It’s troublesome to say how heavyweight champion James J. Jeffries would have matched up towards extra up to date boxers, however there’s little question he was a rare fighter. He misplaced just one match in his total profession and that bout, towards the good Jack Johnson, occurred lengthy after his prime had handed. Sadly, it’s considered one of solely two of Jeffries’ twenty-four professional matches to ever be filmed, the opposite being his rematch in 1899 with legendary brawler “Sailor” Tom Sharkey. However the video high quality of the latter, and the very fact the previous is of a battle going down after nearly six years of inactivity, imply neither provides us an opportunity to make a good analysis.
Jeffries had gained the world title in 1899 from the good Bob Fitzsimmons at Coney Island, New York in simply his fourteenth bout. The larger and heavier challenger had bulled his approach contained in the smaller champion’s guard and inflicted a vicious physique assault, scoring 4 knockdowns and forcing a stoppage in eleven rounds. The rematch happened three years later, after Fitzsimmons had put collectively a pleasant streak of wins capped by a dramatic second spherical knockout of the identical powerful Sharkey who had lasted 25 brutal rounds with Jeffries. That win set the stage for a rematch between “The Boilermaker” and “The Combating Blacksmith,” and battle followers eagerly awaited Jeffries vs Fitzsimmons II.
However Jeffries made his rival wait a pair extra years and by the point the return lastly occurred, many puzzled if the 39-year-old Cornishman’s advancing age may be an excessive amount of to beat. In addition to, Jeffries figured to outweigh the challenger by thirty kilos or extra. However those that backed the person who many immediately nonetheless regard as one of many biggest energy punchers within the historical past of the game, cited the previous champion’s eagerness for revenge. Merely put, no battle had ever mattered extra to “Ruby” and hearsay had it he was so hell-bent on successful he deliberate to load his gloves with Plaster of Paris.
“Let him do it,” stated Jeffries when instructed of those studies. “I’ll flatten him anyway.”
No plaster was to be discovered contained in the challenger’s gloves, however these watching in The Enviornment in San Francisco could possibly be forgiven for considering there was, as from the opening bell the smaller man inflicted a merciless beating on the champion. As early because the second spherical Jeffries was shedding blood as Fitzsimmons utilized super stress, beating Jeffries to the punch over and over. Rudy’s arduous photographs opened up deep cuts round each of Jeffries’ eyes and broke the champion’s nostril. It was later revealed the challenger had in actual fact wrapped his fingers with electrical tape as an alternative of gauze, with nobody from Jeffries’ camp objecting.
However the champion was nothing if not powerful and sturdy and regardless of the carnage, he refused to concede. As an alternative he waited for his probability to strike again and it got here in spherical eight. After a sequence of exchanges, Jeffries cornered his man. Fitzsimmons then inexplicably paused, lowered his guard, and spoke to Jeffries. The champion’s response was to maneuver in and land a tough proper to the stomach adopted by a thunderous left hook to the jaw that put Fitzsimmons down and out.
When the challenger approached the champion a couple of minutes later to congratulate him, Jeffries, seated on his stool, peered up at Fitzsimmons via swollen, bleeding eyes and declared, “You’re essentially the most harmful man alive.”
The bout’s conclusion struck some observers as suspicious and discuss of a “repair” started to flow into within the days following, although each boxers dismissed the hypothesis. “The battle was gained pretty and to the perfect man belongs the laurels,” said Fitzsimmons.
Nobody is aware of what the Cornishman paused to say to Jeffries simply earlier than the deadly punches discovered their mark. Was it a taunt which provoked a violent response from the champion? Or, as some later asserted, a type of give up? One model of the odd ending has it that after seven torrid rounds throughout which Fitzsimmons had repeatedly landed his finest photographs, the challenger was exhausted. As an alternative of absorbing a beating because the match went on, “Ruby,” figuring out he had nothing left, merely paused, dropped his fingers, and instructed Jeffries, “Hit me.” “The Boilermaker” obliged and the battle was over.
— Robert Portis