Cap wrote: ↑03 Jan 2020, 14:54
Jack Johnson was called the Galveston Giant because he was bigger than the average 'heavyweight' of his era. The light heavyweight class was not really recognized, so anyone over 158 or so was classed as a heavyweight. [If Johnson was in his prime now he'd likely be around 6'3" or 6'4" and 220-230. ] Guys like Jack Root, Marvin Hart, Philadelphia Jack O'Brien, Bill Squires, Fireman Jim Flynn,, George Gardner, Mike Schreck, were among the top 'heavyweights' of the day and most never weighed as much as 190 in their prime. Many fought at 170 to 180 (weighed at ringside). Al Kaufman was an exception at 6'1" and 200 pounds but he was never considered a first rate heavyweight.
Johnson beat a great pound-for-pound fighter in Tommy Burns, but he would have had a better legacy if he had fought Sam Langford, Joe Jeannette and Sam McVea after he won the title instead of Ketchel, Kaufman, Flynn, Jim Johnson, etc. It can' t be denied though he did fight men as big as himself (Ben Taylor, Denver Ed Martin, Frank Moran, Bill Lang, Peter Felix, etc), they just didn't have his boxing prowess, particularly his terrific defensive ability.
Cap,
With all due respect, Johnson's resume isn't as good as it looks on paper if you look at who his opponents were and more importantly when he fought them.
Burns was at the super middleweight limit when he fought Johnson, at 5'7 1/2 inches tall and 168 pounds, and he lasted 14 rounds.
Langford was very young, 19 or 20, and not even a full middleweight when he fought Johnson
Jeannette was a novice with no amateur experience.
McVea, just a teenager when he lost to Johnson.
Jeffries, old, and with 6 years of ring rust. He lasted 15 rounds.
Credit Johnson for winning here, but note the circumstance for which it happened.
Johnson could have had a really good legacy outside of being the first African American Champion had he fought prime versions of Langford, McVey, or Jeannette as champion but avoided these matches. A match with Smith to avenge being knocked down in the exhibition match, and McCarty had he lived long enough would have been good opponents too. Jack was set to go vs. Langford in 1909 in the UK, and pulled out of a signed contract. That could have been his best win. Or Sam might have been the next champion. We'll never know.
Losses to Choysnki, Hart, Klondike, and numerous draws make you wonder why. One theory is these opponents were not greenhorns like Jeannette and McVey were, nor were they very small like Langford was before he grew into his heavyweight body. Were Klondike, Choysnki, and Hart in fact better heavyweights than the Langford, Jeannette and McVey Johnson beat? You can argue yes, they were.