Jim Hall v. Jim Fogarty
Jim Hall v. Jim Fogarty
Does someone have a primary source for Hall's alleged 1887 KO win over Fogarty?
Jim Hall v. Jim Fogarty
Can someone definitively confirm for me with a primary source whether Jim Hall stopped Jim Fogarty in the 20th round on October 17, 1887 (or thereabouts) to win the Australian middleweight crown?
hall v. fogarty
I meant a newspaper account. Thanks.
hall-fogarty
Do you have a contact for him or could you give him my contact?
[email protected]
The real issue I have is that Hall vs. Fitz I was described as being for the Australian middleweight championship. Fitz wins. Then later in the year Hall is called the middleweight champion. What gives? I know Hall fought Fogarty to a 15 round draw in the interim, and I think Fogarty was also considered the Australian middle champ. But was Hall's draw with Fogarty somehow considered a win for him? Or is something else going on?
[email protected]
The real issue I have is that Hall vs. Fitz I was described as being for the Australian middleweight championship. Fitz wins. Then later in the year Hall is called the middleweight champion. What gives? I know Hall fought Fogarty to a 15 round draw in the interim, and I think Fogarty was also considered the Australian middle champ. But was Hall's draw with Fogarty somehow considered a win for him? Or is something else going on?
Ah, but the local Australian papers did bill the 1889 fight as being for the Australian Middleweight Title. Here is the question. How did Hall become the Australian middleweight champion, before that, or even after getting KO'd by Fitz? When they had a rematch in early 1890, Hall was called the Australian middleweight champion.
I think the confusion is due to how some historians interpret Colony .
British colony would mean Australia. Colony could also mean State.
Some of those fights could’ve been just that - State titles.
Anyhow, that’s enough from me. As I said, it would be best to write to John Hogg, as I'm not a historian nor do I have time nor interest in it.
Cheers
British colony would mean Australia. Colony could also mean State.
Some of those fights could’ve been just that - State titles.
Anyhow, that’s enough from me. As I said, it would be best to write to John Hogg, as I'm not a historian nor do I have time nor interest in it.
Cheers
fitz/hall
Thanks. Those are interesting points. Might be the case. However, what I have noticed in my research is that usually when it was a local type title they would say so...something like for the Queensland championship (what does that mean?), or the Victorian heavyweight, etc.
follow up
Just FYI, I went over my microfilm reels of the Referee, the local Australian paper and got it all figured out. I agree that Fitz v. Hall I was not for the true championship, although advertsed as being for the championship, but the second bout was for the title. I will discuss in my upcoming Fitz book how it all came to be. But in a nutshell, Jim Fogarty was most recognized as the champ, but after Hall kicked his ass in a 15 rounder (technically called a draw because there was no knockout), and Fogarty basically became a heavyweight, and Hall had been on a really lengthy win streak, the newsmen started calling Hall the champ. I have seen absolutely no reference to Hall and Fogarty meeting other than that 15 rounder.