This is much better film quality than the other Johnson fights around
@itsjustnopinionok8 жыл бұрын
robby rensenbrink im sure some improvements had been made in video from 1908 to 1914. plus. the lighting (fighting indoors with less sun light to fad out the image) made it much more easier to get the best lighting.
@edwardrichard25614 жыл бұрын
Crazy I'm watching this in 2020. The endurance is incredible.
@michaelg.angstreich44674 жыл бұрын
Yes, great endurance.
@profvladhistoria73264 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson virou a cara branca de neve de JIm Jeffries
@aiyahuntacheimumbi2364 жыл бұрын
@ You're not wrong but how else you going to go that many rounds? I wouldn't want to be the tired guy in a 20-40+rd fight lol
@Zeitgeist9974 жыл бұрын
They didn't have processed foods and high fructose corn syrup
@chuckcollins23494 жыл бұрын
Men were cut from a different cloth back in the day.
@jasonrichards28449 жыл бұрын
Looking at this video is very eerie because the very next day was Sunday, June 28, 1914, the day on which Gavrilo Princip shot the Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo,, Bosnia. This led to World War 1 and changed the course of history.. Nobody at this match knew they were fighting just a few hours before an earth-shattering event.
@jac99637 жыл бұрын
+CrateofStolenDirt ...Either way, it's still an earth-shattering, as stated, or a monumental event... And it still started it...
@MrTrackman1006 жыл бұрын
Stupid comment!
@MrTrackman1006 жыл бұрын
Crateof Stolen???--It did indeed lead to WW1.
@paulis42786 жыл бұрын
There is wars and suffering of innocent people in ever period in history till now. Maybe your media is not telling you about illegal wars and killing of innocent people that is happening right now. So in that prospective there is nothing special about that match . So chill!!!
@TheBatugan776 жыл бұрын
Nobody GivesAShit, Jay...
@davidabney77005 жыл бұрын
Jack was 36-years old at the time of this fight. Frank Moran was 26 and nobody's pushover. He had an impressive record going into this championship fight with Johnson and gave a good account of himself in this fight. Imagine a 20-round championship fight today! Jack would have handled himself well in any era of boxing. He was that great!
@bayareaknight48144 жыл бұрын
I don't know dude. Johnson's style of fighting would be tremendously outdated against many of todays fighters going back to the 194Os. Johnson wouldn't be hard to find and he didn't let his hands go until their was a clinch. I would've whooped him long distance, from the outside. Jab all night.
@michaeloraekweotu20874 жыл бұрын
If he had modern nutrition and boxing skills he could last in any era boxing has evolved alot
@kennethcurtis18563 жыл бұрын
@@bayareaknight4814 keyboard champions have joined the discussion.
@samtotheg3 жыл бұрын
@@bayareaknight4814 you wouldnt do shit ,johnson had that rear hand that parried any goofy ass jab that went his way, he also was very very good at landing his own jab ,your face would look like it was put in a meat grinder ,he fights similar to tommy loughran but with power, in fact ive said tommy would be a perfect fighter if he had power that fighter is jack johnson!
@regularnormal3 жыл бұрын
@@bayareaknight4814 lmfao dork
@MrBryantp6 жыл бұрын
it's amazing to read the comments because most clearly don't understand what there watching. These fighters fought 40 rounds sometimes and what you see as holding and clinching is very fierce infighting a lost art to most modern day fighters. Johnson was a defensive master of blocking, feinting, and parrying punches. He would tie and opponent up in knots constantly frustrating them slowly breaking them down. Heavyweights fighting with 5 ounce gloves man you better clinch one punch could knock your teeth out. Most of the comments on here don't have a clue about the sweet science. The men of these times would laugh at a 12 round fight and 12 ounce pillow gloves with fighters getting fatigued after 10 rounds. Modern fighters have evolved the techniques of boxing but they fail miserably in the hidden tangibles separating the Greats from the good. A guy once said to me a 500lb Bengal tiger would destroy a 300lb lion......I said your young you don't understand fighting. A Bengal tiger is a solitary creature while a lion is raised in a pride fighting since he was a cub. All the scars on his face is the fighting experience over many years as he would destroy the tiger. I tell you young people this the 80 to 100 fights the boxers had in this era would allow them to toy with modern day fighters it wont even be close. So sad people have no clue what there witnessing here pure brilliance by a true great!
@TheBatugan776 жыл бұрын
Shorten those posts, Bry. No one reads your incessant drivel anyway.
@author70276 жыл бұрын
i read the post of Bryant. this fight is difficult to watch. their technique is strange. how it happened that Stanley Ketchel caught Johnson so well?
@tommygun50386 жыл бұрын
So if Mike Tyson or another modern heavyweight hit them with 5oz gloves it wouldn't hurt them? I agree they were tougher because they fought alot more too. But that doesn't make your jaw tougher and keep you from getting knocked out. Modern fighters have alot more science and modern training on their side.
@caulijutsu15756 жыл бұрын
A tiger would fuck up a lion
@anthonyalqasem68585 жыл бұрын
Calm down bro it ain't that serious
@jerrylanglois78924 жыл бұрын
3 oz. gloves and no mouthpieces... wow !
@JENDALL7144 жыл бұрын
They had mouth pieces since the late 1800's, it wasn't enforced to wear it.
@jerrylanglois78924 жыл бұрын
@@JENDALL714 I was speaking specifically of the johnson\moran fight, not whether or not mouth pieces were enforced... but thanks for the info.
@ernestitoe4 жыл бұрын
The narrator makes a good point about its being not long after the bare-knuckle era. There was a lot of stalking, occasional flurries of activity, and roughhousing that would have been grappling (permitted) in bare-knuckle boxing. Techniques which are standard today -- jabbing and throwing fast combinations -- were being worked out in Jack Johnson's time. Johnson's stance -- front leg straight out, leaning back -- was very much the way bare-knuckle fighting was done.
@caulijutsu15756 жыл бұрын
You can learn a lot watching this. Especially the clinch fighting. Jack Johnson’s double over position was dominant.
@gutterfighter69167 жыл бұрын
As a former amateur and pro, with forty years in the game, I hear a lot of talk about nutrition etc and modern training. I can tell you without a shadow of doubt that my generation of fighters would not have been good enough to enter the ring with the likes of Johnson. You have to know what to look for in fights. I can see things that nobody in today's fight game can do: cherry picking, arm control and touching a fighter to stop him being able to hit. In the last 70 years, only Larry Holmes could do that. Old time fighters were a different breed! When Joe Louis was King, there was 3000 pro heavies in the US. There are not that many pro fighters on the Earth, today.
@kennyyoung92606 жыл бұрын
Gutter Fighter I agree jack Johnson was a damn good fighter and would beat a lot of these new fighters.
@gulfy096 жыл бұрын
Gutter Fighter. They dont build them like they use too ..these old timers were just strong and durable
@TheBatugan776 жыл бұрын
Everyone's an internet badass.
@cjsansoo75 жыл бұрын
Today's athletes don't compare to athletes just 50 years ago. In the 1960's pitchers in baseball regularly pitched complete games and pitched every fourth day. Today's pitchers rarely throw a complete games and have an extra days rest. WHY???
@david-ok9tg5 жыл бұрын
This is typical bias the older effete generation develops to protect rhier ego as they cannot contend with dismal reality that their 15 minutes of fame was long ago and they are forgotten.
@billthestinker Жыл бұрын
Great upload thank you. It’s fun to watch this sparring match between the great Jack Johnson and a tough middleweight 👍🏿
@jasona96 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson was one of the GREATEST HEAVYWEIGHTS ever. Fast hands and amazing defense!
@eddraconiandratha1776 жыл бұрын
Nope. He was not. Throw out what you have been told and watch him with a fresh eye. He backs strait back everytime he is rushed . Hits the holds and uses infighting that would be considered illegal today. He had 5 defenses , against a middleweight who almost knocked hom out, against a former champion who hadn't fought in 7 years and dropped 120 pouns and against 3 journey men one who he almost lost to and fought to a draw. Then he was knocked out by a fighter who was not considered to be skilled at the time. His greatness is a case of people hearing something said over and over and not doing their own research. Watch this link about Johnson kzbin.info/www/bejne/q6WtipaXr62bl8k
@tommygun50385 жыл бұрын
No he didn't have much competition. Jack Dempsey would have destroyed him.
@lainiwakura46785 жыл бұрын
@@tommygun5038 Dempsey probably would beat him soundly, and I like JJ.
@lainiwakura46785 жыл бұрын
@@eddraconiandratha177 Well I've been around and studied the sport extensively. And every great heavyweight had flaws... some very glaring ones even. Ali also had terrible habits of backing straight up and keeping his hands down. Also limited power. And I think prime Ali (Clay) was the greatest heavyweight of all time. Perhaps even the greatest P4P, as he fought at 194 when he humiliated Liston. But the greats can overcome these flaws because what they do right, they do overwhelmingly right. Dempsey wasn't the same once he wasn't hungry anymore. And I mean hunger both figuratively and literally in his case. This has decayed many a great fighter. Was he the one who coined the phrase: "It's hard to keep getting up and running in the morning when you're wearing silk underwear"...? But anyhow in his prime I'd put him in my top 10. Great footwork and ambidextrous, allowing him to switch stances seamlessly and throw combinations from angles guys just didn't see back then. Similar to Tyson in that regard. Elusive head too, especially for the time... time he was way ahead of. Power to spare and tough as hell. You could knock the guy down but he'd get up... every time. Mike Tyson & Larry Holmes may be the most all around technically sound heavyweights I've seen... in their primes. Of course from the time Mike fired Rooney his skills eroded. People that claim he was just a brawler or a bully... they're the type that don't know boxing. Floyd Patterson too, no coincidence that he was also trained by Cus. But he lacked top end power.
@johndeagle43895 жыл бұрын
Lennox Lewis would have KOed Johnson in 1 round.
@mikerubin224 жыл бұрын
truly fascinating on so many levels; thank you for posting this
@ishatype2764 Жыл бұрын
Taking nothing away from the guys that fought back then but Moran just came in, head down, throwing haymakers. That style was totally made for Johnson's superb uppercut. You could tell Willard had studied the films of Johnson fighting before their fight, he leaned back like Johnson and held Johnson at bay with his long arms.
@tephlondandada1563 жыл бұрын
20 rounds! Just imagine going 20 rounds for a world title. I have great respect.
@HopeIanHope Жыл бұрын
Someone's having a laugh, this has to be Charlie Charlie Charles from the Fast Show 😭😃😂😅🤣
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
Mutiple not sane people on forums said this man could beat guys like frazier/ali/liston/rocky yet never fought guys as advanced as fighters those guys fought This looks trash
@Mbartel500 Жыл бұрын
With 3 ounce gloves, it's amazing more men weren't killed in the ring back then. In some of those fights, there was no limit to the number of rounds fought, as the fight wasn't over until one of the fighters surrendered, was knocked out, or was too badly injured for the fight to continue. Those were brutal times. That celluloid film is in remarkable condition considering it is 109 years old.
@frankieRandle8779 Жыл бұрын
Thing is with lighter gloves the hands weren’t well protected which meant they had to be careful not to break a knuckle. Modern gloves protect the hands much more making it possible for boxers punch the living daylights out of each other without worrying about hand damage, so in one way it’s worse now than it was then.
@Mbartel500 Жыл бұрын
@@frankieRandle8779 with those thin gloves, more energy was transferred with each punch. I think what makes the punches more damaging today, is that the fighters are much stronger, faster, and much heavier. Back in the day, most heavyweight fighters were well under 200 pounds. Look at the speed, power and ferocity of Mike Tyson when he was in his prime. There is no comparison to the fighters of the 1800s.
@frankieRandle8779 Жыл бұрын
@@Mbartel500 yes that’s right although there are exceptions - when Dempsey fought Willard he was 14 st but still gave away 3st to Willard at 17st.
@Mbartel500 Жыл бұрын
@@frankieRandle8779 i did say most…which means not all were under 200 pounds. Jack Johnson was over 200 pounds and over 6 feet tall. He was literally a giant in his era.
@YitroBenAvraham5 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson would have been an amazing MMA fighter. His clinch game was beautiful here. Q
@timothyhughes19045 жыл бұрын
You're on to something. MMA has much in common with boxing as it existed under The London Prize Ring Rules. Under those regulations, rounds did not end until someone was knocked down, a boxer could throw his opponent to the ground, grabbing someone's hair with one hand and pummeling him with your other hand was allowed. These were bare knuckle fights, no gloves or hand wrappings. These were usually finish fights, in other words, battles that continued until someone was knocked out or could no longer continue. Kicking was not allowed. When a round ended, you went back to your corner and had 30 seconds to rest and recover. Then you returned to the center of the ring and placed your foot on a marked out line and begin fighting again. This was called toeing the mark or coming to scratch. John L Sullivan became heavyweight champion under those rules and lost the title under our modern system in 1892. Many people believe MMA is a new thing, actually it has a lot in common with the past.
@wiseteacher35994 жыл бұрын
@@timothyhughes1904 Thanks for the lesson in history.
@anitacunningham28264 жыл бұрын
He was way ahead of his Time. 1love
@davidwilliams48374 жыл бұрын
Good eye. Boxing now looks different because of huge gloves [which cover the center]. This is why Jack fights more like an MMA fighter, but most people don't understand. Even the stance changes with small gloves.
@billyrock83056 жыл бұрын
I attended that lively contest. It was a rather robust affair between two willing combatants. The next day history was written.
@Goku_Kiyosaki6 жыл бұрын
How are you still alive
@lainiwakura46785 жыл бұрын
Lol, this dude is 120 years old.
@c.a.g.31305 жыл бұрын
@@lainiwakura4678 Barely looks a day over 115.
@dunstonbrooks68864 жыл бұрын
@@Goku_Kiyosaki Well it could have been a previous life...
@gregquinn781711 жыл бұрын
98 years ago...amazing
@rondierice49224 жыл бұрын
A 14 year old boy watching this fight...would be 120 years old today!
@darrins3206 Жыл бұрын
Even though the fight was scheduled for 20 rounds, these rounds appear to be 2 minutes instead of the 3 minute rounds we have today. 20 x 2 = 40 minutes. 12 x 3 = 36. Only 4 minutes difference or 1.3 extra 3 minute rounds more in time).
@Shepthebassman914 жыл бұрын
Amazing quality footage for 1914! its incredible how fighters used to be conditioned for 20 plus rounds. the guys today wouldn't even come close to being ready, trained, and seasoned for such long and grueling fights. round after round, there was no neutral corner after a knockdown rule either which different became part of the rules until the mid to late 1920's!
@RTC16554 жыл бұрын
Man, you got to be kidding. The pace these guys are boxing isn't even remotely what it is today. HWs of today would merc these guys in less than three rounds. JJ is a legend of his time but would be helpless today.
@Shepthebassman914 жыл бұрын
RTC1655 Jack Johnson wasn’t really even focused or gave very much attention to the pace of this particular fight here.....he was one of the greatest defensive fighters of any era....at this point in the timeline of his career, Jack was less interested about keeping up with the top contenders and even his training was less intense. Honestly, if you’re viewing this film as a bases for Jack Johnson’s talent and amazing gift as a fighter, you need to watch other fights from earlier years, and watch interviews and do more research....because The great Jim Jeffries said after losing to Johnson (who was maybe at the end of his prime) in 1910, “I couldnt have ever caught Johnson, not even at my best, not in a million years!” Plus Johnson was the one who gave former Heavyweight champion German Max Schmeling the key to the legendary Joe Louis’ weakness in 1936 while watching films of Joe fighting! If ANYONE could fight defensively and slip punches, back up (which is not something one should do in the ring, (ive tried it myself - i used to box and do martial arts) unless you are Muhammed Ali, Willie Pep, Sugar Ray Robinson, or Sugar Ray Leonard. “Frankly”, Frank Moran was a brawler who didnt know how to fight very well technically.....
@jamesmills1093 жыл бұрын
thank God somebody though to film these old fights!
@snivelinj7612 Жыл бұрын
Both of these fighters would be slaughtered by today's heavyweights. There is no way we can compare the outdated boxing styles of those years with those of today though. Johnson was a tough guy. By today's standards his skills were very limited.
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
Mutiple not sane people on forums said this man could beat guys like frazier/ali/liston/rocky yet never fought guys as advanced as fighters those guys fought This looks trash
@alec27266 жыл бұрын
You all have to remember that one hundred years of boxing science, training and style techniques and fitness followed Jack Johnson. Jack Johnson won his World Title against Canadian Tommy Burns at Rushcutters Bay in my hometown, Sydney, Australia. The site, originally was built out of timber for a 'two-man show' to get around local authorities, remained a stadium until the 1960's. It was the largest gate to the day. Now it's now an elevated train line. I remember going to the stadium many times in my younger days. The first modern boxer/fighter World Champion was Jack Dempsey and the first, truly scientific boxer who became World Champion was Gene Tunney, a former US Army heavyweight champion. He defeated Jack Dempsey twice. Gene Tunney became a lawyer and I think, a US Congressman, as did his son Gene Jr. I travelled to New York to have a dinner at Jack Dempsey's Restaurant on Broadway. Was on my Bucket List? Boxing and its traditions do get into your blood!
@WisdomTooth198711 жыл бұрын
7:45 Moran lands a shot and begins grinning , jack applauds lol
@c.a.g.31305 жыл бұрын
7:45
@kevincharles19834 жыл бұрын
Then Moran sticks his hand out for a hand shake. Lol
@oliverlewis90804 жыл бұрын
saw this comment, scrolled up to skip ahead. Was already on 7:44. Pointless but true
@samsum37384 жыл бұрын
Great narration .It is like looking at a fight as it actually happens .
@e_hwhite64803 жыл бұрын
Try and imagine that most of us today have the privilege of watching fights streamed on television but back then audiences only could listen by radio if they weren’t actually at the arenas. Wow!
@jac99637 жыл бұрын
Built like Tyson, but at 6ft 2 (maybe 3) inches!! An athletic phenomenon with an advantage physically that very few ever just naturally possess...A great among World Heavyweight Boxing Champions... The Mike Tyson, Big George Foreman, or Sonny Liston of his age and era...and a truly legendary character to go with it. A true Boxing Legend.
@DrLeroyArch6 жыл бұрын
Johnson was only 6' 1/2", weighed 192 when he beat burns, 200 in later prime so was nowhere near as muscular as the 5'10-11" 215-220 pound Tyson.
@joethomas87184 жыл бұрын
@@DrLeroyArch I would not include Tyson with these boxers, he was a freak of nature fighter.
@curbozer50064 жыл бұрын
Johnson certainly had a great boxers body!...He and Ken Norton looked similar in musculature and reach...Jack fought his best at about 208...Remember, he was already 30 when he finally won the Belt!...many fighters are past their prime by then...but Johnson had a rather contained, economical style of boxing, he really knew how to pace himself...I think this helped him last as long as he did...losing a title at 37 is no disgrace!
@DaveRossignol4 жыл бұрын
Folks in comments are comparing these fighters to modern fighters. This is ridiculous. It’s like comparing a chess champ from modernity with those from 100 years ago. Pointless as the game progresses and players have higher rankings now. Players, fighters, and athletes progress over time. Strategy, nutrition, sports science, technology, training, coaching, etc. etc. improve over time. Just like planes are faster now. To ponder who was the greatest of all time, in any endeavour, one would have to rank an individual’s superiority over the competition of their time. The historical record indicates that nobody was close to Johnson in his time. This dispute the fact there was a bias against him since he was black. By virtue of his record, his superiority and length of time he was champion, Jack Johnson clearly was one of the greatest boxers of all time. Naturally he wouldn’t stand a chance over a modern athlete.
@@TheBatugan77name the guys who made amatuer/mid fighting like these guys in 70s-90s
@kailashpatirai5 жыл бұрын
Thank you soooo much for video
@andrewr628 жыл бұрын
Apart from Johsnons KO loss to Willard I believe this was his toughest title defense (at least on film). Moran had his moments.
@hdvictoryford53294 жыл бұрын
JJ usually fought men much smaller than him. Middleweights, an occasional lt heavy. Goes to show you he was not as great as he was made out to be. I think he fought 3 maybe 4 legit hwts. And he also ducked all the good black fighters of his era. What great champ does that.
@andrewr624 жыл бұрын
@@hdvictoryford5329 I respect JJ's accomplishments especially in lieu of the hostile environment he faced because of his race. But I too have difficulty ranking him talent and ability wise as one of the best of all time. The opponents he faced and didn't face during his reign to me is very telling. I wonder too if modern fans who hold his abilities in such high esteem would feel differently of film existed of his title defenses against middle weight Jack O'Brien or against the very average Jim Johnson both of whom by all accounts did very well against Johnson.
@hdvictoryford53294 жыл бұрын
@@andrewr62 Good thoughts. I appreciate your objectivity. You have me thinking as well if those fights would be around. Or the fight he had with C Choy who knocked him cold. Appreciate your comments.
@keeganbluegrass2 жыл бұрын
@@hdvictoryford5329 He would have been smoked if he fought Sam Langford for the title. Johnson was innovative and a good fighter but was really not even the greatest of his time, and cherry-picked opponents. Fighters like Dempsey, Gibbons or Louis would have done away with Johnson easy
@DCStef2 жыл бұрын
Maybe ducked them while champ but he fought them and defeated them before he was champ
@icogjcbenjamite9 жыл бұрын
boxing back then was about endurance and stamina
@cordellsenior99354 жыл бұрын
Sure wasn't about hitting.
@acnj2284 жыл бұрын
Respect to all the black athletes back than so we can continue our greatness today
@edwardrichard25614 жыл бұрын
Must have been pretty hard for those guys. Most modern dark skin athletes get the money but don't even come close to to the men those guys were.
@RTC16554 жыл бұрын
@Steve Witte Wow, you are really unpleasant. Why?
@stevetatten9422 Жыл бұрын
Not against Tyson Fury.
@tkiejennings79613 жыл бұрын
On my birthday 🎉 and Mike Tyson fought on my Birthday on June 27 I’m just now seeing this Jack Johnson fought on my birthday 🎉💪🏾 I see why I love doing boxing 🥊
@mycheesesteak9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this. It's very interesting to see a fight that's over 100 years old and a piece of boxing history and fought the day before the events that started WW1. I was a bit surprised at the action. I thought there would be a lot more of it. Today's fighters would whoop these guys. I had expected just the opposite.
@chrisevans52596 жыл бұрын
J.Johnson was a true great of the ring,.. Great defense, and superb power and catlike reflexes..made him a formidable opponent..and definitely in the top 6 of ALL-TIME
@RTC16554 жыл бұрын
A guy with zero guard doesn't have 'great defence' in my book
@devilface972 жыл бұрын
@@RTC1655 read a book on boxing then, hopefully one that starts with parrying and arm trapping.
@bigjimmcmurty86934 жыл бұрын
EVERYTIME I watch Johnson fight, I can't help but think Andersson Silva tailored his style after him, they fight almost a like.
@johnluongo42303 жыл бұрын
20 rounds! That’s impressive. Johnson would have been a good wrestler.
@rickhigson38816 жыл бұрын
Holy cow I have often wondered what black people could have done with out the hate,I still shed a tear for Josh Gibson!
@xyzabc1231174 жыл бұрын
Doubt they would have been as great without the pressure!
@hlloyd-fs4uf4 жыл бұрын
Don't bring your racism here ahole.
@eddierivera85564 жыл бұрын
Rick Higson: my dad saw Josh Gibson play in PR and said he was the greatest hitter he ever saw!
@michelmendoza1769 Жыл бұрын
Does anyone know what year this fight occurred?
@TonyCougar19654 жыл бұрын
Georges Carpentier, the famous French boxer (and WW1 Hero) is the referee for this fight. He would win the world light heavyweight title but famously get knocked out by Jack Dempsey for the heavyweight title. Interestingly enough, Carpentier, fighting in the U.S., was the fan favorite against Dempsey, as many fans saw Dempsey as a draft dodger.
@WJKPhD6 жыл бұрын
Hey rsmorodinov! Thanks for posting this amazing piece of boxing treasure. Exclnt clarity. Good commentary, too. Boxing styles then were adapted to extremely long bouts. Three rounds of amateur boxing is very taxing, I know from experience. 20 rounds is way beyond the capacity of most men. Johnson paced himself for the long haul. But he could have adapted his style to 15 round matches. He could have learned to box with his hands up, elbows in, and work off his jab rather than stick and hold. Anyway, its just not possible to compare his ability to that of guys who came 100 years later. PS Jason Richards gives us very interesting information. However, the actual shooting in WWI didn't begin until August 1914. Those idiot kings in Europe had plenty of opportunity to avoid what is the stupidest war in World History. (With his lies abt WMDs, #WarCriminal Bush 43 started the most dishonest war in World History.)
@Section5_CdnIntelService4 жыл бұрын
Moran's record was 26-9-4 prior to this fight. Both men used standard 6 ounce gloves as was the case of most of the previous 30 years.
@scottthefunk Жыл бұрын
3oz he said
@AceDetectives Жыл бұрын
.@@scottthefunk He makes a number of mistakes
@kentishtowncowboy11 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this and to such good quality. It does demonstrate the old stule with low hands and straight Back with Head also held back. Also, notice that both are flat-footed and this effects their lack of elusiveness. It also shows how exaggerated is the historical evidence of Johnson's 'scientific' approach etc. The Galveston Giant, as he was called by Nat Fleischer. Er, no. For those who are interested, the commentator is Steve Holdsworth (UK).
@pauldomingo67376 жыл бұрын
You no nothing
@sleazyfellow5 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson is very unorthodox in his defense, but you Ali and Foreman a little in it. He leans back like Ali (only two to do it consistently without getting punished) and catches punches with his gloves like Foreman did when he first came on the scene. You do see alot of clinches in old-school fights though, a hold over from the bare knuckle era where sometimes whole rounds would be clinching and wrestling.
@tommyclemons17293 ай бұрын
You can see when the challenger turned around and said fuck this im done 😂 then started fighting again
@alien28364 жыл бұрын
CRAZY NOW IS 2020 I THINK I'M BACK IN FUTURE WATCHING BOXES
@anthonymongelli55673 жыл бұрын
Johnson could fight backing up like Ali always in position not a dancer but perfect timing if he needed counter controled the tempo of the fight almost impossible too hit!? You could sense the hesitantcy of Moran when he tried to penetrate Johnson’s defense!!Why was he so good and confident because Johnson learned how to fight by putting ten men in the ring together and the last man standing was the winner so he became a great defensive and offensive fighter ! ! He looked too me like he was not even trying to exert himself but if he had to he could have knocked Moran out any time he wanted to.! I am an ex amateur boxer and I also sparred with professional boxer’s some things are just instinctive ! !👍🏼👍🏼🥊🎯🧐😊 L
@royhudson14614 жыл бұрын
Good commentating on this fight
@patmcstuff671 Жыл бұрын
No wonder they went 20 rounds, nothing happened
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
Mutiple not sane people on forums said this man could beat guys like frazier/ali/liston/rocky yet never fought guys as advanced as fighters those guys fought This looks trash
@AngelSanchez-tq6lx6 жыл бұрын
Beautiful video. Johnson was accurate with fast and sneaky jabs, rights and uppercuts, while nullifying the opponent. Hit and not get hit!
@michaelthompson64525 жыл бұрын
A lot of people have a hard time accepting Jack as being one of the greatest heavyweights ever. Just think about it, a black man in the 1900 ,with a all but not so nice kkk audience watching the fight. He was called everything in the book,and still whip Big Jim's ass. It's sad to know that the kkk is still watching.
@sleazyfellow5 жыл бұрын
Oh god, quit it with that shit. In the early 20th century there were literally millions of KKK members, compared to today with way less than even 10,000.
@TheBatugan775 жыл бұрын
... watching you closely, mikey...
@user-yp3oj5se1i5 жыл бұрын
It's not a lot of people. He was one of the greats but had a lot of losses/draws. Marciano and Calzaghe for instance never lost.
@MrAitraining4 жыл бұрын
Jack was a pioneer, but he also set back blacks in boxing too. He trolled the whites by dating white women, wearing flashy clothes and generally not giving AF. So that brought extra heat and some fuel for closing championship boxing down to black people for a while after jack. I would put Joe Louis as the real pioneer that led to true opening in heavyweight boxing. Johnson def seemed like more fun though 🙂
@MrTrackman1002 жыл бұрын
Amazing how modern looking the film quality is. Silent movies used to look jerk and everyone moved super fast. No more.
@chucknchar4 жыл бұрын
20 rounds? You think Jack Dempsey would take Johnson 20 rounds? Dempsey came at you, both these men wave their arms around, no hard jab.
@samtotheg3 жыл бұрын
youre stupid johnson had a jab and landed it OFTEN , he would do a prime Dempsey worse than Tunney did him(
@TheBatugan773 жыл бұрын
@@samtotheg No need for name calling. You pathetic putz.
@samtotheg3 жыл бұрын
@@TheBatugan77 dumbass you couldn't help yourself
@TheBatugan773 жыл бұрын
@@samtotheg 👈👺 Watch it, son!
@gustavodriotez36667 жыл бұрын
I was there. Second row on the right. Whith my dad now Im 114 yrs young
@MyVeryHappyDay5 жыл бұрын
Gustavo Driotez how is the old man doing? Still in good health?
@lforte36574 жыл бұрын
20 rounds That just " SOUNDS " FREAKY
@vestibulate4 жыл бұрын
Frank Moran went on to a long career in Hollywood, appearing in many films now regarded as classics. Among the illustrious directors who cast him were Charlie Chaplin, Raul Walsh, Frank Capra and Preston Sturges- the latter in numerous roles. In the 1933 picture The Prizefighter and the Lady, Moran is introduced as himself in a pre-fight ring sequence along with Jim Jeffries and several other old-time boxing luminaries.
@tintomara62094 жыл бұрын
Is that the one with Max Baer and Primo Carnera?
@vestibulate4 жыл бұрын
@@tintomara6209 Yes. It's a corny picture, but Baer performs deftly. Carnera is given little to do. The final match between the two resembles the one from the first Rocky film- Max takes a shellacking in the early rounds but fights back when his girl turns up at ringside. The bout is declared a draw, and Carnera retains his title.
@tintomara62094 жыл бұрын
@@vestibulate Cheers man,I'd still love to see it,corny or not!
@vestibulate4 жыл бұрын
@@tintomara6209 Here it is- ok.ru/video/558638762736 Enjoy!
@tintomara62094 жыл бұрын
@@vestibulate Thank you sir! I am sure I shall enjoy every second!
@ahunter95034 жыл бұрын
Fabulous - HE was GREAT JACK J. Beautiful body for a HUGE boxing STATUE x
@richardv.5824 жыл бұрын
Moran one tough guy to go the distances against Johnson.
@HopeIanHope9 ай бұрын
Worst than today's bollocks, nothing happening, no boxing, just holding 👎
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
some not sane odd person said this to me, I've seen your videos on Deontay, as well as your ones on Wlad and the 70s-90s comparison. I find most of it disagreeable, mainly with how you describe the techniques being shown in their respective clips. I agree that Galento, Baer, Braddock, and Carnera were crude boxers, but they were also seen as crude for their own time. I also agree with Marciano's technique being vastly overrated. I disagree with your views on Louis the most. In fact, I think Louis looks great in most of the footage that you use to try and prove your point. In the 70s-90s video, you use Carnera footage to argue that Louis has stiff and sluggish movement, but Louis is moving beautifully in that footage. He's constantly circling with Carnera, moving in and out, feinting, using head movement, parrying, and slipping his jab, while peppering him at will with his own jabs. You argue that Louis looks unsure of himself, but I'd say he looks extremely confident and that Carnera is the only one looking terrified. Carnera has a decent jab but overall looks crude, but Louis looks like a modern boxer in that fight. It's the same case for the footage you use for the Baer fight. You argue that Louis looks sluggish, lacks upper and lower body movement, and can't effectively punch from range or punch while moving. I disagree; in fact, I think Louis pretty much does this in the examples you use. Louis is effortlessly jabbing and hooking from range and is doing it incredibly smoothly. He's using nuanced lateral movement and punching beautifully while doing it. He's dominating the crude Baer like any great boxer would. In your Deontay video, you use a terrified Schmeling getting bulldozed by a rushing Louis in a minute as an example of how Louis and Schmeling can't fight from range or manage distance. I don't think that's really fair; it's clear from the other fights that Louis knows how to use range, angles, and manage distance. I also don't think Louis looks horrible at all here; in fact, he's constantly feinting and anxious to parry that right hand, since you emphasize looking at their hands. They both do well at defending themselves on the inside at 1:18-1:25. Very tight guards. Schmeling cleverly blocks, then rolls Louis' punches at 0:54. I don't think this is the best exampleofr either of their technical brilliance, but I don't think they look bad either. It's important to note that Schmeling said that he was scaredsh*tlesss before the figh, and basically lost before the fightbegan,n like Spinks against Tyson. You also use a pastprime,e Louis and Conn, who had just fought 4 years in the war, from their 1946 fight as your example for why they're inefficient at range, mostly punch just when they stop, stand in front of their opponents waiting to be hit, and even in thiscase,e I still disagree with you. The past prime, basically shot Billy Conn effectively uses lateral movement and isn't predictable with it, parries and overall defends himselfwell,l and jabs from range well. I still think theydido all of these things much better in their first match, especially Conn. I also don't think a pastprime minister,e Ezzard Charles, who reportedly had symptoms of ALS as early as 1951, is the best example to use to define that era's techniques either. Same with the Moore and Dempsey clips. Dempsey,Charles,s and Moore didn't fight like that normally atall,l and when you watch their fights in fulllength,h that becomes clear. Dempsey displays crisp head movement and good technique in his fights with Brennan, Gibbons, and in his training footage with Bill Tate. He even displays good defenseand,d attimes,s technique in his past prime footage against Sharkey and Tunney. 4- yea- old Moore was cooking Marciano at range in the early rounds of their fight, and effectivelydefendingd himself while countering Rock.,Evennthen,n I find Moore's performances against Bivins and Davidson much more impressive. Charles looks modern in his fight against Lloyd Marshall. They're all much more skilled than Deontay. Can you watch my video of Deon/Foreman Louis Vid and tell me if you see anybody that fought Deon or himself or if anybody I showed Foreman fought or himself was less skilled or using the same obsolete tech as the guys I compared them to?
@largelester8 жыл бұрын
These are 3 oz. gloves. Old film but I can still see that Moran's face is a crimson mask. Ali or Klitschko might have survived 20 rounds with the giant. I doubt any of you keyboard punchers would last 1 round with either one of these pugilists.
@TheBatugan776 жыл бұрын
I would.
@DC-js4gk6 жыл бұрын
That is best comment ever. Moran looked pretty good early probably unlucky to meet Jack any other time would have been champ
@joer.32406 жыл бұрын
largelester I could barely last watching to the end of the fight!!
@joer.32406 жыл бұрын
largelester And I'm getting tired just typing this note.Wait...I'm taking a break...Ok,as I was saying,bloody hell 20 rounds!
@kailashpatirai5 жыл бұрын
Glad to see very old boxing
@patrickfallon61922 жыл бұрын
Dull fight the much older Johnson holding most of the fight
@aarondigby98592 жыл бұрын
@16:05 ain't Johnson fighting while moving backwards, pre Ali technique.
@ascendediam Жыл бұрын
nycinstyle is a lunatic and a troll nobody in their fight mind sees rock or louis beating ali they were novices compared to the average 70s fighter
@ascendediam Жыл бұрын
these are the average 70s fighter Advances in angles/tech/timing/fluidity Webner able to punch from range was sloopy but didn't have to stop fully just to punch,able to move forward double up on the inside while using mutiple angles randomly Chuck webar able to come forward while keeping his guard up doesn't just waste many punches,seems to in his Match to not be very uncertain as the pre 60s era like alot were then Rich fought ali doesn't waste many shots coming forward,able to agian like chuck was moving forward keeping hands up smoothly,doesn't look uncertain like they did pre 60s era able to punch from range smoothly with 1 hand and back up very quickly to his position Rich able to back up smoothly not as easy to read,picks shots from range,has good timing at times from range smoothly Terry who fought foreman,terry did these things very good at fighting from range smoothly,able to keep both hands up while moving back very smoothly,agian doesn't look uncertain,throws mutiple shots from different angles while moving forward or back,terry good at picking shots from range in the style of ali at times Duane fought Norton,able to keep hands 1 hand up while moving back and able to punch with the other,able to agian not stop fully just to throw shots off as they did most the time pre 60s,able to throw random shots agian like the others that aren't easy to read,moves back lateral,doesn't waste many shots,able to on the inside be able to punch from a standing up position then switch quickly to a crunch to a body shot back up to the starting up position 30s-40s very over extending alot of times to the body and are very hesitant in most movements they dont fight from range much,they leave themselves open alot alot of times will just throw to the body and not protect themselves they use mostly counters when up close,the lateral movement is very basic they dont seem to be able to punch from range while doing it smoothly they have to stop then punch most the time and their feet are mostly tiptoeing, missing mutiple angles the average 70s fighter used,timing isn't that great,very stiff and slow movements Wlad was way more advanced than the 70s let alone this novice era he would destroy these guys 1st round my video shows how more more advanced he was
@Alltimeboxing12 жыл бұрын
Commentator was wrong, Moran wasn't undefeated at all prior to this fight.
@ismailabdelirada9073 Жыл бұрын
As I commented on the post underneath this one, I saw in my peripheral vision the footwork of the fighters. Normally, I'd be distracted by the punches they were throwing, but here all I could see were their legs moving around the ring. And now it's clear: A boxing match really is a kind of dance. (Sure, it's a dance with bad intentions, but....)
@zwebb73274 жыл бұрын
Their defense is slick, lots of feinting and switching up timing to land jabs. Lots of clinching and fighting coming in and out of the clinch. Jersey joe Walcott and Floyd Mayweather did a lot of this I wonder if they're fans of Johnson
@The_Ex_Boxing_Nerd2 жыл бұрын
Mayweather doesn’t really show much respect to any fighter who has a single loss, but that may just be publicly.
@asmrcritique65657 жыл бұрын
A close fight as Johnson looked a little fatigued from 15th round on. Good thing that he dominated the early half of the fight...
@edwarddeitch88865 жыл бұрын
The fact is that compared to modern fighters with their lightning quick jabs, combinations, and conditioning these old timers were clumsy and turned every clash into a wrestling match. BUT : Their skills at clinching, especially when stunned, is a lost art. The inability to do that has cost many a modern fighter to get knocked cold. It would be fascinating to see what Johnson would have done with modern training and techniques.
@carlosimotti39338 жыл бұрын
I like Johnson's head movements and he's great in the clinch...but I can't see him winning against Louis, Walcott, Charles, Ali, possibly Liston and Dempsey too, and maybe Frazier, Tunney and Schmeling. I think he could beat only Marciano, Lewis, Foreman and Tyson of the greats, if he avoided to be knocked out of course
@timothyhughes19045 жыл бұрын
Larry Holmes said he could have beaten all of the old-time fighters except Jack Johnson.
@147ML5 жыл бұрын
any sportsmen today would win against their one century ago equivalent. It is useless to compare.
@asmundukkelberg87413 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson was great, but Lewis would have destroyed him. I find it strange that Lewis still is so underrated. He was quite likely the best HW of all time.
@benjaminglover15704 жыл бұрын
Be unbeatable today.
@tintomara62094 жыл бұрын
If they must insist on adding modern commentary to old fight footage,they should at least research the fighters properly.Jack Johnson beat Tommy Burns for the title,not Stanley Ketchel.Ketchel came later,s.m.h.
@oncall214 жыл бұрын
Imagine this today. A 20 round heavy weight fight. Most can't last ten!
@RTC16554 жыл бұрын
@Baby Doc Duvalier Nah, he only forgets that it's the amount of punches that counts, not the amount of rounds. HWs of today do probably punch nearly twice as hard as these guys and with a much higher punch output.
@martellitunes4 жыл бұрын
Looks more like a wrestling match to me.
@stuartperry10477 жыл бұрын
Side note. Nether fighter- Johnson or Moran was paid for the fight. The police seized the box office money.
@mikecinquen6 жыл бұрын
If that's true after 20 rds. all I can say is "WOW".......Fucked Up
@aneesehamudi76656 жыл бұрын
Please tell me you're joking bro
@TheBatugan774 жыл бұрын
Fckg cops.
@tempestvideos98345 жыл бұрын
Johnson was a puncher's nightmare.
@taximan47213 жыл бұрын
I think you are wrong. If jack Johnson was a seventies fighter like around the ali, frazier, foreman etc times, he would have being big trouble for all fighters of that time. Back in Jack Johnson days they TRAINED completely different and had not got the proper facilities as they had in then modern era.
@carmodifire12 жыл бұрын
To be fair, he was past it against Willard, and he had to be a lazy type fighter because of the sheer # of rounds and fights then. He liked to clinch because it tired opponents and conserved his own. And he was doing well till he got KO'd against Willard. And, he was the one who exposed Louis's flaws. And, Louis's trainer himself said that Johnson would 'win any day of the week' against Louis
@Drmoemoe4 жыл бұрын
Different fight game then, smaller gloves, you can hit your opponent before he got up after a knockdown.
@janswart27053 жыл бұрын
No, you had to wait until (at least) his gloves were off the floor. The only difference was that you didn't have to retire to a neutral corner, and there was no standing eight count or three knockdown rule.
@wunademones6 жыл бұрын
The background crowd audio is on a loop
@Po1itica11yNcorrect4 жыл бұрын
The entire audio was dubbed in. All they had was silent films in 1914.
@farshimelt4 жыл бұрын
@@TheBatugan77 June 27, 1914, you simp who can't read.
@Brianwilliams-qp1ei8 жыл бұрын
I'm not a fight expert, but to believe that modern fighters have the style, strength, and the speed to beat the older fighters may be a misconception. Modern fight technology would give a fighter an edge but we must understand men of those times where a lot stronger than the average modern man. Also all or most of the training, and style techniques used by fighters such as Ali, Foreman, Frazier, even Klitschko were learned by old trainers that fought during these times. For example go back and look at the second Ali vs. Liston fight, the "anchor punch" Ali used was learned from Step and Fetch it, an entertainer who learned the technique from Jack Johnson. Just something to think about.
@DrPacman8 жыл бұрын
i think you can only compare them if you give them the same nutrition etc
@andrewr628 жыл бұрын
I disagree. As far as training is concerned what is different today? Sparring, speed bag, heavy bag, weights, road work? Turn of the century fighters fought much more often than modern fighters so they were in shape. How many fighters today could fight 20 rounds plus? Speed? You speak as though all fighters today are experts of technique, master of skill with KO power and hand speed. This is simply not the case. There's a thing called talent which is rare. As rare today as it was then.
@jabbingjackizaracist39028 жыл бұрын
@drpacman Get off the nutrition shit man. You sound like an idiot. Do Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries look malnourished to you? The oldtimers came from a society of Miners, farmers, iron workers, hard physical labor. Hard tough men make good fighters. 100x the fighters in 1950 as there are today. Participation is what makes anything great.
@Docmajor167 жыл бұрын
jabbingjackizaracist the fights in the 50s yeah, but this was in 1914. I just think the art of boxing evolved a lot by the time the 50s rolled around, and technique got more advanced. But I believe Jack Johnson would stand out in any era if he was born in it
@andrewr627 жыл бұрын
A lot of people feel that way but some the most recognized skill boxers of all time were before the 1950's. Benny Leonard of the 1920's skills could match that of any modern fighter. Charley Burley of 1930's was a boxing master. There are no skills any fighter today has that he did not have or use in the ring. The great Ray Robinson began his career in the 1940's, perhaps the best boxer of all time. Gene Tunney's stick and move style is amazingly like that of any fighter today in the 1920's. So what is new? What has changed? Fighers today any more skilled the ring? Do most fighters today know things in the ring these greats did not? I don' think so.
@carlgilkes87755 жыл бұрын
The background noise is annoying, it’s annoying and only there to make the commentary seem realistic but it’s on a loop and sounds cheap.
@johndeagle43895 жыл бұрын
Alex Kerr, animal trainer who has worked with both lions and tigers, stated in his book that tigers will nearly always win in a fight with a lion.
@andrewr624 жыл бұрын
Moran gave a good account of himself. He also fought against Willard for the title. The results were not much different.
@Section5_CdnIntelService4 жыл бұрын
Johnson was a clutch and grab artist and Moran was a dirty fighter when given a chance.
@Joe-gu6oe4 жыл бұрын
FANTASTIC VIDEO!! THANKS!!
@danielmann39164 жыл бұрын
Juggling Taxi 🚖 I love ❤️ Jake Johnson he may be the greatest fighter of all time, but they gave him a hard time.
@Section5_CdnIntelService4 жыл бұрын
Wow lots of misinformation.
@BrutalTruth19 жыл бұрын
After just watching the awkward incomplete stylist that was Johnson and in the recent aftermath of Klitschko's dominance of Jennings at the advanced age of 39 for a boxer, it clearer than ever that Vladimir Klitschko has not received his proper and due recognition because he has not allowed himself to become the exclusive promotional property of either Don King or Bob Arum, amongst the two biggest thieving exploiters of boxers in boxing history. Unlike Don King and/or Bob Arum properties, he has not been fed the usual stream of American retreaded bums to defend the title in order to protect the Promoters' bank accounts. Instead, over Klitschko's career has defended his title against the best and most qualified fighters from every continent and nation, including those of Africa and from the former Soviet's eastern block nations. That alone should be indicative that he is far better than the vast majority of modern era Heavyweight Champions. Vladimir Klitschko has earned a seat in the exclusive Valhalla Hall of best Heavyweight Champions, alongside Gene Tunney, Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, Mohammad Ali, and George Foreman. Period!
@jahaddyjael19269 жыл бұрын
different era's. So that's irrelevant
@jakenconor8 жыл бұрын
he will be remembered as a heavyweight champion...sure..but nowhere near the class of Ali. he was nailed to the floor a couple of times by middling men and was completely outboxed by Tyson Fury the only time he faced a talented boxer his own size. Wlad was a dominant champion in a very poor era and still got ko'd a couple of times...and was made to look clueless by Fury as I said.
@BrutalTruth18 жыл бұрын
+jakenconor COMPARATIVE HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONS' CAREERS: A - - WladimIr Klitschko (born 25 March 1976) is 39 years old and was l going strong until very recently, beating the best heavyweights all over the world (he's not just fighting Don King or Bob Arum stumblebum gatekeepers) B - - Larry Holmes (born November 3, 1949) Holmes was 36 years old when he lost his title when he was defeated by a natural middleweight Michael Spinks. Holmes was 39 years old when he was knocked out by the exciting to watch but a comparative bum nonetheless, Mike Tyson C - - Muhammad Ali;(born January 17, 1942) Ali was 31 years old when he lost his title to a brain challenged Leon Spinks Ali was 36 years old when he lost his title to a talent limited Ken Norton. Ali was 38 years old when he lost to slightly better than average heavyweight Larry Holms. Ali was 39 years old when he lost to the untalented bum Trevor Berbick.
@largelester8 жыл бұрын
+BrutalTruth1 haha Jack is a bit quicker and would eventually bleed Klit out for a UD or late TKO
@DC-js4gk6 жыл бұрын
History proves you wrong. His bro was probably better too
@gerardalongi1169 Жыл бұрын
Schedule for 20 rounds insane
@dalegribble604 жыл бұрын
The ref stopped the fight momentarily at 10:00 after Jack's uppercut....seeing Frank's teeth were not embedded in Jack's gloves, he allowed the fight to go on warning him, of the Ketchel fight.....
@davidbrandel13114 жыл бұрын
The ref appears to be warning Johnson not to hold and hit.
@Chief2Moon4 жыл бұрын
Just imagine if "the old timers" had the nutrition, equipment& training techniques of today
@chriscoop76664 жыл бұрын
It's simple... Genetics didn't evolve that much for the last 100 years... So obviously they would fight like todays fighters
@Chief2Moon4 жыл бұрын
Chris Coop On one hand I agree, but there were very few heavyweights over 220lbs like today, plus those of the depression era, many who came before,& some later fighters often had "2nd jobs"...Dempsey, James Braddock, Jersey Joe Walcot, Toney Galento, & others come to mind. Genetics aside, it's undeniable that techniques & rules have certainly evolved over the last 100yrs.
@chriscoop76664 жыл бұрын
@@Chief2Moon I got your point and i agree. What i wanted to say... Take Baby Jack Johnson back from 1878 to 1990 and let him grow up in a modern day boxing family... And he would be some kind of Anthony Joshua...
@Chief2Moon4 жыл бұрын
Chris Coop No argument there👍
@1minnows8 жыл бұрын
Notice how the referee allowed the fighters to hold and grapple for long periods without breaking them. He should have bought a ticket.
@TheBatugan774 жыл бұрын
You should've minded your own fkn business and kept your fkn mouth shut.
@grayadam4 жыл бұрын
Jack Johnson would DESTROY today's heavyweights!
@RTC16554 жыл бұрын
Hehe, no way.
@TheBatugan774 жыл бұрын
@@RTC1655 He he, be quiet.
@johns72724 жыл бұрын
Fantastic footage. Amazing to watch these old fights. Curious too to see how below-amateurish in terms of boxing ability the guys from this generation were. Boxing fundamentals, feet positioning and a jab, are almost totally absent. In fact the first heavyweight to actually display boxing fundmaentals was joe louis - which was probably why he dominated the 30's. You can only imagine what someone like Olexander Usyk would do to these guys, never mind the likes of joshua or wilder
@kennethcurtis18563 жыл бұрын
Put any of today's boxers in the ring for 20 rounds and watch how amature they are. Johnson would eat any of them for a snack.
@samtotheg3 жыл бұрын
man you dont know what you are looking at !
@TheBatugan773 жыл бұрын
John s (is the s for stupid?) You don't know what in the blue fk you're babbling about.
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
@@kennethcurtis1856what is you're purpose for saying this odd ridiculous comment how come no one made midcard fighting this obsolete in 70s-90s or even amateurs? So how would this guy jack make it pro now
@ascendediam9 ай бұрын
@@samtothegodd comment you read other people who aren't all there and you can't see good like yourself say follower how doesn't he know what he is looking at when anybody who is sane can see these guys look like novices How about you name any average fighter who made mid-card fighting like these these guys 70s
@stevegrimmer32082 жыл бұрын
Why hasn't Hollywood made a film about Johnson???
@andrewmartin5383 жыл бұрын
Johnson not letting Moran inside, and when inside, Johnson pushes him backwards.
@chiriladorin-alexandru27768 жыл бұрын
Saturday 27 june 1914 was the last day of piece and happiness in Europe and in entire world. the next day june 28, 1914 was the day that changed the face of the world in bad forever. this date 27 june 1914 of this match was the last beautifull day in the history , the day that close la belle époque, la belle époque , what a nice expression for that time. in my opinion june 27 is the last day of la belle époque. the next day 28 june 1914 was the most darkness sunday, the most saddest day in history because in that day archduke franz Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo and this event led to ww 1 and changed the world forever. today is june 27 2016, exactly 102 years after this match of box.
@Shogo50007 жыл бұрын
There were no peace and happiness for the peoples of Balkans (Europe) under Turkish and Austrian yoke long time before june 28, 1914
@farshimelt4 жыл бұрын
@aaron pryor No one ever learns because money has no learning curve.
@henrybyrd54024 жыл бұрын
Carpentier could have only been 20 years old when he refereed this fight.
@andrewr6211 жыл бұрын
I can't help but feel that a fighter with a solid left jab (LIke a Larrry Holmes) would have been very effective against Johnson. Apparently Moran didn't know how to throw a straight hard left. He just pawed with it.
@samtotheg5 жыл бұрын
johnson knew how to parry ...holmes wouldnt get his jab in at all ...and in the clinches jack destroys him
@otisgreer84294 жыл бұрын
Whose idea was it to show this fight?
@TheBatugan774 жыл бұрын
Mine, Got a problem? Fucker.
@otisgreer84294 жыл бұрын
Yeah, next time try showing a fight were punches are actually being thrown.
@TheBatugan774 жыл бұрын
@@otisgreer8429 Next time don't click on it. Shove your suggestions up your ass. Sideways.
@TheBatugan776 жыл бұрын
Sean O'Blabbermourh is still pissed that Moran got his face tattooed with Johnson's fists
@sleazyfellow5 жыл бұрын
Majority of heavyweights got that. Johnson uses that uppercut very good in close. It's a shame he never really got tested in his prime.