BOXING PSYCHOLOGY.
TUNNEY’S IMPROMPTU SPEECH. London, September 2. With the obvious intention of .giving Gene Tunney, the retired heavy-weight champion, a good send-off on his intellectual career. Harry Preston, famous in the world of sport and Bohemia, gave an amazing party, comprising the arts and sciences, in a West End hotel. Tunney was unabashed, and scored one of the biggest hits of his life by captivating the sceptical audience in a brilliant impromptu speech upon the psychology of boxing. “Boxing,” said Tunney, “is simply an ability to co-ordinate mind and muscle at a critical moment. England is the cradle of modern boxing, and the home of sportsmanship.” 1 Referring to the mueh-spoken-about necessity of a boxer posses - ' sing the killer instinct in order to win, Tunney said: “The desire to 'kill is manifest only when an opponent is helpless against the ropes. A boxer who has such an .instinct on such an occasion is merely brutal, and can find no joy in boxing when one has gained the physical and intellectual superiority.”
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XLIX, Issue 3850, 27 September 1928, Page 4
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172BOXING PSYCHOLOGY. Manawatu Herald, Volume XLIX, Issue 3850, 27 September 1928, Page 4
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