Foi há pouco tempo que comprei e li um dos livros sobre histórias do Boxe que mais gostei. Este livro é fantástico e pode ser adquirido online. O título engana, pois pensa-se logo que o livro falará apenas sobre um tema e uma pessoa; mas é muito mais do que isso!
Fala sobre o Boxe em geral desde o final dos anos 1890 até mais ao menos ao anos 1930, com foco especial em duas décadas – de 1910 e 1920.
É muito bem escrito e conta histórias fabulosas, reais, sobre o contexto e o detalhe de alguns episódios de vida de lutadores famosos como Jack Dempsey, Harry Greb, Jack Jonhson, entre outros e, claro, sobre “Gene” Tunney.
Além disso, entra em detalhe na vida de promotores, jornalistas e treinadores da altura, bem como de figuras paralelas associadas ao Boxe. Um mundo a descobrir ao longo de mais de 500 páginas.
Entre outros tesouros para os fãs da Nobre Arte, encontrei esta curiosa passagem sobre o Boxe Feminino, vivida em Berlim, em 1922 (há 100 anos atrás) e testemunhada pelo então campeão de pesos-pesados – o famoso Jack Dempsey.
“… Before leaving Paris, Dempsey was asked to compare the City of Light with London. “Paris was better,” Dempsey said. “More girls.
More action.” And, he could have added, it aorded even more adulation than he received in England.Indeed, no American fighter, nor any other athlete, had ever been accorded such a
reception in all the years since the Manassa Mauler took Paris by storm in the spring of 1922.
From Paris, Dempsey and his group went by train to Berlin, where, once again, he was greeted and treated royally. Arriving at
the Berlin train station, he found a crowd of about seven thousand, which engulfed him when he got o the train. Dempsey was
stunned by the reception, mainly because boxing had been practically unknown in Germany until after the Armistice, and that
had only been four years ago.Yet here he was being greeted as a sports hero. If boxing was relatively new to Germany, the Germans
turned out to be about a halfcentury ahead of the United States in one aspect of the sport—female boxing.At Kearns’s suggestion the Dempsey party went to a cabaret where women boxers were appearing.
Dempsey had assumed the boxing would be in a comic vein. But he was wrong. During several bouts, the women boxers
went at one another with a vengeance, resulting in several bloody bouts, at least one broken jaw, and a number of knockdowns.
Kearns and the others in Dempsey’s party seemed to enjoy the bouts, but Dempsey was appalled by it all and could not wait to
leave. “Women punching women—I hated it,” he said…”
Do livro:
“Tunney – Boxing´s Brainiest Champ and his upset of the great Jack Dempsey”, escrito por Jack Cavanaugh, 2007 Ballantine Books, New York (páginas 175-175).
A viagem de Jack Dempsey à Europa realizou-se a bordo do Navio-Cruzeiro “Aquitania”. Na Europa esteve em 3 cidades: Londres, depois Paris e por fim Berlim. Foi a primeira vez que Jack Dempsey tinha viajado à Europa e a primeira vez que se tinha sentido tratado como uma figura importante.
Pedro S.
Treinador de Boxe – Academia Skills