rhe bomber, you still get ko'd
Never gave it much thought but Conn could be the most underrated lightheavy of all time compared to the other all time greats of the division.
Joe got the better of the quotes (as well as the fight) with one simple line: “He can run but he can’t hide.”
I agree. I don’t think I would call him the best light heavyweight of all time, at least not resumé or achievement-wise, but when you look at all the greats of that division, there’s no-one I think would own Billy Conn in a boxing ring. He might lose a few against the very best ever but no-one would put a beating on him, I don’t think. He’d be competitive with any of them.
Easily my favorite quote from the bunch, love that Conn gave the respect which was due without putting himself or Louis down.