“To dare is to lose one’s footing momentarily.To not dare is to lose oneself.” — Soren Kierkegaard
Over the a long time we’ve got been advised repeatedly how the good Billy Conn was silly to go for the knockout in opposition to Joe Louis in spherical 13 of their basic 1941 encounter for the heavyweight championship of the world. It’s considered one of boxing’s most well-known platitudes and it’s uncommon to discover a dissenting opinion. Some even referred to as Billy’s determination to go for the kill downright silly, an opinion given credence by Conn himself in his well-known post-fight feedback. “I misplaced my head and 1,000,000 bucks,” he mentioned in his dressing room shortly after the legendary duel. Seconds later he was requested why he went for the knockout, the query prompting the immortal line: “What’s using being Irish if you happen to can’t be thick?”
Billy Conn is with out query one of many biggest mild heavyweights who ever lived; pound-for-pound, he’ll without end be one of the expert and proficient boxers of his time. However his achievements have been overshadowed by the legend of that first defeat to “The Brown Bomber.” And the opinion that “The Pittsburgh Child” made a extreme error in judgment has been regurgitated so many occasions over time that no person even questions the logic of what they’re anticipated to swallow, every technology taking it because the unassailable reality and the story of the struggle.
However is it?
Each sport has its dangers. The outcomes of taking these dangers are what decide if historical past remembers it as a clever transfer or a silly one. The very first thing to evaluate have to be the danger versus reward ratio, and the proof that was considered earlier than accepting the problem inherent in that danger.
When Billy Conn answered the bell for that fateful thirteenth spherical, the information and proof had been these:
1. Conn might damage Louis and had badly staggered him greater than as soon as.2. Louis had not been capable of damage Conn to any considerable diploma.3. Conn was out-boxing and out-punching Louis, typically starting and all the time ending each change.
Was Louis nonetheless a hazard to cease Billy? After all he was. The champion, one of many biggest punchers in pugilistic historical past, was all the time a hazard to cease anybody. And certainly the “good” transfer would have been for Conn to maintain out-boxing the champion till the ultimate bell and be pleased with profitable the choice. However does that robotically make his determination to go for the kill “dumb”?
Once more, not if the proof of the second is taken into account. And if Billy had succeeded in stopping Louis it’s a certainty that historians could be speaking about Conn’s good sport plan of softening Joe up for twelve stanzas earlier than going for the kill within the championship rounds.
Right here is one thing to think about: if Sonny Liston had finished as most anticipated and knocked out Cassius Clay of their monumental 1964 bout, the press, after crowing fortunately that “The Louisville Lip” had lastly been buttoned, would have probably taken turns lambasting Angelo Dundee for permitting his promising however nonetheless growing prospect to go in in opposition to probably the most damaging fighter on the planet. “What had been they pondering?” they might have shouted. “He wasn’t prepared!”
Reveals A by way of Z would have been his earlier two bouts, the primary in opposition to smallish Doug Jones, by which he struggled mightily and misplaced some luster, and the second versus Henry Cooper, by which he was dropped and badly damage by Cooper’s left hook (which, they might have acerbically identified, was Liston’s finest punch and thrown with far more damaging pressure from the 215 pound champion than by the thirty kilos lighter Cooper).
However the future Muhammad Ali gained the bout, so he, Dundee, and everybody concerned had been “good” and knew what they had been doing all alongside. Go the cigars and sing praises to the stellar sport plan. He could be given related reward a decade later after seemingly tempting suicide with George Foreman by preventing off the ropes in opposition to the thunderous-punching champion, solely to tire the massive Texan out and cease him in eight.
Is it not conceivable that we might be singing related praises within the path of Billy Conn’s legacy had his danger paid off and he gained the heavyweight championship of the world on that legendary New York Metropolis evening in 1941?
Going for the kill in opposition to a tiring and beforehand wounded Joe Louis who had but to harm you; a dangerous transfer? After all. Each worthy achievement entails danger.
However a “silly” one? No. — Douglas Cavanaugh