The One Is Jack Hurley, Volume Three : Deacon Jack and the Dawn of Major-League Sports in Seattle - John T Ochs

The One Is Jack Hurley, Volume Three

Deacon Jack and the Dawn of Major-League Sports in Seattle

By: John T Ochs

Paperback | 1 April 2017

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The One Is Jack Hurley is an epic three-volume bio-history of boxing's Golden Age beginning with Jack Dempsey in the 1910s and ending with the emergence of George Foreman in 1970, as filtered through the life experience of legendary manager and promoter -Deacon- Jack Hurley. Hurley began his career in Fargo, North Dakota, just before World War I, worked in and around New York and Chicago from the mid 1920s through the '40s, and settled in Seattle in 1950.

Hurley's life, more than any other, personifies the sport's journey out of the backrooms and bars of the 1900s, to the arenas and stadiums of the 1920s, '30s, and '40s, and into the parlors and family TV rooms of the 1950s and '60s. It is a history not only of one man's life, but of pro boxing itself. A tale long neglected only because Jack's career was so long and multifaceted.

Volume Three, Deacon Jack and the Dawn of Major-League Sports in Seattle, tells the story of Hurley's life in Seattle and of the city's coming of age as a sports town. Long before anyone ever thought of the Supersonics, the Seahawks, or the Mariners, Jack sewed the seed for major-league sports in the city. The narrative begins with his move to Seattle as manager of local fighter Harry (Kid) Matthews. Taking on the mighty International Boxing Club, Jack instigages a federal investigation into the club's monopoly tactics and forces it to grant Harry a heavyweight elimination bout with Rocky Marciano at Madison Square Garden in 1952. Matthews lost, but the Deacon's mission to bring Seattle a world title fight was just beginning.

After British champion Don Cockell defeats Matthews in Seattle, Hurley's effort to promote a Marciano-Cockell heavyweight title bout is thwarted when the University of Washington and the Seattle School District deny him use of the city's two largest venues. The Deacon's run-in with the establishment highlights the need for a new stadium to attract pro sports to the region and leads to a county-wide vote on the construction of a multipurpose stadium.

Hurley's perseverance is rewarded when new heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson agrees to defend his title in Seattle against Olympic Gold Medalist Pete Rademacher in 1957. Despite far-flung criticism that he is crazy to even think about promoting such a bizarre event, the Deacon converts the city's minor-league ballpark into a boxing venue, and the match comes off without a hitch.

Hurley's successes with Matthews and the Patterson-Rademacher fight cement his reputation as a local sports oracle and the city's most famous sports personality. Accepting a post as advance man for the the famous Harlem Globetrotters of basketball fame, he enjoys nationwide celebrity status as an elder statesman, continuing to dispense entertaining bits of thought-provoking wisdom about his first love, boxing, wherever he goes.

In 1966, an aging Deacon returns to the limelight to manage Boone Kirkman for one last run at the heavyweight title, only to fall short when future champion George Foreman stops Kirkman in their 1970 fight at Madison Square Garden. After two years of retirement, the story ends with Hurley's death in November 1972, less than a month before his 75th birthday.

Industry Reviews

John Ochs set out to tell us the story of a fascinating life spent in boxing. He has succeeded, and in admirable fashion. But the finished product is far, far more than just the long-overdue biography of a legendary boxing manager and promoter. It is a veritable encyclopedia of the sport's halcyon era, as measured by the span of years between America's participation in World War I - Jack Hurley was among the millions of doughboys shipped to France - and Vietnam.

These were Hurley's adult years. It was a time when boxing was always a major sport, when the media attention it received was always on a par, and often exceeded, that devoted to baseball and football. ... All the twists and turns of a whirlwind life spent barnstorming the rails and flight paths of America are meticulously detailed here. John Ochs, with a fervor seldom displayed by biographers, has chronicled, absorbingly and charmingly, the life of this singular and intriguing man who wound up being called "The Deacon."

Damon Runyon said he had only ever known two honest fight managers: "One is Jack Hurley, and I forget the name of the other one." Here, in these action-packed pages describing the glory years of boxing and one of its most colorful disciples, you'll discover what Runyon had in mind. -- J Michael Kenyon, Excerpt from his Foreword.

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