Yesterday in my
meanderings, I happened upon a column by the great New York sports writer, Red
Smith.
My old man—Uncle
Slappy’s younger brother—for all his failures, short-comings, peccadilloes and
foibles, did good for me in a couple of ways. Perhaps most important, he was an
inveterate reader of “The New York Times,” and accordingly, he introduced me to
many of the great writers of the 20th Century. Forced me to read
them, if you must know, like forcing vitamins down a colt’s throat in winter.
We’d be fairly quizzed
by my father. “Didja read Red Smith today? Didja read Scottie Reston? Didja
read Flora Lewis, Ada Louise Huxtable, Thomas Wicker?” Most of all, my old man
fairly swatted me with “The New York Times Book Review,” like a cruel owner a
recalcitrant dog. He believed that the Book Review contained the best
writing—and the greatest ideas—of just about anything you could buy for a buck.
But at the top of my
father’s personal pantheon was Red Smith. Which brings me to today’s post.
Yesterday, as I labored
to write more manifestos than you can shake a timesheet at, I remembered this
quotation by Smith: “Writing is easy. You just sit at the typewriter, open a
vein and bleed.”
That quote led me to an
article on Smith and his prowess. In it they noted that Smith had the only
journalism included in a famous College Literature anthology. Smith’s column,
the one below, was nestled between an essay by Winston Churchill and a story by
Dylan Thomas. Good company for a writer.
The column was written
after a rising young Rocky Marciano knocked out a fading Joe Louis, 12-years a
champ, in the eighth round in the old Madison Square Garden, on the site of
Ogilvy’s old HQ.
Here’s the article. Maybe it's the last paragraph that got to me.
In any event, do my old man proud, and
give it a read.
"Night
for Joe Louis”
by Red
Smith
Joe
Louis lay on his stomach on a rubbing table with his right ear pillowed on a
folded towel, his left hand in a bucket of ice on the floor. A handler massaged
his left ear with ice. Joe still wore his old dressing-gown of blue and red—for
the first time, one was aware of how the colors had faded—and a raincoat had
been spread on top of that.
This
was an hour before midnight of October 26, 1951. It was the evening of a day
that dawned July 4, 1934, when Joe Louis became a professional fist fighter and
knocked out Jack Kracken in Chicago for a fifty-dollar purse. The night was a
long time on the way, but it had to come.
Ordinarily,
small space is reserved here for sentimentality about professional fighters.
For seventeen years, three months, and twenty-two days Louis fought for money.
He collected millions. Now the punch that was launched seventeen years ago had
landed. A young man, Rocky Marciano, had knocked the old man out. The story was
ended. That was all except—
Well,
except that this time he was lying down in his dressing-room in the catacombs
of Madison Square Garden. Memory retains scores of pictures of Joe in his
dressing room, always sitting up, relaxed, answering questions in his slow,
thoughtful way. This time only, he was down.
His
face was squashed against the padding of the rubbing table, mulling his words.
Newspapermen had to kneel on the floor like supplicants in a tight little
semicircle and bring their heads close to his lips to hear him. They heard him
say that Marciano was a good puncher, that the best man had won, that he
wouldn’t know until Monday whether this had been his last fight.
He said
he never lost consciousness when Marciano knocked him through the ropes and
Ruby Goldstein, the referee, stopped the fight. He said that if he’d fallen in
mid-ring he might have got up inside ten seconds, but he doubted that he could
have got back through the ropes in time.
They
asked whether Marciano punched harder than Max Schmeling did fifteen years ago,
on the only other night when Louis was stopped.
“This
kid,” Joe said, “knocked me out with what? Two punches. Schmeling knocked me
out with—musta been a hunderd [sic] punches. But,” Joe said, “I was twenty-two
years old. You can take more then than later on.”
“Did
age count tonight, Joe?”
Joe’s
eyes got sleepy. “Ugh,” he said, and bobbed his head.
The
fight mob was filling the room. “How did you feel tonight?” Ezzard Charles was
asked. Joe Louis was the hero of Charles’ boyhood. Ezzard never wanted to fight
Joe, but finally he did and won. Then and thereafter Louis became just another
opponent who sometimes disparaged Charles as a champion.
“Uh,”
Charles said, hesitating. “Good fight.”
“You
didn’t feel sorry, Ezzard?”
“No,”
he said, with a kind of apologetic smile that explained this was just a prize fight
in which one man knocked out an opponent.
“How
did you feel?” Ray Arcel was asked. For years and years Arcel trained opponents
for Joe and tried to help them whip him, and in a decade and a half he dug tons
of inert meat out of the resin.
“I felt
very bad,” Ray said.
It
wasn’t necessary to ask how Marciano felt. He is young and strong and
undefeated. He is rather clumsy and probably always will be, because he has had
the finest of teachers, Charley Goldman, and Charley hasn’t been able to teach
him skill. But he can punch. He can take a punch. It is difficult to see how he
can be stopped this side of the heavyweight championship.
It is
easy to say, and it will be said, that it wouldn’t have been like this with the
Louis of ten years ago. It isn’t a surpassingly bright thing to say, though,
because this isn’t ten years ago. The Joe Louis of October 26, 1951, couldn’t
whip Rocky Marciano, and that’s the only Joe Louis there was in the Garden.
That
one was going to lose on points in a dreary fight that would have left
everything at loose ends. It would have been a clear victory for Marciano, but
not conclusive. Joe might not have been convinced.
Then
Rocky hit Joe a left hook and knocked him down. Then Rocky hit him another hook
and knocked him out. A right to the neck followed that knocked him out of the
ring. And out of the fight business. The last wasn’t necessary, but it was
neat. It wrapped the package, neat and tidy.
An old
man’s dream ended. A young man’s vision of the future opened wide. Young men
have visions, old men have dreams. But the place for old men to dream is beside
the fire.
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