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Show In puglllatk circles during the Interim. In-terim. I officiated as timer and umpire for Kllraln. also I was timer for Corbett when hu won the championship from Sullivan In New Orleans. Sullivan Is tho last man In the world who should say anything discreditable about a fighter. For the sake of his own record, he ought to be willing to let bygones be bygones. He never knew hyw to fight and never engaged in a single battle In which he displayed dis-played championship class. It Is a shame to think what either ' Jeffries or Johnson would havo done to John L. In his best days. Sulll-! Sulll-! van's ring record was built up by "porting writers of the panhandling ' variety. He always played to tho rabble. Whenever he visited a town for tho purpose of giving an exhibition he relied on the rabble for support. The rabble followed him about the streets and sang his praises long and lustily, and John L. would even matters mat-ters up by tossing a handful of small change in the air and let the rabble scramble for It. i It iieeras to me that John L. could well afford to tako a seat In the background back-ground and quit knocking. Wielding the hammer will not get him anything. Sullivan was the j-oorest excuse for a champion tho American prize ring ever had. even though he did beat "Paddy" Ryan and Jake Kllraln, All the men he ever met knew how to fight a little bit. Such, for Instance, as Charley Mltcholl, Jack Burke. Alf Greenfield, Tug Wilson and Domlnick McCafforty, were umall mlddlewelghts, and at that he failed to knock any one of them out.' Bout with Kllraln Was Poor. The Sulllvan-Kllrain fight, which went 75 rounds, lasting two hours and somo minutes, was positively tho worst exhibition of fighting I ever saw. Both men fought like two old dock wallopers. Neither man struck nor attempted to strike what could be called an effective blow during the 40 rounds of pull and haul and fall down. In which both appeared to me to be willing to quit. I remember asking ask-ing Charley Mitchell tho next day at the St. Charles hotel In New Orleans where In thunderatlon ho picked up such a stiff as Kllraln. It was the first time T had ever seen Kllraln. but I had bejn led to believe from, what Mitchell' had told mo about him that he was a wonder, but I was grlevoiioly disappointed. As for Sullivan. I knew he couldn't fight enough to keep warm; and for that reason I thought Kllraln certainly would beat him. and I still believe had not Mike Donovan thrown up the sponge when he did that Kllraln would have finally won, not because of his superiority as a fighter, but because be-cause Sullivan would have quit first. This Is a true and correct review of that fight. John L. Failed to Worry Corbett. 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