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Lew Jenkins
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==Professional career highlights== Jenkins defeated Lew Feldman on April 8, 1938, in a ten-round split decision at the Sportatorium in Dallas, Texas. Oddly, the Dallas crowd booed loudly after the decision of the judges and referees for Jenkins, the Texas native.<ref>"Jenkins Beats Lew Feldman", ''Reno-Gazette Journal'', Reno, Nevada, pg. 12, 9 April 1938</ref> ===Win over Mike Belloise, November 1939=== On November 21, 1939, Jenkins scored a seventh-round technical knockout against Mike Belloise, a former World Featherweight Champion, before a crowd of 12,000 at the Bronx's New York Coliseum.<ref>"Jenkins Defeats Mike Belloise", ''Valley Morning Star'', Harlingen, Texas, pg. 12, 22 November 1939</ref> Belloise was unable to answer the call of the bell for the eighth round due to the severe punishment he had taken to the body in the sixth and seventh rounds.<ref>"Belloise Kayoed By Lou Jenkins", ''Arizona Republic'', Phoenix, Arizona, pg. 11, 23 November 1939</ref> It was later confirmed that Belloise suffered a broken rib from the bout.<ref>"Breaks Rib, Loses", ''News-Journal'', Mansfield, Ohio, pg. 6, 23 November 1939</ref> On January 24, 1940, Jenkins convincingly defeated Cuban boxer Chino Alvarez in a knockout only around fifteen seconds into the first round at the Sportatorium in Dallas. Jenkins landed only two or three punches and the rowdy Dallas crowd booed when the ten count was completed, with several climbing into the ring. The victory was Jenkin's ninth straight with six by knockouts. Jenkins sudden rise to prominence as a serious World Lightweight contender was not unprecedented, as he had been fighting professionally at least five years, but the quality of his opposition had increased dramatically in the last two years as many newspapers noted. When he defeated Tippy Larkin in a first-round knockout at Madison Square Garden on March 8, 1940, he was finally scheduled for a World Lightweight Title bout with reigning champion [[Lou Ambers]]. In the impressive win over Larkin, Jenkins started cautiously, then flicked a few straight lefts. After Jenkins blasted with both hands, and in "2:41 of the first round Larkin was left flailing around in his own corner and down for the count."<ref>"Larkin Kayo Victim", ''Asbury Park Press'', Asbury Park, New Jersey, pg. 9, 9 March 1940</ref><ref>Miller, Tom, "Dallasites Boo As Lew Jenkins Gets Quick Kayo", ''El Paso Herald'', El Paso, Texas, pg. 10, 25 January 1940</ref> ===Taking the World Lightweight Championship, May 1940=== Jenkins defeated [[Lou Ambers]] in [[New York City]] on May 10, 1940, to become World Lightweight Champion.<ref name=BR/><ref name="nytimes.com">{{cite news|title=Lew Jenkins Is Dead at 64; Held Lighweight {{sic|hide=y|reason=error in original}} Title in 1940|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/11/01/obituaries/lew-jenkins-is-dead-at-64-held-lighweight-title-in-1940.html|work=New York Times|agency=Associated Press|date=November 1, 1981|page=40|access-date=November 23, 2018}}</ref> Ambers was down for a count of five in the first, briefly down again from a left in the second, and was down in the third before the referee stopped the bout when Jenkins landed a final solid right to Ambers' jaw.<ref>Ferguson, Harry, "Lew Jenkins Blasts Way To Lightweight Laurels", ''Cumberland Evening Times'', Cumberland, Maryland, pg. 6, 11 May 1940</ref> After winning the World Lightweight Championship from Ambers, Jenkins lost his boxing discipline and spent time carousing at night and buying expensive automobiles. He drank recklessly, sometimes before bouts, and crashed several motorcycles and cars.<ref name=BR/><ref name=CBZ/><ref name=BRB>{{cite web|title=Lew Jenkins Boxing Biography|url=http://boxrec.com/media/index.php?title=Human:9466|publisher=BoxRec|access-date=8 December 2016}}</ref> On March 8, 1940, Jenkins scored a first-round knockout of [[Tippy Larkin]] in a non-title bout at New York's Madison Square Garden before a crowd of 11,542.<ref>"Lou Jenkins Kayoes Tippy Larkin in First", ''Arizona Republic'', Phoenix, Arizona, pg. 60, 9 March 1940</ref> "Tearing out with the bell, the slugger from the Southwest (Jenkins) took command immediately. He threw both fists without a stop, finally connecting with a series of solid lefts and rights and Larkin dropped in his corner."<ref>Feder, Sid, "Tippy Larkin Goes to Sleep During First Round", ''Santa Cruz Sentinel'', Santa Cruz, California, pg. 4, 9 March 1940</ref> The knockout occurred at the end of the first, 2:41 into the round. Jenkins had scored five straight knockouts in his most recent New York fights. A noteworthy opponent, Larkin would take the World Light Welterweight Championship in 1946.<ref name=BR/> On September 16, 1940, Jenkins managed to win a decision against [[Bob Montgomery (boxer)|Bob Montgomery]] in a non-title, ten-round decision, before a crowd of 12,900 at Shibe Park in Philadelphia. Jenkins was down in the third round for a count of nine. The United Press gave Jenkins five rounds to four for Montgomery, though ring officials gave Jenkins a somewhat wider margin.<ref name=BR/><ref>Cuddy, Jack, "Lew Jenkins Shows Heart in Rough Bout", ''The Pittsburgh Press'', Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, pg. 22, 17 September 1940</ref> Montgomery would twice hold the NYSAC World Lightweight Championship in May 1943 and November 1944. ====World Lightweight Championship defense, November 1940==== On November 22, 1940, Jenkins successfully defended his World Lightweight Title against Pete Lello in a second-round knockout at New York's Madison Square Garden before a largely hostile audience of around 11,000. Jenkins knocked Lello down four times in the second, usually with strong blows to the jaw and at least twice for counts of nine. He said after the bout that he had little memory of the bout after his first knockdown in the second.<ref>"Pete Lello Put Away in Second Stanza", ''Ames Daily Tribune'', Ames, Iowa, pg. 3, 23 November 1940</ref> Lello had formerly knocked out Jenkins in a close bout that ended in an early seventh round victory in Chicago on March 24, 1939.<ref name=BR/> ===Losing the World Lightweight Championship, December 1941=== <!-- [[WP:NFCC]] violation: [[Image:Sammy Angott.jpg|170px|left|thumb|Sammy Angott]] --> On December 19, 1941, Jenkins lost his World Lightweight Title against [[Sammy Angott]] before a crowd of 11,343 at New York's Madison Square Garden. Fighting with a neck injury he may have received from motorcycle and car crashes, he was outpointed over 15 rounds. From then on he lost a significant percentage of his remaining bouts, though often against quality competition.<ref name=BR/><ref>Feder, Sid, "Louisville Slugger Scores Easy Win Over Lou Jenkins", ''The Ottawa Journal'', Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, pg. 28, 20 December 1941</ref> On September 30, 1949, Jenkins defeated Eddie Giosa in a ten-round unanimous decision at the Arena in Philadelphia. He had Giosa down for a count of eight in the second from a left hook, then put him to the mat again with a right to the head. He had Giosa down again in the tenth with a left hook to the head for a count of eight, though the fight continued and was determined by a points decision.<ref>Webster, John, "Giosa Outpointed by Lew Jenkins", ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'', Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, pg. 17, 1 October 1949</ref> Both men fought at 139 in the [[welterweight]] range. He had formerly lost to Giosa on May 2, 1949, in a fairly close split decision at the same location. The May victory was Giosa's fourth straight win.<ref name=BR/><ref>Fourth straight win for Giosa in "Lew Jenkins Loses Decision to Giosa", ''Arizona Republic'', Phoenix, Arizona, pg. 24, 3 May 1949</ref>
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