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Overview
Artie Levine was a dangerous Jewish boxer in both middleweight and light heavyweight divisions in the 1940's. He was a legitimate contender who flattened 36 opponents with a devastating Left Hook. Middleweight is a division, or weight class, in boxing. ...
In boxing, the light heavyweight division is the weight division between cruiserweight over 175 pounds (79. ...
Levine, who stood at 5"8, was a right handed slugger, with an orthodox fighting style. His left hook made him a fighter that no one looked forward to facing in the ring. He was trained by Charley Goldman, the famed trainer of boxing legend Rocky Marciano. Charley Goldman (b. ...
Rocco Francis Marchegiano, better known as Rocky Marciano (September 1, 1923 â August 31, 1969), was an American boxer. ...
Levine fought professionally for eight years (1941-1949) before retiring at the age of 24.
Stolen Glory On 1946-11-06 Levine challenged Sugar Ray Robinson. Robinson claimed Levine hit him with the hardest punch of his career when he knocked Sugar Ray down and out for a 21 second long count. Sugar Ray Robinson, born Walker Smith Jr. ...
Instead of directing Levine back to his corner, the referee walked him to his corner then returned about 10 seconds later to begin the count on Robinson. Robinson came back and KO'd Levine in the 10th round. Of the fight, The Ring Magazine wrote: Sugar...was almost kayoed in the fourth round. A left hook, followed by a right cross, both to the chin, put (him) down and almost out...Sugar rose unsteadily and called upon all his ring skill and stamina to last out the round...Sugar had several other close calls during the course of the evening. Artie's left hooks and resounding right crosses occasionally found their marks and with telling effect. Robinson's class and body punching were taking their toll from the heavier Levine as the bout progressed. Sugar started the tenth with knockout intent. With the round about two minutes gone, Sugar paralyzed Artie with a right to the solar plexus. Then Sugar became a 'killer,' throwing punches with reckless abandon to both head and body with the result that Artie was beaten to the floor. (The Ring, January 1947, page 34)
It is unknown what effect this victory could have had upon both the careers of Levine or Robinson. It is possible to speculate that since Levine had actually knocked Sugar Ray out in this fight that he may have done it again in a rematch, altering the history of boxings greatest pound for pound fighter.
Fight Stats His fight record was: W: 52(36 ko's)| L:15 | D:5 | Total 72
External Resources Complete fight record: http://www.boxrec.com/boxer_display.php?boxer_id=013083 Additional career info: http://www.ootpdevelopments.com/board/showthread.php?t=81457 When Boxing Was a Jewish Sport: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/027595353X/ref=cap_pdp_dp_3/104-7450740-9659930 |