Answering the bell: Can Utah help revive Sweet Science?

Published: Thursday, May 7, 2009 11:46 p.m. MDT
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If history is any indicator, this week's national Golden Gloves boxing tournament is something you'll want to see. Cassius Clay, Mike Tyson, Evander Holyfield and Sugar Ray Leonard are tournament alumni.

With any luck, an international star will emerge from this year's group. In five years, you can say you were there at the beginning. Besides, this sort of thing doesn't come around often. This is the first time in 41 years Salt Lake City has hosted the tournament. Which makes a person wonder: Where has the Sweet Science been hiding itself, anyway?

The answers vary, but one explanation involves government heavy-handedness, which effectively KO'd boxing in Utah more than two decades ago.

Nothing scares off business like a profit-killing tax.

Utah has a formidable boxing history. Jack Dempsey fought and trained here as a young man. Jay Lambert, Gene Fullmer, Rex Layne and Danny Lopez — all Utahns — started here and went on to national and even international acclaim.

Word in the gyms was you didn't want to mess with the Utah guys. They were tough, motivated and unafraid to lead with their faces.

Just check out some of their old pictures for verification.

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But Utah didn't just produce fighters, it hosted a lot of bouts. Future champs came here and on their way to the top. Most of the arenas, like the Golden Spike Coliseum and Fairgrounds Coliseum, smelled bad and were poorly lit, but fans came in droves nonetheless. It looked like a scene from the film "Raging Bull." (Incidentally, former champ Jake "Raging Bull" LaMotta visited here to promote the movie. He apparently thought this was an important enough boxing/movie market to appear.)

Dempsey often listed Salt Lake as his residence, with good reason. Utah is the place where he sent Boston Bearcat to dreamland in the first round of a bout in 1916, same place he rang Fireman Jim Flynn's bell. It's also where he mailed Billy Murphy, Jim Johnson and Joe Lyons home in a box.

It wasn't until halfway through his 83-bout career that he stopped coming back to Utah to fight.

Meanwhile, Lopez defended his world featherweight title in the old Salt Palace in 1979 by decking Roberto Castanon. It was a big event. Howard Cosell showed up ringside, calling Salt Lake a cowtown and waving a big cigar.

Max Baer, "Gentleman" Jim Corbett, Archie Moore and George Foreman fought here, as well.

That's a long, rich history.

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