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{{short description|Boxing competition}}
{{short description|Boxing match}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}}
{{Infobox Boxingmatch
{{Infobox boxing match
|fight date=September 22, 1927
| Fight Name  = Gene Tunney vs. Jack Dempsey II
|Fight Name="The Long Count Fight"
| image        = [[File:Gene Tunney vs. Jack Dempsey II.jpg|250px]]
|location=[[Soldier Field]] in [[Chicago]], U.S.
| caption      =
|image=[[File:The Long Count Fight.jpg|300px]]
| fight date   = September 22, 1927
|caption=The two boxers at Soldier Field on September 22, 1927
| location     = [[Soldier Field]], [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]], U.S.
|fighter1={{flagicon|US|1912}} Gene Tunney
| titles      = [[National Boxing Association|NBA]], [[NYSAC]], and [[The Ring (magazine)|''The Ring'']] [[Undisputed championship (boxing)|undisputed]] heavyweight championship
|nickname1="The Fighting Marine"
| fighter1     = {{flagicon|US|1912}} Gene Tunney
|record1= 63-1-1, 44 knockouts
| nickname1   = "The Fighting Marine"
|hometown1= [[New York City]], New York, U.S.
| hometown1   = [[New York City, New York]]
|recognition1= World heavyweight champion
| purse1      = $990,445
|fighter2={{flagicon|US|1912}} Jack Dempsey
| record1      = 63–1–1 (18) (47 KO)
|nickname2="Kid Blackie", “The Manassa Mauler”
| age1        = {{age in years and months |May 25, 1897 |22 September 1927}}
|record2= 54-5-9, 50 knockouts
| height1      = 6 ft 0 in
|hometown2=[[Manassa, Colorado]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| weight1      = 189+1/2 lb
|recognition2= Former world heavyweight champion
| style1      = Orthodox
|titles= World heavyweight championship
| recognition1 = [[National Boxing Association|NBA]], [[NYSAC]] and [[list of The Ring world champions#Heavyweight|''The Ring'']] [[Undisputed championship (boxing)|undisputed]]<br>Heavyweight Champion
|height1         = {{height|cm=183}}  
| fighter2     = {{flagicon|US|1912}} Jack Dempsey
|weight1        = {{convert|86|kg|abbr=on}}
| nickname2   = "The Manassa Mauler"
|height2        = {{height|cm=185}}
| hometown2   = [[Manassa, Colorado]]
|weight2        = {{convert|87|kg|abbr=on}}
| purse2      = $447,500
|result=Tunney wins via [[unanimous decision]]}}
| record2      = 63–5–9 (6) (53 KO)
| age2         = {{age in years and months |June 24, 1895 |22 September 1927}}
| height2      = 6 ft 1 in
| weight2      = 192+1/2 lb
| style2      = Orthodox
| recognition2 = [[The Ring (magazine)|''The Ring'']]<br />No. 1 Ranked Heavyweight<br />Former [[Undisputed championship (boxing)|undisputed]] [[List of world heavyweight boxing champions|heavyweight champion]]
| result       = Tunney wins via [[unanimous decision]]
}}
'''[[Gene Tunney]] vs. [[Jack Dempsey]] II''', retroactively known as '''Long Count Fight''', or the '''Battle of the Long Count''', was a professional boxing match contested on September 22, 1927, for the undisputed heavyweight championship.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gene Tunney vs. Jack Dempsey (2nd meeting) |url=https://boxrec.com/wiki/index.php/Gene_Tunney_vs._Jack_Dempsey_(2nd_meeting) |website=boxrec.com |publisher=BoxRec |access-date=25 August 2025}}</ref>


The '''Long Count Fight''', or the '''Battle of the Long Count''', was a [[professional boxing]] 10-round rematch between world [[heavyweight]] champion [[Gene Tunney]] and former champion [[Jack Dempsey]], which Tunney won in a unanimous decision. It took place on September 22, 1927, at [[Soldier Field]] in [[Chicago]]. "Long Count" is applied to the fight because, when Tunney was knocked down in the seventh round, the count was delayed due to Dempsey's failure to go to and remain in a neutral corner. Whether this "long count" actually affected the outcome remains a subject of debate.
It was a 10-round rematch between world [[heavyweight]] champion Tunney and former champion Dempsey, which Tunney won in a unanimous decision. It took at [[Soldier Field]] in [[Chicago]]. "Long Count" is applied to the fight because, when Tunney was knocked down in the seventh round, the count was delayed due to Dempsey's failure to go to and remain in a neutral corner. Whether this "long count" actually affected the outcome remains a subject of debate.


== Background ==
==Background==
Just 364 days before, on September 23, 1926, Tunney had beaten Dempsey in ten rounds by unanimous decision to lift the world heavyweight title, at [[John F. Kennedy Stadium (Philadelphia)|Sesquicentennial Stadium]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]]. The first fight between Tunney and Dempsey had been moved out of Chicago because Dempsey had learned that [[Al Capone]] was a big fan of his, and he did not want Capone to be involved in the fight.{{Citation needed|date=August 2007}} Capone reportedly bet $50,000 on Dempsey for the rematch, which fueled false rumors of a [[Match fixing|fix]]. Dempsey was favored by [[bookmaker|odds maker]]s in both fights, largely because of public betting which heavily tilted towards Dempsey.
Just 364 days before, on September 23, 1926, Tunney had beaten Dempsey in ten rounds by unanimous decision to lift the world heavyweight title, at [[John F. Kennedy Stadium (Philadelphia)|Sesquicentennial Stadium]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]]. The first fight between Tunney and Dempsey had been moved out of Chicago because Dempsey had learned that [[Al Capone]] was a big fan of his, and he did not want Capone to be involved in the fight.{{Citation needed|date=August 2007}} Capone reportedly bet $50,000 on Dempsey for the rematch, which fueled false rumors of a [[Match fixing|fix]]. Dempsey was favored by [[bookmaker|odds maker]]s in both fights, largely because of public betting which heavily tilted towards Dempsey.


The rematch was held at Chicago's [[Soldier Field]], and would draw a [[gate receipts|gate]] of $2,658,660 ({{Inflation|US| 2658660|1927|fmt=eq|r=-3}}). It was the first $2 million gate in entertainment history.{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} Tunney received a record purse of $990,445.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Guiness World Championship Boxing Book|last=Morrison|first=Ian|year=1990|publisher=Guiness Publishing Limited|page=151|isbn=0-85112-900-5|url=https://archive.org/details/guinnessworldcha0000morr/page/150/mode/2up|access-date=May 3, 2024|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref>
The rematch was held at Chicago's [[Soldier Field]], and would draw a [[gate receipts|gate]] of $2,658,660 ({{Inflation|US| 2658660|1927|fmt=eq|r=-3}}). It was the first $2 million gate in entertainment history.{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} Tunney received a record purse of $990,445.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Guinness World Championship Boxing Book|last=Morrison|first=Ian|year=1990|publisher=Guinness Publishing Limited|page=151|isbn=0-85112-900-5|url=https://archive.org/details/guinnessworldcha0000morr/page/150/mode/2up|access-date=May 3, 2024|via=[[Internet Archive]]}}</ref>


The match was broadcast by announcers [[Graham McNamee]] and [[Phillips Carlin]] to more than 60 [[NBC Radio Network|NBC]] radio stations.<ref>{{cite news|title=Tunney-Dempsey Match Tonight at 10 O'Clock|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=September 22, 1927|page=22}}</ref>
The match was broadcast by announcers [[Graham McNamee]] and [[Phillips Carlin]] to more than 60 [[NBC Radio Network|NBC]] radio stations.<ref>{{cite news|title=Tunney-Dempsey Match Tonight at 10 O'Clock|newspaper=The Boston Globe|date=September 22, 1927|page=22}}</ref>
[[File:In 1926 bokst Jack Dempsey in het Soldiers Field stadium in Chicago een wedstrijd tegen Gene, SFA005001404.jpg|thumb|Fans filing into Soldier Field before the fight]]
[[File:In 1926 bokst Jack Dempsey in het Soldiers Field stadium in Chicago een wedstrijd tegen Gene, SFA005001404.jpg|thumb|Fans filing into Soldier Field before the fight]]
Despite the fact that Tunney had won the first fight by a wide margin on the scorecards, the prospect of a second bout created tremendous public interest. Dempsey was one of the so-called "big five" sports legends of the 1920s,{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} and it was widely rumored that he had refused to join the military during [[World War I]].{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} He actually had attempted to enlist in the [[United States Army|Army]], but had been turned down; a jury later exonerated Dempsey of [[draft evasion]]. Tunney, who enjoyed literature and the arts, was a former member of the [[United States Marine Corps]]. His [[nickname]] was "The Fighting Marine".
Despite the fact that Tunney had won the first fight by a wide margin on the scorecards, the prospect of a second bout created tremendous public interest. Dempsey was one of the so-called "big five" sports legends of the 1920s,{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} and it was widely rumored that he had refused to join the military during [[World War I]].{{citation needed|date=December 2023}} He actually had attempted to enlist in the [[United States Army|Army]], but had been turned down; a jury later exonerated Dempsey of [[draft evasion]]. Tunney, who enjoyed literature and the arts, was a former member of the [[United States Marine Corps]]. His [[nickname]] was "The Fighting Marine".


The fight took place under new rules regarding knockdowns: the fallen fighter would have 10 seconds to rise to his feet under his own power after his opponent had moved to a neutral corner (i.e., one with no trainers). The Dempsey camp requested the new rule, which was not yet universal, be used.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.genetunney.org/idol63.html | title = Jack Dempsey - The Idol of Fistiana by Nat Fleischer | url-status = dead | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070314164236/http://www.genetunney.org/idol63.html | archivedate = 2007-03-14 }}</ref> Dempsey, in the final days of training prior to the rematch, apparently ignored the setting of the new rule. Also, the fight was staged inside a 20-foot ring,<ref name=EastSideBoxing>{{cite web | url = http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news/DempseyvsTunney.php | title = The Time Tunnel: 75th Anniversary of "The Long Count"}}</ref> which favored the boxer with superior [[footwork (martial arts)|footwork]]<!-- martial arts includes boxing -->, in this case Tunney. Dempsey liked to crowd his opponents, and normally fought in a 16-foot ring that offered less space to maneuver.
The fight took place under new rules regarding knockdowns: the fallen fighter would have 10 seconds to rise to his feet under his own power after his opponent had moved to a neutral corner (i.e., one with no trainers). The Dempsey camp requested the new rule, which was not yet universal, be used.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.genetunney.org/idol63.html | title = Jack Dempsey - The Idol of Fistiana by Nat Fleischer | url-status = dead | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070314164236/http://www.genetunney.org/idol63.html | archivedate = 2007-03-14 }}</ref> Dempsey, in the final days of training prior to the rematch, apparently ignored the setting of the new rule. Also, the fight was staged inside a 20-foot ring,<ref name=EastSideBoxing>{{cite web | url = http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news/DempseyvsTunney.php | title = The Time Tunnel: 75th Anniversary of "The Long Count"}}</ref> which favored the boxer with superior [[footwork (martial arts)|footwork]]<!-- martial arts includes boxing -->, in this case Tunney. Dempsey liked to crowd his opponents, and normally fought in a 16-foot ring that offered less space to maneuver.


==The fight==
==The fight==
[[File:The Long Count Fight.jpg|thumb|Tunney on the canvas]]
[[File:Jack Dempsey verliest in een gevecht met Gene Tunney in Chicago in 1927 zijn wereldtitel, SFA005001401.jpg|thumb|Tunney declared the winner]]
[[File:Jack Dempsey verliest in een gevecht met Gene Tunney in Chicago in 1927 zijn wereldtitel, SFA005001401.jpg|thumb|Tunney declared the winner]]
[[File:Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight against Jack Dempsey, 1927 (NMAH 2011.0070.01).jpg|thumb|upright=.7|Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight ([[National Museum of American History]])]]
[[File:Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight against Jack Dempsey, 1927 (NMAH 2011.0070.01).jpg|thumb|upright=.7|Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight ([[National Museum of American History]])]]
Line 48: Line 57:
By the eighth round, Tunney had resumed boxing from a distance, and he floored Dempsey with a punch. This time, however, the referee started counting right away, before Tunney had moved to a neutral corner. Tunney then dominated the final two rounds and went on to retain the world title by a unanimous decision. After the fight, Dempsey lifted Tunney's arm and said, "You were best. You fought a smart fight, kid." It was Dempsey's last career fight, and Tunney's next-to-last.
By the eighth round, Tunney had resumed boxing from a distance, and he floored Dempsey with a punch. This time, however, the referee started counting right away, before Tunney had moved to a neutral corner. Tunney then dominated the final two rounds and went on to retain the world title by a unanimous decision. After the fight, Dempsey lifted Tunney's arm and said, "You were best. You fought a smart fight, kid." It was Dempsey's last career fight, and Tunney's next-to-last.


==Controversy==
==Aftermath==
Controversy over the match promptly erupted. A significant factor in prolonging the controversy was that, at the time, U.S. law prohibited the transportation of boxing match movies across state lines (the law had been passed in 1912 in reaction to [[Johnson–Jeffries riots|riot]]s that broke out after [[Jack Johnson (boxer)|Jack Johnson's]] 1910 [[Jack Johnson vs. James J. Jeffries|victory]] over [[James J. Jeffries]]<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/01/17/DDGIBAQN9B1.DTL Tim Goodman, "Boxing champ faced worst adversary outside the ring — "racism".] ''San Francisco Chronicle'', January 17, 2005.</ref>{{Failed verification|date=September 2020|reason=This article here lists the order of events as 1910 Fight first, Riot second, Law fourth while the source lists 1908 Fight first, Riot second, Law third, 1910 Fight fourth. Due to this article listing the law as passed in 1912, the source would be wrong. If the source is right, then the article is wrong. Based on other articles, the source seems to be inaccurate.}}; [[The Johnson–Jeffries Fight|the fight had been filmed]], though it was banned in some areas of the United States.) As a result, almost nobody was able to see the counts for themselves. Once the law was repealed, and it became possible for many to watch the footage and judge the fallen fighters' alertness (particularly Tunney's), the controversy dwindled.
===Controversy===
Controversy over the match promptly erupted. A significant factor in prolonging the controversy was that, at the time, U.S. law prohibited the transportation of boxing match movies across state lines (the law had been passed in 1912 in reaction to [[Johnson–Jeffries riots|riot]]s that broke out after [[Jack Johnson (boxer)|Jack Johnson's]] 1910 [[Jack Johnson vs. James J. Jeffries|victory]] over [[James J. Jeffries]]<ref>[http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/01/17/DDGIBAQN9B1.DTL Tim Goodman, "Boxing champ faced worst adversary outside the ring — "racism".] ''San Francisco Chronicle'', January 17, 2005.</ref>{{Failed verification|date=September 2020|reason=This article here lists the order of events as 1910 Fight first, Riot second, Law fourth while the source lists 1908 Fight first, Riot second, Law third, 1910 Fight fourth. Due to this article listing the law as passed in 1912, the source would be wrong. If the source is right, then the article is wrong. Based on other articles, the source seems to be inaccurate.}}; [[The Johnson–Jeffries Fight|the fight had been filmed]], though it was banned in some areas of the United States.) As a result, almost nobody was able to see the counts for themselves. Once the law was repealed, and it became possible for many to watch the footage and judge the fallen fighters' alertness (particularly Tunney's), the controversy dwindled.


To this day, however, boxing fans argue over whether Dempsey could or should have won the fight. What is not in dispute is that the public's affection for Dempsey grew in the wake of his two losses to Tunney. "In defeat, he gained more stature," wrote the ''[[Washington Post]]'s'' [[Shirley Povich]]. "He was the loser in the battle of the long count, yet the hero."
To this day, however, boxing fans argue over whether Dempsey could or should have won the fight. What is not in dispute is that the public's affection for Dempsey grew in the wake of his two losses to Tunney. "In defeat, he gained more stature," wrote the ''[[Washington Post]]'s'' [[Shirley Povich]]. "He was the loser in the battle of the long count, yet the hero."


Tunney said that he had picked up the referee's count at "two," and could have gotten up at any point after that, preferring to wait until "nine" for obvious tactical reasons. Dempsey said, "I have no reason not to believe him. Gene's a great guy."
Tunney said that he had picked up the referee's count at "two," and could have gotten up at any point after that, preferring to wait until "nine" for obvious tactical reasons. Dempsey said, "I have no reason not to believe him. Gene's a great guy."


Dempsey later joined the [[United States Coast Guard]], and he and Tunney became good friends who visited each other frequently. Tunney and Dempsey are both members of the [[International Boxing Hall of Fame]]. In March 2011, the family of Gene Tunney donated the gloves he wore in the fight to The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.<ref>Curry, John. [http://3morerounds.com/news/gen-tunneys-boxing-gloves-from-the-long-count-donated/ "Gene Tunney’s Boxing Gloves from ‘The Long Count’ Donated"], 3MoreRounds.com, March 21, 2011</ref>
Dempsey later joined the [[United States Coast Guard]], and he and Tunney became good friends who visited each other frequently. Tunney and Dempsey are both members of the [[International Boxing Hall of Fame]]. In March 2011, the family of Gene Tunney donated the gloves he wore in the fight to The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.<ref>Curry, John. [http://3morerounds.com/news/gen-tunneys-boxing-gloves-from-the-long-count-donated/ "Gene Tunney’s Boxing Gloves from ‘The Long Count’ Donated"], 3MoreRounds.com, March 21, 2011</ref>
==Undercard==
Confirmed bouts:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://boxrec.com/en/event/11657|title=BoxRec - event|publisher=}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-bef | before=[[Jack Dempsey vs. Gene Tunney|First bout]]}}
{{s-ttl | title=[[Gene Tunney]]'s bouts |years=22 September 1927}}
{{s-aft | after=vs. [[Tom Heeney]]}}
{{s-bef | before=vs. [[Jack Sharkey]]}}
{{s-ttl | title=[[Jack Dempsey]]'s bouts |years=22 September 1927}}
{{s-non | reason=Retired}}
{{s-end}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Long Count Fight}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Long Count Fight}}
[[Category:Boxing matches involving Jack Dempsey]]
[[Category:Boxing in Chicago]]
[[Category:1927 in boxing]]
[[Category:1927 in boxing]]
[[Category:1927 in sports in Illinois]]
[[Category:1927 in sports in Illinois]]
[[Category:September 1927 sports events in the United States]]
[[Category:September 1927 sports events in the United States]]
[[Category:Boxing controversies]]
[[Category:Boxing matches in the United States]]
[[Category:Boxing matches involving Jack Dempsey|Tunney II]]
[[Category:Boxing in Chicago]]
[[Category:Events at Soldier Field]]
[[Category:Events at Soldier Field]]
[[Category:Boxing matches in the United States]]
[[Category:Heavyweight championship matches]]
[[Category:Heavyweight championship matches]]
[[Category:Boxing controversies]]
[[Category:Nicknamed sporting events]]
[[Category:Nicknamed sporting events]]

Latest revision as of 11:21, 30 December 2025

Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "infobox". Gene Tunney vs. Jack Dempsey II, retroactively known as Long Count Fight, or the Battle of the Long Count, was a professional boxing match contested on September 22, 1927, for the undisputed heavyweight championship.[1]

It was a 10-round rematch between world heavyweight champion Tunney and former champion Dempsey, which Tunney won in a unanimous decision. It took at Soldier Field in Chicago. "Long Count" is applied to the fight because, when Tunney was knocked down in the seventh round, the count was delayed due to Dempsey's failure to go to and remain in a neutral corner. Whether this "long count" actually affected the outcome remains a subject of debate.

Background

Just 364 days before, on September 23, 1926, Tunney had beaten Dempsey in ten rounds by unanimous decision to lift the world heavyweight title, at Sesquicentennial Stadium in Philadelphia. The first fight between Tunney and Dempsey had been moved out of Chicago because Dempsey had learned that Al Capone was a big fan of his, and he did not want Capone to be involved in the fight.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Capone reportedly bet $50,000 on Dempsey for the rematch, which fueled false rumors of a fix. Dempsey was favored by odds makers in both fights, largely because of public betting which heavily tilted towards Dempsey.

The rematch was held at Chicago's Soldier Field, and would draw a gate of $2,658,660 (Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[".). It was the first $2 million gate in entertainment history.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Tunney received a record purse of $990,445.[2]

The match was broadcast by announcers Graham McNamee and Phillips Carlin to more than 60 NBC radio stations.[3]

File:In 1926 bokst Jack Dempsey in het Soldiers Field stadium in Chicago een wedstrijd tegen Gene, SFA005001404.jpg
Fans filing into Soldier Field before the fight

Despite the fact that Tunney had won the first fight by a wide margin on the scorecards, the prospect of a second bout created tremendous public interest. Dempsey was one of the so-called "big five" sports legends of the 1920s,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". and it was widely rumored that he had refused to join the military during World War I.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". He actually had attempted to enlist in the Army, but had been turned down; a jury later exonerated Dempsey of draft evasion. Tunney, who enjoyed literature and the arts, was a former member of the United States Marine Corps. His nickname was "The Fighting Marine".

The fight took place under new rules regarding knockdowns: the fallen fighter would have 10 seconds to rise to his feet under his own power after his opponent had moved to a neutral corner (i.e., one with no trainers). The Dempsey camp requested the new rule, which was not yet universal, be used.[4] Dempsey, in the final days of training prior to the rematch, apparently ignored the setting of the new rule. Also, the fight was staged inside a 20-foot ring,[5] which favored the boxer with superior footwork, in this case Tunney. Dempsey liked to crowd his opponents, and normally fought in a 16-foot ring that offered less space to maneuver.

The fight

File:The Long Count Fight.jpg
Tunney on the canvas
File:Jack Dempsey verliest in een gevecht met Gene Tunney in Chicago in 1927 zijn wereldtitel, SFA005001401.jpg
Tunney declared the winner
File:Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight against Jack Dempsey, 1927 (NMAH 2011.0070.01).jpg
Boxing gloves worn by Gene Tunney in the Long Count Fight (National Museum of American History)

Tunney was, by most accounts, dominating the fight from rounds one to six, using his familiar style of boxing from a distance while looking for openings and, at the same time, building a points lead. Up until the end of round six, nothing indicated this fight would be far different from their original meeting.

In round seven, however, the 104,943[5] in attendance witnessed a moment that would live on in boxing history. With Tunney trapped against the ropes and near a corner, Dempsey unleashed a combination of punches that floored the champion. Two rights and two lefts landed on Tunney's chin and staggered him, and four more punches put him on the canvas. It was the first time in Tunney's career that he had been knocked down.

Apparently dizzy and disoriented, Tunney grabbed on to the ring's top rope with his left hand. Dempsey, who often stood over downed opponents and rushed back at them after they got up, looked down on Tunney. Referee Dave Barry ordered Dempsey into a neutral corner to no avail; Dempsey remained standing near Tunney, observing his opponent. This gave Tunney precious seconds to recuperate. By the time Dempsey finally walked to a neutral corner, Tunney had been down for around 3 to 8 seconds. Barry could not start to count on Tunney until Dempsey reached the neutral corner, but he was still able to count to nine before Tunney got up. Some believe that if Dempsey had responded to the referee's order in time, he would have likely regained the world heavyweight crown with a seventh-round knockout. The validity of this argument has been debated to this day. In the fight film, a clock was superimposed that recorded Tunney's time on the floor as 13 seconds, from the moment he fell until he got up. Because of this delay, it became known as "The Long Count Fight".

By the eighth round, Tunney had resumed boxing from a distance, and he floored Dempsey with a punch. This time, however, the referee started counting right away, before Tunney had moved to a neutral corner. Tunney then dominated the final two rounds and went on to retain the world title by a unanimous decision. After the fight, Dempsey lifted Tunney's arm and said, "You were best. You fought a smart fight, kid." It was Dempsey's last career fight, and Tunney's next-to-last.

Aftermath

Controversy

Controversy over the match promptly erupted. A significant factor in prolonging the controversy was that, at the time, U.S. law prohibited the transportation of boxing match movies across state lines (the law had been passed in 1912 in reaction to riots that broke out after Jack Johnson's 1910 victory over James J. Jeffries[6]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".; the fight had been filmed, though it was banned in some areas of the United States.) As a result, almost nobody was able to see the counts for themselves. Once the law was repealed, and it became possible for many to watch the footage and judge the fallen fighters' alertness (particularly Tunney's), the controversy dwindled.

To this day, however, boxing fans argue over whether Dempsey could or should have won the fight. What is not in dispute is that the public's affection for Dempsey grew in the wake of his two losses to Tunney. "In defeat, he gained more stature," wrote the Washington Post's Shirley Povich. "He was the loser in the battle of the long count, yet the hero."

Tunney said that he had picked up the referee's count at "two," and could have gotten up at any point after that, preferring to wait until "nine" for obvious tactical reasons. Dempsey said, "I have no reason not to believe him. Gene's a great guy."

Dempsey later joined the United States Coast Guard, and he and Tunney became good friends who visited each other frequently. Tunney and Dempsey are both members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame. In March 2011, the family of Gene Tunney donated the gloves he wore in the fight to The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.[7]

Undercard

Confirmed bouts:[8]

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Tim Goodman, "Boxing champ faced worst adversary outside the ring — "racism". San Francisco Chronicle, January 17, 2005.
  7. Curry, John. "Gene Tunney’s Boxing Gloves from ‘The Long Count’ Donated", 3MoreRounds.com, March 21, 2011
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Gene Tunney's bouts
22 September 1927 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Jack Dempsey's bouts
22 September 1927 Template:S-ttl/check
Retired