Joe Louis: Power, Perfection, And Complete Part 1
By: Frank Lotierzo
Many Boxing historians, writers, and fans often refer to him as being the greatest Heavyweight Champ in Boxing history. Which is something that can easily be supported by his brilliant career and overall ability as a fighter. What amazes me is how underrated he is as a Boxer and Technician. When the name Joe Louis is mentioned, most limit and think of him as being strictly a puncher. Which is a grave misconception.
Joe Louis was the quintessential Boxer-Puncher. However, because he had dynamite in both hands and scored some picturesque knockouts, most categorize him as being a catch and kill style puncher. Fundamentally, Louis was absolutely faultless. He carried his hands high with his elbows in and his chin down. He threw short and concise bombs, and never wasted a punch. When ever he let his hands go, it was for keeps. He also put together five and six punch combinations with speed, power, and accuracy better than any other Heavyweight in history.
Joe Louis was a stalker who pressured his opponents, but it wasn't overwhelming pressure like Rocky Marciano and Joe Frazier applied. Unlike Marciano and Frazier who forced their opponents back and into mistakes, Louis led his opponents into making them. His style was predicated on putting pressure on his opponent, but doing so in a way that allowed them to think it was safe to go to him, which was actually strategic suicide. Most punchers try to track their opponents down, forcing them back while they are looking to land their power shots. Louis did it differently. His pressure was subtle. While stalking his foe he would get closer and closer, but he did it in a way that would mislead his opponents into thinking it was safe for them to go on the offensive, just so they could move to one side or the other in order to get away.
When his opponent went on the offensive, they were played right into Louis' hands. This was a result of his trainer, Jack Blackburn, teaching him and embedding it into his head that he could hit an opponent harder and cleaner if they were moving towards him, than if they were moving away from him. Louis would deceptively move towards and opponent and then ever so slightly step back drawing them into him. When his opponent came to him, that's when he stepped in with his short quick shots to the head landing with full impact. Due to Louis setting the pace and dictating the ring geography, this is how he often set up many opponents to be in range for his explosive combinations. This was a technique that Blackburn forced Louis to learn, and by the time he was Champ, he had it down pat.
Most of the time when an opponent came to Louis, it was really a defensive move so they could get away safely. This is when he would strike. As his opponent came to him and tried to lead, Louis would strike with the speed of a Cobra with short straight punches that landed solid and clean. Couple his explosive power with his great hand speed, especially in short burst, and you have some of Boxing's swiftest and most destructive knockout highlights.
What set Louis apart from other big punchers was that he could box and fight from the outside, or he could go inside and tear up an opponents body bringing their hands down, thus providing an opening for his short chopping rights to the chin. What other big puncher can that be said about? What other big puncher was that versatile? Past greats like Jeffries, Liston, Foreman, and Lewis were effective outside and could fight inside, but they didn't have anywhere near the hand speed of Louis. They also were not in his league as far as putting combinations together. Louis' precision and accuracy was superior to any big puncher who has yet lived.
Swarming punchers like Dempsey, Marciano, Frazier, and Tyson were only effective on the attack while trying to get inside. Keep any one of the of them at the end of a jab, and they are not so overwhelming. Unlike Louis, they had to constantly push the fight. Make any one of them back up, and they were a fish out of water. Opposed to Louis, who if a fighter tried to push him back, they were playing into his hands and setting themselves up to become a victim of his vicious two fisted assault.
Dempsey and Marciano were terrific punchers, but they didn't have outstanding hand speed. Frazier could really punch, and his hands were deceivingly fast, especially inside. Tyson was a terrific two handed puncher and had exceptional hand speed. But they couldn't put punches together in combination as precise and hard as Louis.
When it came to finishing an opponent, they weren't nearly as complete or refined as Louis. Dempsey tended to get wild with his punches when going for the kill. Marciano would sometimes be predictable throwing left-right, left-right, without doubling or changing up. Frazier had an outstanding right to the body, but relied on his left hook too much to finish. And Tyson looped his punches, although he could put a two handed assault together, he was vulnerable to being tied up and held. Louis often packaged five and six together brilliantly. And the fact that he didn't loop them, enabled him to get inside without being tied up.
Another thing overlooked when breaking down Louis as a puncher, was the fact that he carried his punch throughout the fight. Louis was dangerous from round one to fifteen. He was lethal and capable of ending it at anytime. Jeffries, Marciano, and Frazier also carried their power throughout the fight, but Jeffries and Marciano couldn't execute like Louis, and Frazier was to dependant on his left-hook. And Liston, Foreman, Tyson, and Lewis, all tended to fade sometimes down the stretch and lost a little power as the fight progressed.
Over the years it has often been said that Louis was vulnerable to quick footed fighters with lateral movement. Although there is some truth to this, it's not nearly to the degree in which it has been over-stated. This analogy is based mostly because of three fights during Louis' title tenure. His two fights with Jersey Joe Walcott and his first bout against Billy Conn.
Jersey Joe gave a fading Louis a fit in both of their title fights. Walcott had good feet, and moved in and out and side to side doing what was termed the Walcott shuffle. However, his feet weren't what troubled Louis. It was more his head and shoulder feints along with his dips and twist that bothered him. Walcott was an awkward fighter, and troubled many fighters with those same tactics, not just Louis.
By: Frank Lotierzo
Many Boxing historians, writers, and fans often refer to him as being the greatest Heavyweight Champ in Boxing history. Which is something that can easily be supported by his brilliant career and overall ability as a fighter. What amazes me is how underrated he is as a Boxer and Technician. When the name Joe Louis is mentioned, most limit and think of him as being strictly a puncher. Which is a grave misconception.
Joe Louis was the quintessential Boxer-Puncher. However, because he had dynamite in both hands and scored some picturesque knockouts, most categorize him as being a catch and kill style puncher. Fundamentally, Louis was absolutely faultless. He carried his hands high with his elbows in and his chin down. He threw short and concise bombs, and never wasted a punch. When ever he let his hands go, it was for keeps. He also put together five and six punch combinations with speed, power, and accuracy better than any other Heavyweight in history.
Joe Louis was a stalker who pressured his opponents, but it wasn't overwhelming pressure like Rocky Marciano and Joe Frazier applied. Unlike Marciano and Frazier who forced their opponents back and into mistakes, Louis led his opponents into making them. His style was predicated on putting pressure on his opponent, but doing so in a way that allowed them to think it was safe to go to him, which was actually strategic suicide. Most punchers try to track their opponents down, forcing them back while they are looking to land their power shots. Louis did it differently. His pressure was subtle. While stalking his foe he would get closer and closer, but he did it in a way that would mislead his opponents into thinking it was safe for them to go on the offensive, just so they could move to one side or the other in order to get away.
When his opponent went on the offensive, they were played right into Louis' hands. This was a result of his trainer, Jack Blackburn, teaching him and embedding it into his head that he could hit an opponent harder and cleaner if they were moving towards him, than if they were moving away from him. Louis would deceptively move towards and opponent and then ever so slightly step back drawing them into him. When his opponent came to him, that's when he stepped in with his short quick shots to the head landing with full impact. Due to Louis setting the pace and dictating the ring geography, this is how he often set up many opponents to be in range for his explosive combinations. This was a technique that Blackburn forced Louis to learn, and by the time he was Champ, he had it down pat.
Most of the time when an opponent came to Louis, it was really a defensive move so they could get away safely. This is when he would strike. As his opponent came to him and tried to lead, Louis would strike with the speed of a Cobra with short straight punches that landed solid and clean. Couple his explosive power with his great hand speed, especially in short burst, and you have some of Boxing's swiftest and most destructive knockout highlights.
What set Louis apart from other big punchers was that he could box and fight from the outside, or he could go inside and tear up an opponents body bringing their hands down, thus providing an opening for his short chopping rights to the chin. What other big puncher can that be said about? What other big puncher was that versatile? Past greats like Jeffries, Liston, Foreman, and Lewis were effective outside and could fight inside, but they didn't have anywhere near the hand speed of Louis. They also were not in his league as far as putting combinations together. Louis' precision and accuracy was superior to any big puncher who has yet lived.
Swarming punchers like Dempsey, Marciano, Frazier, and Tyson were only effective on the attack while trying to get inside. Keep any one of the of them at the end of a jab, and they are not so overwhelming. Unlike Louis, they had to constantly push the fight. Make any one of them back up, and they were a fish out of water. Opposed to Louis, who if a fighter tried to push him back, they were playing into his hands and setting themselves up to become a victim of his vicious two fisted assault.
Dempsey and Marciano were terrific punchers, but they didn't have outstanding hand speed. Frazier could really punch, and his hands were deceivingly fast, especially inside. Tyson was a terrific two handed puncher and had exceptional hand speed. But they couldn't put punches together in combination as precise and hard as Louis.
When it came to finishing an opponent, they weren't nearly as complete or refined as Louis. Dempsey tended to get wild with his punches when going for the kill. Marciano would sometimes be predictable throwing left-right, left-right, without doubling or changing up. Frazier had an outstanding right to the body, but relied on his left hook too much to finish. And Tyson looped his punches, although he could put a two handed assault together, he was vulnerable to being tied up and held. Louis often packaged five and six together brilliantly. And the fact that he didn't loop them, enabled him to get inside without being tied up.
Another thing overlooked when breaking down Louis as a puncher, was the fact that he carried his punch throughout the fight. Louis was dangerous from round one to fifteen. He was lethal and capable of ending it at anytime. Jeffries, Marciano, and Frazier also carried their power throughout the fight, but Jeffries and Marciano couldn't execute like Louis, and Frazier was to dependant on his left-hook. And Liston, Foreman, Tyson, and Lewis, all tended to fade sometimes down the stretch and lost a little power as the fight progressed.
Over the years it has often been said that Louis was vulnerable to quick footed fighters with lateral movement. Although there is some truth to this, it's not nearly to the degree in which it has been over-stated. This analogy is based mostly because of three fights during Louis' title tenure. His two fights with Jersey Joe Walcott and his first bout against Billy Conn.
Jersey Joe gave a fading Louis a fit in both of their title fights. Walcott had good feet, and moved in and out and side to side doing what was termed the Walcott shuffle. However, his feet weren't what troubled Louis. It was more his head and shoulder feints along with his dips and twist that bothered him. Walcott was an awkward fighter, and troubled many fighters with those same tactics, not just Louis.
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