How much did lenny mclean weigh
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Top 15 Famous Footballers. FAMpeople is your site which contains biographies of famous people of the past and present. His face would have being mashed.
Fergy , May 27, McLean was formidable in a street brawl against other street brawlers where he was free to punch, kick, headbutt, bite and jump on them until they stopped moving. In a ring against anyone with a semblance of boxing abilty, he wasn't so formidable. He was knocked out by Johnny Waldron, a semi-pro light-heavy, and lost twice to Cliff Field. In a pro bout, Field got knocked out by Richard Dunn in a few rounds. Berlenbach , May 30, WAR01 , May 30, InMemoryofJakeLamotta , May 30, Facts I learned from Lennys autobiography.
Thor Odinson , roughdiamond , BitPlayerVesti and 5 others like this. McLean senior died after a heart bypass when his son Lenny was only six, and was buried in a "pauper's grave", as many working class men of the time were. Lenny's mother, Rose, later remarried to a man who, like her previous husband, was a well known local conman , a large man known as Jim Irwin. However, unlike McLean senior, Jim Irwin was a violent alcoholic , and Lenny and his brothers were viciously abused for many years.
By the age of ten, McLean had his jaw broken twice, along with many other bones. However, when Lenny's infant brother Raymond was beaten within an inch of his life by Irwin with a belt, McLean's great-uncle Jimmy Spinks - a feared and well respected local gangster - got involved and assaulted Irwin, nearly killing him, and told him if he ever returned he would cut him from ear to ear so he had a face like his.
Lenny looked up to his uncle from there on and turned to street fighting with a determination never to be beaten again by any man, he expended the bottled up rage of his abusive childhood with such ferocity that many times it would take three or more men to pull him off his opponent.
During his teenage years, McLean mixed with various villainous figures for whom he ran errands. McLean was arrested for petty crime s and served eighteen months in prison. He worked odd jobs to get by after he was fired from his first legitimate job for beating up his "cocky" foreman. By the time he was fifteen, McLean realised he could make a good living from fighting and pursued it as his main means of income. He became the best-known bare knuckle street fighter that Britain had ever seen.
Another profession McLean excelled at was that of a bouncer. McLean was also described as a "fixer" and a "minder" or bodyguard for celebrities and criminal figures alike one such unusual client was Boy George and at numerous times McLean's name was reputedly put up to scare away members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army and the mafia.
The couple had two children. Unlicensed boxing McLean could not enter licensed boxing due to his unpredictable temper, his violent reputation and criminal record; he therefore entered the murky world of unlicensed boxing which despite being legal, was not sanctioned by the British Boxing Board of Control and quickly became one of the biggest names in that field.
When Frank Warren formed the National Boxing Council in the s, it allowed the toughest underground fighters in Britain to legally go head to head. For the first time, the aggression and passion of the underground boxing world was now being channelled through a licensed outlet.
The results were explosive. Irish and gypsy boxing champions met the hardest brawlers from the London gangland scenes for the first time. Being the best-known figure in the world of unlicensed boxing produced many fans as well as enemies, for McLean. He suffered two bullet wounds from separate attacks, as well as being stabbed on two different occasions, on both of which he was attacked from behind.
McLean survived all attempts on his life. McLean, who in his prime was six foot two inches tall and weighed over twenty stone, boasted that he could beat anybody, in either a legitimate match of boxing or in an unlicensed match without gloves, and sent out challenges to all the big names of the day.
Muhammed Ali was approached by an agent of McLean, but turned down a match against the "Guv'nor", either because he did not wish the risk of damaging his reputation in an unlicensed match or risk any severe injury which is unlikely in a professional match.
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