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Showing posts with label Jack McAuliffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack McAuliffe. Show all posts

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Tom O'Rourke, manager of Joe Walcott

1922-12-10 The Evening Telegram (New York, NY) (page 8)
FIGHTERS I HAVE HANDLED
As told to George B. Underwood
By World famous Managers, Trainers and Seconds
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Joe Walcott, the Giant Killer, as Seen by Tom O'Rourke, Who Discovered and Campaigned Him--Big or Small, They All Looked the Same to the Barbadoes Demon--Settled Debt with Choynski for Dixon.
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(Copyrighted by G. B. Underwood.)
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This is the seventh article of the series on famous figures of the ring as related to America's leading writer of boxing by world's famous managers, trainers and handlers. In previous installments Tom O'Rourke told Mr. Underwood of George Dixon, Joe Humphries of Terry McGovern, Dan McKettrick of Willie Lewis, Jimmy Johnson of Jem Driscoll, Ike Dorgan of Frank Moran and Sam Wallach of Leach Cross. O'Rourke today gives Mr. Underwood his second contribution, telling of Joe Walcott, the Barbadoes Demon. Fistiana greatly is enriched by these personal and intimate glimpses of the ring's greatest heroes. These articles appear in this paper every Sunday.
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If you had asked any of the great fighters of the old Horton law days, from middleweight up to heavyweight, who was the last man in the world they would like to see in the corner opposite them, it is 100 to 1 that, if they answered truthfully, nine out of ten would reply, Joe Walcott.

Walcott, never more than a welterweight and generally fighting as a lightweight, was the most feared fighter of his time. Under rough and tumble conditions he could whip any man in the world, and under Marquis of Queensberry rules most of them.

I have seen all of the great heavyweights of the last fifty years. There is not one who I would be afraid to send Joe Walcott up against, or one who Joe himself wouldn't fall all over himself to get a crack at. I do not bar Jim Jeffries, either. In fact, Jeffries himself once came to me and said:--

"Tom, I see you are challenging all the heavyweights in behalf of Walcott. Don't include me in that list. It would take me at least ten rounds to size the fellow up rightly and know how to fight him. Even then I would have my troubles with him. He's built like a gorilla and can give and take almost as much punishment as one of them."

You must remember that little Walcott knocked out Joe Choynski in seven rounds shortly after Choynski had fought Jeffries a fierce twenty round draw.

Jeffries said that Choynski hit him the hardest blow he ever was struck, the punch driving the teeth on both jaws through his lips. Jim would have changed his opinion if he had fought Walcott. Joe could hit twice as hard and fast as Choynski.

Proof of the respect and fear with which Walcott was held by the heavyweights of his time was the way they avoided him. I posted a certified cheque for $5,000 with a New York newspaper as a forfeit for Walcott to fight Jim Corbett and Kid McCoy on the same night, allowing Walcott one-half hour's rest in between bouts, Corbett and McCoy to toss up to see which would first tackle the Barbadoes Demon.

Both ignored the offer, despite it would give each a chance to make a big wad of needed money. Corbett came to me later and tried to laugh it off, saying:--

"Why, of course, you didn't mean it, Tom. I understand what it was--great publicity. Why, I would make a monkey out of your gorilla man, and you know it!"

"I know it, eh?" I replied. "What I do know is that money talks and that I have a certified cheque for $5,000 posted with a reputable newspaper guaranteeing that Walcott will whip both you and McCoy on the same night, and I know that neither you nor McCoy can be pulled in the ring with Walcott with a team of horses!"

Rolls Maher in Mud.

They rightly called Joe Walcott the Barbadoes Demon. Joe was only five feet one inch in height, but he was about as broad as he was tall and his gorilla-like arms hung down almost to his knees. He had the reach of a towering six footer and could hit like no man I ever have seen before or since his time, not even excepting Fitzsimmons or Peter Maher.

Walcott, by the way, once rolled Peter Maher all over Coney Island Boulevard. This is how it happened:--

Soon after I brought Walcott to New York I sent him down to Coney Island to help train George Dixon for Little Chocolate's fight with Fred Johnson, the English featherweight champion. Maher came into Dixon's training quarters one day. Joe was curled up on the floor by the fire just like a dog. Maher looked in the door and seeing Joe with his queer bullet shaped head and great arms stretched out there, turned with a grin to me and said:--

"Bedad, Tom, I've a mind to poke him an' see if he's got a tail!"

"Keep away from him, Peter," I warned, "or he'll smear that Irish face of yours all over the map!"

Mind you Walcott was asleep and hadn't heard a word of it. A few days later Maher and his sparring partner encountered Dixon and Walcott on the road. Peter was in high glee and after joshing with Dixon told George he was going to find out whether or not Walcott had a tail hidden under the back of his shirt.

Peter grabbed Joe. Joe grabbed Peter. The next place Peter found himself was on his back in the middle of a puddle, with his own sparring partner on top of him.

Walcott had cross-buttocked Maher down and rolled him in the mud and then had grabbed his sparring partner and flopped him on top of Peter.

Right now, when old Peter tells of it he will exclaim:--

"Begorrah, that naygur Walcott wasn't a man at all--at all! Shure, he was a divil!"

The first time I ever heard of Walcott he was a cook on one of the coast line boats between Boston and the Barbadoes. I had Dixon on a theatrical tour and we were showing in Miner's Theatre on the Bowery. One night George said to me:--

"Tom, there's another little coon up Boston way who can whip his weight in wildcats. He's a cook on one of the coast liners. I saw him at one of the smokers down East and he knocked a fellow twice as big as himself clean over the ropes. My friends tell me he is going to enter next week's amateur boxing and wrestling tournament in Mechanics Building, Boston. You'd better run down and bring him back with you. It'll be worth your while."

I told Dixon I would run down to Boston and look the fellow over, anyway. So the next Thursday I went to Boston to see the final competitions in the amateur tournament.

Walcott Cleans Up.

Walcott was entered in both lightweight and middleweight boxing events and in the lightweight wrestling championship as well.

In the lightweight boxing championship, Walcott fought three men and knocked them all cold. He disposed of two of his middleweight opponents by the knockout route, and then fought a fellow named Kelly in the final to what the judges called a draw. In my mind Walcott was a clear winner.

In between his six boxing bouts he took part in three wrestling bouts and won them all. Joe came out of Mechanics Building that night amateur lightweight champion boxer and wrestler, and with a tie for the middleweight boxing championship as well.

Yes, you're right, I came with him. I knew a good fighter when I saw one, and you bet I was quick to take Walcott under my wing.

Well, I brought Walcott on to New York and made him a member of my Dixon show. He was green and unschooled in boxing, so while I was teaching him the fundamentals of boxing I kept him wrestling nightly with the show, meeting all comers. I boxed regularly with Walcott at the start, just as I had with Dixon, and what he knew of the manly art he learned from me.

While we were in New York the city was plastered with posters telling of a show Jack McAuliffe, the lightweight champion, was to take part in at Madison Square Garden. McAuliffe agreed to meet any three men the public would select and forfeit $500 to any or all whom he failed to stop inside of three rounds.

Walcott, in his strolls around the Bowery, noticed one of the posters. The day of the Garden bouts he came to me and asked if he could go on early at Miner's that night and get away. When I asked him what for, he replied:--

"There's a fellow named McAuliffe who is going to give $500 to any man that stays three rounds. I want to get that $500."

"Don't you want to stay with this show, Joe?" I asked.

He replied that he did.

"Well," I replied, "we want only winners at this show. Don't go fooling around McAuliffe or you'll lose to him and lose your job, too."

"Mister O'Rourke," he replied, "there ain't no man in the world who can knock me out in three rounds!"

That's how confident Walcott was when he first started in the game. I would have let him fight McAuliffe, only I was a mighty good friend of Jack's and didn't want to crab his game. We were making good with the show and there was plenty of money in sight without interfering with McAuliffe.

Later, Jack came down to Miner's to see our show, and after seeing Walcott in action acknowledged to me that Walcott could kill him. Jack said he himself could whip any man of his weight in the world, but that Walcott was more of a gorilla than he was a man.

A Stalking Horse.

To show you how cagey McAuliffe was, let me tell you how he sidetracked Austin Gibbons. Gibbons had fought McAuliffe in a short bout once and given Jack a tough go. Jack didn't want to meet Austin again. McAuliffe then was tied up with Judge Murphy, the power behind the throne at the Palace A. C., of Coney Island. The public wanted McAuliffe to take on Gibbons there. McAuliffe said he was willing, but that Gibbons first must meet Joe Walcott. The rather unsuspecting Gibbons agreed to a match with Walcott, and Joe knocked him out in three rounds.

Then when Gibbons' supporters again tried to arrange a McAuliffe-Gibbons bout McAuliffe sneeringly exclaimed:--

"What! Me, the lightweight champion, fight a man whom O'Rourke's green coon knocked out in three rounds? Nothing doing! Let Gibbons go out and make a reputation and earn the right to fight me!"

After the Gibbons-Walcott fight Joe accompanied us on the road with the Dixon show. We hit a town in Pennsylvania. Our posters advertised that Dixon agreed to stop any one or forfeit $50.

When the show opened that night a big, brawny 190 pound miner stepped on the stage to answer Dixon's challenge.

I told him Dixon was only a bantam and that our offer stood only for men of his weight.

The miner replied that our advertising poster did not stipulate any weight and called for us to make good our advertisement. He was a local favorite and the house was with him, loudly declaring Dixon must make good.

I stepped to the front of the stage and started in telling the crowd that it wasn't right to compel the bantamweight champion to risk injury at the hands of a heavyweight, but the crowd howled me down. I raised my hand for silence and then declared:--

"All right, Dixon will fight him! But first let your man go on with another little colored fellow here with our show. He only weighs 130 pounds, but he will fight your man. If you man beats this chap then your big fellow can fight Dixon."

"Don't go on with the dub!" yelled some of the crowd to their representative. "Fight the champion, Dixon, or no one!"

Finally, after a long confab and upon my firm insistence that the heavyweight fight Walcott first the heavyweight sneeringly consented to go on with Walcott.

"Those white folks think I'm a dub, eh?" muttered Walcott as we were putting on the gloves. "I'll show 'em!"

He certainly did "show 'em." Joe walked right out of his corner and buried the big fellow under a swirling shower of lefts and rights. One of Joe's rights thudded home to the jaw in the first minute's fighting and knocked the fellow out for a good half hour.

"Well, I'm glad I didn't fight Dixon," groaned the big miner, after we finally brought him around. "If I had fought the champion he probably would have killed me!"

The one big thing the public goes wrong in as regards professional boxing is that, like that Pennsylvania miner, they generally figure on the name rather than the man. That is why a champion almost invariably enters the ring a heavy favorite.

Great Fight with Lavigne.

Probably the most talked of fight in the history of American boxing was Walcott's famous go with Kid Lavigne at Maspeth, L. I. Lavigne, lightweight champion at the time, finally agreed to a match with Walcott provided the weights be 133 pounds at three P. M. The agreement was that Walcott should stop Lavigne inside fifteen rounds or forfeit the purse.

While Joe could shave down to the lightweight limit and still be strong at that time he could not reduce to 133 pounds without suffering from stomach cramps. Three times, when he was training for Lavigne, we had to go out and carry Joe home off the road because of his collapsing with the cramps.

Walcott and Lavigne weighed in for their fight in the Turkish baths at the corner of Broome street and the Bowery. Walcott weighed 131½ pounds and Lavigne 132½ pounds.

There is no need rehearsing that fight to you or your readers. Who hasn't heard of it--the fiercest, bloodiest, closest waged combat in the history of the roped square? Both Lavigne and Walcott fought like wildcats from the opening gong. They were both game as bulldogs and could hit like triphammers and withstand all kinds of punishment.

At the end of the sixth round little Dixon, who was assisting me in seconding Walcott, told Joe that he wasn't giving everything he had, but he better do it or he would lose our money. "If you don't knock him out quickly," warned George, "you're liable to get the cramps and he'll whip you!"

"I can lick him any time I want," boasted Walcott. "I'll cut loose and knock him out in a round or so."

But when Walcott came to his corner at the end of the seventh he was seized with the cramps. They attacked him so bad that he couldn't sit down, but stood up and grasped the ring ropes while we kneaded and massaged him.

During the last eight rounds of the Lavigne fight Walcott suffered continually with those cramps. Those who attended the mill thought his standing up between rounds was mere braggadocio. They little knew what agony Joe really was in.

That was the big reason why Lavigne was on his feet at the end of the fifteenth round. The white boy put up a wonderful battle, and I don't want to take any credit away from him. But if Walcott had not been seized with those cramps Joe would have stopped Lavigne inside the distance.

When I started talking of Walcott I told you how he knocked out Joe Choynski in seven rounds not very long after Choynski had gone twenty rounds to a draw with Jeffries. I was eight years arranging that match between Walcott and Choynski.

How It All Started.

It all started the night of the Dixon-Skelly match during the three day carnival attending the Sullivan-Corbett fight at New Orleans, in 1892.

Choynski then was managed by Parson Davies, a very close and intimate friend of mine. Skelly offered Joe $75 to second him against Dixon. Choynski induced Davies to come to me and asked if I would have any objections to Choynski going behind Skelly against my man Dixon. I replied that I had not, for Dixon would annihilate Skelly, no matter who was in Jack's corner, and I was glad that Choynski had the chance to pick up $75.

Well, when Dixon and Skelly came to ring centre for instructions from Mr. Duffy, the referee, that night, Choynski, in a voice that could plainly be heard throughout the hall, grabbed the referee by the arm and said:--

"Mr. Duffy, you'll have to watch this fellow, Dixon, closely, tonight, for he's a very foul fighter!"

Dixon almost turned white at that utterly unwarranted accusation. Stepping up to Choynski he asked:--

"Joe, did you ever see me fight?"

"No," Choynski grudgingly acknowledged.

"No, you never have seen me fight," responded Little Chocolate, "and you, nor no one else, ever has seen me foul. There is not a foul against me in all my record. Yet you step up before this hostile Southern audience, who already has protested against a negro like myself meeting a white man, and further inflame them against me by making me out as a foul fighter!

"Jack Skelly himself has seen me fight many times. He knows my record fully. I know Jack Skelly is man enough and honest enough for him to truthfully tell whether by act or reputation I am a foul fighter."

And to Skelly's credit Jack truthfully declared:--

"Mr. Duffy, my opponent is as clean a boxer as there is in the ring!"

I was boiling with rage at Choynski's accusation. Holding myself in as best I could, I told Choynski:--

"Choynski, you came crawling to me and asked if I had any objections to letting you second Skelly, so you could make $75. I told you, all right! and that I was glad to have you. Now in return for it you try to inflame this Southern crowd against this little negro boy.

"Let me tell you, Choynski, I'm going to make you pay for this! I've got another little coon named Walcott under my wing and he's going to fight you and give you the worst beating you ever had. Unless you deliberately lay down and quit he'll play with you as a cat would with a mouse before he knocks you out. You'll regret this baiting of Dixon to your dying day when Walcott gets through with you!"

It was eight long years before I could inveigle Choynski into the ring with Walcott, however. Parson Davies naturally steered him clear of the match. The Parson knew fighters well enough to know what Walcott would do to Choynski. Finally, however, Davies broke with Choynski and Joe lost the advice and instructions of that splendid handler of fighters. I had an interest in the Broadway A.C. here in New York and I offered Choynski a match with Walcott and he accepted it. That, mind you, was eight years after the episode at New Orleans.

Settling the Debt.

Choynski came on here from California to train for Walcott. The betting was 5 to 1, with Choynski favorite. The talent couldn't see what chance little Walcott had against the man who fought Jim Jeffries a fierce twenty round draw.

I took one bet from Al Smith, the well known sporting man of that time, of $1,000 to $200. Walcott weighed 135 pounds and Choynski 175 pounds, you must remember.

Well, in the first round Walcott knocked Choynski down seven times. Each time Referee Charlie White gave Choynski the benefit of the count. It was shortly after the McCoy-Choynski fight, in which Choynski's supporters claimed that White had given Choynski a fast count. Old Good Eye gave Choynski no chance to claim a quick count in the Walcott match. He dragged out the count each time.

Every time that Walcott would floor Choynski in the first round of that fight, John L. Sullivan, who was seconding the Californian, would tumble down off the ring platform, thinking the fight was over, and start for the dressing room. John L. had to jump down, turn around and jump back again almost a dozen times before Walcott finally knocked Choynski out in the seventh round.

Joe Walcott paid Joe Choynski back in full that night for the trick Choynski attempted to pull on poor little Dixon in New Orleans eight years before.

The only man approaching Walcott's weight who could give Joe a real fight when Joe was right was Mysterious Billy Smith, a real fighter and one of the great champions of the ring. Joe beat Billy frequently, but the battles always were close and fiercely fought.

Before one of their fights, Smith sent word to Joe that he was going to bite his ears off.

"Never mind, Joe," I joshed, when he told me of it, "if he bites your ears off he will be disqualified and lose the fight anyway."

"Huh!" snorted Joe. "Ah druver lose all the fights in the worl', Mister O'Rourke, than to lose mah ears!"

Under the greatest fighting physique any man ever boasted Walcott had the brain and feelings of a child. Physically and anatomically speaking, however, what a fighter, what a truly wonderful fighter he really was! There never was a man of his poundage his equal and I doubt if there ever will be.

Monday, March 21, 2011

1890-03-21 Jack McAuliffe W-KO47 Jimmy Carroll [California Athletic Club, San Francisco, CA, USA]

1890-03-22 Daily Alta California (San Francisco, CA) (page 8)
CARROLL KNOCKED OUT.
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Jack McAuliffe Defeats Jimmy Carroll in Forty-seven Rounds.

The fight at the California Athletic Club last night between Jack McAuliffe and Jimmy Carroll for a purse of $3000 and a side bet of $5000, resulted in McAuliffe knocking Carroll out in the forty-seventh round. McAuliffe weighed 134½ and Carroll 135½ pounds. Up to the forty-sixth round it looked as if Carroll had the best of it. He stabbed McAuliffe with his left in the face at least fifty times. In the twelfth round Carroll had a narrow escape from being knocked out by his head striking the floor as both men fell in a clinch with McAuliffe on top. Carroll, during the fight, tried to land with his swinging blows, but could not get them in with much effect. McAuliffe's strength was failing and it seemed as if one good blow would have put him out. He fought desperately, however, in the last round, and his wild strikes caught Carroll in the stomach. The men clinched and Carroll fell. He was up before the ten seconds expired, but weak and groggy. McAuliffe then forced the fight, although he could hardly stand, an
d it looked as if his legs would go out from under him. He got in a swinging right-hander on Carroll's jaw and the latter fell to the floor, striking his head heavily. He was unable to rise, and McAuliffe was declared the winner.

The Directors of the Club have determined to make a match between Jackson and Joe McAuliffe.


1890-03-22 Daily Evening Bulletin (San Francisco, CA) (page 3)
McAULIFFE WINS.
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Result of His Encounter with Jimmy Carroll at the California Club.
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Last evening Jack McAuliffe and Jimmy Carroll battled in the rooms of the California Athletic Club for the lightweight championship of the world, a purse of $3,000 and a wager of $5,000 a side. It was the most scientific battle ever fought in this city, and Jimmy Carroll, who is at least thirteen years the senior of his opponent, astonished everybody who witnessed the contest by his remarkable fighting. Both men showed in the ring at 9 o'clock, and it was announced that Carroll weighed 135½ pounds and McAuliffe 134½ pounds. Both men were in the pink of condition.

Until the last ten rounds McAuliffe was the aggressor, and then Carroll took a hand and forced the pace, having the better of his opponent. The move was an unfortunate one for Carroll, however, as McAuliffe watched his opportunity and as Carroll came at him, in the forty-seventh round, with a left-hand smash at the body, he crooked his rights and, throwing all his strength into the blow, landed on Jimmy's jaw, and Carroll fell limp on the floor. He arose, however, gamely, and fought back well until another blow on the jaw sent him down and out.


1890-03-22 The St. Louis Republic (St. Louis, MO) (page 3)
CARROLL KNOCKED OUT
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M'AULIFFE WINS AFTER A LONG AND HOTLY-CONTESTED FIGHT.
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The Betting Previous to the Battle--The Men in the Ring--Fight by Rounds--The Long Reach of the Winner Stands Him in Good Stead.
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Special to The Republic.

San Francisco, March 21.--There was not an empty seat in the exhibition-room of the California Athletic Club to-night, the attraction being the great glove fight between Jimmy Carroll and Jack McAuliffe for the light championship of the world. All day long the pool-rooms had been as busy as bee hives, and it is estimated that $20,000 was wagered on the results. Most of the money was laid at odds of $100 to $60 on McAuliffe. The men were both trained down to the finest possible shape and prepared in all respects for the fight of their lives.

No pugilistic event ever held in this city created more interest than this contest. Lovers of this class of sport had been looking forward to the fight ever since McAuliffe's arrival here about two months ago, when a final settlement of conditions was agreed upon, and during the last few weeks the coming contest awakened the keenest interest. This was due in a great measure to the large amount of money at stake upon the result. The purse offered by the club amounted to $3,000, of which $500 was to go to the loser. In addition to this sum each principal posted $5,000 on the fight, making the total sum which would fall into the hands of the winner $12,500. Before the terms of the contest were completed Carroll demanded that both men should fight at 133 pounds, but McAuliffe declared that he could not get down to that weight without injury to himself, and it was finally agreed that the men should weigh in before the contest at 137 pounds.

A number of sporting men arrived here from Eastern points some time ago, attracted by the coming fight, and it was freely reported that they had brought large amounts of money with them which they intended to place on McAuliffe. When the match was first made Carroll was a favorite here, but soon after the announcement was made that there was so much McAuliffe money in the market Carroll's admirers evinced a decided unwillingness to come forward, the general impression being that they were holding out for large odds. The consequence was that up to the day of the fight the amount wagered was not as large as expected. Two to one on McAuliffe was what Carroll's friends wanted. The Eastern supporters of McAuliffe made offers ranging from $100 to $80, to $100 to $60, but they found but few takers, though the pool-rooms during the last few days have been crowded with friends of both men.

So far as the condition of the men was concerned it was regarded as perfect in both cases. The men met at the California Club last night and selected seconds. Carroll selected Martin Murphy and Florrie Barnett. McAuliffe announced that Billy Madden and Jack Dempsey would be in his corner. Carroll immediately raised a strong objection to Dempsey on the ground that he was an employee of the club, and as such was disqualified to act as second. The directors pointed out that Carroll himself, who is also an employee of the club, had acted as second of McCarthy in the latter's fight with Dempsey last month. They therefore suspended the rule and allowed Dempsey to go behind McAuliffe to-night. Hiram Cook was selected as referee.

NO FOOLING ALLOWED.

Owing to some rumors afloat yesterday that the contest was not to be a genuine one, President Fulda last night informed Carroll and McAuliffe that if at any time during the contest there was any evidence of "fooling," the fight would be stopped and the men thrown out of the ring.

As early as 6 o'clock this evening spectators began to assemble at the gymnasium of the California Club, and two hours later there was not a vacant seat in the large building, fully 2,000 persons being present. The betting became more brisk this evening, though the Carroll men still persisted in their demands for two to one, and considerable money was placed at those odds. Among the heaviest bets made was one of $2,000 to $1,000 on McAuliffe.

Previous to the contest an effort was made to pass a resolution instructing the board of directors to arrange a match between McAuliffe and Peter Jackson, but the club decided to leave the matter in the hands of the directors.

It was nearly 9 o'clock when the contestants, accompanied by their seconds, appeared in the ring. McAuliffe was the first to step over the ropes. Both men were received with much enthusiasm. The weights were announced as follows: McAuliffe, 134½; Carroll, 135½.

THE FIGHT BY ROUNDS.

Time was called at 9:10.

In the first round McAuliffe opened with a rush, but Carroll escaped by dodging. McAuliffe followed this in a moment and reached Carroll's neck three times with his right. McAuliffe made another rush and again found Carroll's neck, the men clinched and the round closed.

Second Round--Carroll opened by a rush on McAuliffe and jagged his jaw several times, McAuliffe returning with a hot right-hand blow in Carroll's ribs and followed it up with a swing on the neck. Carroll countered with a hard left one on Mac's jaw. The men then sparred cautiously till the close of the round.

Third Round--The men sparred a full minute and then Mac led out with his left, catching Carroll under chin, repeating it before Carroll had recovered from his first shock and a clinch followed. Carroll then tried a hard swing, but McAuliffe dodged. In the clinch that followed McAuliffe received a sharp upper cut.

Fourth Round--McAuliffe reached Carroll's ear with his right and then gave him a vicious upper-cut with his left. McAuliffe made a half dozen terrible lunges, all of which Carroll escaped by clean dodging until just before the round closed, when he received a sharp rap in the ribs, and immediately countered on McAuliffe's jaw.

Fifth Round--McAuliffe aimed for Carroll's jaw, but received a hard jab on the mouth, which sent him down on his knees. He rose at once and several rallies followed, in which Carroll received a left-hander on the neck.

Sixth Round--McAuliffe again caught Carroll in the jaw with a hard right-hander, and followed it up with two stinging blows in the wind. McAuliffe continued to play for his opponent's wind, and reached there several times with marvellous rapidity.

Seventh Round--McAuliffe continued the same tactics, and landed two more left-handed blows on Carroll's body. Some sharp fighting at close quarters followed, in which neither had any advantage. McAuliffe continued to do most of the leading, but Carroll escaped much punishment by clever dodging.

Eighth Round--There was little done till near the close, when there was a sharp rally in which Carroll received considerable pounding.

Ninth Round--McAuliffe's advantage in reach had served him well so far. There was another hot rally in this round, in which Carroll brought a little blood from McAuliffe's forehead. McAuliffe again rushed the fighting.

Tenth Round--McAuliffe landed on Carroll's ribs several times, though the blows were not hard. McAuliffe had a narrow escape from a swinging right-hander which just grazed his ear. He responded with a terrific right swing on Carroll's jaw.

Eleventh Round--McAuliffe opened the round with a hard left-hander on Carroll's stomach, but received in return a terrific jab in the mouth. McAuliffe then caught Carroll on the nose and the latter again countered on the neck.

Twelfth Round--This was the shortest round of the fight so far. There was a hot rally in which a number of blows were exchanged. A clinch followed, in which the men fell heavily to the floor, McAuliffe on top. Carroll rose and some terrific slugging at close quarters followed until both men were very groggy. Carroll here scored a clean knock-down by landing on McAuliffe's jaw.

Thirteenth Round--Both men fought hard for a knockout, although they were very tired. McAuliffe did most of the rushing, but just before the round closed Carroll gave him a staggering blow in the jaw, which almost sent him to the floor.

Fourteenth Round--Carroll seemed to be the fresher when the men came up. They sparred carefully, and there was little done during the first half of the round. Then Mac landed with his left on Carroll's cheek. The latter countered with a light tap on Mac's jaw.

Fifteenth Round--McAuliffe again found Carroll's wind hard. Just before the round closed Carroll forced matters, catching Mac heavily in the wind and again on the jaw. The latter saved himself from further punishment by a clinch.

Sixteenth Round--Mac landed well with his long left, and prevented Carroll from getting close enough to him to do damage with his left. Carroll seemed to be the stronger man. Little was done in this round except a right-hand stinger on Carroll's ribs from Mac's right.

Seventeenth Round--This round opened with a short rally, with honors about even. Both men were evidently very tired, and little else was done during the round.

Eighteenth Round--The men clinched and as they broke away Carroll upper-cut McAuliffe viciously and then gave him several right and left-handers which staggered him perceptibly. McAuliffe closed the round with a left-hand punch on Carroll's mouth.

Nineteenth Round--But little damage was done in the round until just at the close, when McAuliffe reached Carroll's ribs three times and each time received a sharp counter in the neck which staggered him.

Twentieth Round--Mac resumed punching operations on Carroll's body with but little effect. Carroll feinted several times, but made little effort to lead.

Twenty-first Round--Mac landed a hard right-hander on Carroll's jaw and attempted to follow it up with his left. Carroll escaped by a clever dodge. A moment later McAuliffe reached his neck and then gave him a left-hand swing in the ribs.

Twenty-second Round--McAuliffe again reached Carroll's neck. The latter tried to return the blow, but Mac jumped away. Carroll next staggered back from a right-hander in the cheek. Carroll attempted a pivot blow several times, but failed to reach McAuliffe as the latter ducked cleverly.

Twenty-third Round--Carroll gave McAuliffe a left hand swing full in the mouth.

Twenty-fourth Round--Mac landed hard on Carroll's wind twice and received a hot one in the throat.

Twenty-fifth Round--Both men did considerable leading, but the blows were light, with the exception of one right-hander of Carroll's which caught McAuliffe in the ear, hard.

The twenty-sixth round was very tame, but in the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth there was some sharp fighting at close quarters, in which McAuliffe had the advantage. He pounded Carroll about the neck and body till the latter staggered under his blows. In the next two rounds there was some heavy hitting with very little advantage to either man.

BEGINNING TO GET WEAK.

The next few rounds were generally in McAuliffe's favor, both men displaying much cleverness. There were a number of rallies, in which considerable pounding was done by McAuliffe. Mac's blows seemed to have greater effect when the men were not fighting at close quarters. McAuliffe had the advantage nearly all the time, as Carroll seldom reached him. Once McAuliffe landed a straight right-hand blow on Carroll's neck, which had a staggering effect. At the close of the thirty-sixth round the men, while not strong, were both in fair condition. The thirty-seventh round was very tame, but the men sparred the next round with some slight exchanges and then Carroll commenced to pound away at Mac's face and jaw. Carroll reached his mark more than a half-dozen times and Mac was evidently becoming dazed. He struck out weakly, but Carroll would get away safely and come back with another jab to Mac's face. Carroll repeated this performance in the next round, though with not such good effect. The fortieth round was quiet.

McAuliffe recovered a little in the next round, but in the forty-second Carroll gave him an ugly upper-cut, and then planted several more hard ones on his nose and face, causing the blood to flow freely and making McAuliffe stagger. In the forty-third round McAuliffe was plainly getting weaker, and a number of blows on his jaw from Carroll's fist in this round did not improve his condition.

McAuliffe ended the fight in the forty-seventh round, after savage slugging, by knocking Carroll out by a blow in the mouth.