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Encyclopedia > Young Stribling
Young Stribling
Statistics
Real name William Lawrence Stribling Jr.
Nickname King of the Canebrakes
Rated at Heavyweight
Nationality United States
Birth date December 26, 1904
Birth place Bainbridge, Georgia
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 289
Wins 256
Wins by KO 128
Losses 16
Draws 14
No contests 0

Young Stribling was a professional boxer in the Heavyweight division. He was the elder brother of fellow boxer Herbert (Baby) Stribling. Heavyweight is a division, or weight class, in boxing. ... is the 360th day of the year (361st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ... 1904 (MCMIV) was a leap year starting on a Friday (see link for calendar). ... Bainbridge is a city in Decatur County, Georgia, United States. ... Professional boxing bout featuring Ricardo Domínguez (left, throwing a left uppercut) versus Rafael Ortiz Boxing, also referred to as pugilism is a combat sport in which two participants of similar weight fight each other with their fists in a series of one to three-minute intervals called rounds. ... Heavyweight is a division, or weight class, in boxing. ...

Contents

Background

In 1911, Stribling's family had come to Spokane on the Sullivan and Considine Vaudeville Circuit with an acrobatic act called the "Four Novelty Grahams." They spent one week at the Empress Theater, then called the Washington Theater. As part of the show, the Stribling brothers boxed exhibitions.


Stribling was one of the best high school basketball players in the United States. He was known as a "dead shot". His team went to the national interscholastic tournament at Chicago, but he was ruled ineligible to play because of his professional boxing. Stribling was also an avid and accomplished aviator who loved to fly.


Professional Career

Stribling turned professional in 1921 and challenged Max Schmeling for the National Boxing Association World Heavyweight Title in 1933, and lost via TKO in the 15th round. Maximillian Adolph Otto Siegfried Schmeling (September 28, 1905 – February 2, 2005) was a German boxer whose two fights with Joe Louis transcended boxing and became worldwide social events because of their racial and national associations. ...


Death

He died October 3, 1933, after a motorcycle/automobile accident when he was just 28. The accident occurred October 1 outside of Macon, Georgia. Traveling 35 miles per hour on a motorcycle, "Strib" was en route to a hospital to visit his convalescing wife and their brand-new baby (his third child), born two weeks previously. He waved a greeting to a friend passing in an automobile. But he failed to see another car behind that of his friend, Roy Barrow. The veteran of roughly 300 bouts, who never received a permanent scar due to his great defensive skills, attempted to dodge the second car but was too late. The fender of the car struck Stribling, crushing and virtually ripping off his left foot, and sending him to the pavement, fracturing his pelvis.


Stribling was taken to the hospital, where, coincidentally, his wife and baby were. His mother rushed to the hospital from the Stribling plantation in South Georgia; his father from Texas. At one point he awoke, saw his wife, and asked, "How's the baby?" Almost to the end he remained conscious, "carrying on in the same spirit that he showed when they picked him up from the roadside on Sunday," reported papers of the day. "Well, kid," he said to his friend (Barrow), who was the first to reach him as he lay beside his wrecked motorcycle with one foot dangling by a single tendon, "I guess this means more roadwork."


At first the doctors held out hope, after they had amputated his left foot. But his vitality began to wane. Physicians were amazed at his ability to cling to life when his temperature hit 107 1/2 degrees and his pulse 175. His wife was wheeled into his room. He recognized his wife. "W.L.?" "Sugar," was his barely audible reply. "Hello, baby," were his last words to her, the papers reported. His father walked grimly from the room and tearfully said, "He's gone. Death occurred at 6:00 Tuesday morning, October 3. The next day, his body was placed in the Municipal Auditorium of Macon, to lie in state from 10 in the morning until 6 that evening


Honors

Located in Macon, Georgia, the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame is the country’s largest state sports museum at 43,000 square feet. ... Ring Magazine was established in 1922. ...

References

Excerpts taken from the Nov. 7, 1927 Spokane Spokesman Review newspaper, just prior to Stribling's visit to nearby Dishman, WA.


See also

This is a list of notable male boxers. ...

External links

  • Career boxing record
  • Young Stribling's Story[[Category:1933 deaths}}

  Results from FactBites:
 
Stribling toy list (134 words)
Stribling failed to win a championship, but his career was still going strong when he died in a motorcycle accident at the age of 28.
Stribling's mother, a vaudeville acrobat, claimed she wanted him to be a boxer from the time he was a baby.
Stribling's parents put him and his kid brother in their vaudeville act as juvenile boxers.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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