
Jack Dempsey plays along with left hook from the Mayor of Shelby, James A. Johnson.

Greb and Flowers both died (never woke up from the operation) after being anesthetized by the SAME anesthesiologist.Chuck1052 wrote:The premature death of Jimmy Delaney got me thinking about the number of Harry Greb's opponents who died at a young age. They include:
1. Jimmy Delaney (blood poisoning)- 1927
2. Tiger Flowers (surgery complications)- 1927
3. Ralph Brooks (suicide)- 1926
4. Bartley Madden (injuries sustained while falling off a building)- 1930
5. Bill Brennan (shot to death)- 1924
6. Billy Miske (Bright's Disease)- 1924
7. Eddie McGoorty (reportedly throat cancer)- 1929 (at the age of forty)
8. Mickey Shannon (injuries sustained in bout with Al Roberts)- 1920
9. Willie Langford (unknown cause)- 1920
(There was a rumor that Willie Langford was the cousin of Sam Langford)
10. Terry Martin (Spanish Influenza)- 1918
Note- Greb himself died at the age of 32 while undergoing surgery in 1926.
- Chuck Johnston
I sat next to Eddie Gregory at the Jesse Burnett-Jerry Martin fight at the Philly Spectrum.Chuck1052 wrote:At his best, Jesse Burnett was a tough nut to crack for any light-heavyweight during the 1970s. It appears that he acquitted himself well when having a series of bouts with likes of Alvaro Lopez and Victor Galindez.
Does anybody remember Burnett's bout with Miguel Angel Cuello for the vacant WBC version of the world light-heavyweight title which took place in Monte Carlo? Burnett had a good start in that bout and even knocked down Cuello in the fourth round before getting stopped in the ninth. But one has to remember that Burnett was a substitute who got the bout on forty-eight hours notice and then rode on a plane for twenty-four hours from Los Angeles to Monte Carlo.
While Burnett didn't have an exciting boxing style, I am sure that Missoula boxing fans would have seen a competitive bout if he fought Camel as scheduled.
- Chuck Johnston
Chuck1052 wrote:At his best, Jesse Burnett was a tough nut to crack for any light-heavyweight during the 1970s. It appears that he acquitted himself well when having a series of bouts with likes of Alvaro Lopez and Victor Galindez.
Does anybody remember Burnett's bout with Miguel Angel Cuello for the vacant WBC version of the world light-heavyweight title which took place in Monte Carlo? Burnett had a good start in that bout and even knocked down Cuello in the fourth round before getting stopped in the ninth. But one has to remember that Burnett was a substitute who got the bout on forty-eight hours notice and then rode on a plane for twenty-four hours from Los Angeles to Monte Carlo.
While Burnett didn't have an exciting boxing style, I am sure that Missoula boxing fans would have seen a competitive bout if he fought Camel as scheduled.
- Chuck Johnston
Burnett was robbed again and again by the officials. Especially when he clobbered Leon SpinksChuck1052 wrote:Looking at Jesse Burnett's record, it looks like he had his first pro bout at the age of 26. While he was active as a fighter, I remember reading that he was holding down a fulltime job as a gardener in addition to doing his regular training and roadwork. It is my understanding that such a schedule is not good for a professional fighter.
I think that Burnett and Bruce Curry were the first two fighters who were managed and trained by Jesse Reid. With both fighters, it looked like Reid made some errors. For instance, I wonder if it was wise to have Curry fight Thomas Hearns or have Burnett take the bout with Miguel Angel Cuello in a distant place like Monte Carlo on such short notice.
- Chuck Johnston

Dempsey Works With Dave Shade In Daily Session .Chuck1052 wrote:granberry, Jack Dempsey used Dave Shade as a sparring partner after Leo Flynn took over as the manager of Dempsey, which was certainly after Dempsey's first bout with Gene Tunney. Flynn had been the manager of Shade since late 1921, so there was that connection between Shade and Dempsey.
It was reported that Shade and Flynn didn't always get along, but I found that they owned homes which were located next to each other in New York City during 1930. At the time, Shade had a wife and one son.
- Chuck Johnston



Chuck, this was an example of one of the very good gates. Many times a card would sometimes get scheduled against a county fair or suffer from extreme winter conditions. One of the Inspector's Reports on Oct. 26, 1933 in Chinook, MT shows a total gate of $7.00 (14 tickets @ .50 ea). After taxes, the remains 6.65 was given to the two main event boxers to split. That was at one of many smaller venues, but larger towns like Butte and Billings usually did pretty well.Chuck1052 wrote:Norm, it looks like the tickets were relatively high-priced for the April 27, 1927 Butte card headlined by the bout between Joe Simonich and Jack Palmer. The lower-priced tickets appeared to sell alot better than the higher-priced ones. But a gate of $4,000. was quite good in a midsized city during the 1920s.
- Chuck Johnston