- Johnny Coulon
Infobox_Boxer
name = Johnny Coulon
realname = Johnny Coulon
nickname = "The Cherry Picker From Logan Square"
nationality = flagicon|Canada Canadian
weight =Bantamweight
birth_date =February 12 ,1889
birth_place =Toronto ,Canada
death_date = death date and age|1973|10|29|1889|2|12|mf=y
death_place =Chicago ,Illinois ,United States
style = Orthodox
total = 97
wins = 56
KO = 24
losses = 4
draws = 4
no contests = 32John Frederic Coulon (
February 12 ,1889 –October 29 ,1973 ) was thebantamweight boxing champion of the world from6 March ,1910 , when he wrested the crown from England'sJim Kendrick , until 1914, when he was defeated byKid Williams .Born in
Toronto to American parents Emile Eugene Coulon (1857-1911) and Sarah Loretta Waltzinger (1857-1923), Coulon grew up in turn-of-the-centuryChicago , where as a prelim fighter he became known as "The Cherry Picker from Logan Square." He turned pro at 16 and was champion at 21. His career, managed by his father, Eugene "Pop" Coulon, stretched from 1905 to 1920. The hall-of-famer is listed as losing only four times in 97 fights, but he claimed to have fought over 300 pro fights.Coulon won his first 26 bouts before losing a 10-round decision to
Kid Murphy . In a rematch with Murphy in 1908, Coulon reversed the decision and earned recognition as the American bantamweight champion.After capturing the world title against Kendrick in 19 rounds, he defended the title against
Earl Denning ,Frankie Conley ,Frankie Burns , andKid Williams . He finally lost the crown in 1914 when Williams stopped him in the third round. He also facedHarry Forbes during his career. Coulon met three Hall-of-Famers in his career: Kid Williams,Pete Herman , andCharley Goldman , who is best known for trainingRocky Marciano .Coulon served in the
United States Army duringWorld War I , often instructing soldiers on how to fight. He boxed twice after his service stint and retired from the ring in 1920 with a record of 56 wins, 4 draws, and 32 no-contests.After retirement, he began public performances with a stupendous stage act. He would appear stripped to the waist and challenge anyone in the audience to try to lift him off his feet. It seemed an empty challenge since at five feet and barely 110 pounds, he was smaller than many schoolboys. But each who took up the challenge soon left the stage baffled and frustrated. Coulon himself never made any extravagant claims that he could violate natural laws. He was content to make a living by presenting a baffling stage act. The trick was that Coulon would feign a struggle, grabbing the opponent by the neck and applying pressure to a nerve there.
In 1921, Coulon married Marie Maloney (1892-1984). She never saw him fight professionally, but together they opened Coulon's Gymnasium on the
South Side of Chicago . Marie was the business manager. "His professional career was over when we met, but together we saw oh so many of the great ones train at our gym down thru the years — men likeJack Dempsey ,Gene Tunney ,Jim Braddock ,Joe Louis ,Sugar Ray Robinson , andMuhammad Ali ."Fact|date=January 2008 Ali would often use the gym to keep himself toned during his exile years. Coulon managed junior welterweight championEddie Perkins (74-20-4) and light-heavyweight contenderAllen Thomas .Ernest Hemingway visited Coulon's and insisted on sparring with the local pugs.LeRoy Neiman sketched boxers working out. A cult movie of the sixties, "Medium Cool ", filmed scenes at the gym, where Coulon briefly appeared, a tiny old man captured forever on celluloid.Coulon was not only a topnotch trainer, but living boxing history. He was a close friend of Jack Johnson, had frequented Johnson's restaurant, the "Café de Champion," and had even been a pallbearer at the great champion's funeral. He had known every heavyweight champion since the Great
John L. Sullivan , had been bantamweight champion of the world, had trained hundreds of fighters and was a revered celebrity in Chicago during the 1960s. At 76 he could leave a ring by jumping over a top rope, landing softly on his feet. He celebrated a birthday by walking the length of the gym on his hands. He died at 84 in 1973 in Chicago and was buried in St. Mary's Cemetery.Coulon was inducted into
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1955 (Sport: Boxing; Theme: Strength & Science), was installed in theCatholic Youth Organization 's Club of Champions for his contributions to amateur boxing in 1971, and into theInternational Boxing Hall of Fame in 1999.
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