sport historian
Master
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2004
- Messages
- 2,986
During the 1980's, the first of every month I would go by a bookstore that had a magazine stand. I would buy 2-3 boxing magazines. One day I bought a magazine that had Gerry Cooney's picture on the cover. The young woman at the counter said, "I sure hope he wins." I ran into that almost everywhere before Gerry Cooney challenged Larry Holmes for the heavyweight title on June 11, 1982, 27 years ago. A lot of white people were pulling for Cooney to win. Would that happen in 2009?
Gerry Cooney first started getting a lot of attention in 1980. Being from New York was a big advantage. The boxing magazines were there and wrote about Cooney a lot even though most establishment journalists downgraded him.
I recently watched Cooney's wins over Dino Dennis, Leroy Boone, and Jimmy Young. After the Young fight, CBS analyst Gil Clancy shouted, "Gerry Cooney is the hottest heavyweight in the world." It looked like Cooney could take Larry Holmes in a year or so. Things didn't work out that way.
Cooney started a pattern of signing for fights, then getting injured causing a postponement, or a cancellation. His next fight after Young was Ron Lyle. When Lyle was injured, Earnie Shavers (who was on a losing streak) was substituted. Cooney's managers then announced that Gerry had a back injury, even though he was seen dancing at a disco. Some said that they were afraid to let Cooney meet Shavers. Two months later Cooney stopped Lyle in one round with body punches. On May 11 1981, Cooney knocked out Ken Norton in 54 seconds.
He didn't fight again until meeting Holmes 13 months later. The Holmes fight was supposed to be in March 1982 but Cooney was injured while sparring yet again, causing another delay until June. Surprisingly, these inuries and the layoff weren't considered a factor in the fight!
A writer named Steve Losch, who was a Cooney supporter, felt that Gerry Cooney lost his edge after becoming a celebrity. Before, Cooney always beat up his sparring partners. Prior to the title fight, he looked bad in sparring sessions. Losch wrote in the January 1983 Boxing Today, "Larry Holmes never learned that Cooney came into the fight in less than perfect form, and the ticket-buying public believed to the very end that they saw the real Gerry Cooney."
Losch wrote that reporters saw a special press screening of "Rocky III," and came back to a press party to find Mr. T there, looking exactly as he did on the screen, reality and fantasy became dangerously blurred. I had noticed at the time that Cooney took the Rocky movies far more seriously than he should have.
I watched the Holmes-Cooney fight again a couple of days ago. In the ring before the fight, Cooney looked like he expected to lose, unlike before Young and Norton. I thought Cooney won 4 of the first 10 rounds with one even. He collapsed in the 13th through exhaustion as well as Holmes" punches.
The fight did great business. The live gate was $6 million and closed-circuit business was big, especially in New York. Eventual gross was near $50 million surpassing the $37 million for Leonard Hearns. Some said that in the HBO and ABC showings of the fight, Cooney seemed to do better than on theater TV. In the theater showing, Cooney seemed to be getting the hell beat out of him. In the HBO and ABC viewings, Cooney gave Holmes some trouble while being outpointed. I only saw the ABC version and Holmes was very careful of Cooney's left hook.
Gerry Cooney first started getting a lot of attention in 1980. Being from New York was a big advantage. The boxing magazines were there and wrote about Cooney a lot even though most establishment journalists downgraded him.
I recently watched Cooney's wins over Dino Dennis, Leroy Boone, and Jimmy Young. After the Young fight, CBS analyst Gil Clancy shouted, "Gerry Cooney is the hottest heavyweight in the world." It looked like Cooney could take Larry Holmes in a year or so. Things didn't work out that way.
Cooney started a pattern of signing for fights, then getting injured causing a postponement, or a cancellation. His next fight after Young was Ron Lyle. When Lyle was injured, Earnie Shavers (who was on a losing streak) was substituted. Cooney's managers then announced that Gerry had a back injury, even though he was seen dancing at a disco. Some said that they were afraid to let Cooney meet Shavers. Two months later Cooney stopped Lyle in one round with body punches. On May 11 1981, Cooney knocked out Ken Norton in 54 seconds.
He didn't fight again until meeting Holmes 13 months later. The Holmes fight was supposed to be in March 1982 but Cooney was injured while sparring yet again, causing another delay until June. Surprisingly, these inuries and the layoff weren't considered a factor in the fight!
A writer named Steve Losch, who was a Cooney supporter, felt that Gerry Cooney lost his edge after becoming a celebrity. Before, Cooney always beat up his sparring partners. Prior to the title fight, he looked bad in sparring sessions. Losch wrote in the January 1983 Boxing Today, "Larry Holmes never learned that Cooney came into the fight in less than perfect form, and the ticket-buying public believed to the very end that they saw the real Gerry Cooney."
Losch wrote that reporters saw a special press screening of "Rocky III," and came back to a press party to find Mr. T there, looking exactly as he did on the screen, reality and fantasy became dangerously blurred. I had noticed at the time that Cooney took the Rocky movies far more seriously than he should have.
I watched the Holmes-Cooney fight again a couple of days ago. In the ring before the fight, Cooney looked like he expected to lose, unlike before Young and Norton. I thought Cooney won 4 of the first 10 rounds with one even. He collapsed in the 13th through exhaustion as well as Holmes" punches.
The fight did great business. The live gate was $6 million and closed-circuit business was big, especially in New York. Eventual gross was near $50 million surpassing the $37 million for Leonard Hearns. Some said that in the HBO and ABC showings of the fight, Cooney seemed to do better than on theater TV. In the theater showing, Cooney seemed to be getting the hell beat out of him. In the HBO and ABC viewings, Cooney gave Holmes some trouble while being outpointed. I only saw the ABC version and Holmes was very careful of Cooney's left hook.