Everything about James J Braddock totally explained
James Walter Braddock (
June 7,
1905 –
November 29,
1974) was an
American heavyweight boxing champion.
Fighting under the name
James J. Braddock (ostensibly to follow the pattern set by two prior champions,
James J. Corbett and
James J. Jeffries), his amazing comeback from a floundering career, which saw him lose several bouts before struggling to support his family by working on the docks during the
Great Depression) earned him the nickname
"The Cinderella Man" from
Damon Runyon. His manager was
Joe Gould.
Early life and boxing career
Braddock was born in
Hell's Kitchen in
New York City on West 48th Street within a couple of blocks of the
Madison Square Garden venue that made heavyweight]] and
heavyweight divisions, James Braddock turned pro at the age of 21, fighting as a light heavyweight. After three years, Braddock's record was 34-5-7 with 21 knockouts.
In 1928, he pulled off a major upset by knocking out highly regarded
Tuffy Griffiths. The following year he earned a chance to fight for the championship, but he narrowly lost to
Tommy Loughran in a fifteen-round decision. Braddock was greatly depressed by the loss and badly fractured his right hand in several places in the process. His career suffered as a result, as did Braddock's disposition.
His record for the next thirty-three fights fell to 11-20-2, fighting with what close friends described as "generalized indifference." With his family in poverty during
the Great Depression, Braddock had to give up boxing for a time and worked as a
longshoreman. Due to frequent injuries to his right hand, Braddock compensated by using his left hand during his longshoreman work, and it gradually became stronger than his right. He always remembered the humiliation of having to accept
government relief money, but was inspired by
Dorothy Day and the
Catholic Worker Movement, a Christian social justice organization founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in 1933 to help the homeless and hungry. After his boxing comeback, Braddock returned the welfare money he'd received and made frequent donations to various Catholic Worker Houses, including feeding homeless guests with his family.
Baer vs. Braddock
In 1934, Braddock was given a fight with the highly touted
John "Corn" Griffin. Although Braddock was intended simply as a stepping stone in Griffin's career, he knocked out the "Ozark Cyclone" in the third round. Braddock then fought
John Henry Lewis, a future light heavyweight champion (and friend of future heavyweight champion
Joe Louis) who had previously defeated Braddock. He won in one of the most important fights of his career. After defeating another highly regarded heavyweight contender,
Art Lasky, whose nose he broke during the bout on
March 22 1935, Braddock was given a title fight against the World Heavyweight Champion,
Max Baer.
Considered little more than a journeyman fighter, Braddock was hand-picked by Baer's handlers because he was seen as an easy payday for the champion. Instead, on
June 13,
1935, at
Madison Square Garden Bowl, Braddock won the heavyweight championship of the world as the 10-to-1 underdog in one of the most stunning upsets in boxing history. Baer admitted afterwards that he'd underestimated Braddock as "a chump" and had received the worst pummeling of his professional career.
During the fight, a dogged Braddock took heavy hits from the powerful younger champion (30 years vs 26 years for Baer), but Braddock kept coming, wearing down Baer, who seemed perplexed by Braddock's ability to take a punch. In the end, the judges gave Braddock the title with a unanimous decision.
James Braddock suffered from problems with his arthritic hands after injuries throughout his career, and in 1936 his title defense in
Madison Square Garden against the
German Max Schmeling was cancelled under suspicious circumstances. Braddock argued he'd have received only a
US$25,000 purse against Schmeling, compared to $250,000 against rising star
Joe Louis. It was also likely that Braddock's manager,
Joe Gould, didn't want a potential German victory to be used as Nazi propaganda.
James Braddock vs. Joe Louis
When ready to fight, the thirty-two-year-old Braddock chose to defend his title against the 23-year-old star
Joe Louis. Realizing that Louis would be a heavy favorite and being an astute businessman,
Joe Gould negotiated an agreement with Mike Jacobs, head of 20th Century Sporting Club, a competitor to Madison Square Garden, whereby Braddock would receive 10% of the promoter's future gate receipts. At
Comiskey Park, in front of fifty thousand fans, Braddock knocked Louis down in the first round of their
June 22 1937 bout, but Louis recovered and dominated the bout, winning by an eighth round stoppage. According to Braddock, Louis threw far more punches than Baer had.
Although Braddock never complained, few knew that during the fight with Louis, Braddock actually received medication for arthritis. Braddock barely lifted his left during the fight because the medicine numbed him like a muscle relaxant. Braddock's only lucky punch happened in an uppercut, simply since he failed to raise his left over his head. His follow up punch missed Louis's chin, and slammed into Louis's chest. The punch cracked around the auditorium. A punch only an inch short of its target kept Braddock from retaining the title. Joe Louis worked Braddock over in the subsequent rounds, added twenty-three stitches, and moving a tooth right through his mouthpiece and into his lip. Joe Louis is on record as saying Braddock was "the most courageous fighter I ever fought." Braddock is purported to have aided Louis with some of his tax problems with the IRS later in life and the two developed an abiding friendship.
Retirement, World War II
Braddock always said he wanted his hand raised in his final fight. His last ring performance was in 1938, when he fought Welsh boxer Tommy Farr. Braddock came from behind to win a unanimous decision, breaking and bloodying Farr's nose, cracking two of his ribs, and knocking him down three times. The last two rounds were considered by many sportswriters to be the best of Braddock's life.
Following his retirement, Braddock and manager Joe Gould both enlisted into the
U.S. Army in 1942, where they eventually became first lieutenants. Before the war ended, Braddock served on the island of
Saipan, where he trained enlisted men in hand-to-hand combat. In 1944, he received the
James J. Walker Award in recognition of his long and meritorious service to the boxing industry.
Later in life, working as an
Operating Engineer in
Local 825
, he helped to construct the
Verrazano Narrows Bridge, and also worked as a marine equipment surplus supplier, running generators and welding equipment. Braddock and his wife Mae raised their three children, Jay, Howard and Rosemarie, in a house they bought in
North Bergen, New Jersey.
On his passing in 1974 at the age of 69, James J. Braddock was interred in the
Mount Carmel Cemetery in
Tenafly, New Jersey. He was inducted into the
International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2001. The
James J. Braddock North Hudson County Park
in North Bergen is named in his honor.
The film: Cinderella Man
The
2005 biographical film Cinderella Man tells the story of James J. Braddock. Directed by
Ron Howard, and starring
Russell Crowe as Braddock with
Renée Zellweger as his wife Mae, the movie had an estimated budget of $88 million and grossed $108.5 million world-wide.
Paul Giamatti, playing Braddock's manager Joe Gould, was nominated for the
Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actor. The role of neighbor Sara Wilson was played by
Rosemarie DeWitt, who is Braddock's real-life granddaughter (daughter of Braddock's daughter Rosemarie Braddock and husband Kenny DeWitt).
Although the film received many positive reviews (83% were positive according to
Rottentomatoes.com), some critics argued that part of Braddock's journey was glamorized too much by director Ron Howard.
One example is that throughout the film,
Max Baer (Braddock's final opponent at the climax of the movie) is portrayed in a semi-hostile (and inaccurate) manner. The character of Baer in the movie is portrayed as an arrogant villain who shows no remorse after killing men in the ring. In reality, Baer was badly shaken by the one death he caused, giving money to
Frankie Campbell's wife, Elsie Camilli and her young son, Frankie Jr. from a boxing exhibition held just prior to his bout with Braddock. Baer's son, actor
Max Baer Jr. of
The Beverly Hillbillies fame, has stated that he remembered his father having nightmares over the bout.
Max Baer was flamboyant and high spirited, laughing and joking regularly. However, this was more for show than to be malicious. In reality he was regarded by those who knew him best as humble, gentle, and sensitive, once remarking, "The only thing I don't like about boxing is that usually some guy gets hurt, and it's not me."
Further Information
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