“….younger Mr. Greb, performing like Mr. Kipling’s mongoose, Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, bounced, caromed, slid and glided from so many angles and in so some ways on the extra orthodox and sedate glove man that Gibbons was all at sea and scarcely knew the place he was at.” –New York Telegram, March 14, 1922
“Rikki-Tikki-Tavi” is a brief story from Rudyard Kipling’s well-known quantity, The Jungle E book, chronicling because it does the adventures of a fearless mongoose. And actually no animal description of the nice Harry Greb’s ring model captures it so clearly and in such a vivid approach as that above by a New York Telegram author.
Harry was most frequently described as a “wildcat,” because of his boundless aggression, and as a “kangaroo” due to his occasional leaping assault and retreat ways. However in response to 1000’s of eyewitness accounts, Greb really fought like a mixture of each of these mammals, so describing him as preventing like a mongoose—an animal that slashed and tore like a wildcat whereas leaping and bounding round like a kangaroo—appears most acceptable.
Like a mongoose, Greb couldn’t care much less that the thing of his fury was a lot greater than he, nor that it carried one thing that could possibly be deadly if it discovered its mark. Secondly, and likewise just like the mongoose, Greb’s battle ways had no set model {that a} foe may anticipate, no sample that could possibly be tracked so openings could possibly be watched for and timed. His feinting, bouncing and skittering round, coupled together with his pace and work price, have been so disruptive that it scrambled the senses and timing of even essentially the most composed of technical boxers and dashing sluggers.

Harry was throughout you. And then you definately couldn’t even get close to him. Then he was throughout you once more. You then couldn’t get close to him even when he was throughout you. He was a most perplexing opponent, an enigma inside an enigma; his quirks even had quirks.
However getting again to the Kipling story … Inside its pages there are battles between the heroic little mongoose and several other lethal snakes. A boxing fan studying these accounts can’t assist however be drawn in by the writer’s sensible descriptions of those showdowns, so reminiscent are they of contests between enraged pugilists, boxers who have been pure enemies, who appeared born to hate and antagonize each other earlier than tearing in for the kill. It retains the reader on the sting of his or her seat till the tip of the story.

Now take that boxing fan and exchange him with a boxing historical past fan; extra particularly, one who has accomplished a lot studying on the preventing historical past of Harry Greb (there are a couple of of us on the market). Such was the case the opposite day when Yours Actually picked up “Rikki-Tikki-Tavi” for the primary time in some twenty years and gave it a re-read. Kipling’s battle descriptions sounded so eerily just like what boxing writers wrote about Greb fights that it prompted pauses within the studying. A couple of examples:
“… he danced as much as Karait with the peculiar rocking, swaying movement that he had inherited from his household. It seems very humorous, however it’s so completely balanced a gait you can fly off from it at any angle you please …”
“Rikki-tikki was bounding all spherical Nagaina, maintaining simply out of her stroke … Nagaina gathered herself collectively and flung out at him. Rikki-tikki jumped up and backward.”
“Then Rikki-tikki danced in a circle to get behind her, and Nagaina spun spherical to maintain her head to his head …with tooth and soar and spring and chunk…”

Now, for the sake of comparability, listed below are some precise quotes from first-hand accounts of Greb’s ring performances:
“If he isn’t hopping and dancing or bounding about, tossing gloves in any respect angles at a price that makes opponents of extraordinary pace dizzy, he’s inside clawing away with each fists.” —Harry Keck
“He was hopping, leaping, swinging, dashing, jabbing all the way in which.” Denver Put up 4/6/1920
“He can hit a person oftener from extra totally different instructions than any man that ever lived.” —Grantland Rice
“… he made his opponents look silly at occasions by getting behind them …” –E.W. Dickerson
“When his opponent thought Harry was about to steer, he would soar again out of vary and make the opposite fellow look foolish.” —George Barton
Uncanny, isn’t it? And that’s only a small sampling. The a long time of firsthand testimony relating to Greb’s model and the way he fought may fill large volumes. However for some odd purpose, many fashionable battle followers nonetheless require “footage” to imagine any of it, a few of them even going as far as to seek advice from “The Pittsburgh Windmill” as nothing greater than a “fable.”

Contemplating the manifold observations regarding the nice champion, coupled with an official file that tacitly stands as clear proof, that absolutely backs up all earlier accounts, it’s nothing wanting astounding that some stay unconvinced. We’ve got no movie of Pittsburgh Pirates nice Honus Wagner or Ty Cobb both, so we could price them as being inferior to Invoice Buckner or Mookie Wilson just because now we have movie on the latter two and never the previous?
With all due respect to the nice Archie Moore — whose model was extra akin to an armored snapping turtle than any species of fast shifting weasel — maybe it’s Greb who ought to have been dubbed “The Ol’ Mongoose” quite than Moore. As a result of we all know how Greb fought, all the way down to the final element. He fought like a mongoose: quick, cell, erratic and lethal environment friendly.
Harry Greb, “The Ol’ Mongoose.” Sounds excellent to me. Now let’s simply hope these misplaced movies of Greb floor quickly so it will probably silence the hordes of recent Greb-naysayers as soon as and for all.
— Douglas Cavanaugh



















