Oh boy, where do I even start with Mickey Walker? Honestly, if there was ever a guy who was living a wild Irish stereotype to its fullest, it was him. I’m talking about a guy who seemed to have a lifelong feud with sobriety but somehow managed to punch his way into boxing history. It’s like, imagine you’re watching some old school movie about a scrappy brawler – you know the type, right? Well, that was Mickey in real life, no script needed.
Let’s set the scene: He kicks off his boxing career at just 17, right after World War I, when jobs were like four-leaf clovers. Hard to find and mostly just luck. Cue Mickey, fists up and ready, taking on the world. “The Toy Bulldog” – that’s what they called him. Short, stocky, and just plain relentless. You could almost feel the thump of those punches through the canvas.
Oh, and the story about him supposedly drinking gin during fights? Mmhmm, classic Mickey. I mean, imagine trying to stay upright while your opponent’s fists and a bit of booze are tag-teaming against you. Yet, he lost only 19 out of 165 fights. Pretty mind-boggling, right? Some folks said the Roaring Twenties were about jazz and flappers, but for Mickey, it was more about bottles and brawls.
There’s that wild tale – and this is where it gets really bonkers – where he thought a fight was canceled, goes on a pub crawl, and ends up in the ring totally hammered. Five knockdowns in one round and somehow pulls through. It’s like a scene from a slapstick comedy. The kind of thing you can’t make up – unless you’re living it.
Jumping up to the heavyweights? No sweat for Mickey, or maybe a lot of sweat. Who’s keeping track, anyway? Challenging guys way heavier than he was just seemed like Tuesday to him. It’s almost like he wanted to defy gravity and common sense all at once.
And let’s not skip his after-boxing era – painting! This tough-as-nails boxer turned into an artist after retiring. Really paints a picture, doesn’t it? Sorry for the pun, couldn’t help it!
Summing up Mickey Walker? Delightfully chaotic, always unpredictable. Like he said to his manager after a fight, “Speak for yourself.” That was Mickey – living life as one continuous round, never hearing the final bell.