Quote Originally Posted by Beanflicker View Post
If you want to talk specifically about the analogy you made though, boxing was a relatively new art in Mexico at the time of Benny Leonard brought over from Cuba, and Mexico wasn't producing the kind of fighters like obviously it became known for later on.

In the days of Gene Tunney and Dempsey, there were a ton of black boxers who were (generally) athletically superior, filled with anger from the way they had been and continued to be treated by white society, and a desire to break out of their impoverished beginnings.
Technically I understand as I named a fighter who started much earlier than the Mexicans I would have referenced like Jose Flores aka Battling Shaw in the late 1920's.

I just try to keep it in perspective that every sport had to be integrated, so do we draw the line or hold all white athletes accountable if they didn't face an athlete who race/ethnicity rules today?

As I'm sure; before the word pugilism made it to Mexico, there was more than a fare share of fist fights occurring in Tijuana & then some.

it's not like when American football or baseball made it there- that's a lot of stuff to learn. But a boxing match skill wise in the 1910s/1920's was basically a fistfight with mittens on IMO.

I guess Gorgeous George then would have gotten his buttocks kicked had their been a Dwayne the Rock Johnson to wrestle? Can you smell...what the Rock is cookin?