Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The Greatest Fight of the Twentieth Century



When we think of sports, we pretty much think of “who won”, “what was the score”, or simply stated “what was the outcome.” But this match was not as much about boxing, as it was of German supremacy vs. America’s prejudice of blacks.

In Germany, Hitler did not want the fight to take place. If Schmeling lost to a black man, it was a major setback for his racial theories.

In America it would have been a devastating loss for not only Louis, but blacks in general. In a society where they were thought of as less than human, blacks felt as if this was a fight that might raise them in social acceptance and equality. If he lost, their race would be back to slavery and prejudice.

Joe Louis was 22 years old at the time of the first Schmeling fight in 1936. He was undefeated in 27 fights, and he had never even been knocked down. Most boxing fans thought he had the heavy weight title in the bag and it was only a matter of time.

Schmeling was an ex-champion from the 1930’s, and most people thought he was washed up. However, Schmeling did his homework and detected a flaw in Louis’ style which helped him defeat the mighty Joe Louis.

Hitler and Germany rejoiced. Schmeling was welcomed home with great celebration and Hitler even had a film of Schmeling’s victory made and had it shown across Germany. As for America’s black society, they would have to wait for a rematch.

From then on Schmeling was as a Nazi. His manager may have been Jewish, and Schmeling may not have worn the swastika on his arm, but he was branded. He was used by Hitler to support him and his ideas of a perfect country.

The rematch would come about in 1938. Joe Louis was determined to become the heavyweight champion, and ultimately did. But he felt he could not be the true champion until he defeated Schmeling.

In America, newspaper cartoons depicted Louis as somewhat of an animal. They used derogatory names for him, and exaggerated his features by drawing him with huge lips and using a broken dialect. They could never get past the fact that he was black.

Even though President Roosevelt personally gave Louis encouragement, America had a difficult time with a black man representing their great empire. Here was a man who could not drink from the same water fountain, eat in the same restaurants, sleep in the same hotels, and was made to ride in the back of a bus, representing America in what some called the greatest sports event of the 20th century.

When it came time for the second fight, Louis was prepared. This time Louis studied up on Schmeling and found his weaknesses. One weakness in particular that Louis noticed was Schmeling’s straight right. He had to prepare himself before he threw it. Louis used this discovery to his advantage and destroyed Schmeling. After a right roundhouse from Louis the event came to an end. Louis had broken two of Schmelding’s vertebrae and had him on the ropes. By that time Schmeling had had enough and his coach jumped in the ring to admit defeat.

Joe Lewis was as an undefeated boxer for a long time and was also a heavyweight champion. Even though Joe Lewis is considered to be one of the greatest boxers of all time, the one fight he could not win was that of prejudice in the U.S.

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http://www.saddoboxing.com/boxing-article/Joe-Louis-v-Max-Schmeling.html
http://www.johnrosengren.net/fists.htm
http://www.jerryjazzmusician.com/mainHTML.cfm?page=margolick.html


7 comments:

  1. I agree with what you had to say about Joe Louis representing and standing up for the African-Americans. Also how you were saying that this was much more than a regular boxing match, it was blacks vs prejudice and slavery.

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  2. You would think that a man who was famous for his fighting skills in the U.S. would be regarded by the people as a good person. Its a shame that the world used to be so radically racist like that. It shows how brutal humanity can really be against it own kind!

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  3. That is a really amazing story about overcoming everyone even your fellow countrymen. Louis deserved to win and show the world that skin color does not matter in the ring. I would have liked to know what happened right after the match, with all the people who did not believe in Lewis.

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  4. I'm curious to know what kepted Louis in boxing. I can imagine the people around having a lack empathy and compassion toward him not only because he was black but for losing to Schmelting as well. I could believe he stayed in for his people but I think there is something. Why do you believe he continued to fight?

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  5. Louis was a brave man who stepped up to the plate and fought the opposite race. I give props to him for being determined to win the match against Schmeling. He showed that even blacks can have an influence to the world.

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  6. Andie, I think the reason Louis continued to fight was because boxing is what he had worked towards for most of his adult life and it was what he was really good at. You also have to remember that there weren't that many job oppurtunities for blacks to make a lot of money, and boxing gave him that.

    Leilani, I'm not quite sure what happened right after the fight, but i do know that Black America was thrilled with his win, and white America still had a hard time dealing with it. Even though he was an American they didn't know how to handle a black man winning. For Max Schmelding, Germany and Hitler were extremely disappointed in him. There were no celebration and praise when he came back after the second fight.

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  7. I beg to differ. Joe Louis was a hero to whites and blacks alike for defeating the Nazi image, just as Jesse Owens was the hero of the Olympics. The more interesting issues to me are that Schmeling's manager was Jewish (I didn't know that), and Louis' continued standing as a second-class citizen. Shouldn't American heroes have the same rights as everyone regardless of race?

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