The Great John L wrote:HomicideHenry wrote:One can argue, possibly, that from the 1930s onward prizefighters went from being fighters to athletes (in the modern sense), considering previous to that era men fought whomever they could and got ranked on sheer volume of wins rather than by merit of beating equally great opponents.
And what do you base this on? Could you provide some examples?
Most of the fighters of the 1920s and prior had excessively huge records, most of which against relative unknowns and novices. Mind you RING magazine wasn't created until the mid 1920's and state commissions didn't have no ranking system either. Reputation was built not just on performance, but by sheer volume (with most fighters). Case in point, Dempsey had almost 50 fights prior to Jess Willard. Sure there we good fighters among those, like Fred Fulton, Willie Meehan, Jim Flynn, Carl Morris, Gunboar Smith, etc. but a good majority were part-timers whose names have disappeared into the history books forever as mere footnotes. Go further back, especially in the 19th century and prior, alot of fighters fought regional champions or complete uknowns and those fights were lost to history.
This tradition in a sense was further bellied in the early days of television. In those times, just like with professional wrestling, each state generally had two-three stations that covered fights in the local areas. To get recognised, one had to not only be the best in their region, but go state to state to build a reputation, and most of these fights were generally with weak or average competition. Take a look at Archie Moore's record, for example, and you will see a man who fought an awful lot of questionable opponents in between his legendary opponents. Or if you're not satisfied, look at someone like Lamar Clark, whose reputation was built on sheer volume against whomever was available to him. Fighting nearly 50 bums and pro debuters got him a chance at Ali.
Jimmy Wilde is another good example of this, as most of his opponents are unknowns. Course, Wilde also lived in the day and age of the fighting booths/carnivals where many a match went unrecognised and forgotten.