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Farewell to Sport
Farewell to Sport
Farewell to Sport
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Farewell to Sport

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One of Sports Illustrated’s Top 100 Sports Books of All Time: A classic collection by one of the twentieth century’s most influential sportswriters 

From 1923 to 1937, New York Daily News columnist Paul Gallico’s dispatches from  ringside, rink-side, the sidelines, and the grandstand were a must-read for every American sports fan. Where else could one discover what it was really like to box heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey? To tee off against golfing legend Bobby Jones? To strap on a glove and try to catch Dizzy Dean’s ferocious fastball?
 
Gallico went where no other reporter dared, and for that he earned a permanent place in the pantheon of great American sportswriters alongside Ring Lardner, Red Smith, and Roger Kahn. Then, like a pitcher hanging up his cleats after throwing a perfect game, Gallico walked away to pursue other authorial interests, including the fiction that earned him his greatest renown. His parting gift to his devoted readers was Farewell to Sport, a collection of twenty-six of his finest pieces.
 
In these bulletins from the golden age of sports, Gallico profiles icons such as Babe Ruth, Bill Tilden, and Gene Tunney. He exposes the scripted drama of professional wrestling and the hypocrisy of big-time college football. And in feats of daring that went on to inspire a whole new school of journalism, he sacrifices his pride to meet the greatest athletes of the day on their own turf.
 
A brilliant snapshot of a fascinating era in sports history and a masterwork remarkably ahead of its time, Farewell to Sport is a fitting testament to the legacy of Paul Gallico.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 7, 2015
ISBN9781504009485
Farewell to Sport
Author

Paul Gallico

Paul Gallico (1897–1976) began his writing career at the New York Daily News, where he became one of the best-known sports journalists in America. Over the course of his fourteen years as a daily columnist and editor, he took a knockout punch from Jack Dempsey, caught Dizzy Dean’s fastball, teed off against Bobby Jones, and founded the Golden Gloves boxing tournament. In 1937, at the height of his fame, Gallico quit his column to devote himself to writing fiction. He went on to publish more than forty books for adults and children, including The Snow Goose (1941) and The Poseidon Adventure (1969), the basis for the blockbuster movie of the same name. Lou Gehrig: Pride of the Yankees (1942), a biography of the baseball icon, inspired the Academy Award–nominated film starring Gary Cooper. Born in New York City to an Italian father and an Austrian mother, Gallico left the United States in 1950 and lived the rest of his life abroad, with stops in England, Monaco, and Antibes, France, among numerous other locales.

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    Farewell to Sport - Paul Gallico

    I

    MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY …

    From the summer day thirteen years ago when as a wide-eyed, open-mouthed novice, a rank cub who had never seen a prizefighter before, I was sent to Jack Dempsey’s camp at Saratoga Springs, New York, to write stories about his training for the defense of his title against the challenge of Luis Angel Firpo, to another summer evening not long past, when in the vast Reichs Sports Stadion in Berlin the Olympic flag crept down the masthead and the perpetual flame died and vanished from the great black tripod, my last assignment—this is the first time that I have had a chance to stop for a moment and think over the things that I have seen and reported in the wildest, maddest, and most glamorous period in all the history of sport. I am able to do this, because I am saying good-by to sports-writing.

    It was an incredible period, this dizzy, spinning, sports reel of athletes, events, records, personalities, drama, and speed, a geared-up, whirling, golden world in which a lifetime was lived in five years, or sometimes it seemed even overnight, as heroes and heroines, champions and challengers burst upon the scene, shone like exploding star shells, and often vanished as quickly.

    I have for these past years had a ringside seat where men and women have, with their bodies, performed the greatest prodigies ever recorded. I saw the abysmal, unreasoning fury of Dempsey and Firpo fighting like animals and sat in a blinding cloudburst and watched Gene Tunney annihilate an unbeatable Dempsey. I saw Red Grange weave his twisting patterns up and down football fields, and followed in the galleries of Bob Jones as he played his smooth, superb golf shots that have never since been matched.

    Bill Tilden banged his unreturnable cannon-ball service across the net, and Jim Londos stood brown and glistening with oil and sweat under the hot candelabra of the wrestling pits. Tex Rickard was a bland, thin-lipped, Stetson-hatted gambler and an organizer of prizefights on a gigantic scale, and again Tex Rickard was a painted corpse on a bier lying in a state far beyond his worth in the center of Madison Square Garden, which he built.

    Babe Ruth stood up to bat on his thin, match-stick ankles, his head characteristically cocked a little to one side, slowly waving his bludgeon, and old Grover Cleveland Alexander, his oversized cap comically perched on top of his weatherbeaten head, prepared to pitch to him. Gertrude Ederle rode up Broadway standing in the back of a car with her arms outstretched with joy and happiness, into a blizzard of torn ticker tape and newspaper and telephone-book confetti. Primo Carnera, 278 pounds, fought Tommy Loughran, 183 pounds, under a Miami moon, and Giorgetti and Brocco and Spencer rode their flimsy bikes eternally around the wooden saucer of the six-day races.

    What a world! What heroes and heroines! How the black ribbon streamers of the celebrating headlines poured from the high-speed presses! The death wagons roared around the Indianapolis speedway track at two hundred and twenty miles an hour, and Helen Wills was something leggy with two long brown pigtails tied with bows that bounced and shook as she ran, and then she was a grown woman, cold, calm, commanding, absolute queen of her tennis world.

    Army played Navy at football before a hundred thousand people, and Paavo Nurmi dog-trotted around and around the oval running-track, in his methodical and devastating assaults upon Time, assaults that created records that no one would ever break until one day a dark-haired miler from Kansas named Cunningham ran a mile race at Princeton, not against opponents who were left far behind, but against the moving finger of a giant electric split-second clock set up at one end of the stadium. This then was to be the most dramatic foot-race ever run, and so it was until the day two summers ago when a black-shirted New Zealand medical student with straw-colored hair and a skinny body ran that same Cunningham and the greatest field of runners ever assembled into the ground in the Olympic equivalent of the mile.

    Dynasties fell, nations collapsed, politics changed, dictators appeared, countries were torn apart by revolution, there were distant wars, but all I saw were the eight-oared shells glistening in the late afternoon sun at Poughkeepsie, shattering the shining surface of the water with their blades, crawling like enormous water-spiders down the reach of the Hudson; prizefighters lying twitching on the canvas while their opponents waited for them to get up, their arms following the spread of the ropes out from the ring-posts in the corners; horses streaming in gay, changing patterns around the dirt tracks, their heads bobbing in rhythm and counter-rhythm, with a million dollars and more riding on their velvet noses. In my world there were only ball games played in the hot, sweating Indian-summer days, when every move made by the figures in white and gray outlined against the brown and green diamond was greeted by nerve-shattering, hysterical roars from seventy thousand people, or there would be eight naiads in black silk swim-suits threshing the blue waters of a pool between cork-roped lanes, and lovely bodies arched from high platforms into the cool water below. Hockey-players wheeled like birds in flight on the silvery ice, armored football-players crashed their heavy bodies against one another or kicked the ball spinning up into gray sky; fencers slashed and lunged, runners threw themselves at the tightly stretched bit of string at the finish line, jumpers scissored over bars set at unbelievable heights—it was a world at play, a fantastic competitive cosmos in which nothing ever seemed more important than who won, what was the score, who did it, and how.

    Moments of beauty are remembered inseparably with athletes performing in the arenas. There were Herb Pennock’s pitching motion, and the gleam in the eyes of Helen Wills looking up at a tennis ball in the air during her service, and her lovely neck line, and the smooth swiveling of Dempsey’s shoulders as he punched a rataplan on the light bag. I find myself suddenly thinking of Maxie Hebert and Ernst Baier skating the pair at Garmisch, in a snowfall that made the scene resemble an old print, or of R. Norris Williams’s backhand half-volley, or the six-round bout between Jimmy Slattery and Jack Delaney, the most brilliant and graceful prizefight ever boxed between two men.

    There were Georgia Coleman poised on the springboard, her yellow hair, capless, shining in the California sun, and Dorothy Poynton’s magnificent and graceful swan dive off the high tower, in which for a moment she became an exquisite white bird poised on some unseen current of air; the tremendous and awe-inspiring flotilla of vessels of every description that dotted the Atlantic Ocean off Newport, seen from the air, as they followed the America Cup races, and Aldo Nadi, the world’s greatest fencer, himself a living rapier in brilliant darting movements of attack and parry. The most perfect thing in human locomotion ever to please the eye was the foot-running of Ben Carr of Pennsylvania until one saw Jesse Owens running, not on the track, but over the top of it. Or I see Eleanor Holm Jarrett, herself a lovely creature, swimming the back-stroke, her fresh young face wreathed in green and white foam; Tommy Hitchcock leaning under the neck of his mount in full gallop to make a polo shot, Benny Howard rounding a pylon at two hundred and fifty miles an hour in Ike, one of his tiny white form-fitting racers, Pepper Martin sliding into second base.…

    They were queer fascinating folk who peopled this weird world and who became my temporary companions as the seasons brought them round, each in turn, almost as though they were papier-mâché figures pasted on a slowly revolving cyclorama. It seems as though I never knew days, weeks, months, winter, spring, summer, and autumn, but only sports seasons. The baseball season opened April 14, moved steadily through the summer, and then merged, via the world series, into the football season. There would be the indoor and the outdoor boxing season, the indoor track meets with their regular performers, the hockey season, the winter golf circuit and the summer tournaments, the indoor and outdoor tennis periods, the racing meets apportioned off by the jockey clubs in batches of three weeks to a track, the spring and fall six-day bicycle races, all coming round year after year regularly, as if driven by clockwork, with their costumes and paraphernalia, their lingo, their camp followers, and their famous characters.

    I have to think of course of Jack Kearns, smart, dapper, the perfect wise guy, groomed and scented, the finished modern type of fight manager; and the late Leo P. Flynn, old, white-haired, leathery-faced, one corner of his mouth exhibiting a small permanent orifice from talking and spitting out of it, calluses on his under forearms from leaning on the ropes and side-talking advice into the cauliflower ears of the fighters he used to call his bums—he was any casting director’s vision of the perfect old-time fight manager. Then there were curious egg-headed Humbert Fugazy, the little Italian banker who fancied himself a fight promoter and who was always building dream stadiums that never materialized except on paper; and tough, cocky little Gene Sarazen, the enfant terrible of golf, and his running-mate when the white-flannel troupe came round, gay, smart, cynical, Vinnie Richards, the bad boy of tennis. Knute Rockne, bald, quizzical, had a magnificent sense of humor, and Bill Duffy, dressed up like a tailor’s model, had strange eyes and was a dangerous man. Fat Harry Mendel, the perennial press agent of the six-day races, appeared as surely as death and taxes twice each year, and one was glad to have known small, quiet Miller Huggins, who always seemed patiently tired from the strain of managing the Yankees when they were the greatest slugging club in the history of modern baseball. And there were men of mystery such as Hugo Quist, the secretive manager of Paavo Nurmi, or men of romance, flamboyance, and ballyhoo like C. C. Pyle, inventor and promoter of the great coast-to-coast foot-race, nicknamed by W. O. McGeehan the Bunion Derby.

    All the things they did and said over that exciting period were news. The names come crowding back again—Jim Farley, chairman of the New York Boxing Commission, always playing his bland political game, the late John McGraw, with his gnarled face and bulbous nose, and the lean, ascetic-looking (but tough) Connie Mack; good-natured buoyant Helen Hicks, the husky girl golfer, and the great ball-players of the era, Cobb and Speaker and Sisler, Walter Johnson and Lefty Grove and the famous Dean boys, Dizzy and Daffy. There were more fighters than I can think of—the dark, shuffling, pawing Paul Berlenbach of the numbing punch, the hysterical Sharkey, Baby-Face Jimmy McLarnin, who always managed to look like a choir-boy while he was knocking you out; the brilliant, bounding Johnny Dundee; weird unorthodox Harry Greb, and the brave Mickey Walker; Tunney, the enigma; Camera, the misfit circus freak who became heavyweight champion; Schmeling, the only German who ever learned how to fight with his fists; Harry Wills, the perpetual championship contender; and Joe Louis, one of the finest and deadliest fighting machines ever developed. It seemed that never at one time had so many great performers and fascinating people been gathered together under one tent.

    The breathless rapidity with which the scene would shift left you little or no time for thought or reflection upon this mad, whirling planet of play. One afternoon you might be at the tennis tournament at Forest Hills, between matches drinking an iced tea at little iron tables set out on the close-clipped green lawn, beneath gay, colored umbrellas, surrounded by beautifully dressed women and soft-spoken men in summer flannels; and the next you might find yourself sitting at a spotted, rickety wooden table in a frowsy, ribald fight camp, gagging over a glass of needle beer and eating a steak sandwich, surrounded by lop ears, stumble-bums, cheap, small-time politicians, fight managers, ring champions, floozies, gangsters, Negroes, policemen, and a few actors thrown in for good measure.

    It would be a ball game one day and the Kentucky Derby the next. You had hardly got the sound of the galloping hoofs, the paddock trumpet-call, and the muffled, unforgettable They’re off! out of your ears, not to mention the gambling fever cooled in your veins, when you were standing in a gallery on a hillside, overlooking green, scrupulously manicured fairways, pitted with irregular white patches, listening to the soft snick of the cleanly hit golf ball. And hardly were you used to the jargon of the golf tournament—Jones has gone crazy, he’s even threes for five holes … What did Hagen turn in?… Diegel has to birdie the last two to tie … Sarazen’s two under coming into the eighth, but they say Cruickshank’s burning up the back nine—when you find yourself perhaps at Indianapolis, wandering about the beehive-busy motor pits with the heavy stink of gasoline and burning oil always in your nostrils, and your head ringing with the constant thunder of exploding motors.

    It was a wonderful, chaotic universe of clashing colors, temperaments, and emotions, of brave deeds performed sometimes against odds seemingly insuperable, mixed with mean and shameful acts of pure skullduggery, cheapness, snide tricks, filth, and greed, moments of sheer, sweet courage and magnificence when the flame of the human spirit and the will to triumph burned so brightly that it choked your throat and blinded your eyes to be watching it, and moments, too, of such villainy, cowardice, and depravity, of such rapaciousness and malice that you felt hot and ashamed even to find yourself reporting it.

    The swimming of the English Channel by Gertrude Ederle in the face of the most awesome handicaps of wind, weather, sea, and human hatred and jealousy was as matchless and wonderful a triumph of courage and indomitable will—uselessly applied, if you must, but beautiful, nevertheless, as the building of Primo Camera into the heavyweight championship of the world was a dark, foul, noisome thing, infamous from beginning to end, completely sordid and corrupt.

    I have seen the coming of the million-dollar gate, the seventy-thousand-dollar horse-race, the hundred-thousand-dollar ballplayer, the three-hundred-thousand-dollar football game, the millionaire prizefighter, and the fifty-thousand-dollar golfer. I have witnessed an era of spending in sport such as has never been seen before and which may not be matched again, when the box-office price for a single ringside seat for a heavyweight championship prizefight was fifty dollars, and fetched as high as two hundred and fifty dollars a pair from speculators. In my time more than a million dollars passed through the betting windows at a racetrack in a day. Babe Ruth drew a salary of seventy thousand dollars a year, and Gene Tunney was paid a million dollars for a single fight lasting half an hour. Non-champions were paid as high as thirty thousand dollars for a six-round bout, and a horse could win four hundred and forty thousand dollars in a single year, and did. And I have seen the bubble collapse as sharply and completely as did the great stock boom, and watched prizefighting go downhill from a million-dollar industry back to the small-time money from which it came.

    Too, I witnessed the amazing growth of American football from a game that was always popular and well attended, to the greatest money industry and gate attraction of all sports, greater than prizefighting, baseball, hockey, or any professional sports, the total football receipts for one season far surpassing those of any other sport. And I watched the game degenerate into the biggest and dirtiest sports racket the country has ever known, far sootier even than prizefighting, which has never pretended to be on any level higher than a pigsty.

    Somehow or other, all of these things managed to happen in those years between 1923 and 1936, years which saw not only the greatest champions that our games have ever known, but an astounding plethora of men and women challengers and runners-up who were nearly as good as the champions.

    At one time, for instance, fighting for the tennis supremacy held so long by Tilden as an amateur, there were such players as Little Bill Johnston, Dick Williams, Frank Hunter, Vinnie Richards, Manuel Alonso, Borotra, Cochet, and Lacoste. Contemporary with Helen Wills Moody was Suzanne Lenglen, perhaps the greatest of all the women players at the peak of her form, as well as Molla Mallory, Mary K. Browne, Helen Jacobs, Betty Nuthall, Dorothy Round, and Kay Stammers.

    Bob Jones was such a stand-out in the golfing world that he made people forget the greatest troop of professional and amateur golfers that ever lived and played at one time, headed by Walter Hagen and including such players as Gene Sarazen, Mac Smith, Tommy Armour, Chick Evans, Frances Ouimet, Johnny Goodman, Billy Burke, George von Elm, Leo Diegel, Bobby Cruickshank, Olin Dutra, Horton Smith, and dozens of others.

    An age that was first dazzled by the speed and showmanship of Charlie Paddock at one hundred yards also knew Ralph Metcalfe, Eddie Tolan, Ralph Locke, Frank Wycoff, and finally the greatest sprinter of them all, Jesse Owens. The era is remembered chiefly by the running of Paavo Nurmi, but it also had Willie Ritola, Glenn Cunningham, Bill Bonthron, Jack Lovelock, Joie Ray, Gene Venzke, Eric Ny, Luigi Beccali, and a lot of other boys who could step that mile.

    Ederle’s feat in swimming the English Channel made her the outstanding girl swimmer of the post-war era, but those same years saw the most dazzling array of women swimming and diving stars ever assembled, including Aileen Riggen, Helen Wainwright, Helene Madison, Jo McKim, Lenore Kight, Dorothy Poynton, Kit Rawls, Georgia Coleman, Sybil Bauer, Agnes Geraghty, and Helen Meany. They not only could swim and dive better than anyone else in the world, but most of them were stunning to look at as well.

    Red Grange and Knute Rockne are the best-remembered football names of the period, but during that fantastically prodigious time there were also Pop Warner, Gil Dobie, Alonzo Stagg, and Fielding Yost, equally great football coaches, and among the famous players, Albie Booth, Chris Cagle, Ernie Nevers, the famous Four Horsemen of Notre Dame, Stuhldreher, Layden, Miller, and Crowley, and later Frank Carideo and Joe Savoldi of the same school, Bronko Nagurski, Stan Kostka, and Benny Friedman and Harry Newman, the great Michigan players.

    Every sport, it seemed, at least to us reporting it, had the greatest champion of all time at the head of it and at the same time the greatest competition to make him and keep him champion. There was Earl Sande, matchless as a money-winning jockey, Sonja Henie, probably the greatest girl figure-skating champion ever, Johnny Weissmuller, who was all by himself while he swam, Eleanor Sears, who was unbeatable at squash, Gar Wood, the champion of all speedboat drivers, Peter De Paolo who was National Automobile race driving champion for three years in succession, Glenna Collette, who whipped the women’s golf field the way La Moody dominated tennis and who was contemporary with probably the greatest girl golfer that ever played, Miss Joyce Wethered of England; and we have yet to develop a polo-player to compare with Tommy Hitchcock.

    That, then, was the marvelous era that is past, and those a few of the people who performed in it. Some of them are dead. Few of them are active any longer or retain their titles. It seems to me that I am quitting in good time. And yet in all those long days of endless excitement I found myself usually too busy reporting to do much evaluating. Why did we love Dempsey? What was it made us call Miss Wills, later Mrs. Moody, Our Helen? Why did we spend dollars into the millions to see ham fighters and very often fake prizefights? What makes us go to ball games to the number of ten million spectators a year? Why do we stand for dirty football? What makes women athletes such wretched sports? Why are Negro athletes? What made Gene Tunney tick?

    Sports-writing has been an old and good friend and companion to me. One does not, it seems, barge ruthlessly out of such a friendship. Rather one lingers a little over the good-by, sometimes even a little reluctant to leave, and uncertain, turning back as some old, well-loved incident is remembered, calling up again the picture of vanished friends, having one’s last say, lingering as long as one dares before that final, irrevocable shutting of the door.

    II

    WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE—DEMPSEY?

    The most popular prizefighter that ever lived was Jack Dempsey, born William Harrison Dempsey, June 24, 1896, at Manassa, Colorado, and heavyweight champion of the world from July 4, 1919 to September 3, 1926. It has been generally forgotten that for a long time he was also one of the most unpopular and despised champions that ever climbed into a ring.

    And, curiously, it is possible to place one’s finger upon the exact time and place, almost, when the switch occurred and the cult of Dempsey-worshippers was born—a public love and idolatry that have transcended anything ever known in the ring and perhaps, for that matter, in any sport.

    It was, I suspect, some time between the hours of one and two o’clock in the morning of September 4, in 1926, in a room at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Philadelphia. It was about then that he returned there minus the heavyweight championship of the world, which he had left with Gene Tunney at the Sesquicentennial Stadium a short while before. They had fought for half an hour in a torrential rain and Tunney had battered the supposed invincible champion almost beyond recognition.

    He was not alone. Seconds, hangers-on, reporters crowded into the room behind him. A lovely woman came to him with pity and tenderness and took him into her arms and held him for a moment. Lightly she touched his face with her fingertips. One side of that face was completely shapeless, red, blue, purple in color, wealed, welted, and bruised, the eye barely visible behind ridges of swollen flesh.

    She said: What happened, Ginsberg? Ginsberg was Estelle Taylor’s pet name for her husband.

    Dempsey grinned out of the good corner of his mouth, held her off for a second, and then said: Honey, I forgot to duck.

    From that moment on, everybody loved him.

    John L. Sullivan, the Boston Strong Boy, was reputedly the most popular heavyweight champion of all times, but this is not so, because in Sullivan’s day (his last fight was in 1892) prizefighting was neither respectable nor widespread in its appeal. It was long before the days of Tex Rickard, million-dollar gates, new-laid millionaires with an itch for publicity, and the freedom of post-war manners and morals which made it possible for a prizefighter to aspire to and eventually marry a society girl and be accepted in her class as a human being. It was before the days of high-pressure newspaper publicity and prizefight ballyhoo and also before the time when Sweet Charity learned, to borrow one of boxing’s own expressive terms, how to put the bite on prizefighting as a quick and at first infallible money-getter. In the old days the sport was socially outlawed. Women—that is to say, ladies—did not go to the boxing pits and therefore Sullivan’s popularity was limited strictly to the class then known as sports.

    But nearly everyone in every walk of life seemed to love and admire Jack Dempsey. There was hardly any class to whose imagination he did not appeal. He was and still remains today in the minds of millions of people the perfect type of fighting man.

    He was, as fighters go, a pretty good performer, though not nearly so good as legend and kindled imaginations pictured him. He had great truculence, pugnacity, and aggressiveness, a valuable and unlimited fund of natural cruelty, tremendous courage, speed and determination, and good, though actually, not extraordinary, hitting powers. He was never a good boxer and had little or no defense. His protection was aggression. He was not, for instance, ever as good a fighter and boxer as the Negro Joe Louis is today, notwithstanding Louis’s defeat by Schmeling. Dempsey’s entire reputation was based, actually, on two fights, the one in which he knocked out gigantic Jess Willard at Toledo, to win his championship, and the thrilling, atavistic brawl with Luis Angel Firpo, the big Argentine, at the Polo Grounds in New York, September 23, 1923. But they were sufficient, for they marked Dempsey as a giant-killer, a slayer of ogres. He became one with David, Siegfried, and Roland. And it is interesting to note in connection with this that Dempsey’s period of unpopularity, even though he was branded a slacker during the war, really dates from the day in 1921—July 2, to be exact—when he knocked out the Frenchman Georges Carpentier, at Boyle’s Thirty Acres, in Jersey City, in four rounds. Carpentier was hardly more than a heavy middleweight. He probably didn’t weigh more than 168 pounds for the fight. He was a little man, much smaller than Dempsey. And he was a war hero. This fight also marked the first of the million-dollar gates.

    But Dempsey was a picture-book fighter. By all the sons of Mars, he looked the part. He had dark eyes, blue-black hair, and the most beautifully proportioned body ever seen in any ring. He had the wide but sharply sloping shoulders of the puncher, a slim waist, and fine, symmetrical legs. His weaving, shuffling style of approach was drama in itself and suggested the stalking of a jungle animal. He had a smoldering truculence on his face and hatred in his eyes. His gorge lay close to the surface. He was utterly without mercy or pity, asked no quarter, gave none. He would do anything he could get away with, fair or foul, to win. This was definitely a part of the man, but was also a result of his early life and schooling in the hobo jungles, bar-rooms, and mining camps of the West. Where Dempsey learned to fight, there were no rounds, rest intervals, gloves, referees, or attending seconds. There are no draws and no decisions in rough and tumble fighting. You had to win. If you lost you went to the hospital or to the undertaking parlor. Dempsey, more often than not, in his early days as hobo, saloon bouncer, or roustabout, fought to survive. I always had the feeling that he carried that into the ring with him, that he was impatient of rules and restrictions and niceties of conduct, impatient even of the leather that bound his knuckles.

    But all of these characteristics added to the picture of a man who could swing his fists and slug bigger, heavier, stronger men into unconsciousness. It crystallized something that all of us at one time or another long for—to be able to up to someone, a giant, a bully, a tough guy, without qualm or tremor, and let him have it.

    All the great legends of the ring are built upon the picture that the average man has of himself as he would like to be, a combination of D’Artagnan, Scaramouche, the Scarlet Pimpernel, and—Jack Dempsey. If we could, we would all be gentle, soft-spoken creatures, tender with women, cool and even tempered, but once aroused—Whap! A lightning-like left or right to the jaw. Down goes truck-driver or footpad or hoodlum. We mentally dust our hands, readjust our cravat, smile pleasantly, step over the body of the prostrate victim, and carry on. Just like that. The most popular thing a sports-writer can say about a prizefighter, the good old stand-by, is that outside the ring you would never take him for a pug. No, sir, more like a bank clerk or a business man. Just as quiet and gentle—loves birds and flowers, and you ought to see him with his kiddies on his knee. Look back into the files. Sharkey cultivated petunias. Schmeling would lie for hours in the grass and watch a mother bird feed its young. Tunney retired in a rowboat to some secluded portion of a mountain lake and read a good book. Joe Louis studied the Bible (or at least he was trying to learn how to read so that he could study the Bible if he wanted to) and was good to his mother.… But what killers when aroused! Could that soft-spoken fellow with the well-cut clothes, the rather queer, high-pitched voice, and the perfect manners be the Jack Dempsey who clouted Jess Willard until he resembled nothing at all human, and floored Luis Firpo eleven times before he knocked him out? How wonderful to be so quiet, so gentlemanly—and yet so terrible!

    Actually, for many years, Dempsey was inclined to be as cruel outside the ring as he was in action within. I have seen him in a playful wrestling match in a training camp, with one Joe Benjamin, a lightweight who used to be kept around as a sort of a camp stooge and jester (every big fighter always has a camp butt or jester), bring up his knee into Benjamin’s groin and leave him squirming with pain. Gus Wilson, who came over from France with Carpentier as trainer and remained here, became one of Dempsey’s good friends and even trained him. But in friendly roughing, Dempsey once hit him what he thought was a playful tap on the side and Gus went to the hospital and the damaged kidney was removed. Estelle Taylor loved Dempsey, but all through their married life she lived in constant terror of him. It must have been a good deal like being married to a catamount.

    To me this always added to the picture rather than detracted from it, because I like my prizefighters mean. Cruelty and absolute lack of mercy are an essential quality in every successful prizefighter. I have never known one who wasn’t ruthless and amoral. It is childish to believe that this can be put on and off like a mantle. The gentle lambs outside the ropes are never much good within, and vice versa. The managers and press agents for prizefighters were not long in discovering what the public wished to think about the comportment of their tigers in street clothes. For the most part, the stories about their sweet and lovely natures are untrue. Much later, when they are older and retire from the ring, the mean streak may become more deeply submerged, as it has in the case of Dempsey. But the life that a prizefighter lives while in daily training is hardly conducive to softening his character. His brutality and viciousness are carefully cultivated, fed, and watered like a plant, because they are a valuable business commodity. He practices daily cruelties upon spar boys who are paid to accept them uncomplainingly. There never was a meaner man than Dempsey with his sparring partners unless it be the cold and emotionless Joseph Louis Barrow.

    Dempsey used to have such big, inept hulks as Farmer Lodge in his training camps. He slugged them and slogged them. If he knocked them down, he waited until they got up and then knocked them down again. If it looked as though they were about to collapse from the effects of the punching he was giving them, he would hold his hand just long enough to let them come back a little—and then slug them again.

    The average boxing fan or person familiar with the beauties of the game will inquire at this point: Well, what are sparring partners for? This is unanswerable, but there are degrees of permissible brutality, especially with injured men. But wounds or no wounds, taped ribs or none, fresh cuts, bad eyes, bruised lips or no, when they went in to spar against Dempsey they expected no mercy and got none. When his trainer called: Time, he set out to beat them into insensibility, and generally did. Most fighters, in training, will let up when they have hurt a rehearsal mate with a punch to the extent that he begins to come undone at the seams and wobbles a little. There is nothing to be gained by knocking him out unless a bunch of the boys from the press have arrived from town, when it makes good copy for them and will sometimes affect the betting odds. They have even trained Joe Louis to hold back a little when he gets a spar boy going, but Dempsey never eased up in all his life, so far as I ever saw or knew. The first signs of their eyes glazing a trifle or that sudden little leaning forward of the body and shaking of the knees that telltales a lethal punch, and he would leap forward, his lips drawn back over his teeth, and rain his hooks upon them until they collapsed slowly and slid to the floor. He treated each and every one of them as his personal enemy as soon as he entered the ring. He seemed to have a constant bottomless well of cold fury somewhere close to his throat.

    Dempsey is accused by many of having been a foul fighter, and the same is fervently denied by the Dempseymaniacs. Dempsey himself never denied it, to my knowledge. In point of fact, under the strict interpretation of the modern rules of ring combat, he was a foul fighter, rough, anxious to hurt, and careless of his punches. But psychically Dempsey actually never was a foul battler, because in his simple way he recognized no deadlines on the body of his opponent and certainly asked for none to be enforced upon his. He also knew that such smug and arbitrary divisions as fair and foul cannot be made of the word fight, nor are they properly applicable as adjectives. The word stands all by itself and complete in its meaning, not to be tampered with, increased or diminished, like love or red. You either do or you don’t. It either is or it isn’t. And either it was a fight or it wasn’t. He had no advantage of protective armor that was denied his opponent. He was equally vulnerable. He was not a deliberately low puncher, though sometimes, with a touch of macabre humor, he liked to test out the courage and disposition of his opponent with a few low ones, but he was simply unconcerned with such niceties and obvious decadencies as a belt line. After all, wasn’t it sufficient that when he got his man down he refrained from putting the boots to him?

    In a way these probings of Dempsey’s were frequently interesting tests and two men reacted quite differently to them. He hit Sharkey low. Sharkey immediately looked to the referee for help and made the error, during the rendering of his complaint to authority, of turning his head for a moment and taking his eyes from his opponent. Dempsey immediately hit him on the chin with a left hook while his head was turned and knocked him out. In Dempsey’s school if you didn’t keep your eye on your opponent you paid for it. He hit Gene Tunney low in both of their fights and Tunney took it without a murmur, kept his head and his temper, and beat Dempsey both times. In later years, as a referee, Dempsey would always say when instructing two boys before a bout: All right now, fellas, let’s both get in here and have a nice little fight. And he meant just that. The kids knew that with Dempsey as third man in the ring there was no use squawking or complaining about accidental low blows or roughness or any of the little extra-legal tendernesses that fighters sometimes visit upon one another. The best they could get out of him would be a Never mind that, son. Come on, let’s fight.

    Perhaps the essential difference between two such champions as Dempsey and Tunney is best noticed when you listen to them discuss past contests. Dempsey will say: When I fought Tommy Gibbons … Tunney will invariably say: "Ah—when I boxed Carpentier …" Dempsey never boxed anybody, which is one reason why he was so worshipped and became such a glamorous figure. When the bell rang he ran out and began to attack his opponent, and he never stopped attacking him, trying to batter him to the floor, until the bell ended the round.

    After all, in our dramatization of ourselves we rarely see ourselves indulging in fancy stuff except to toy with the victim for a moment before letting him have it and laying him away among the sweetpeas. Your hero, whether on

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