Lonsdale's Belt
Boxing's Most Coveted Prize
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
For more than 100 years the Lonsdale Belt, first awarded in 1909 by the legendary National Sporting Club and since 1936 by the British Boxing Board of Control, has encircled the waists of all the great names in British boxing history: Freddie Welsh and Ted "Kid" Lewis; Benny Lynch and Jimmy Wilde; Freddie Mills, Randolph Turpin, and Terry Downes; Henry Cooper, Barry McGuigan, Lennox Lewis, and Joe Calzaghe. Drawing upon a wealth of sources—interviews and reminiscences, boxing-board minutes and programs, contemporary magazines and newspapers, even archive film, sports historian John Harding tells the absorbing and fascinating story of the belt's origins and development and how the system the belt represents has continued to provide an unambiguous measure of excellence in the chaotic and often murky world of British professional boxing.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Like certain vintage wines, books about British boxing may not be exportable to the U.S., which holds pugilism in the U.K. in about the same esteem as Britons do American soccer. Thus it seems likely that Harding, who scored several years ago with his biography, Jack Kid Berg, cannot expect comparable success with this survey of eight weight classes from 1909 to 1993. Originally named the National Sporting Club's Challenge Belt and in 1936 renamed the British Boxing Board of Control Lord Lonsdale Challenge Belt, the trophy has been won and worn by only a handful of boxers known on this side of the Atlantic, even to longtime fans: Tommy Farr, Randy Turpin, Henry Cooper and Lennox Lewis. Because each belt--originally made of nine-carat gold, now of hallmarked standard silver- and gold-plate--today costs about 4000 to make, all promoters of larger professional shows must pay a "tax" of 400 to help cover the cost of the belts. But despite the well-researched accounts of the winners' careers, exciting descriptions of the major bouts and copious photos and other illustrations presented here, the book's appeal will be limited.