JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

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Cap wrote: 06 Jun 2016, 17:13
Ambling Alp II wrote:You aren't being fair to him, Cap. Of course he fought a lot of "tavern brawler" or those types. He fought literally anyone (white of course) around.
However, they weren't all bad. Charley Mitchell and Jake Kilrain were good fighters.
If he was that bad, he never would have lasted until the 21st round against Corbett after being out for three years.
My guess is that he was not as crude as some people may think.
I just finished reading Adam Pollack's bio of Corbett. Corbett was afraid of Sullivan landing a solid punch so he ran and ducked and slipped to tire the old man out. As for Mitchell, he was barely a middleweight. Five nine and 150 pounds when he fought Sullivan for real with gloves on. Jake Kilrain was a cyclist turned boxer whose best win was a 44 round knockout of light heavyweight George Godfrey. Fourty-four rounds! Still, he was easily Sullivan's best opponent. Too bad they fought London Prize Ring Rules. Pretty much MMA stuff. Clutching, grabbing, rolling around, choke holds. Throw a guy down and land on his stomach with your knees!

Sullivan was unbeatable in his prime because there was no one remotely like him at what he did. Guys who could actually box tended to be too small to hurt him or take his KO punch (Irish Jack Burke, Dominick McCaffrey, etc), the ones who were as big or bigger had little or no skill (Herbert Slade, Paddy Ryan, etc). When he finally met a guy who was his own size and could actually box he lost. Corbett probably could have stopped Sullivan earlier but he didn't have the nerve. He was more interested in acting on stage than fighting in the ring.

Sullivan was one of the big names in sports back then, along with Ned Hanlan the world champion sculler, even though most states outlawed what he did. I think Peter Jackson, Frank Slavin, Joe Goddard, Joe Choynski, Bob Fitzsimmons, and a few other boxers from the Glove Era would have beaten him easily Marquis of Queensberry Rules and five ounce gloves. That's just my opinion though, based on all I've read over the years.
Sullivan didn't fight any name heavyweights, he avoided them. His prime was a short one that lasted until his mid 20's. The men he fought were often older, smaller, and had spotty record. He should be remembered as a pioneer and icon, and not taken about outside his time, which happened when the transition to bare knuckles to gloves was happening.

I agree Peter Jackson, Frank Slavin, Joe Goddard, Joe Choynski, and Bob Fitzsimmons would have been his best opponents by far, and he might have lost these matches had they happened. I think Fitzsimmons would have been him with Jackson likely winning late. IMO Goddard and Slavin would have a shot. Choynski had a spotty record but sure could hit. Choysnki is probably a loser, but well never know for sure. His KO 3 over Jack Johnson sure looks good on paper, and clips show Choysyki could move very well.

Sullivan was a puncher in a land of few, and fought none. We can deduce he had a big right hand, was durable and popular with the fans. The concepts of using a jab, his footwork, defense, head movement, a left hook, and the basics os boxing however were not part of his game. After sparring with James J. Jeffries, Sullivan gave a very honest opinion by saying the game has changed and a person with the skills of his time would have been beaten badly by Jeffries, who had his hands full at times vs. Corbett and Fitzsimmons. I think that puts its into perspective. But someone had to be the first recognized glove champion and Sullivan brought glory to the game,
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

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Sullivan sparred Jeffries twice in 1900 in the months of April and August. Friendly exhibitions, I must add. For a long time he looked far older than his years but by this time he certainly looked more like Santa Claus than he did the former heavyweight champion of the world. So I don't know how much emphasis you want to make on a sparring session between the present heavyweight champion and a man who looked like this:

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Jeffries, Fitzsimmons, and many others were quite complimentary of Sullivan and his abilities. He was not just this one-dimensional brawler with zero science. He used a lot of feints, he counter punched, and he was actually quick on his feet. Him, more than anyone else on the planet, pushed and popularized the Marquess of Queensbury rules so he certainly had an advantage over many London Prize Ring Rules types because he knew the rules more than anyone else.

To hit the matter further home, Corbett himself admitted that had he fought an earlier version of Sullivan he may not have won at all. So for everybody saying that Sullivan was just some neanderthal who got outsmarted by Corbett, is a myth that keeps being perpetrated. Corbett was not the father of modern boxing by a long shot, as all of his techniques and movements had been known for over a century prior to him.

The fact is Sullivan had been inactive for too long, living too cushy of a lifestyle, and was basically a full-blown alcoholic who was very overweight by the time he met Corbett. It wasn't a great victory for Corbett. Neither was beating Jeffries a great victory for Johnson. Etc--- when you really put aside all of the crap and look at everything and it's proper context, it was an old man who was an echo of his former self being beaten by a young upstart.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Caractacus »

Jim J. Corbet was quite complimentery about Jawnell in his 1926 autobiography.
Gene Tunney apparently didn't think much of his skills as a boxer
even tho his old man was a BIG fan of John L. Sullivan.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Caractacus »

John L. Sullivan was the Babe Ruth of his day.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Caractacus »

The fights at the Olympic Club in New Orleans
September 1892

Monday September 5th
George Dixon defends the Featherweight title against James Skelly

Tuesday Evening-September 6th-1892
Jack McAuliffe defends the lightweight Championship against Billy Meyers

Wednesday Evening-September 7th
John L. Sullivan defends the World Heavyweight Championship against James J. Corbett
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Ambling Alp II »

Caractacus wrote: 28 Sep 2021, 16:11 John L. Sullivan was the Babe Ruth of his day.
I always thought Cap Anson was a better comparison. Boxing (like baseball at the time) was becoming more and more popular but had not reached what it would become. Sullivan like Anson was great but would be surpassed in time. The sport was still at the stage where new strategies and techniques that improved things were still being developed.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

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On this day 130 years ago.
Jim J. Corbett wins the heavyweight Championship of the World !

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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Ambling Alp II »

Would have been interesting if Sullivan would have been in his prime when he fought Corbett.
Last edited by Ambling Alp II on 08 Sep 2022, 10:38, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

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Corbett's plans were to take out Sullivan some time between the 20th and 25th round.
Corbett never threw really hard punches unless it was going to be a "coup de grace" punch
and he threw all he had into the final punch ( a right hand)
which also broke Corbett's hand in doing so.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Wee Tommy »

HomicideHenry wrote: 23 Mar 2013, 20:38 A CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY IN PICTURES

The following is pictures during the life and career of John L. Sullivan so that the people can get a proper idea of his prime weights, prime career, and of course the twilight and end of his career and life. It is a shame that some of his more important fights never had photographs taken, only portraits exist. However, this will assist the fans and would be historians to help rank Sullivan properly as a fighter and champion.

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John L. Sullivan, prior to the Flood fight, possibly as early as when he fought Scannel and Donovan

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John L. Sullivan versus John Flood, Boston Newspaper Portrait

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Sullivan versus Ryan for the championship of the world


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John L. Sullivan in his prime years, probably after the match with Paddy Ryan

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John L. Sullivan in 1882

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John L. Sullivan, circa 1882 or prior

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John L. Sullivan circa 1885

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The iconic image photographed when Sullivan posed as a living statuary

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John L. Sullivan probably around the same year as pictured above

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John L. Sullivan around the time he fought Jim Corbett

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Sullivan (pictured right) with Ryan at their last exhibition match in 1897

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John L. Sullivan near the time he kayos Jim McCormick in two rounds
Some effort into this thread, was a great read. What an absolute legend John L was. A nutcase clearly. Some life he led, both amazing and tragic.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Ambling Alp II »

Some other tidbits:

Sullivan considered becoming a priest.
Considered being a baseball player. (Corbett's brother was a pitcher who once won over 20 games.)
Sullivan had more education than Corbett.
Corbett broke Sullivan's nose during their fight.
Sullivan did score a knockdown in the Sullivan-Corbett fight.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Wee Tommy »

Did Sullivan duck any serious challenges in his prime?
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Ambling Alp II »

Guess it depends on what you consider to be his prime. From 1882-1889, I would say no. He was then 30 and didn't want to train anymore. He then didn't fight anyone until Corbett. Could have fought Frank Slavin or Peter Jackson.
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Wee Tommy »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 12 Sep 2022, 10:40 Guess it depends on what you consider to be his prime. From 1882-1889, I would say no. He was then 30 and didn't want to train anymore. He then didn't fight anyone until Corbett. Could have fought Frank Slavin or Peter Jackson.
His prime was clearly before his alcoholism and bad health damaged him.

Why would anyone consider his prime to be after 30?
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by Caractacus »

Ambling Alp II wrote: 10 Sep 2022, 20:32 Some other tidbits:

Sullivan considered becoming a priest.
Considered being a baseball player. (Corbett's brother was a pitcher who once won over 20 games.)
Sullivan had more education than Corbett.
Corbett broke Sullivan's nose during their fight.
Sullivan did score a knockdown in the Sullivan-Corbett fight.
also before he became a fighter, John Sullivan was a "Plummer"
( or an apprentice to one anyway).
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Re: JOHN L. SULLIVAN, THE EARLY YEARS

Post by HomicideHenry »

Wee Tommy wrote: 12 Sep 2022, 02:51 Did Sullivan duck any serious challenges in his prime?
There was but one man in Sullivan's prime that he did not fight, but to his credit he did try to fight (the first time he said no, the second and third time's he either challenged or was open to negotiations) and that was the original George Godfrey, the Colored Champion of the World.

Good as Godfrey was, I think Sullivan would've defeated him soundly. I don't think there was any man in the world during Sullivan's prime years who could have actually beaten him.

It wasn't until Sullivan got hog fat and living the life of a stage actor more than as an athlete, was there anyone out there capable of giving him a hard time or potentially beating him.

I do know when Peter Jackson finally came along on the scene, that stylistically Sullivan would have had a better chance against him than Corbett because unlike Corbett the Black Prince was more offensively minded and most people could not stand up for too long against Sullivan's punching power--- as evident in 1905 when contender Jim McCormick made the categorical mistake of exchanging blow-for-blow with the long retired Sullivan and getting knocked out unconscious for over 5 minutes in the second round.

But it is most likely Sullivan would have lost a decision to Peter Jackson, unless it was truly a fight to the finish affair and it's plausible that Jackson and Sullivan would've had a draw similar to Jackson's 61 round draw with Corbett, or possibly stop Jackson who would have been completely exhausted--- because Sullivan could take a tremendous amount of punishment and had a damn good engine even when he was grossly out of shape.
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