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1936 book on 'Cinderella Man' Braddock scores hit

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  • 1936 book on 'Cinderella Man' Braddock scores hit

    1936 book on 'Cinderella Man' Braddock scores hit
    By Philip Barbara

    Reuters
    06/13/05 12:14 ET

    CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J. (Reuters) - Sportswriter Lud Shabazian, who
    covered the "Cinderella Man" James J. Braddock's boxing career from
    his first fight in 1923 to his crowning victory over Max Baer in 1935,
    told this story years later:

    In the steaming, cluttered attic of his New Jersey home, he struggled
    to write Braddock's biography, the words giving him fits. Energy
    drained from his body and sweat dripped from his chin, soaking his
    clothes until, he said, perspiration puddled to his knees.

    A storyteller's poetic license, for sure. But Shabazian identified
    with Braddock's hard-knock rise to the world heavyweight title. The
    stifling attic became Shabazian's ring, an empty page the blank stare
    of an opponent, as he slugged it out toe-to-toe with a typewriter.

    When Shabazian's book "Relief to Royalty" was published in 1936 by
    his newspaper, the Hudson Dispatch, it wasn't formally distributed for
    retail sale. Instead, the author and the champ gave it to family and
    friends. Often they sat together at charity events co-signing copies,
    not asking for the $1.25 cover price in those can't-spare-a-dime days.

    With a forward by famed writer Damon Runyon, the book has been
    rediscovered as the foremost original source for anyone wanting
    an insider's glimpse into Braddock's career and the glory days of
    prizefighting. It is also legendary among collectors of rare boxing
    books -- hard to find and harder to afford at $1,500 a copy.

    "I can't overstate the value of 'Relief to Royalty.' I don't know how
    I would have written 'Cinderella Man' without it," Jeremy Schaap,
    author of a riveting new biography of that name, told Reuters. "By
    reading Lud, I got an excellent sense of the most important moments
    in Braddock's life and career."

    Schaap's biography and the new eponymous Russell Crowe movie
    "Cinderella Man" are part of a burst of interest in the Depression-era
    saga, which includes at least three other books and several articles.

    PROMISING PRIZEFIGHTER

    In 1929, Braddock was a promising New Jersey prizefighter with $20,000
    in the bank. But his fortunes spiraled downward when the bank failed
    and he suffered a demoralizing loss to light-heavyweight world champ
    Tommy Loughran.

    With boxing his only trade, Braddock kept fighting despite a
    chronically broken right hand, and his defeats mounted.

    Married, with three young children to feed, and seen by fight
    matchmakers as a has-been, he was forced by 1933 to hustle a living
    as a laborer, often walking 10 miles a day searching for work along
    the New Jersey docks.

    When the gas and electricity to his basement apartment were shut off in
    the terrible winter of 1934, he turned to the county relief. "I didn't
    mind being hungry, but the kids needed to eat," he would later say.

    Using his left hand to unload cargo allowed his right to heal, and he
    was hardened by suffering. After manager Joe Gould got him a fight
    with just two days' notice, in June 1934, he flattened the touted
    "Corn" Griffin.

    Subsequent victories lifted him into contention for the heavyweight
    title, and on June 13, 1935, he took the crown from the enigmatic Baer,
    for heavyweight boxing's greatest upset.

    Braddock became an overnight sensation. He was, as Runyon said,
    the Cinderella Man.

    FOLLOWING HIS CAREER

    Shabazian, who at age 20 had become sports editor of the Dispatch,
    in Union City, New Jersey, had been following Braddock since his
    first amateur fight in 1923.

    He saw Braddock soar to amateur boxing heights and smash his way to
    contention. When Braddock began slipping, he urged the fighter on
    in his columns. When everyone said Baer would annihilate Braddock,
    Shabazian, who signed his columns and cartoons simply "Lud," for
    Ludwig, clung to the New Jerseyan.

    They became friends, making him a natural choice to write Braddock's
    "authorized" biography.

    During the two years Braddock held the title -- taken away by Joe
    Louis in June 1937 -- and in the decades that followed, Lud and
    Braddock appeared at countless sports nights and charity events.

    They were a contrasting pair: Braddock, the pale, rugged, 6-foot-3
    (1.9-meter) Irish-American would bow but say few words as he was
    introduced by Lud, a connoisseur at the microphone and 5-foot-6
    (1.6-meter) Armenian-American, with dark hair that bristled like an
    old brush.

    "My granddad and Lud were very tight," said Jay Braddock, the champ's
    grandson. "We considered Lud part of the family."

    HOLLYWOOD INTEREST

    Jay Braddock said Cliff Hollingsworth, who brought the story idea
    to Hollywood, relied on family material and did not read "Relief
    to Royalty."

    Yet during filming in Toronto, director Ron Howard's staff called the
    Jersey City Library repeatedly asking whether Braddock had a crest
    on his robe, said Charles Markey, a library staff member.

    Markey and others turned to Lud's book and Dispatch columns. The
    answer: Braddock didn't have a crest on his robe, but did wear a
    shamrock on his trunks.

    Kevin Johnson, of Royal Books in Baltimore, found a copy of "Relief
    to Royalty" this winter after hunting for five years.

    With a dust jacket it's worth $1,500, and $700 without one. With
    a jacket and the signatures it would fetch a considerable premium,
    Johnson said.

    About 2,500 copies were published, hundreds of which were donated
    by Lud to the USO during World War II for soldiers' recreation,
    according to Lud's son, Bob Shabazian.

    Braddock died on Nov. 30, 1974, after which the biography was
    serialized in the Dispatch. Lud, by then sports editor for five
    decades, spoke about Braddock wistfully to his staff, including this
    reporter, and described his struggle to write the book. He died in
    July 1990.

    "Keep punchin," was his advice to young writers.

    A photo taken just after the Baer fight illustrates Lud's and
    Braddock's friendship. The fighter is hugging Lud with one arm as a
    ring official holds up the other to introduce the new world champion.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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