Talk:Tom Johnson (bareknuckle boxer)

Good articleTom Johnson (bareknuckle boxer) has been listed as one of the Sports and recreation good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
May 23, 2011Good article nomineeListed

Citation style change edit

Does anyone have an objection to me changing from the {{cite book}} etc templates to a short cite format? I am considering taking this article through to WP:FAC and I've been told time and again that the present style is not particularly liked by those whose frequent FAC. - Sitush (talk) 07:08, 5 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

While I see no problem in converting to short citation format, why waste time and effort? As of now, the references are consistently formatted. It is not a question of liking by some editors, rather whether the article meets FA criteria. The FA criteria for reference style do not prefer any style over other, rather emphasizes consistency.
That being said, if you think you have time and interest to convert to short citation style, just go ahead :) regards.--Dwaipayan (talk) 23:59, 21 September 2012 (UTC)Reply

The nature of Johnson's championship edit

This article is much better sourced than the majority of prizefighting articles on Wikipedia, and the author(s) deserve a lot of credit. However, just one point...

In the 2nd paragraph of the article it is stated 'By June 1784 [Johnson] had declared himself to be the champion, although whether of England or the world is uncertain'. In fairness, the issue at stake is fairly clear. Johnson was an Englishman who had fought only in England against other Englishmen. Furthermore there is no evidence to suggest that the concept of a 'World Championship' existed in 1784 (no one would fight for that title for another 100 years or so). So, I think we can be sure that all references to 'the championship' in early English prizefighting sources relate specifically to the English Championship. (Even on the rare occasions when fights occurred between fighters of different nationalities, e.g. the Cribb vs Molineaux fights in 1810 & 11, the concept of a World Championship was never mentioned.)

Later in the article there is some discussion of whether Johnson was the 'World Heavyweight Champion' (as apparently was suggested by Barrett O'Hara - is he at all notable? - who stated that Johnson was the 14th holder of that title). This is entirely anachronistic because, not only was there not a World Championship until many years after Johnson fought, there was also not a Heavyweight championship, as weight-based categories did not formally exist until about 1860 at the very earliest.

Realistically these sort of claims ought to be removed from the article. Fair enough somebody said it in 1909 but - given that what he said was completely anachronistic and incorrect - it shouldn't be given the oxygen of inclusion in Wikipedia and is clearly non-encyclopaedic.

The first sentence of the article has it correctly, '[Johnson] was referred to as the Champion of England'.

Also, I do wonder if the very long section on 'Background to 18th century prizefighting' really belongs in this article or in it's own separate article. I'm not sure if there is really an article on Wikipedia at the moment that serves as a decent overview of the subject. Given that Johnson is the first 'linear champion', in the sense in which that phrase would normally be understood these days, this may be the best place in which to cover off the period prior to his emergence. (Obviously Broughton was a champion in the modern sense, but the period between Broughton and Johnson seems to have been very chaotic, with fighters emerging from nowhere and then disappearing from view, long periods where the title seems to have been vacant etc.) Axad12 (talk) 04:52, 11 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

The nature of the English Championship, pre-1800 edit

In the absence of any central organising body (and perhaps more importantly in the absence of a belt), it isn’t always straightforward to determine exactly who was champion from what dates during the early period of prizefighting. (This issue is also complicated by the fact that sometimes the word ‘champion’ is used in contemporary sources in what would seem to be rather a looser way than the word would be interpreted in the modern day.)

If we take the example of John Jackson, who everyone accepts was English Champion, he only fought three fights (with record WLW) and the only one of those fights in which he could have won the English Championship was his third fight, the victory over Mendoza in 1795.

So, Mendoza was evidently the English Champion until 1795 (when he lost to Jackson), and the only fights in which Mendoza could have originally won the title are his two fights against Warr in 1792 and 1794. However, if you look at those three fights, Mendoza-Warr I, Mendoza-Warr II and Jackson-Mendoza, none of the contemporary accounts state that they were ‘for the championship’. Indeed, I’m not convinced that many of the earlier bouts (e.g. those of Johnson) which are generally accepted these days as having been ‘for the championship’ are specifically described as such in contemporary accounts.

Prior to about 1800 the reality seems to have been that ‘the championship’ was determined entirely by public consensus – which may have only emerged some time after specific results. This explains why it is so rare that contemporary accounts of boxing during that period (or the later writing of Pierce Egan, when describing this period) ever describe a particular fight as having been anticipated as a battle for the championship, or as someone having specifically become champion directly after a victory. This being the case, the whole idea of specific pre-1800 bouts being ‘for the championship’ (in the modern sense of that term) is probably completely anachronistic. See also, for example, Mendoza’s own autobiography and the complete lack of any mention of particular fights having been ‘for the championship’.

Anyone who has read a lot of prizefighter biographies on Wikipedia will be aware that there is a lot of anachronistic prose present – at one end of the spectrum there used to be plenty of incorrect mention of weight-category championships which simply did not exist at the time (derived ultimately from the very flawed ‘cyberboxingzone’ website), but at the other end of the spectrum there is frequent reference to specific victories having been by ‘knockout’ (an unknown concept at the time, as pretty much all fights ended approximately in that way), to fighters having ‘turned pro’ (they are almost all known to have had other regular jobs), to the existence of ‘promoters’ (really, in an era when the sport was illegal?), etc, etc. All of this illustrates the great difficulty that we sometimes have in shaking off the trappings of modern-day boxing – which, on terms of its organisation, was entirely different to prizefighting in almost every way.

So, this note is essentially a request that editors consider quite carefully whether it is actually useful to describe specific pre-1800 fights as having been ‘for the championship’. It seems that it would be far more useful to locate contemporary source material to directly support the idea that specific fighters were recognised as champion at a particular time. E.g. in many cases it may be more appropriate to omit reference to ‘Fighter X fought Fighter Y in a battle for the English championship’, and instead to say ‘After this victory Fighter Y seems to have begun to be recognised as English Champion’ and provide contemporary sources as references.

[I have cross-posted this note in the talk sections for Johnson, Brain, Mendoza and Jackson. Hopefully it is useful.] Axad12 (talk) 05:03, 14 March 2023 (UTC)Reply