Benny Leonard was arguably the greatest lightweight champion of all
time. With superb boxing skills and potent punching power, he fought
over 200 times and suffered just five defeats. He spent his boyhood in a
crime-ridden ghetto in Manhattan's Lower East Side and was the greatest
of a long line of Jewish boxers to emerge from the slums. Leonard was
still only 19 when he knocked out Freddie Welsh to become world
lightweight king in 1917. He defended the title eight times and retired
as undefeated champion in 1925, to please the only woman he loved, his
mother. But the 1929 Wall Street Crash wiped out his fortune and he was
forced to make a comeback at 35. Leonard fought the best of his era:
Johnny Dundee, Johnny Kilbane, Rocky Kansas, Jack Britton, Ted Kid
Lewis, and Lew Tendler among them. Apart from being a sublime boxer,
Benny was a first-class showman who helped to put boxing on a higher
plane. He died as he lived - in the ring - while refereeing a fight at
age 51. This is the definitive account of his remarkable life and
career.