Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1940 — Page 22
"SPORTS. ..
By E dd ie Ash
THE Chicago Cubs have put out a fancy player roster
and record book packed with
information about the 1940
Bruin players. ... Incidentally, the Cubs used to be Indianapolis fans’ favorite big league team until Cincinnati's Roaring Reds took over in these parts.
The Cubs have two native
Hoosiers on their squad. ...
Bob Sturgeon, rookie shortstop, was born in Clinton; Ind., : and attended grammar school there before the family
moved to California. . . . He Red Birds last season.
played with the Columbu:
The veteran Billy Herman, second sacker, was born in New Albany and is a “Kentucky Hoosier.” . . . He starred for the Louisville Colonels and the Bruins paid a big price for him in August, 1931. - His best year was 1935 when he led the National League in total number of hits with 227, number of doubles with 57 and in number of sacrifice hits, 24. . . . He amassed a batting mark ‘of .341 and, in " addition, led the senior major loop’s second basemen in fielding.
Traffic Jam in Brooklyn Outfield
BROOKLYN'S DODGERS have
11 outfielders and Manager Leo
Durocher’s. biggest training camp problem will be the selection of the best tiio of ball hawks. ... None has a secure hold on any
position, it is said.
The candidates include four players who were fair competitors of 1939, four disappointments and three minor leaguers of promise. There are actually 12 outfielders on the Dodgers’ reserve list but the name of Goody Rosen, who finished last season with Montreal, is not included because Durocher will not take him to camp. Working from the bottom up there is Melo Almada, left-handed batter who compiled a mark of .214 last year and who failed to hit
for distance when he did connect. .
. . Gene Moore, of whom much
was expected in 1939, wound up with 225 after a thorough trial. 4. . Leo was certain Gene was a .28) hitter in a bad, slump but the season
ended before the slump. 8 =
ROY CULLENBINE, who signed with the Dodgers Monday for $25,000 after having been freed from the Detroit club by Judge Landis, batted a mere .240 last year, but Durocher is counting on Roy to capture one of the regular positions, figuring the ex-Tiger had an off year and was not used sufficiently. Tuck Stainback qualifies as one of the biggest disappointments
of the 1939 season.
Art Parks, purchased from Montreal in
1939 midseason was
. leading the Internationai’League in runs batted in at the time. ... He started off in good stride but tailed off a trifle and was benched. -
Koy Is Granted Best Chance
PARKS WENT to the bench when Larry MacPhail landed Dixie
Walker. . .
. Dixie whaled at a great pace for a few weeks, then
dropped, winding up with a .280 mark. . When Dixie slumped the Dodgers came up with Jimmy Ripple, and the ex-Giant won several games immediately with his timely
blows.
as a regular is Ernie Koy, whose
players who played in more than 75 games. . .
ing hitter in 1938 with .299 also. TE
The player with probably the best chance of opening the season
278 was the best mark of the . Ernie was the lead-
#
THE ROOKIE brigade consists of Lindsay Deal, who batted .316
with Montreal and finished the 1939
season with the Dodgers; Charley
Gilbert and Cal Chapman, who batted .317 and .346 respectively for
Nashville last year. ..
. Deal is 23 years old, Chapman 27, while
Gilbert has yet to reach his 21st birthday.
Of the 11 outfielders only Koy
batters, while Cullenbine is a switch hitter. .
and Stainback are right-handed . . Leo is not particular
how his outfielders swing as long as they produce with consistency. Sturm Had Busy Day at Joplin :
JOHNNY STRUM, Kansas City’s 1939 first sacker, is probably the only player who ever made all three putouts in a triple play with
each one at a different base.
* With Joplin in 193%, and runners on second and third, Sturm
took the shortstop’s throw at first to retire the batter and then
threw home to head off the man fiom third. . The runner returned toward tnird and was caught in a runup play and finally tagged at the plate by Sturm, who then sprinted
to third and retired the runner coming in from second. . runner evidently fell asleep somewhere along the line. .
to receive a trial with the Yankees p 4 s = COL. MATT WINN, Kentucky
. « The last .. Sturm is this spring. 2 : Derby chief, declares it is ine
evitable that there will be night horse racing at big running tracks.
. « « but won't’ predict how soon. Economic conditions are such,
says Winn, that workers can’t
get away in the afternoons to take in sporting events, as baseball proved. . . . There will be 42 night games in the National League this season with lights in six of the eight parks... . Only the Cubs and
the Bees’ parks are strictly daylight.
St. Joseph's and Kokomo Win
St. Joseph’s evened the score against out-of-state fives last night by tripping St. Norbert’s, 57 to 43, and Kokomo downed N. C. A. G. U,, 37 to 32, in a College Conference clash. Northwestern beat Butler, 32 to 30. Neal Mosser, crack St. Joseph's center, dropped in an even 25 points on nine field goals and seven free throws to lead the Pumas to their victory over St. Norbert’s. His total was only one point short of the all- * time St. Joseph's scoring record. The score was close throughout the first half, however, and Bowman's field goal gave the Pumas a 21-to-19 lead at the half. McNulty, a forward, was high point man for St. Norbert’s with four field goals. : Five games are on the docket
tonight, three of them in the State|s, Conference | EK
College Conference. games bring together Anderson at Taylor, Manchester at Huntington, and Hanover at Valparaiso, while other contests are Concordia at Defiance and Indiana Tech at Tiffin.
Where to Go—
TONIGHT Amateur Boxing — Golden Gloves Tournament, Armory, 7:15. Ice Show—Sonja Henie, Coliseum, 8:30. Billiards—State three-cushion tourney, Harry Cooler’s, 8:00. Basketball — Manual vs. Shortridge, Tech Gym, 8:00. Cathedral vs. Washington, Washe ' ington Gym, 8:00. : Broad Ripple vs. New Augusta, Ripple Gym 8.00. Park vs. Castleton, Park Gym,
: TOMORROW Ice. Show—Sonja Henie, Coliseum, 8:30. Basketball — Tech vs. Shelbyville, Tech Gym, 8:00. Sacred Heart vs. Howe, Sacred Heart Gym, 8:00, Pare vs. Russellville, Park Gym, 1:00, : Track—Butler vs. Michigan Normal, Fieldhouse, 1:30. SUNDAY Hockey—Indianapolis. vs. Hershey, Coliseum, 8:30.
‘Quarter Finals End Today in Florida
MIAMI BEACH, Fla, Feb. 8 (U. P.) ~The remainder of the quarter final matches of the Roney Plaza Invitational Tennis Tournament will be played today. In the opening quarter final yesterday National Champion Bobby : of Chicago won over Ed Alloo
~ of Hollywood, 1-6, 6-2, 6-4, while the].
veteran Martin Buxby upset Charles Hare of London, top-seeded foreign
star, 3-6, 6-3 1.
Basketball
Three games will be played tonight in the Bush-Feezle Sunday School League: : i—Central Christian vs. Rdzewoed M. E.
8—Central Baptist vs: Shelby M. E. 9-—8peedway M. E. vs. First Friends.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LEAGUE STANDINGS
Central Christian Central Baptists Specdway Baia snesven Shelb 5
YM. E. oveidss asin First Friends Edgewood
The schedule for the Em-Roe Girls’ Big Six League tonight at the H.A C.: 7:30—Seven UD, v5: Midnite Club. 8:30—~Branch 35 vs. H. A. C. 9:30—RCA vs. Maplehurst Dairy,
The standings of three BushFeezle leagues that have completed their schedules:
MONDAY LEAGUE Seeos: ..............'... 9
Bakauel
Ht
° FACTORY LEAGUE
Kingans Stokely-Van Camp .. Hoosier A. C. ..... eee :
TUESDAY LEAGUE
Sanmusl"
JeGoyler Printers Rockwood Local Beveridge Paper Co. ... 3arth Place ....,...... 4 400 [eds Ramblers -100 Arlington Market 4100
Tonight's scredule in : the BushFeezle League Champions’ Tournament at the Pennsy Gynt:
7—Inland Contaiver vs. Stewart Warner A. 8—Drikold vs. Goldsmith Secos. 9—Holy Cross Crusaders vs. Holy Cross Shamrocks (nontournament),
Entry fees and player lists for the 23d annual city tourney at the Pennsy Gym are to be in by this evening, Director H. G. Engelhardt warned today. The tournament committee of H. DeGolyer, R. Curry and Cliff Butler is to meet at 8 o'clock tonight.
Billiards Ace at Boys’ Club Tonight
Charles Peterson, billiards expert, is to give an exhibition of trick and fancy shots at the English Avenue Boys’ Club tonight at 8 o'clock. Peterson, the St. Louis veteran,
600 40
coamvol®
makes the balls do about everything:
but talk and promises the Boys’ Club members a rare performance.
+ |Bud Ward ‘Ragged,’
Takes Layoff
- SPOKANE, Wash., Feb. 9 (U. P.). ~—National Amateur Golf Champion Marvin (Bud) Ward said today he planned to take a two-weeks layoff from competition because of his ragged showing in recent California tournaments. Foon Ward said he planned to compete in the annual North-South Open at Pinehurst, N. C., and Bobby Jones’ Tournament at Augusta, Ga.
»
. Here's
. Run Tomorrow
Jolting Joe Is
$1 to Keep
the start of the semi-finals. : Both Open and Novice classes
Purdue Is Hot, In Top Form
By STEVE SNIDER United Press Staff Correspondent
CHICAGO, Feb. 9.—One of the prize contests in the long, thrillpacked basketball series between Purdue and Indiana comes up Saturday night and the most glamorless angle of the game may decide it.
Along about this time of the sea-
|son,- physical conditioning begins
to pay huge dividends. how Purdue's current front-runners wound up training for the Hoosiers: 1. Engaged in a 40-minute intrasquad ‘scrimmage. Score 74 to 42 —and just as dizzy as the result indicates. 2. Coach Ward (Piggy) Lambert, a bear on conditioning, permitted only a two-minute intermission between halves. The so-called regulars played three-fourths the time. This strenuous workout, Lambert hopes, will offset whatever advantage Indiana. gained in its Satutday night ‘engagement at DePaul. The Hoosiers eame back aftér their long mid-year layoff and walloped DePaul’s strong team with ridiculous ease. It was the same DePaul team that earlier had thumped Purdue by 12 points. If the Boilermakers drop this one, they may wind up in a triple tie for the lead. A defeat will leave Purdue with a record of four victories and one defeat, same as Indiana. Michigan, now without
ct. |the services of Tom Harmon who
has decided to study the rest of the year, can move up into the same
3 bracket by defeating Northwestern.
Saturday's favorites are Indiana over Purdue, Michigan over Northwestern, Illinois over Minnesota, Ohio State over Chicago, and Wisconsin over Iowa.
Butler Thinlies
Butler's trackmen will try again for the victory row at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow when they meet Michigan Normal in a dual meet at the Field-
) | house. It will be the second start g|of the year for the charges of | Coach Ray Sears, who got off on 399! the wrong foot Tuesday night in
losing to Purdue, 514-5 to 381-5. Last year up at Ypsilanti, Normal
000 | defeated the Bulldogs, 52 to 42.
The men who scored 39 of Butler's 42 will be in action again tomorrow, while for Michigan only 12 of the 52 “points” will be returning. The Bulldogs will be depending to a great extent on their cocaptains, William Southworth and Charles Marshall. Marshall, in the Purdue clash, broke both his own and the Fieldhouse record for the 50-yard high hurdles, doing the distance in 64 seconds. He also’ won the low hurdles and tied for first place in the high jump. Southworth, showing mid-season form against the Boilermakers, won both the mile and half-mile.
Steele, Kampfer Are Paired
Ray Steele, 218, a bronzed Californian generally rated among the first five heavies in the game, will go against Hans Kampfer, 230, skilled German performer, in the wrestling feature’ next Tuesday night at the Armory. The powerful Kampfer was called upon to substitute for Jumping Joe Savoldi last Tuesday and downed Leo Numa, Pacific Coast matman, in consecutive falls. Hans is listed as the best German grappler to see action in this country in the past five years. Steele, a rugged and speedy performer in the ring, is touted in some quarters: as the “uncrowned champ.” He recently returned to this country after a year’s inva-
Les Holder, Rhodius Community Center Novice flyweight, hopes to go places in the beginners’ class of The Times-Legion Golden Gloves tourney, He's still-in the official lineup of leather pushers and probably will see action in ¢he tournament tonight.
Duck and Cover Upl—It's : Golden Gloves Tonight
Fourth push in The Times-Legion Golden Gloves drive gets under way at the Armory tonight and let the punches land where they may! A furious pace is expected to be set by the young amateur knuckledusters as they battle in the last of the preliminary eliminations and
contain fast talent and the grade of entertainment tonight probably will match anything gone before. Efforts will be made to put the first match in the ring not later than 7:15 and referees, judges and timers are requested to report ahead of the usual time. : Pairings to Be Posted All boxers were to weigh in and take the physical examination at the Armory this afternoon between 2 and 5 o'clock. Drawings for the night’s bouts will be made at 6 o'clock and pairings posted in the dressing room. : There will be heavy competition in both classes on account of the heavy field in some divisions. The list of eligibles prior to the weighin contained 32 in the Open class and 49 Novices. Since only one more show remains—Feb, 16—it will be necessary to stage at least 30 bods tonight. : Heavyweights .will be called ; to throw leather for the first sing in the event all get by the physi-
cal checkup. The evening's sched- gf
ule calls for rapid-fire action and the boxers will be requested to: be prepared fo meet the step-up in arrangements. J Over Three Rounds All bouts are scheduled over the three-round route, two minutes to the round. Decisions will be given
by the referee and two judges with |B°
draw verdicts barred by Golden Gloves rules.
The tourney survivors have had K
plenty of training time by now and are better prepared to slam bang it the full distance. The first three shows were featured by a galaxy of knockouts and this fourth one probably will supply an added display of heavy artillery, Open Champs Form Team The Open class is working toward gaining coveted places on The Times-Legion team that will participate in the Tournament of Golden Gloves Champions at Chicago Feb. 26, 27, 28. Ticket prices tonight: reserved, $1; general admission, 50 cents. The Armory box office opens at 6 o'clock. Reserved seat pasteboards were on sale downtown today at Haag’s Claypool Hotel drugstore. : 1
They're Ready, Wil ling and Able to Punc h and Jab fo Gh ory “
Times Photo.
One of the leading confenders in The Times-Legion ,Golden Gloves tourney is John Hawkins, Bess
A. C. lightweight.
You see him doing a round at the fast bag. He's in the Open class and his division
is down to four; the other contenders being Lester Johnson, Boyce A. C., and Sam Haslet and Joe Sgro, both of English Avenue Boys’ Club. 'Hawkins, like his rivals, is a smart boxer and hard puncher.
And Here's How They Measure
LOUIS GODOY 25 9409000090000 Age 0000 BLLIRO 27 204 ......... Weight. ......... 202 6 feet 134 in... Height ..6 feet, #4 in. 76 in. . Reach 41 in, .. Chest (normal) .. 44 in, ...Chest (expanded) 16% in. ...... Neck qin. ........ Waist ........ 35 in. 14 in. ....... Biceps ..... 15% in. 12 in, ....,, Forearm ...... 12 in. 8 in. "est 00000 Wrist sinensis 93% in. in. .,.... 22 in. ceesssee Thigh 20000000 24 in. 150M. c.ooeses. CalE oovanees 17 I 10 in. 00 000800 Ankle "Seer 11 in.
Fields’ 714 Tops Bowlers
Paul Fields of the Universal League takes over the bowling crown today after crashing through with a 714 that topped the efforts of City pinmen last night. Fourteen points behind is Bob Shaw of the Parkway Recreation League and Bunny Minardo is in show place with a 694. Al Etheridge, Industrial kegler, hit a hot streak last night at the Indiana ‘Alleys, got nine straight rikes and then suffered a slight case of the jitters when the crowd began to collect for the “kill.” But anyway, Al got a 661 for a spot among the leaders. > The 600 ranks: Go Bihar. Universal oc 11111101 Larry Rudbeck, Universal F. Shaw, Parkway Rec. E. Laker, Thurs. Night Al Etheridee, Industrial sum, Kingan’s . . Hindel, industrial . . Kriner, aft . .
a S. Smith, Universal ... ves Erdman, Thurs. Nicht Handicap ..... 628 E. Hornberger, Wencke. Alph
RE . Zappia urs. Nig andieap.... Maurice Schoen, Industrial Dan Mattroda, Schweitzer-Cummins.. Wuensch, Schuster Coal Cv Barnard Jen Wh
Kiefer, Universal . ........ Wenning, Diamond Chain ... Ralph Brooks. Industrial .. Colvin, Printcraft . end John Shelley, Industrial ... Ray Cadick. Industrial .... Burrell, Parkwav Rec. ..... Cooke, Printeraft =. ....... Cullivan, Koch Furniture .. Lauck, St. Catherine’s ...... sesresnce . Pavey, ntcraft Green, vrs. Night Handican ......, Friedman, Thurs. Night Handicap .... Rast, Related Foods
W. Weaver, Printeraft Stonebreaker, Universal
Iron Man Glenn Tries for Lost Glory Tomorrow
PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—Glenn Cunningham, “iron horse” of the middle-distance runners who has been conquered in his last three mile starts, tries again tomorrow night to regain some of his former glory when he runs the mile in the Pennac Games. Twice he has bowed to bespectacled Chuck Fenske of Wisconsin and both he and Fenske lost to Gene Venzke, former Penn star whom Cun-
ningham once defeated with monotonous regularity. Cunningham, at 30, still is one of the best but he is losing that extra quality which kept him at the top so long. : According to Olympic Coach Lawson Robertson, a defeat at Convention Hall in the third annual Penn A. C. Games may cause him to hang up his spikes immediately. He can regain some of his lost prestige by retaining the mile title he won last year in 4:15.6, a difficult task against a crack field which includes Fenske, Blaine Rideout of North Texas Teachers College and Luigi Beccali, former Italian Olympic champion, This race features a program of eight individual events and 12 relays, in which 350 athletes will compete.
A fast field will compete in the two-mile run where Don Lash, In-
diana State trooper, attempts to re-|
peat his Millrose win over Gregory. Rice of Notre Dame. Also entered are Tommy Deckard, Lash’s In schoolmate, and Harry Fields of Maryland. : Chuck Beetham, former Ohio Stafe star, who lost his first halfmile of the indoor season to John Woodruff, former Pittshurgh ace, at the Millrose (Games, headlines the
880 field. |
Ur
See the 1940 Models
Johnson f OUTBOARD MOTORS. Convenient Layaway Plan
Sportsman’s Store
128 N. Penn. St.
sion 9 Australian wrestling rings.
Six I. A. C. Splashers
In A. A. U. Meet
Six Indianapolis Athletic. Club swimmers will compete this evening in the national junior A. A. U. championships at Louisville. Entered in the girls’ events are Virginia Hunt ahd Patty Aspinall, 50-yard free style, and June Fogel, who will swim with Patty in the Middle States 300-yard medley. Dave Gastineau, Ray Schake and Tom Gastineau will compete in the boys’ events. LN,
Fist esse ocoe 12 in. Ss
York Giants will each take 10 south. Pittsburgh and Boston each have nine, while Brooklyn has only
ix. An incomplete roundjup of the prospects with the best chance follows; ) : CINCINNATI—Pitcher Joe Beggs. Former Yankee. Control of puzzling “downer” greatest asset. Given only 248 passes in 1018 innings. : Outfielder Mike McCormick. Hit 318 with Indianapolis last year.. Outfielder Vince DiMaggio. Hit 290 in 154 games with /Kansas City in 1939. Belted 46 homers. Drove in 136 runs. ST. LOUIS—Pitcher “Preacher” Roe. Stopped Reds with four hits in 1939 exhibition. Pitched onehitter with Rochester last season. Pitcher Ernie White. Twirled nohitter in Houston. Won 15 games. Fanned 15 batters in five innings in 1938. ;
CHICAGO~Pitcher Julio Bonetti. Won 20; lost five, on West Coast. Gave ‘Jp only 25 walks in 238 innings and three wild pitches. Outfieldéer Dominic Dallesandro. Won Pacific Coast batting crown last year with .368, highest since 1935. . NEW YOR K—Outfielder John Rucker. Hit .346 with Atlanta in '39. Set a base-circling record of 13 seconds. Called fastest in baseball. j Shortstop Mickey Witek. Leading
88 hit-maker in International League
last year with 204 blows in 156 games. Drove in 104 runs.
& Butcher Signs
PITTSBURGH, Feb. 9 (U. P.).— Max Butcher, big right-hand pitch-
a er, has sent in his signed 1940 con-
tract from his home at Logan, W.
623| Va., the Pittsburgh baseball club
83 Anxious Rookies Poised For Chance in National
NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—A record crop of 83 rookies make in their National League debut when spring training begins next month. Three of the eight clubs are taking less than 10 freshmen to camp. The Philadelphia Phillies, who finished last last year, have 15. Cincinnati and Chicago, pennant-winners and fourth-place finishers respectively, are next with 12, while the St. Louis Cardinals and New
Latshaw and Logan Sign
Pitcher Bob Logan and Pirstsacker Bob Latshaw called at the Perry Stadium offices today and attached their signatures to 1940 Tribe contracts. ‘They are the first to enter the fold. and both said they were anxious to head for Florida and get going in spring training. Logan resides here while Latshaw is a Californian. 2 However, the tall first baseman will spend the rest of the winter in Chicago. President Leo T. Miller said contracts to other Indianapolis players will be mailed next week. The Indians’ chieftain is just back from sitting -ir¢ on: sports writers’ banquets in the East, at Boston and New York. a Miller made some contacts for new talent, but was unable fo close any deals. “I think I'll have some good news for the fans shortly,” he added after announcing the signing of the two Bobs.
Pace, Lou Salica Fight March 4
NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (U.P.).—Lou Salica of New York and Georgie Pace of Cleveland, both claimants to the world bantam weight title,
{are to settle the argument in a 15-
round championship mateh at Toronto March 4. : Salica is recognized as 112-pound champion by the New York Commission, but Pace is the recognized ruler in N. B. A. territory.
litle Against Godoy Chilean Tough, -
And He Hasn't Read the Rules
Arturo Given Small Chance—But Some
By JACK CUDDY United Press Staff Correspondent . NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—Forgetting briefly our Pan-American goodneighbor policy, we stage tonight the second "attle between the North ern and Southern hemispheres for
the world heavyweight crown, this
one before some 18,000 fans at Madison Square Garden. In that splotch of dazaling light in the very heart of the “House That Rickard Built” our great Northern champion, Joe Louis, will
: {climb through the ring ropes to
defend his world title against the
roughest, toughest man he ever met: : | Arturo Godoy, who hails from Chile,
well south of the equator.
The fight starts at 9 o’clock tonight (Indianapolis Time) and will be broadcast by WENR-NBC, Sam Taub will handle blow-by-blow description and Bill Stern will take over between rounds.
Regardless of the winner, this brawl between the Chilean Indian, who never read the book of rules, and Bomber Louis, one of the most devastating punchers pugilism ever knew, should—while it lasts—ape proach the electrifying brutality ate tained in the historic. Dempsey=
'Firpo thriller nearly 17 years ago.
Although Godoy is given little chance to win over Louis tonight, the experts assure that he will last much longer’ than Firpo did against Dempsey. They say this because Arturo—brawny, black-haired son of an Iquique fisherman—fights in true achcomber fashion, with head-butts, elbows, back hands, glove-heels and thumbs. Moreover he fights out of a low crouch, with face almost sweeping the canvas as he bobs and weaves. He presents an elusive and dangerous target for a sharp-shooter like Louis, who is
cautious about breaking his hands against a man who is all head and
elbows. : Louis, who shattered ring prece-
dent by knocking out seven of his o
eight previous title challengers, naturally is favored to win at odds of 8-to-1 over the first 15-round
route that the challenger ever ate -
tempted to trav.l. But the two big questions about this - initial international heavyweight title tilt ever staged in the Garden ate these: (1) Will Godoy have Louis on the floor? and (2) How long will Ctodoy last?
$110,000 Gate Expected Promoter Mike Jacobs assureg
that fans will pay close to $110,000"
to see these questions answered.
Jacobs may be right because im Bomber Joe’s four previous Garden
appearances he drew $129,000 with
Paulino Uzcudun, $112,000 with Bob
Pastor, $111,000 with Nathan Mann and $102,000 with John Henry Lewis.
If Godoy wins, he will remain inh.
the United States and givé Louis a return title shot for a million dollar gate in June. If Louis re. tains the title tonight, he will make his 10th crown defense against
‘|Johnny Paychek of Des Moines at
the Garden in April. As usual, the champ is getting 37% per cent of the net gate, Godoy receives 17%.
If 27-year-old Artruro wins over
25<year-old ' Louis, he will be the first South American ever to hold the heavy crown. Also his victory will mark the first' time the title has changed hands indoors since June 9, 1899, when Jim Jeffries knocked out Bob Fitzsimmons in 11
rounds at Coney Island. :
1 | announced today.
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