I should have added that Sugar Ray Robinson did not usually watch films of other fighters to study.
but there were exceptions.
He wrote on page 269 of his book that he studied
films of Randy Turpin for the re-match
and also of Gene Fullmer for their third fight.
he also writes that Murray Goodman the publicist for Madison Square Garden
was with him when he studied the Fullmer footage,so maybe he supplied Robinson with the films ?
In another part of the book, Robinson writes that the day after one fight
he went to Lowe's theater in Times Square to watch it on the big screen.
Why there is no film of Zale vs Graziano 1 and 2
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Caractacus
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Jeff_lacy_ko
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Re: Why there is no film of Zale vs Graziano 1 and 2
Someone left the lens cap on.
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Caractacus
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Re: Why there is no film of Zale vs Graziano 1 and 2
,speaking of "LOST" televised fights.
check this out.
about 17 seconds of part of the kinescope of the Wednesday June 19.1946 NBC-TV live transmission of the Joe Louis vrs Billy Conn re-match.
check it out at approx. 0:43 of this clip
check this out.
about 17 seconds of part of the kinescope of the Wednesday June 19.1946 NBC-TV live transmission of the Joe Louis vrs Billy Conn re-match.
check it out at approx. 0:43 of this clip
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Caractacus
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Re: Why there is no film of Zale vs Graziano 1 and 2
Has the full NBC-TV television broadcast ever show up yet ?Caractacus wrote: ↑24 Jul 2021, 13:48 I found it again ,
part of the kinescope of the 1946 NBC-TV live transmission of the Joe Louis vrs Billy Conn re-match.
check it out at approx. 0:43 of this clip
( you can really get a sense of the ring action on the kinescope then from the film IMOP)
Re: Why there is no film of Zale vs Graziano 1 and 2
Could that have been the Maxim fight? I am sure he wrote that he could not remember the latter parts of the fight so watched on the big screen.Caractacus wrote: ↑11 Aug 2021, 12:10 I should have added that Sugar Ray Robinson did not usually watch films of other fighters to study.
but there were exceptions.
He wrote on page 269 of his book that he studied
films of Randy Turpin for the re-match
and also of Gene Fullmer for their third fight.
he also writes that Murray Goodman the publicist for Madison Square Garden
was with him when he studied the Fullmer footage,so maybe he supplied Robinson with the films ?
In another part of the book, Robinson writes that the day after one fight
he went to Lowe's theater in Times Square to watch it on the big screen.