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The Story of Three Men
By Tom Donelson
INSIDE BOXING (July 1, 2004) -There are times in which good men find themselves
in the wrong place at the wrong time. Max Schmeling, Joe Frazier and Gerry
Cooney were three good men who found themselves playing boxing villains.
In 1936, Max Schmeling upset Joe Louis with a 12 round knock out and momentarily
derailed the Louis express. In the two years between their classic rematch, the
horror of Nazis Germany became more obvious. So when Max Schmeling fought Louis
for the heavyweight championship, this fight became Germany vs. America- good
vs. evil. Schmeling became a symbol of Germany “Master race” and certainly the
Germans were perfectly willing to allow Max to assume the mantle of the German
Super man. The Nazis looked at this fight as the national referendum of
Germany’s superiority
For Schmeling, the pressure was intense. Schmeling, like other Germans, was
proud of the German progress in the 1930’s as Germany began to rebuild its
military and its pride. While many felt that Schmeling was a willing pawn in
Hitler’s schemes, Schmeling himself was not a Nazi or anti-Semite. His own
manager was Jewish and he refused to fire his manager despite pressure from the
Nazi hierarchy. On one occasion, he even aided a Jewish family to escape Germany
in the late 30’s. Before the fight, the Gestapo detained Schmeling’s parents and
family. The message was clear, “defect and your family will be imprisoned.”
For Joe Louis, he was not just fighting for his country but to avenge his only
loss, and show once and for all he was the best. And in a 2-minute period, he
not only avenged his loss two years previously but he settled once and for all
who was the true champion.
As for Max Schmeling, he essentially became a non-person in Nazis Germany but he
still served in the German arm forces with honor. After the war, Schmeling
regained his stature as a fighter and the second bout with Joe Louis was no
longer an albatross around his neck. He prospered as a successful businessman.
He also became friends with his conqueror and both men learned to respect one
another; and after the war, the animosity that existed between the men in the
ring disappeared as quickly as the animosity between the new Germany and
America. Two warriors became the symbol of struggle of the coming war and later,
they would become symbols of a new friendship
In 1982, Gerry Cooney fought Larry Holmes and as both men prepared for this
fight, racial tension was just beneath the surface. Gerry Cooney had not fought
for 13 months but at the age of 25, he appeared to be a killing machine with a
wicked left hook that shattered everything in its path. As for Holmes, he never
was truly accepted as a great fighter as Ali overshadowed Holmes even in
retirement. To make matters even worse, he found himself the underdog against
Cooney in some boxing corner. Sports Illustrated had a piece, showing why Cooney
would begin a new era of boxing by beating the 32 year-old Holmes.
As for the fight, Holmes showed his greatness as he defeated Cooney with his
superior boxing skills. While Cooney showed grit and heart, he was not the
fighter that Holmes was. On this hot summer day in 1982, he was the second best
heavyweight but Cooney never truly recovered from this defeat. A sensitive man,
he felt that he let down his supporter and many in the boxing community viewed
Cooney as just another failed, over inflated great White Hope. This was an
unfair criticism since he was good fighter who had the tools to be a great
fighter. Raw and awkward, Cooney never truly developed as a fighter and after
Holmes, he drifted as he fought a few mediocre fighters and developed a drinking
problem. He suffered two major defeats at the hand of Michael Spinks and George
Foreman- the latter, which ended his career. These three defeats defined Cooney
as a failed heavyweight. The reality was that Cooney had the talent to be a
heavyweight champion but he never developed the talent.
Cooney, however, made his own personal comeback as he beat both the bottle and
used his newfound wealth from boxing to help other fighters. He formed FIST, an
organization designed to help boxers finds themselves after they leave the ring.
His ability to curry favors with CEO’s and to relate to the club fighter allowed
him to make FIST a major player. At this point, his organization has helped over
250 fighters and whatever disappointment that marred his career in the ring has
now disappeared with his subsequent career outside the ring. As Showtime
commentator Steve Farhood told me, Cooney is one of the few guys who is does
more than talk when it comes to helping other fighters in their post ring days.
He is doing something. One more thing, Cooney became good friend with his rival
Larry Holmes. Like Schmeling and Louis before them, Holmes and Cooney rivalry
became a symbol of respect and the tension that existed during their fight has
long since disappeared. Like Schmeling, many have now accepted Cooney as a good
man who simply was a person put in a situation not of his making. For both men,
their big losses no longer defined their career but their overall accomplishment
both inside and outside the ring has.
As for Joe Frazier, bitterness still reigns. Frazier found himself playing the
foil to Ali. At the end of the 60’s and during the early 70’s, Ali became the
symbol of the political left and black extremism opposition to America. When Ali
stepped into the ring against Joe Frazier in their first super fight, he
represented a cause bigger than himself. Bitter at the government prosecution
that denied him his chance to fight for three and half years, Ali was determined
to regain the title that he was stripped off.
Frazier found himself the victim of Ali’s taunting and for many young blacks;
Frazier was the white man champion and an Uncle Tom. One of Ali’s corner man
described Frazier as raging black and Frazier, himself, once reminded audience
that his skin was darker than his opponent. (This was Frazier way to insinuating
that Ali had some white blood in him. This was Frazier way of fighting back the
racial insult being thrown his way.)
Frazier wanted to be just a fighter and he never was politically oriented but on
this night, neutrality was not an option. On this night, Frazier showed himself
to be a great fighter in his own right but despite his victory, it was Ali who
gained all the respect. Frazier may have defended his championship but Ali was
still the people champ.
He would lose his title to Foreman and lose two classic battles to Ali but his
clashes with Ali that defined Frazier as it defined Ali. Ali would continued his
taunting before each of his next fights with Frazier but after the “Thrilla in
Manila”, Ali no longer had the stomach to taunt his opponent. He realized that
after that fight his own immortality and from this point, he began his own
rapprochement with Frazier but to no avail. Frazier carried every insult within
his soul and it wasn’t till recent time that he has started to make his own
peace with Ali.
For Frazier, there wasn’t really any peace in his post fight life. Overshadowed
by Ali and even later Foreman, Frazier never truly was granted his true
recognition as a great fighter. Some held the two Foreman demolitions against
him as if losing to Foreman was some sort of disgrace. (Mike Tyson never showed
any interest in fighting Foreman during Foreman second boxing career. Tyson knew
that Foreman style was not anymore right for him as it was for Frazier.)
The irony was that it was George Foreman who became a symbol of middle class
value. During the 1968 Olympics, Foreman carried an American flag into the ring
after he won the gold medal. This was the Olympic that many blacks either
boycotted or carried on protest during the games.
During his exile, Foreman learned salesmanship, as he became a preacher and when
he began his second comeback; he developed a skill for self-promotion. Of the
three great fighters of the 70’s, Foreman ended up the most secure financially.
While Ali suffers from Parkinson and Frazier still harbor bitterness, Foreman
accepted his loss at Ali’s hand and won the Heavyweight title a second time. He
changed his image from the surly young man to the happy go lucky business man,
who just happened to fight. When he was not in the ring, he was promoting food
chains, his own grill and a clothing line. Foreman is a secured, rich man. It
was Foreman, who found the American dream and became integrated within the
American mainstream.
Ali has become an icon and Foreman has become everyone favorite uncle. Frazier
finds himself in the shadowed and still waiting for acceptance of his own
greatness. Whereas peace came to both Schmeling and Cooney, Frazier is still
looking for tranquility.