The legacy of Joe Louis’ loss to Max Schmeling on Juneteenth

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The legacy of Joe Louis’ loss to Max Schmeling on Juneteenth

The fight between a black American and a Nazi-era German was supposed to symbolise racial and political difference. Instead it forged a lasting friendship

Historical narrative can often be grafted on to sporting events in retrospect. When one of the world’s most famous black Americans, Joe Louis, bludgeoned Germany’s Max Schmeling to a first-round defeat in 1938, it was symbolic of free-world endurance against the fascism of Schmeling’s Nazi homeland.

In two minutes and four seconds of brutal efficiency, Louis exploded with a barrage of uppercuts, crosses and hooks to put his opponent on the canvas three times. By the time the fight ended in technical knockout, Schmeling had thrown just four punches, two of which had missed, to Louis’s 31. Many spectators had yet to take their seats.

Related: Joe Louis, the greatest of the heavyweights, dies – archive, 13 April 1981

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