Sports Memorabilia
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@kiwiwomble it's a medium.
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@yeetyaah said in Sports Memorabilia:
@kiwiwomble it's a medium.
jeez, 90's jerseys proportions are all crazy compared to today, very jealous, i was a fatty in the 90's so my old jerseys are large and so huge, almost an off the shoulder number
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@kiwiwomble ha yeah this one surprisingly only fits a little bigger than a standard medium.
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@bovidae said in Sports Memorabilia:
@yeetyaah said in Sports Memorabilia:
@bovidae yeah mate, 2005/06, 2016/17 and 2018/19 are match worn.
If you know, whose jerseys do you think they are?
There are also the training jerseys to collect.
This Chiefs jersey must have been from 1996/97 based on who is in the photo.
Hey mate where is this photo from? I've just acquired one of these jerseys and I can't find any photos of theses ones being worn. If there's more photos can you post them?
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Cool tie
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Ajaz Patel is selling his Test Shirt he wore, for charity.
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Just browsing eBay and came across this unused ticket from the Willard-Dempsey world heavyweight championship fight of July 4th, 1919 in Toledo; wherein the hulking heavily favoured 6/5 champ Jess Willard got savaged by the much smaller challenger Jack Dempsey. You can see right on the stub what each fighter was making: $100K for Willard and a comparatively paltry $27.5K for Dempsey.
What is most eye-popping for me is the cost of the ticket. $60 dollars in 1919 was more than a month salary for the average worker, and these aren’t for front row ringside, this is for the section!
BoxRec informs me that, “There was a crowd of 19,500, which was less than a quarter of the arena's seating capacity. Promoter Tex Rickard said all the $60 ringside seats were sold and most of the $50 seats were sold, but the disappointment came from the sell of the cheapest tickets, which sold for $10. Provisions had been made to seat between 35,000 and 40,000 in the $10 seat section, but only about 5,000 seats were sold.”
https://boxrec.com/media/index.php/Jess_Willard_vs._Jack_Dempsey
And check out the highlights from the three rounds before the towel is thrown in. No going to your corner or standing 8-counts back in those days. Dempsey smashes Willard in the face each time he tries to gets off the canvas onto his feet.
Brutal!
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@Kid-Chocolate said in Sports Memorabilia:
Just browsing eBay and came across this unused ticket from the Willard-Dempsey world heavyweight championship fight of July 4th, 1919 in Toledo; wherein the hulking heavily favoured 6/5 champ Jess Willard got savaged by the much smaller challenger Jack Dempsey. You can see right on the stub what each fighter was making: $100K for Willard and a comparatively paltry $27.5K for Dempsey.
What is most eye-popping for me is the cost of the ticket. $60 dollars in 1919 was more than a month salary for the average worker, and these aren’t for front row ringside, this is for the section!
BoxRec informs me that, “There was a crowd of 19,500, which was less than a quarter of the arena's seating capacity. Promoter Tex Rickard said all the $60 ringside seats were sold and most of the $50 seats were sold, but the disappointment came from the sell of the cheapest tickets, which sold for $10. Provisions had been made to seat between 35,000 and 40,000 in the $10 seat section, but only about 5,000 seats were sold.”
T>
https://boxrec.com/media/index.php/Jess_Willard_vs._Jack_DempseyAnd check out the highlights from the three rounds before the towel is thrown in. No going to your corner or standing 8-counts back in those days. Dempsey smashes Willard in the face each time he tries to gets off the canvas onto his feet.
Brutal!
Willard wasn’t a great champ but he was absolutely tough as fuck. Both these guys lived well into their 80s as well.
Different sport back then, the way Dempsey stands over him and pummels him is absolutely ruthless and obviously the three knockdown rule didn’t exist then either.
I’ve heard conflicting reports on how injured Willard was from a few bruises to burst eardrums, broken teeth etc. I suspect the truth is somewhere in the middle.
Mike Tyson modelled his whole career on Dempsey and it’s quite evident. His book on fighting is a fascinating read, I’ve had a look and it’s good fun using some of the techniques on the heavy bag in the garage.