Kalan wrote: Willard was the most inactive Heavyweight Champion in the History of Boxing. He got rich with personal appearances but hated the sport of Boxing with a passion. In the more than 4 years between his fights with Johnson and Dempsey, Jess fought only one exhibition match with Frank Moran. That fight is now listed as a 10-round World Title Fight but years ago it wasn't and no winner was declared.
Nonsense. Willards bout with Frank Moran was a real fight. Not an exhibition. The only difference is that by New York State Law decisions were not allowed to be rendered officially. Instead people relied on a consensus of what the newspaper experts said. This was one of the biggest, if not biggest fights of all time financially to this point. That doesn't happen for exhibitions. Had Moran knocked Willard out the title would have changed hands.
Ridiculous. Why would the length of the fight give people time to negotiate Johnson's surrender??? Were negotiations going on in a back room as the fight was taking place?? No. 45 rounds was not unheard of. In fact Johnson's bouts with Jeffries and Flynn for the title were also scheduled for 45 rounds, as was his first fight with Flynn that was a non title fight. Johnson wasn't arrested on charges of violating the Mann act for another five years and that came after a lot of negotiations going back and forth between Federal Marshalls based in the USA and Johnson who was now living across the border in Mexico.Kalan wrote: Willard's fight with Johnson was scheduled for 45 rounds, an unheard of distance. Johnson claimed the unusual length was to give promoters and managers enough time to give his wife papers promising a lenient prison stay and various prison privileges (including positions of Athletic Director, and Boxing Coach and staging boxing matches within the prison) at such time as Johnson entered the United States and was arrested. He was a fugitive from justice for violating the Mann Act. His wife needed time to read and okay the documents. Johnson claimed he got a signal from his wife after the 25th round, that she had in her possession all the promised documents and had read them all. In the 26th round Johnson delivered his end of the bargain. He claimed he took a right from Willard and faked a KO loss, shading his eyes from the sun with his forearm during the count as a message of defiance.
The Willard-Dempsey fight was scheduled for 12 rounds because that was the duration allowed by rules adopted by the Toledo Boxing Commission in 1918.Kalan wrote:Willard's Title Fight with Dempsey was scheduled for 12 rounds. He was very poorly trained and took 4 years worth of punishment in 9 minutes.
Get your facts straight.