Tommy Gibbons
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Tommy Gibbons | |
Statistics | |
---|---|
Real name | Tommy Gibbons |
Nickname | none |
Weight | Heavyweight |
Nationality | United States Of America |
Birth date | March 22, 1891 |
Birth place | St. Paul, Minnesota |
Death date | November 19, 1960 |
Style | |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 110 + 44ND |
Wins | 56 |
Wins by KO | 48 |
Losses | 4 |
Draws | 1 + 44ND |
No contests | 1 |
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Thomas J. Gibbons (born March 22, 1891 in St. Paul, Minnesota, died November 19, 1960) was a boxer who lost the Heavyweight Championship to Jack Dempsey in 15 rounds. The brother of Mike Gibbons, Tommy started boxing professionally in 1911 as a middleweight. Like his brother he was a master scientific boxer who chose to outbox his opponents. In time, he advanced to the Heavyweight class and developed a respectable punch.
His biggest fight came near the end of his career when he met heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey on July 4, 1923 in Shelby, Montana. The local backers and the town of Shelby went broke putting on the fight. The great Dempsey battled through the full fifteen rounds before winning by decision. Dempsey was awarded $200,000, whereas Gibbons received expense money.
Tommy Gibbons record was 56-4-1 with 44 no decisions, and 1 no contest. He scored 48 knockouts, and was stopped only once by Gene Tunney on June 5, 1925. The names dotting his record read like boxing's hall of fame. Tommy recorded wins over George Chip, Willie Meehan, Billy Miske, Chuck Wiggins, Jack Bloomfield, and Kid Norfolk. Tommy had no decision matches with George "K.O." Brown, Billy Miske, Harry Greb, Battling Levinsky, Bob Roper, Chuck Wiggins, Georges Carpentier, and others. Only Harry Greb, Billy Miske, Jack Dempsey, and Gene Tunney were able to score wins over Tommy Gibbons.
Following his retirement, Tommy Gibbons was elected four times as the Sheriff of Ramsey County. He became a member of the Ring Boxing Hall of Fame in 1963, and was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1993.
[edit] Occupations
He began work at the Great Northern rail yard for $1.10 a day, of which he was allowed to keep 10 cents. He gave the rest of the money to help his mother and father support the family. He accompanied his brother, Mike to some of his boxing matches. When their father saw that they could earn much more money boxing, than they could ever earn at the rail yard, he allowed them to go into boxing full time. After retiring from boxing at age 34, he sold insurance very successfully and was a member of the $100,000 Club in the 1920*s. His friends convinced him to run for Sheriff of Ramsey County in Minnesota, Which included the capital city of St. Paul. He won for six consecutive four year terms before retiring at the age of 68.
[edit] Fast Facts
- Owed the Gibbons Brother*s Gym with his boxing brother Mike Gibbons
- He started boxing professionally in 1911.
- Boxed 106 fights, losing only 4 and being stopped only once, by Gene Tunney. He retired after the fight.
- Was the first boxer to go the entire Fifteen rounds with Dempsey during the World Championship Fight in Shelby, Montana on July 4, 1923, where he lost the decision.
- Tommy and Helen donated $50,000 to build the Immaculate Conception Church in Osakis, Minnesota from his purse from the Tunney fight.
- Was King Boreas IX in 1946 for the Winter Carnival in St. Paul, Minnesota.
- Was Knighted twice by the Catholic Church for his work for the church. A Knight of St. Gregory and A Knight of St. George.
- Was elected, along with his brother Mike to the *Helms* Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954.
[edit] Quotes
"Nailing him was like trying to thread a needle in a high wind." - Jack Dempsey about Tommy Gibbons bout in 1923
"Dempsey could beat anybody he could hit. The only reason that he couldn't do anything with fellows like Tunney or Greb or myself was he couldn't hit us." - Tom Gibbons in a radio interview in 1949
"For the first and only time, I was more worried about getting hurt by the crowd than by the guy I was fighting. I got a pretty good blast when introduced. The crowd was hollering and raising hell. I looked around for my bodyguard, a colorful New York character named Wild Bill Lyons, who packed two pearl-handled pistols and used to talk a lot about his days in the West. Wild Bill was under the ring, hiding." - Jack Dempsey about being introduced to the crowd at the Dempsey/Gibbons fight in Shelby, Montana July 4, 1923
"I could have licked him in Shelby if I had been 30, but I was 32. I'll never forget that day. I never got so tired of man in my life." - Tommy Gibbons discussing his World Championship bout with Jack Dempsey.
"People couldn*t seem to understand how I could take so much from Dempsey. They said I was as Iron Man (a name I always wanted to avoid), when really all I did was slip this way and that as the occasion required. Brother Mike was a past master at that. I never saw anyone to equal him at all. He taught it to me." - Tommy Gibbons from Punches I Have Taken
[edit] See also
Jack Dempsey vs. Tommy Gibbons
International Boxing Hall of Fame