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Thread: Ted “Kid” Lewis

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    Default Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Here's 2 articles on a long ago British fighter, arguably the greatest fighter to come from these shores

    Both have the same title more or less but are from different authors - Mike Casey & Ben Hoskin. The Hoskin article has video of Lewis at the bottom of the page

    Ted (Kid) Lewis: The Aldgate Sphinx - The Mike Casey Archive | The Cyber Boxing Zone

    The Aldgate Sphinx: Ted “Kid” Lewis - The Aldgate Sphinx: Ted “Kid” Lewis - Boxing.com

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    Default Re: Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Great fighter. Record is deceiving with the 40 odd losses. He fought over 300 times in multiple weight classes and would go to anyone's back yard. I'm pretty sure him and Britton fought about 25 times.

    Superb welter.

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    Default Re: Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Quote Originally Posted by IamInuit View Post
    Great fighter. Record is deceiving with the 40 odd losses. He fought over 300 times in multiple weight classes and would go to anyone's back yard. I'm pretty sure him and Britton fought about 25 times.

    Superb welter.
    The rivalry started in 1915 ended in 1921. In the 20-fight series, Jack Britton won--9-7-4 (KO 1).

    Ted Kid Lewis vs. Jack Britton: Longest boxing series | ShuttlePen

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    Default Re: Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Quote Originally Posted by scribbs View Post
    Here's 2 articles on a long ago British fighter, arguably the greatest fighter to come from these shores

    Both have the same title more or less but are from different authors - Mike Casey & Ben Hoskin. The Hoskin article has video of Lewis at the bottom of the page

    Ted (Kid) Lewis: The Aldgate Sphinx - The Mike Casey Archive | The Cyber Boxing Zone

    The Aldgate Sphinx: Ted “Kid” Lewis - The Aldgate Sphinx: Ted “Kid” Lewis - Boxing.com
    I like your posts. Keep em' up.

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    Default Re: Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Who do you think should be ranked higher all-time Ted "Kid" Lewis or Jack Berg? Below is a recent article by Robert Edgren on Jack Berg.

    The Boxing Biographies
    Newsletter
    Volume 9 No 1 18 April , 2013
    www.boxingbiographies.com

    Moorhead Daily News
    23 August 1930
    ENGLISH LIGHTWEIGHT LOOMS
    AS TOUGH BOXER TO TROUNCE
    By ROBERT EDGREN
     
    Jack Berg, the sensational English lightweight who gave Kid Chocolate of Cuba his first ring trimming, should be a dangerous opponent for Al Singer, new lightweight champion. There isn't any doubt in the world that Berg will give Singer a fight, and it's no secret that Singer isn't at his best against a fast man who never stops hitting.
    Singer lost to Kid Chocolate in 12 rounds last August. And Ignacio Fernandez, who crowded the present king of all the lightweights, viciously enraged by being struck low, knocked Singer out in three rounds three months before that. No doubt Singer has improved a lot in the past year, and has the confidence that comes to any man who knocks out a champion, but that doesn't prove he can beat the British whirlwind. Singer looked like Terry McGovern in the quick knockout of Mandell, but he isn’t always such a punching wonder. Eight of his fights last year, aside from the one he lost to Kid Chocolate, went 10 rounds to a decision.
    Jack Berg was a sensation in his first fight in a New York ring. On May 10, last year, he met the clever and hard hitting Bruce Flowers at the garden. Everyone thought the little English boxer would be just a set-up for Flowers. If Bruce had any such notion it was quickly knocked out of him. Berg swarmed over Flowers with the first rush, and kept up a rushing, slam-bang attack that kept Flowers on his heels. Flowers tried to use his boxing skill to stand Berg up for a knockout punch, but finally gave it up and stood toe to toe slugging with the smaller white-skinned fellow who was buzzing around him stinging like a hornet. I remember, sitting at the ringside, round after round I said to myself: "This can't go on nobody can stand such a pace. There's never been anything like this since Bat Nelson, and Bat wasn't half as fast," But it did keep on. Berg finally forced Flowers to give up trying to slug with him, hammered Flowers wobbly, and had
    the crowd standing on the chairs and war whooping like twenty thousand bughouse Indians before it was over.
    Popular with Fans
    That fight made Berg. Everyone who saw him wanted, to see him again. He had put on a fight that WAS a fight a whale of a fight. The two went on again had to there wasn't another fight in New York that created any interest until they did. In fact, they fought again in 13 days. This time Flowers knew what was coming, and while he stayed the 10 rounds and only lost another decision he did very little monkeying with the human buzz saw.
    Jack Berg has gone right on winning fights. They can't stop him. Can't even hinder him. He doesn't look like a fighter looks more like a poet but how he can fight!. He hasn't a wicked kayo wallop, but he hits hard enough, and plenty often. He can take the hardest punches, lean in against them and keep on coming. He took scores of Chocolate's best on the chin, and nobody ever said Chocolate couldn't hit. He was every bit as fast as the Cuban flash, and as clever, in a different way.
    Battling Nelson used to boast he was the only fighter who could fight at top speed and never
    grow arm weary. Bat said: "I'm not human. I don't tire and punches don't daze me." Berg could say that, and he might add that he doesn't have to keep up a doggedly aggressive pace to go through a fight without tiring. He can fight at top speed and turn on a little more juice for the last round. As for feeling punches he hasn't shown any sign of feeling them yet. It may possibly
    be different if he feels the kind of a punch that Al Singer laid on Mandell's chin. But that remains to be proved, and it is one of the things that makes a possible Singer-
    Berg match an attraction. In any case Singer won't have 'to fight the Cuban Flash again to prove it. He has a man of his own weight who can give him a fight.
    Stanley Ketchel, one of the greatest middleweight champion, had the ability to fight at top speed even when fights went over 20 and over 30 rounds, like his fights with Joe Thomas. But Ketchel had something else a terrific punch. He didn't often have to go through a long fight. It took Thomas to make him do that, and he ruined Thomas. Jim Jeffries, in his prime, never showed a sign of slowing up or growing weary in a fight. But he cut out a deliberate pace. There was the old Iron Man, Austin Rice, of Terry McGovern's day absolutely tireless and punch proof. And Joe Bernstein, pride of the Ghetto, and Elbows McFadden, who wore out Joe Gans.
    In New York a few years ago we had another of those iron men who would have been a good match for Berg. He was Battling Hurley. How that kid could tear in and never stop throwing punches! He didn't care what happened to his face. He didn't feel a sock on the chin. But in a year or so he got the most bedecorated map I ever saw in a ring. He was hammered lopsided by walking into punchen, even if he did go and knock the punchers out. In another year they had Hurley slowed up and feeling punchesplenty, and then he faded from the picture. I always was sorry for that kid. His handlers didn't care what happened to him, as long as they got the money, and it wasn't big money in
    those days, either.

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    Default Re: Ted “Kid” Lewis

    Tyson loved Ted kid Lewis and saw him as the best British fighter but I am sure Lennox and Naz have a good case as well.
    Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.

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