I am going to watch and study these in detail to see if he could live with fighters of today.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
Paid attendance at Yankee Stadium was 84,831, and about 11,000 passes were issued.
Total receipts were $932,944.
Louis' purse was $217,337, and Baer's was $181,114.
Louis married Marva Trotter several hours before the fight.
Jack Dempsey worked as a second in Baer's corner.
Three months prior to fighting Louis, Baer lost the World Heavyweight Championship to James J. Braddock by a 15-round decision. It was one of the biggest upsets in boxing history.
Baer entered the fight against Louis with a broken right hand and a bone chip in his left wrist. His manager, Ancil Hoffman, pleaded with him to postpone the fight and get a specialist to examine his injuries. Baer was examined by Dr. William Healy, an orthopedic surgeon, at Johns Hopkins University Hospital in Maryland. Dr. Healy told Baer that his left wrist would heal over time, but his right hand should be operated on before he fought again. Baer decided to go ahead and fight Louis instead of having the operation. Just weeks before he was to meet Louis, Baer wrote his wife, "I hope to God my hand heals before the fight." Dr. Max Stern gave Baer several shots of Novocain in his right hand in his dressing room before the fight. However, the fight was delayed for 45 minutes due to rain, and the Novocain started to wear off by the time Baer entered the ring.
Louis entered the ring as a 2-1 betting favorite.
Two rights to the head floored Baer late in round three. It was the first knockdown of Baer's career. Baer rose at the referee's count of nine but was soon put down again by three consecutive left hooks to the jaw. The bell rang at the count of four, saving Baer from a knockout. Louis dropped Baer for the third and final time late in the fourth with an overhand right and a left hook. Baer collapsed to both knees and was counted out by the referee.
There were two timekeeping errors. The first was when the rest period between rounds three and four lasted 74 seconds instead of the 60 stipulated by the rules. The second error was when round four ran longer than the regulation three minutes. The time of the knockout was 3:09 of the fourth round. Baer should have been saved by the bell, as he had been at the end of round three. When told of the errors, Baer's response was, "What's the difference? I was beaten and beaten in grand fashion."
According to his autobiography, Joe Louis: My Life, Louis believed the best performance of his career was against Max Baer.
Quotes
Max Baer: "I could have struggled up once more, but when I get executed, people are going to have to pay more than twenty-five dollars a seat to watch it."
Joe Louis: "I wanted this to be a quick fight."
Max Baer: "I define fear as standing across the ring from Joe Louis and knowing he wants to go home early."
https://boxrec.com/media/index.php/J...s_vs._Max_Baer
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
These are feckin great bud.
Cool as fuck finally watching that in colour 👌 I've got all the old fights on DVD but obviously in black n white.
Louis (who imo is the greatest ever Heavyweight) was simply relentless and a brilliant "in fighter" with a superb mixture of punches.
Couldn't agree more. It may be purely psychological... but it holds my attention more.
Watching the fight, I get renewed admiration for Louis' tremendous boxing skills. He hit Baer with a vast variety of punches. Beautiful, perfectly timed uppercuts.... lefts.... rights.... just awesome. Baer from what I've read was a fearsome opponent. Powerful, sort of a nasty streak.... not to mention a lot bigger than Louis. Gotta say though.... although it was a KO victory for Louis.... Baer showed some chin in there, as he got hit with some incredible flush shots from the very beginning. The sort of shots that would've laid out most other opponents.
Sometimes we forget about these guys when ranking HW's all time. Glad to see Louis still merits the respect he so richly deserves.
I was trying to find out how much Joe Louis weighed for the fight, think he would have been under 200lb which is just over 14 stones. I think he could live with most heavyweights now, Wilder is not that much heavier.
The super heavyweights may be a different kettle of fish however.
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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