Rocky Marciano fought two celebrated boxing matches with Ezzard Charles. The first match took place on 17 June 1954; and the second on 17 September 1954. The first fight went the distance with Marciano winning on points through a unanimous decision. In the second bout Marciano knocked out Charles in the eighth round.
Both fights were held for the world heavyweight championship, with Charles attempting to retake the title from Marciano. Both fights were held at Yankee Stadium in New York City.
Marciano–Charles I
Date | June 17, 1954 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Yankee Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | NYSAC, NBA, and The Ring heavyweight titles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Marciano won via 15 round UD |
Charles had previously held the heavyweight title, but lost it to Jersey Joe Walcott in 1951. Marciano won the title the following year in 1952. Charles went on to win a title eliminator over Bob Satterfield in January 1954 before facing the champion in June. It was Marciano's third title defense, and he was 30 years old at the time of their first fight while Charles was 33.
Rounds 1–4
The first four rounds of the first Marciano–Charles bout revealed Charles's superior technical expertise. Marciano was outfought and outmaneuvered in these early rounds. Charles threw body shots at Marciano with great success; he also opened a two inch long and one inch deep cut over Marciano's left eye. Marciano's cut man Freddie Brown, who later worked for Roberto Durán, would comment that he could not remember treating a cut worse than this one.
Rounds 5–9
In the fifth round, Charles surprisingly became defensive and stopped dictating the pace of the fight. In the early rounds, Charles had thrown body punches at Marciano with great success; by the fifth round Charles was no longer throwing these punches. Without making any effort to protect his eye, Marciano carried the fight to Charles, went on the offensive, found his rhythm, and seized the initiative in the fight. By the end of round 9, Marciano's face was a crimson mask, and yet he had managed to land so many punches on Charles that he was ahead in the scoring.
Rounds 10–15
By the 10th round, Marciano was clearly ahead and yet he kept fighting as if the decision was in doubt, and kept trying for a knockout. Charles managed to stay on his feet while withstanding Marciano's punches, but his face gradually started changing for the worse. His right eye closed, his lower lip was split and swollen, and a blood clot appeared on his left jaw. At the end Marciano won the fight with a unanimous decision (scored 8-5, 9-5 and 8-6 in favor of the champion). Ruby Goldstein, who refereed this fight, commented:
Charles was a very good, smart fighter, who still employed the tactics he had as a middleweight.He gave Marciano trouble for the first ten rounds.He came at him fast with an assortment of punches, and he hit Rocky with a lot of combinations where he'd put together five or six punches in a row.Most fighters would grab on and wait for their head to clear after being hit by a good combination. But this is where Marciano was a discouraging-type fighter. After a fighter hit him with some of his best punches, Rocky would come chasing right back after him, back him up against the ropes, and throw seven or eight punches of his own.
Marciano–Charles II
Date | September 17, 1954 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Yankee Stadium | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | NYSAC, NBA, and The Ring heavyweight titles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Marciano won via 8th-round KO |
The highly anticipated second Marciano–Charles bout proved to be surprisingly dramatic with both the fighters exerting dominance in different stages of the fight. Charles had put on weight for this fight, and his strategy seemed to be to go for a swift knockout.
Early rounds
Charles won the first round by landing some clean punches on Marciano's jaw. In the second round, Marciano hit Charles with a body blow, and then knocked Charles down on the canvas, but quickly beat the count. Marciano now went for the kill, but Charles proved too slippery and survived the round. The fight then became an offensive–defensive affair with Marciano constantly on the attack and Charles content to do defensive boxing while throwing only occasional punches. The fight became dull and insipid with about the only excitement coming from Marciano's usage of roughhouse tactics like throwing low blows and hitting after the bell. The fouls did not affect the judges who had Marciano well ahead after the fifth round.
A twist in the tale
Something strange happened in the sixth round because of which Ezzard Charles almost won the fight. As Charles and Marciano emerged from a clinch towards the end of the round, Marciano was seen sporting a deep wound on his left nostril. It was unclear how Marciano got hurt with some claiming it was due to Charles's punches, and Marciano laying the blame on Charles's elbow. Marciano now started bleeding profusely from the wound; he would later observe: "I knew something was wrong because the blood was running like from a faucet. "Meanwhile, Charles's corner was feeling triumphant after the sixth round; Charles was advised by them to keep throwing punches at Marciano's nose.
Seventh round
In the seventh round, Marciano went out with a makeshift patch over his nose; the device was quickly knocked off by Charles's punches as Charles went after Marciano's nose. Remarkably enough, Marciano won the seventh round by landing more blows than Charles who was left staggered at the end of the round. Even so, it was Marciano who was in danger because of the nose wound which continued to gush blood. The word was out that the fight would only be allowed to continue for one or two more rounds.
Eighth round
In the interval before the eighth round, Marciano's corner advised him to go after Charles's body. Instead, he decided to ignore the advice and went after his opponent's head. As Marciano later explained:
I was spilling too much blood, and they might have stopped it. I like my title too much to lose it on account of a little blood. I don't knock 'em out in the body. I knock 'em out on the chin.
With 24 seconds left for the end of the eighth round, Ezzard Charles was knocked out by Marciano. It was later suggested that the extra weight Charles had put on for this fight resulted in him providing a slower target for Marciano.
Legacy
Many critics regard the two Marciano–Charles fights to be among the greatest heavyweight boxing bouts. Particular praise is given to the second Marciano–Charles fight, which is considered by critics to be among Marciano's finest performances in his boxing career and most memorable and entertaining fight. The rematch was also awarded The Ring magazine’s Fight of the Year of 1954.
References
- Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. pp. 43–48.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. pp. 219–232.
- ^ "Fight Post-Mortem". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 19 June 1954. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- "Marciano Says Charles Was Toughest Opponent". Rome News-Tribune. 18 June 1954. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- "Rocky Stops Challenger In Eighth Round". The Lewiston Daily Sun. 18 September 1954. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- "Marciano Runs His Record to 47–0". The New York Times. 17 September 1954. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- "The Champ: County to honor legendary boxer Charles today". Gwinnet Daily Post. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
- "Marciano beats Charles to retain world title". Papers Past (NZ). 1954.
- "Marciano keeps world title". Papers Past (NZ). 1954.
- ^ Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. p. 44.
- Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. pp. 44–6.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. pp. 221–2.
- ^ Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. p. 46.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. pp. 222–3.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. p. 223.
- Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. pp. 47–48.
- ^ Ken Jones; Chris Smith (1990). Boxing The Champions. The Crowood Press. p. 48.
- ^ Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. pp. 228–9.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. pp. 229–30.
- ^ Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. p. 230.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. p. 229.
- Russel Sullivan (1990). Rocky Marciano:The Rock of His Times. University of Illinois Press. p. 232.