When we compare fighters a lot of misunderstandings arise. To either group, Preclassical/Classical the other group would look like strange amateurs. For example, we see the great Fitz wing a big ole haymaker against Corbett and you can hear the rumblings... Or we see fighters today, right in front of their opponent, squared up, not throwing a blow, which would make a preclassical guy cringe.
Some of this has to do with a magic space that forms in different places in the two approaches to boxing. If you look at preclassical fighting, as I have said before, there is a 3 foot (sword length) distance. You will seldom, if ever see a competent preclassical fighting man in this space... Much as in Japanese sword nobody would be ****** enough to be in cutting range unless setting a trap. In both cases... a three foot razor blade (the sword), a quick lead (like jeffries hit Fitz with for example) acts as a deterrent to being in that gap.
Dempsey and other punchers changed the focus to slipping blows, being able to use combinations and the distance that a hand would travel to the target, and not a sword (a la James Figg). So we see the front lead turn into a jab, a range finder, and a punch with more reach than a lead which is generated using slightly different body mechanics. Johnson may have been one of the first guys to actually turn the lead into a jab.
With Louis came the perfection of less frenetic footwork, the puncher, in stalking fashion methodically cut the ring down, tried to take angles in as entry points, and to put the opponent to the ropes. This gap dissapears almost entirely.
This post is an oversimplification but it is designed to point out a major "apples and oranges" type comparison boxing historians are often forced to make. Fighters fought with total different considerations... in preclassical boxing one either jockeyed for position, set a trap, or otherwise primed the gap, to come in and deliver a blow... if it went to grips, then the grappling, the inside game came into play. For later boxers the punch came right directly from a fighting distance that allowed either man the immanent ability to hit the other man. Speed, and entry point became the emphasis.
Consider this first clip and watch at 2 minutes and 7 seconds the front left lead Jeffries delivers to Fitz. Also notice that magic gap that exists between them... Notice how much effort is made in how to enter the gap to attack the opponent.
Now here is Louis by comparison.
Discuss
Some of this has to do with a magic space that forms in different places in the two approaches to boxing. If you look at preclassical fighting, as I have said before, there is a 3 foot (sword length) distance. You will seldom, if ever see a competent preclassical fighting man in this space... Much as in Japanese sword nobody would be ****** enough to be in cutting range unless setting a trap. In both cases... a three foot razor blade (the sword), a quick lead (like jeffries hit Fitz with for example) acts as a deterrent to being in that gap.
Dempsey and other punchers changed the focus to slipping blows, being able to use combinations and the distance that a hand would travel to the target, and not a sword (a la James Figg). So we see the front lead turn into a jab, a range finder, and a punch with more reach than a lead which is generated using slightly different body mechanics. Johnson may have been one of the first guys to actually turn the lead into a jab.
With Louis came the perfection of less frenetic footwork, the puncher, in stalking fashion methodically cut the ring down, tried to take angles in as entry points, and to put the opponent to the ropes. This gap dissapears almost entirely.
This post is an oversimplification but it is designed to point out a major "apples and oranges" type comparison boxing historians are often forced to make. Fighters fought with total different considerations... in preclassical boxing one either jockeyed for position, set a trap, or otherwise primed the gap, to come in and deliver a blow... if it went to grips, then the grappling, the inside game came into play. For later boxers the punch came right directly from a fighting distance that allowed either man the immanent ability to hit the other man. Speed, and entry point became the emphasis.
Consider this first clip and watch at 2 minutes and 7 seconds the front left lead Jeffries delivers to Fitz. Also notice that magic gap that exists between them... Notice how much effort is made in how to enter the gap to attack the opponent.
Now here is Louis by comparison.
Discuss
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