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The Liston Chronicles, Part 1: Rising Sonny
By Springs Toledo
“An’ the dawn comes up like thunder…"
~ Rudyard Kipling
Dick the Bruiser was built like the Hoover Dam. A former lineman for the Green Bay Packers, a professional wrestler, and an icon from the 1950s right through the 1980s, he stood 6’1 and weighed 265 lbs. When he offered his opinion, people listened. In 1962, he had some choice words about what he saw as the sorry state of the heavyweight division. Charles “Sonny” Liston was king at this point. Legend has it that Sonny got wind of what the Bruiser said and caught up with him out front of the Thunderbird Hotel in Vegas. In broad daylight, Sonny beat him into a corner and slapped him repeatedly until Dick the Bruiser cowered on the sidewalk. Heralded as “The Most Dangerous Man Alive”, Dick was overheard whimpering, “I just wanna go home now”.
Legends spring up like black daisies on the road on which history’s tough guys swagger. Be they Goliath, Richard Coeur de Lion, or Frederick Barbarossa, the truth is often embellished until it reaches the outer limits of credibility.
Despite expectations, most of the black daisies at Sonny Liston’s feet are credible. He lived up to a fearsome reputation that probably began when he was thirteen years old and in the first grade. (And that’s not a misprint.) He was illiterate, had a juvenile record that was about as long as his wingspan, became a union strike breaker for wiseguys, and served two stints in Missouri for armed robbery and for assaulting a police officer. That last conviction raised eyebrows: The cop in question pulled his gun on Liston but Liston snatched it away and then did worse. Witnesses heard a voice saying “don’t hurt me” from the alley where Liston had carried the cop. The cop needed seven stitches over his eye and suffered a broken knee. Liston walked out of the alley wearing the cop’s hat and carrying his gun.
This cost him seven months in an eight-by-nine; but no sooner was he released that he got pinched again. This time it was for resisting arrest. Liston had deposited an officer upside down in a trash can.
In “The Devil and Sonny Liston”, author Nick Tosches goes on to quote Captain John Doherty about Liston’s struggles with the St. Louis Police Department and the St. Louis Police Department’s struggles with Liston: “Five coppers tried to lock Sonny. This ain’t no b.s. story. They broke hickory nightsticks over his head. They couldn’t get his hands cuffed. He was a monster.”
He was banned from fighting in several states, including New York and California, and if a man is to be judged by the company he keeps, they weren’t wrong. There is no doubt that Liston was connected with if not outright “owned” by underworld figures operating out of St. Louis. However, the trajectory of his career does not suggest that he was given soft opposition, even given his crooked associations. Only two of his first forty opponents had losing records. In his sixth fight, a still green Liston faced Johnny Summerlin, 19-1, who would crack the top ten within the year. Liston beat him twice in a row.
In 1954, he fought an unorthodox light heavyweight named Marty Marshall. Marshall had a style that recalled the pivoting, herky-jerky, watch-me-ruin-your-timing style of Jersey Joe Walcott. He could switch from an orthodox to a southpaw stance on a dime. Liston, who fought like a night train ever-rolling into KO station, had trouble with a man who refused to stay on the tracks. Liston claimed that Marshall ran around the ring whooping like such a clown that he couldn’t help but laugh –and summarily got his jaw broken. He couldn’t close it. In the sixth round, another shot fractured it again. Liston fought on anyway and dropped a split decision. “I walked the streets all night,” he remembered, “it hurt so bad.” The loss was twice avenged.
The third time Liston and Marshall met was in March 1956. Marshall entered the ring as a replacement for Hall of Famer Harold Johnson, a supreme technician. Johnson had to back out of the bout after injuring his shoulder in training. At that juncture, Johnson’s 55-8 record sparkled with wins over Jimmy Bivins, Bert Lytell, Archie Moore, Clarence Henry, and Ezzard Charles. The surprise is the confidence that Liston’s management must have had to take such a risk.
In May, Liston broke the aforementioned cop’s knee in the alley, cooled his heels in the clink, and didn’t return to the ring until 1958. But by November of that year ringside observers said that he barely broke a sweat in eight victories. They would also agree that Sonny Liston was at his rampaging peak in 1959-1960.
The iron-jawed George Chuvalo was asked in an interview who hit him the hardest. Mike DeJohn, “a real good whacker” was at the top of the list, although DeJohn was spent by the time Chuvalo faced him. Liston fought DeJohn in 1959 when he was ranked #8 by Ring Magazine. According to the New York Times, Liston’s jab made a mess of his nose and DeJohn went down twice from body shots during the six round slugfest. Two months later Liston faced the widely avoided Cleveland “Big Cat” Williams –another banger. Liston stopped him in three rounds. He stopped him again a year later and a round sooner. (Williams, incidentally, wouldn’t be stopped again until he met Ali in 1966, and by then Williams was shot –figuratively and literally.) By the end of 1960, Liston demolished Nino Valdes, bounced number two contender Roy Harris off the canvas three times before stopping him in the first round, and looked very strong against the number one contender Zora Folley. Master boxer Eddie Machen, ranked third, went the distance but mistook the ring for a race track. He ran as if his trunks were on fire. Liston swung and missed and didn’t look so formidable, but took a decision, despite a three point deduction for low blows.
Five of these six men were in their prime. Only Valdes was fading, though still dangerous.
According to Ring Magazine, Liston was the number one contender since at least July 1960 when he beat Zora Folley. The highly respected editor, Nat Fleischer himself was demanding that Liston be given a shot at Floyd Patterson’s title as soon as possible. Cus D’Amato, Patterson’s manager, was in no rush to sign Valdes, Folley, or Machen... although the complicated shadow of Sonny Liston gave him real shivers. D’Amato avoided them all with loose and limber reasoning: He lamented about the cheap prospective gate in a Machen fight, yet became a moralist when it came to Liston.
Liston did two things of note during this time. The first is that he stayed active –even to the point of accepting the short money to fight Harris, Williams, and Zora Folley (he took $25,000 to Zora's $40,000, despite the fact that Liston was on an eight fight KO streak and hadn't lost in seven years. Zora had lost less than two years earlier and had just earned a snoozer decision against a fighter who lost twice as much as he won). Tosches tells the story of Sonny’s surprise visit to Cus D'Amato’s office where he asked a menacing question: “Is you or is you ain't going to give me a title shot?" Cus presumably came out from under the desk and told Sonny to give him a list of managers and Cus would choose one for Sonny himself. Sonny, who was smarter than the average bear, said, "Ain't that nice. What you mean is that you want to control me."
By the time Sonny fought Albert Westphal in December of 1961, he was fed up.
At the weigh-in on the day of the fight, Westphal was feeling the glare of the brooding behemoth. “You can talk to me. I’m your friend. Why are you so angry?” Westphal asked him. “You’ll find out tonight,” snapped Sonny. The German looked like an erratic kernel of popcorn until the roof fell in on him. The fight was over in two minutes.
Meanwhile, the popular champion Floyd Patterson was wrestling with his conscience: “One night in bed, I made up my mind. I knew if I wanted to sleep comfortably, I’d have to take on Liston.” So, Floyd defied Cus D’Amato’s safety-first policy of title reigns, waved away the fears of the NAACP, and overruled the pleadings of no less than President John F. Kennedy himself. A quivering hand signed to fight Liston and Floyd bravely met his fate.
It surprised no one, though there was a collective gasp, when Sonny Liston became heavyweight champion on September 25, 1962 at Chicago’s Comiskey Park. He rolled over Patterson to take the title in 2:05 of the first round (it would take him only four more seconds to do the same in the rematch). “It was”, wrote Arthur Daley of the New York Times, “a bull elephant matched against a frail deer and then felling him with a disdainful swipe of his ponderous trunk.”
The “bad guy” won, just like Sonny had promised. The armed robber, labor goon, cop-fighting ex-con …the big, black menace… was king. Jim Murray wrote that the world of sports had to reconcile itself with the fact that it was stuck with Liston –indefinitely. It was analogous to “finding a live bat on a string under your Christmas tree.”
In the post-fight chaos that erupted, Cassius Marcellus Clay hastily dashed down some verse and became a voice crying out in the wilderness:
And as the people left the park
You could hear them say
Liston will stay king
Until he meets that Clay…
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George Chuvalo’s interview was conducted by Barry Lindenmen and published in Propane Canada, May/June 2004. Information for this article was derived from contemporary editions of the New York Times. Special thanks to Nick Gamble for his assistance with The Ring ratings. Gregory Toledo can be contacted at scalinatella@hotmail.com.
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Peter Egley:
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Even though there are some peculiarities upon the boxing life of Sonny Liston, he is still damned interesting. Always like reading about him. There is apparently a movie called Phantom Punch I learned about in The Ring.
Friday May 29, 2009 04:15:14 PM
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brownsugar:
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this type of writting is for grown folks only,.. a very nice read,.. and I agree,.. Liston was a facinating Bully,. maybe even the king of all heavyweight bullies,.. except for maybe a prime Mike Tyson...George Forman,.. and Vitali Klitscho...Sonny Liston reeked of crime,.. intimidation and things that could never be spoken of in public places...
Friday May 29, 2009 05:32:20 PM
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DaveB:
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Good writing. Sonny Liston was from the school of hard knocks. One of 25 children, working out in the cotton fields as soon as he was able to. Daddy who would whip him almost everyday and a mother who couldn't protect him from his daddy who maybe wasn't really his daddy. Unable to read and write, but boy could he fight. This is the perfect prescription for the life he would ultimately live. His story is intriguing and I look forward to reading more.
Friday May 29, 2009 09:31:38 PM
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Robert Curtis:
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This shortchanges Liston so much. He was such a tough guy who no one wanted to be champ. Yet he got it. This is a serious jailbird who grabbed the heavyweight championship of the WORLD when it mean something. Boxing history is such a mess.
Friday May 29, 2009 11:00:23 PM
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MisterLee:
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This paints a good picture of Sonny Liston. The only thing I knew of him was his loss to Ali, who made it look easy. Good to know the real talent of Liston. Maybe I'll watch some of his fights sometime soon. I'm working on Judah vs. Clottey, and i'm upset the announcers gave judah the first 2 rounds for hitting clottey's gloves. Clottey did some pretty good straight rights to the head, and some body work. Again, it's shoe shine athleticism vs. good pressuring volume. Berto vs. Collazo, Dawson vs. Johnson all over again. Unless the pressure wins via knockout like Clottey (or was it accidental headbutt and going to the cards?), the shoe shiner will get the benefit of the doubt. What a crock! I thought boxing was built upon EFFECTIVE punches, not just how pretty you look when you threw them. Bah, time to finish a few more rounds and sleep. TSS Rules! :)
Saturday May 30, 2009 01:01:17 AM
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Radam G, a humble PacManite:
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***Reader Bobby C wrote **what I was going to. In the words of the soon-to-be-released Don, "You heard it here, first. Holla back, ladies." Enough tapped. Holla!
Saturday May 30, 2009 11:47:10 AM
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Radam G, a humble PacManite:
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Wow! The coconut juice is heavy. I musta' fo'got! Nice piece, Fightwriter G-To. U DA MAN! Holla!
Saturday May 30, 2009 11:51:26 AM
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Uncle Billy:
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I've always been intrigued by Liston. I believe he's an underrated all-time heavyweight. In his prime, he could have beat anyone, ever. I'm surprised he never got anotehr title shot after the 2nd Ali fight. Frazier - Liston in 1968/1969 would have been an interesting fight.
Sunday May 31, 2009 01:59:04 PM
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Robert Curtis:
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Greg, I also forgot to say thanks and what a great writer and addition to this site you are. I used to be funny on TSS. These days I come off as a nutty grouch. Must be that coconut wine Radam turned me on to. Either that or it's male menopause. Thanks for this article and I'll be grateful for the Sonny chronicles Pt. 2. I've got a few of Liston's early fights on disc and the remarkable thing is the grizzly bear strength this guy had. He just swatted out Cleveland Williams like a bug, and "Big Cat" Williams would make most of us want to hide under our beds. The second half of this story is the tricky part. It's as convoluted and bizarre as an Oliver Stone movie. I don't expect answers. But it is intriguing.
Monday Jun 1, 2009 10:55:26 AM
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Gregory Toledo:
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No problem, Robert. I've read your comments for my other articles and they inflated my head...! You have every right to be critical sometimes and I know that any comment you make is well-informed, so thank you. Part II is scheduled to be up tomorrow and I hope I was able to capture the mystery of it all fairly. I'm currently working on the last one -part III. That is one that I think you will approve of. Sonny will too. Hopefully you and Radam will toast TSS after that one ...with that crazy coconut wine!
Monday Jun 1, 2009 05:09:21 PM
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Radam G, a humble PacManite:
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Wow! VuQu -- Filipino Coconut wine for sale -- has invaded the shores of KanoLand. I guess Bobby C has already been sippin' it over there in the City of Angeles. Also the City of the Stars and wannabes. Business is hollering in Los Angeles. From Barugo, Leyte, Philippines, -- Holla!
Monday Jun 1, 2009 07:29:02 PM
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Joe:
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Watch some of the Liston fights, even after Ali whupped him. The man had an incredible jab and head movement. He hit guys hard. I would have avoided this guy at all costs.
If it wasn't for Ali he might have been the Champ for a decade.
Tuesday Jun 2, 2009 09:47:32 AM
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MisterLee @ Joe:
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Can you recommend some Liston fights for me? I haven't seen any other than the Ali fight. Thanks!
Tuesday Jun 2, 2009 12:18:30 PM
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Smiley C:
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Boxing Bible writing Misterlee, go to youtube and hit sonny liston's name and a ton of his bouts will come up. Fo' sure!
Tuesday Jun 2, 2009 02:58:31 PM
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Joe:
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Liston vs. Machen
Liston vs. Patterson 1
Liston vs. Patterson 2
even after he lost the title and lost but
Liston vs. Martin '69
You can catch some other quick KO's on ESPN Classic periodically.
YouTube has several bouts also
Wednesday Jun 3, 2009 06:55:22 AM
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MIsterLee:
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Youtube shmoutube.... why settle for burgers when you can have steak? I download all my fights, and they're usually at dvd quality. since then, youtube is my only alternative when i can't find a fight, which is usually impossible. They got eveything on the internet. Yeah man, i'm a high class boxing video watcher, a connoisseur of the sweet science, and still learning. Pc out, thanks joe, i saved those fight names. take care. :)
Wednesday Jun 3, 2009 12:19:49 PM
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Angie And Goody...23 Years Later
Twenty three years later after they seconded Marvin Hagler and Ray Leonard in Las Vegas, Goody Petronelli and Angelo Dundee crossed paths again. This time, it was at Foxwoods. Photo/friend of TSS "The Iceman" John Scully reports there were only pleasantries exchanged. Goody didn't debate the split decision victory enjoyed by Leonard, which to this day Hagler disputes.
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