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'Twas the Fight before Christmas
Posted: Tuesday December 21, 1999 05:34 PM
You can take all your Tiny Tims and your Grinches and your Miracles on Whatever
Street and stuff them in your stocking. The best Christmas story is about a
boxer.
It starts the day in 1918 when a doctor tells a slender heavyweight named Billy
Miske that his bum kidneys give him five years to live, if he's lucky. Turns out
he's dying of Bright's disease. This comes as rotten news to Billy, who's only
24 years old and not half bad in the ring. He's good enough to fight guys like
future light heavyweight champ Harry Greb twice to 10-round draws, which is sort
of like tying with a twister. Still, the doc says if Billy's smart, he'll find a
comfortable couch and retire right
now.
Problem is, almost nobody but Billy knows he's up to his ears in debt, being
$100,000 in the hole because the car distributorship he operates in
St. Paul doesn't distribute near enough cars. Billy's weakness as a
salesman is that he's too trusting. He keeps counting on his friends to pay up,
and mostly they don't. So Billy keeps the kidney news to himself and decides to
continue fighting and paying what he owes. In fact, Billy fights 30 more times
after the doc's death sentence, including bust-ups with guys like Tommy Gibbons,
who was knocked out only one time in his career, and three dances with Jack
Dempsey, once for the title in
1920.
Dempsey hits people only slightly harder than a bus, and in that title bout he
belts Billy once so flush in the heart that Billy goes down for a nine count. In
those nine seconds a purple welt the size of a baseball pops up on Billy's
chest, scaring Dempsey half to death. But then Billy himself pops up, wanting
more. Dempsey knocks him clean out less than a minute later, this time with an
anvil to the jaw, as Dempsey is trying to get the fight over before one of them
faints, maybe Dempsey. "I was afraid I'd killed him," Dempsey says
afterward, but Billy's kidneys are doing a good job of that all by
themselves.
By the fall of 1923, Billy is dying fast. He looks like a broomstick on a diet.
He's too weak to work out, much less prizefight. The only thing thinner than
Billy's arms is his wallet. He hasn't had a bout since January, which is
trouble, because Christmas is coming up
hard.
Well, Billy isn't about to face his wife, Marie, and their three young kids,
Billy Jr., Douglas and Donna, tapped out for his last Christmas, so he goes to
his longtime manager, Jack Reddy, and asks him for one last fight. Reddy says no
chance. "I don't like to say this," Reddy tells him, "but if you
went in the ring now, in your condition, you might get
killed."
"What's the difference?" Billy answers. "It's better than waiting
for it in a rocking
chair."
Reddy chews on that for a while and comes up with a proposition: "Do one
thing for me. Go to the gym, start working out, and let's see if you can get
into some kind of condition. Then we'll
talk."
Billy says no can do. He says there's no way he can work out. He says he's got
one last fight in him, and maybe not even that. A softie, Reddy arranges a
Nov. 7 bout in Omaha against a brawler named Bill Brennan, who went 12
rounds with Dempsey and is still meaner than 10 miles in brand-new
shoes.
True to his word, Billy doesn't get any nearer the gym than his aspirin bottle.
He stays in hiding, slurping bowls of chicken soup and boiled fish, and rarely
making it out of bed. But he turns up in Omaha on the appointed night, survives
four rounds with Brennan and cashes a check for
$2,400.
That check buys the best Christmas the Miskes ever have. The kids come flying
downstairs in the morning to a Christmas tree, a toy train, a baby-grand piano
and presents stacked higher than they can reach. They eat like Rockefellers and
sing like angels and laugh all day. Do you know, the only smile bigger in
Minneapolis that day than the ones on the faces of those three Miske kids is on
Billy's
mug.
The next morning Billy calls Reddy and whispers, "Come and get me, Jack.
I'm dying." Reddy rushes Billy to St. Mary's Hospital, but the doctors
can't do a thing. On New Year's Day 1924, Billy, 29, dies of kidney
failure.
That's it, really. Except that if you ever pass through Omaha and run into an
old-timer, ask him about the prizefight that day, the one that gave Billy Miske
the finish he wanted, the one he won in four rounds, over Bill Brennan, by a
knockout.
Issue date: December 27, 1999
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