Players stress importance of unity and describe how war affects their preparations for the tournament
JOHN L SULLIVAN’S is a name that still resonates within the world of not just boxing but sports overall, despite him having been dead since 1918. When you take the time to look back at his remarkable life, you begin to understand why.
Born into poverty in 1858 in Roxbury, Massachusetts, Sullivan began fighting professionally in 1878 at age 20. This was the era of bareknuckle bouts and Sullivan’s prowess in the ring quickly earned him the nickname The Boston Strong Boy.
A period in US history in which rugged masculinity and hard drinking were viewed as the hallmarks of a man and the country’s frontier spirit, Sullivan swiftly came to symbolise both as he cut a swathe through his opponents to emerge as the “first significant mass cultural hero in American life.”
SYLVIA HIKINS recommends a fascinating, revealing, superbly acted evening of theatre
RON JACOBS recommends a book that charts the disparate circumstances that defined the lives of two prominent black Afro-Americans — one a communist, the other an anti-communist
When Patterson and Liston met in the ring in 1962, it was more than a title bout — it was a collision of two black archetypes shaped by white America’s fears and fantasies, writes JOHN WIGHT


