try uploading the pic to an image hosting site. it will generate a link for u. then paste the link between these [img] [img], with a / added before the 'i' in the 2nd box
at the moment u dont have a link between the image boxes
The reporter's name is Cyril Tiffin and he can be seen watching between the 1st boxer's feet. The other picture has him seated at the table on the left. There is a copy of the Boxing News on the table. Is the large man shaking hands on the left a boxer?
Ok, I have sussed the first picture. The third guy from the left is Vivian Brodzky, who was then the owner of Boxing News. The fourth guy on the left, the smaller of the two shaking hands, is retiring Boxing News editor, Bert Callis.
I think the guy in the middle, who is also reflected in the mirror is future editor, Gilbert Odd.
The rest of the lads will be BN staff and reporters. I do not know who is shaking Callis' hand, the guy on the far left, but I will do some digging.
The action shot is much harder. I get the feeling that the guy on the right might be Frank Johnson of Manchester, the British lightweight champion in the 1950s. I enclose another picture of Frank, again on the right, what do people think?
Regarding the man who is shaking Callis' hand, the obvious big name to have wheeled in to such an event, who was then in the UK training for a World title defence, was Gus Lesnevich. This chap has the same colour eyes and there is something similar about the two but I am unconvinced. Does anyone else have a view?
prewarboxing wrote: ↑08 Mar 2019, 18:06
Regarding the man who is shaking Callis' hand, the obvious big name to have wheeled in to such an event, who was then in the UK training for a World title defence, was Gus Lesnevich. This chap has the same colour eyes and there is something similar about the two but I am unconvinced. Does anyone else have a view?
It isn't Tommy Farr. I think he looks a bit like Bob Hope but I can't believe it would be him. Hope was in London in 1948 and he liked his boxing and he is the kind of fella who Brodzky would know (he mixed in wealthy company). But not him surely?
Baksi was in England in '46 and '47 fighting Freddie Mills and Bruce Woodcock, but not in '48. Back then it wasn't like they would hop a plane to attend a dinner. It was a week on a liner and they would generally be headed over the briny for a fight or some money-making reason. So I would doubt Baksi.