Newsboy Brown (needs more recognition)

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by janitor, May 6, 2009.


  1. janitor

    janitor VIP Member Full Member

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    Simply an incredible record for a flyweight, with wins over a lot of name fighters:

    Baby Arizmendi
    Panama Al Brown
    Chalky Wright
    Frankie Genaro,
    Midget Wolgast
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  2. AlFrancis

    AlFrancis Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Add 2 draws against Fidel LaBarba to that.
     
  3. Boilermaker

    Boilermaker Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    He looks like Rocky Marciano to me. Similar fighting style?
     
  4. GPater11093

    GPater11093 Barry Full Member

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    is there any footage of him
     
  5. SuzieQ49

    SuzieQ49 The Manager Full Member

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    Wow impressive resume. Do not know much about him.
     
  6. ray fredrickson

    ray fredrickson Member Full Member

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    Agree!! Im a boxing nut ,I love Ol RING RECORD BOOKS & Goin over the names of former greats & not so greats. I always see his nane at beginning & record but dont know anything about him. You always hear about the big names but never enough about guys like Newsboy and the aver mentioned opponetts!! I love it when you guys(fun expert fans) mention guys like King Levinsky,Jock Malone ,Ko Brown,Charley Burley, Jack Chase, Holman Williams,Sam McVey, Harry Smith,Fred Fulton,Matt Wells,Al brown, Scrapion Johnson,Etc. just the (LITTLE) guys who make boxing the great sport it is!!! God bless thanks, PS keep up the good work!!!!
     
  7. My2Sense

    My2Sense Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Funny enough, it seems like it. Accounts seems to suggest he was a very aggressive, brawling type fighter.

    He was considered a very popular attraction through his career, and appears to have been a very respected fighter in and around his weight, despite never really winning a title.

    He was only ever stopped once I believe, in his farewell fight.


    There's a whole website dedicated to him here:
    http://members.tripod.com/~newsbrown/newsboy.html
     
  8. My2Sense

    My2Sense Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Here's his biography: http://members.tripod.com/~newsbrown/biography.html

    Boxing great Dave Montrose was born in Russia in 1904 and immigrated to the United States as a small boy. He learned to fight at an early age selling newspapers on the street corners of Sioux City, Iowa. He began boxing professionally at the age of 18. He acquired the name "Newsboy Brown" in one of his early fights. The ring announcer, proceeded to introduce him. "In this corner...," he began. Then, realizing he had not bothered to learn the name of the young fighter, whom he knew only to be a newsboy, he continued, "the brown-skinned newsboy.....Newsboy Brown." The name stuck, and Newsboy Brown went on to become one of the most popular prizefighters of the 1920's and '30's.

    The grand opening of the Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles on August 5, 1925 was a major media event, attended by such celebrities as Jack Dempsey and Rudolph Valentino. The card featured several six round events, one of which matched Newsboy Brown against Frankie Grandetta. Brown, of course, took the decision. By that time a resident of Boyle Heights in Los Angeles, he quickly became a favorite of the local boxing fans, appearing many times in the Olympic Auditorium after that.

    Newsboy Brown came about as close as one can to being recognized as a world champion. As a flyweight, he beat world champions Frankie Genaro and Midget Wolgast and fought to two draws with world champion Fidel La Barba. Unfortunately, however, none of these were title fights.

    After his second draw with La Barba, Newsboy Brown was acknowledged by many as the logical contender for a shot at La Barba's crown. Before he had that chance, however, La Barba gave up his title to attend Stanford University, throwing the world flyweight championship into dispute. An elimination tournament was held in New York City to determine his successor. It all came down to a final 15 round battle on December 16, 1927 between Newsboy Brown and an ex-soldier from New York named Corporal Izzy Schwartz. Newsboy Brown lost a heartbreaking decision to Schwartz that night. But Schwartz' title was recognized only in New York.

    La Barba in the meanwhile had proclaimed his successor to be a veteran flyweight named Johnny McCoy. After his loss to Schwartz, the Newsboy decided to take on McCoy. As the records show, on January 3, 1928, Newsboy Brown defeated Johnny McCoy in Los Angeles to claim the flyweight title. Because of the continuing dispute over the legitimacy of the title, however, the Newsboy's claim was recognized essentially only in California. Eight months later he lost it to Johnny Hill in a 15 round decision in London, England.

    He also fought as a bantamweight, against such top contenders as Chalky Wright, who later went on to become World Featherweight Champion from 1941 to 1942. In 1929, Panama Al Brown (no relation) defeated Vidal Gregorio in Long Island City to capture the vacant world bantamweight title, which he successfully defended ten times before finally surrendering it to Baltazar Sangchili on June 1, 1935. In the meantime, however, Newsboy Brown beat World Champion Panama Al Brown in a 15 round bout in Los Angeles on December 15, 1931. Unfortunately, because both fighters weighed in over the 118 point limit, it was a non-title fight, and Newsboy Brown never became world bantamweight champion either.

    On March 3, 1931, he won the California Bantamweight title by defeating Speedy Dado in a ten round contest in Los Angeles. He eventually lost it to Philippine champion Young Tommy in a record attendance setting fight in Sacramento, California on January 28, 1932.

    After 81 professional fights over 11 years in the ring, he finally hung up the gloves in 1933. He broke into the motion picture business by coaching cowboy star Tom Mix in his fight scenes. As a result of his association with Mix, he landed a job in the properties department of one of the Hollywood studios, where he worked in his later years. Dave Montrose died in 1977 at the age of 73. He is remembered fondly in the boxing community as a tough scrapper with the heart of a lion.
     
  9. My2Sense

    My2Sense Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Here's an account of his fight with Panama Al, considered his biggest career win and a huge upset at the time. Newsboy was already a hardened veteran of many years in the ring by this time.

    http://members.tripod.com/~newsbrown/brownvbrown.html

    Newsboy Brown, veteran of many a ring battle, achieved one of his greatest triumphs, and also provided one of the season's fistic upsets, on December 15, 1931 when he defeated "Panama" Alphonse Brown, bantam champion of the world, in a 10 round thriller at the Los Angeles Olympic Auditorium. No title was at stake, however, because both fighters were over the 118 pound bantamweight limit, the Newsboy going in at 120 ½ pounds, while the Panama boxer weighed 122.

    Giving away almost a head in height to the gangling Panamanian, and 4 inches in reach, the Newsboy turned in a fine performance, outscoring his opponent with stinging rights and lefts to the body. Although the Panamanian drew several cautions for head butting during the melee, he also showed flashes of sterling offensive work with hard rights, but the Newsboy always came back to give more than he received.

    Newsboy Brown assumed and maintained the aggressor's attitude from start to finish. It took him one round to size up the situation. Then he moved into close quarters, beating his two fists mightily to the champion's midriff. The Newsboy took the second, third, and forth rounds handily. In the fifth, Al Brown managed to land several stiff rights, looping punches that caught the Newsboy by surprise. Again in the seventh and eighth rounds the champion rallied with fury to beat his smaller opponent back and bombard him with punches.

    They came to the tenth and final round on fairly even terms. But the Newsboy went whaling away, tore right into the Panamanian and bombarded him viciously about the stomach, now and then crossing things up with snappy left hooks to the chin. In the end, referee Harry Lee passed by the outstretched arm of the surprised champion and hoisted the arm of the fighting Newsboy of Boyle Heights. A sympathetic crown cheered his victory to the echo. The Newsboy had taken 6 rounds to the champion's 3, with one even.