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  1. boxrec.com › en › proboxerBoxRec: Max Baer

    1:51 ref: Arthur Donovan Joe Agnello Charley Lynch. A crowd of 53, 000 (with another 3, 300 with passes) - including Jack Sharkey and Primo Carnera - paid $239, 676.07 to assure a fair profit for Jack Dempsey in his first big promotional venture. 1933 Fight of the Year - Ring Magazine. Donovan ignored repeated back-handers from Baer. 1932-09-26.

  2. boxrec.com › wiki › indexMax Baer - BoxRec

    Height: 189cm. Reach: 206cm. Referee: Record. Pro Boxer: Record. Division: Heavyweight. Manager: Ancil Hoffman. Trainer: Bob McAllister (circa 1931) Max Baer Gallery. Contents. 1 Career Overview. 1.1 Early Years. 1.2 Contender & Champion. 1.3 Braddock & Louis Fights. 1.4 Comeback & Later Years. 2 Professional Record. 3 Notes. 4 External Links.

  3. About. Max Baer was a heavyweight boxer with a professional career that spanned over eleven years, from 1929 to 1941. Over the course of his career, Baer fought in a total of 81 fights, winning 68 of them, 51 of which were by knockout. Baer also won three world titles throughout his career, including the NBA, NYSAC, and The Ring heavyweight titles.

  4. One of the most devastating right-handed punchers in heavyweight history, Baer was a wise-cracking performer whose ring antics entertained boxing audiences during the Great Depression. Baer turned pro in 1929 and won 22 of his first 24 fights, nine with first-round knockouts.

  5. Mar 31, 2020 · Former heavyweight champion Max Baer last stepped into the ring in April 1941, stopped for the second time by Lou Nova. Baer left the earth 18 years later. Yet, even in 2020, it doesn’t take...

  6. Maximilian Adelbert Baer was an American professional boxer and the world heavyweight champion from June 14, 1934, to June 13, 1935. He was known in his time as the Livermore Larupper and Madcap Maxie. Two of his fights were rated Fight of the Year by The Ring magazine. Baer was also a boxing referee, and had occasional roles in film and ...

  7. Possessing perhaps the most powerful right hand in heavyweight history, Max Baer was a flashy performer who wise-cracked and clowned his way through his career. Although he never fully realized his tremendous potential, Baer won the heavyweight title, and his showmanship entertained an America rocked by the Great Depression.

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