REMEMBERING DICK TIGER
                          By Adeyinka Makinde
                           13.12 
                            - There perhaps have only been a few in the modern 
                            epoch of boxing who have represented the themes of 
                            blue collar fighter and ageless ring warrior as compellingly 
                            as did Richard Ihetu, better known by his ring pseudonymn, 
                            Dick Tiger. Indeed, it was once written that that 
                            he 'was the type of fighter who rolled up his sleeves, 
                            spat on his hands and went to work, giving an honest 
                            labouring mans effort. Each time. Everytime.' A succinctly 
                            unglamorous portrayal of a simple and uncomplicated 
                            man who bore the struggles and travails of a lifetime 
                            with admirable courage and dignity.
13.12 
                            - There perhaps have only been a few in the modern 
                            epoch of boxing who have represented the themes of 
                            blue collar fighter and ageless ring warrior as compellingly 
                            as did Richard Ihetu, better known by his ring pseudonymn, 
                            Dick Tiger. Indeed, it was once written that that 
                            he 'was the type of fighter who rolled up his sleeves, 
                            spat on his hands and went to work, giving an honest 
                            labouring mans effort. Each time. Everytime.' A succinctly 
                            unglamorous portrayal of a simple and uncomplicated 
                            man who bore the struggles and travails of a lifetime 
                            with admirable courage and dignity.
                          He was born on 14 August 1929 in Amaigbo, 
                            a village situated within the Eastern region of what 
                            was then the British protectorate of Nigeria. He learned 
                            his formidable work ethic firstly from the rigours 
                            of tilling his fathers modestly sized farm and later 
                            as a market trader in the nearby township of Aba. 
                            The decision to lace up a pair of gloves at the ripe 
                            old age of nineteen was in part due to a need to escape 
                            the drudgery of urban life and partly due to a reputation 
                            as a street fighter. He took to it like second nature, 
                            partaking in interclub contests arranged by British 
                            military officers at a barracks on the outskirts of 
                            town. One day an Englishman sat entranced watching 
                            the short stocky fellow practically jump in the air 
                            to clobber his opponent. What tenacity he thought, 
                            almost like a tiger. "A tiger is what he is!" 
                            he shouted. Thus was born the sobriquet Dick Tiger. 
                            Nigeria had no substantive traditions in the sport 
                            but encouraged by the improving standards of organisation 
                            and the increasing accessibility of British rings 
                            to pugilists of West African origin, Tiger decided 
                            to turn professional in the early 1950's. He cleaned 
                            up against the grandiosely named Easy Dynamite, Mighty 
                            Joe and Super Human Power. But contrary to his official 
                            fight record, he would never beat the modestly named 
                            southpaw, Tommy West in all of three meetings. West 
                            died soon after their final match and Tiger, the peripatetic 
                            fighter who traversed Nigeria as part of a travelling 
                            boxing booth as well as a trader, was the main man 
                            again.
                          In 1955, having outgrown the local 
                            opposition, he joined the trans-Atlantic migration 
                            of fighters, arriving in the port city of Liverpool 
                            by a mailboat. Events quickly took upon a nighmarerish 
                            quality. British boxing, resurgent in the immediate 
                            post war period was by now in the depths of an industry 
                            wide recession brought about in the main by a debilitating 
                            tax on sporting events. He struggled to keep warm 
                            and found the native food hard going. Adding to the 
                            problems of climate and cuisine was the need to orientate 
                            his style to British standards. He was apt to miss 
                            with ill-timed lunges and not infrequently, ran into 
                            his opponents left jabs. After four bouts and four 
                            decision losses, he went back to the drawing board 
                            and would square accounts with all four and then go 
                            on to beat amongst others future world champion Terry 
                            Downes while enroute to the British Empire middleweight 
                            championship which he ripped off Patrick McAteer.
                          In 1959, Tiger refused to renew his 
                            contract with his second British manager, Tony Vairo 
                            (the first one, Peter Banasko, had dumped him after 
                            having never recovered from Hogan Basseys defection 
                            to another manager) and headed for New York to be 
                            guided by the braintrust of Wilfred 'Jersey' Jones 
                            and Lew Burston. Now approaching 30, Tiger was keen 
                            to emulate Basseys accession to the world featherweight 
                            title which owed much to their behind-the-scenes manoeuvrings 
                            in getting Bassey, then largely unknown to American 
                            audiences, into the elimination series devised by 
                            the world governing authorities to find a successor 
                            to Sandy Saddler. Yet the ostensibly high powered 
                            duo, Jones was an associate editor at Ring magazine 
                            while Burston served as Madison Square Gardens International 
                            representative' were unable to secure for Tiger a 
                            title challenge against either holder of the now fragmented 
                            middleweight crown. Gene Fullmer and Paul Pender were 
                            both blatant in avoiding him, the latter commenting 
                            at the time that Tiger "is one of those fighters 
                            who just keeps coming. They are the kind you don't 
                            fight unless you have to." Thus unlike Bassey, 
                            Tiger became a known and avoided quantity courtesy 
                            of N.B.C's 'Fight of the Week' broadcasts on Friday 
                            evenings. But although the age of saturation coverage 
                            by American television was in its last phase, Tiger 
                            profited as never; such that by the time he fought 
                            Henry Hank in March of 1962, Harry Markson, Madison 
                            Square Gardens Director of Boxing, describing him 
                            as a "stand out" fighter was happy to pay 
                            him a television appearance fee of $10,500, well in 
                            excess of the average payment of $4000. 
                          Tiger stood out in other ways. A stocky, 
                            sinewy African adorned with tribal markings on both 
                            chest and back, yet a softy-spoken British accented 
                            gentleman partial to homborg hats and Anthony Eden 
                            coats. Bemused and occasionally irritated by asides
                            about 'headhunters' and the cannibalism supposedly 
                            practiced on his home continent, a favourite response 
                            was to quip that we "quit that years ago when 
                            the Governor-General made us sick." In time American 
                            sportswriters would go past their shallow prejudices 
                            and admire him for his personal qualities, not least 
                            of which was the quiet dignity he projected.
                          He was too quiet for some though. 
                            Gene Fullmer once recalled the disappointment of the 
                            promoters of their first title fight at Tiger's lack 
                            of braggadocio -a handy weapon in the quest for higher 
                            box office receipts. John Condon, the long time director 
                            of publicity at Madison Square Garden apparently loathed 
                            his tendency to introspection. According to Tommy 
                            Kenville, a Garden publicist, Tiger was at times "difficult 
                            to deal with." He would avoid pressmen and then 
                            when he spoke to them it would be shrouded in bland, 
                            "monosyllabic tones" such as "It could 
                            be a good fight
." But many of his contests 
                            were just that; good fights. Occasionally they were 
                            classic exhibitions of pugilism. 
                          On October 23 1962, at San Francisco's 
                            Candlestick Park, he seized the N.B.A. middleweight 
                            crown from the bloodied Gene Fullmer in a match which 
                            lived up to its 'Pier six brawl' billing. Afterwards 
                            in Nigeria, they celebrated like never; bursting out 
                            of their homes and into the streets to sing and dance 
                            in unbridled jubilation. After being granted undisputed 
                            status by edict of the other governing bodies, Tiger 
                            defended his title twice against Fullmer. First was 
                            a drawn verdict in Las Vegas in Las Vegas while the 
                            other happened in Ibadan, western Nigeria. Black Africa's 
                            first world title bout occurred eleven years before 
                            Zaire's 'Rumble in the Jungle.' For Tiger who painstakingly 
                            had built up a career without the benefit of support, 
                            it was a triumphant homecoming. The build up was eventful 
                            too. Nigeria's quarrelling politicians called a temporary 
                            truce in aid of an event, which they underwrote and 
                            utilised in the promotion of their newly independent 
                            nation. Tiger's subsequent seven round mauling of 
                            Fullmer before thirty thousand baying countrymen, 
                            was one of his most assured and destructive displays 
                            of boxing skill. "Fullmer's face," wrote 
                            Peter Wilson of the London Daily Mirror, 'was a rubbery 
                            caricature of human countenance, a contour map of 
                            disaster with bumps and lumps for mountains and, ridges 
                            and meandering red streaks for the rivers.'
                          The euphoria however would not last 
                            for long. A few months later in the first ever world 
                            title bout promoted in Atlantic City, he dropped a 
                            fifteen round decision to Joey Giardello. It was one 
                            of Tiger's more disappointing outings but a stellar 
                            performance by Giardello who surprised many on the 
                            night by a jab and move strategy. "Fancy giving 
                            the verdict to the runner instead of the fighter," 
                            Tiger lamented. "Ahh, these days you can win 
                            a world championship by running." He could never 
                            accept that a boxer could win a fight and a challenger 
                            a championship "playing tricks" and "flying 
                            around like a bird." American judges, he had 
                            been led to believe were more inclined to favouring 
                            aggressors.
                          The other thing which Tiger had been 
                            led to believe about Americans was that they kept 
                            their promises. "You were man enough to give 
                            me a chance at the title, so you deserve a return," 
                            Giardello told him. These word would haunt Tiger for 
                            close to two years during which Giardello continued 
                            to vacillate and to prevaricate. Yet this was the 
                            period during which Tiger consolidated a major portion 
                            of his legend, taking on every ranked contender willing 
                            to venture into the ring with him. It was the time 
                            when Tiger became a 'Garden fighter,' with both Harry 
                            Markson and Teddy Brenner, Madison Square Gardens 
                            matchmaker, seeing Tiger as a useful tool in attracting 
                            live audiences in a new boxing era brought about in 
                            1964 when the Gillette company announced the ending 
                            of its sponsored coverage of fights at the Garden. 
                            There were wins over Jose Gonzalez, Don Fullmer and 
                            Juan 'Rocky' Rivero. A controversial points loss to 
                            Joey Archer sullied his streak of wins But his most 
                            impressive victory of the period occurred in May of 
                            1965 when he dropped the 'Hurricane,' Rubin Carter 
                            three times on the way to a unanimous decision. This 
                            performance convinced many, among them the Ring's 
                            Nat Loubet that Tiger was the 'worlds best middleweight, 
                            the uncrowned champion.' Giardello relented and later 
                            on that year regained his title in what was described 
                            as the 'most one sided fight to be staged in New York 
                            for some time.' In the process, he set some noteworthy 
                            achievements; joining Ketchel, Zale and Robinson as 
                            the only fighters in history to have regained the 
                            middleweight championship.
                          In April 1966, he lost his title to 
                            Emile Griffith. Although the judges scored the bout 
                            unanimously in Griffiths favour, most of the attending 
                            press corps saw it for Tiger. Among their ranks, was 
                            the stentorian Nat Fleisher who described the decision 
                            as being 'one of the worst rendered in New York for 
                            many years.' 'The judges,' he added, ' had being honest 
                            but deluded.' With Griffiths and the Garden disposed 
                            to putting him behind a queue consisting of the likes 
                            of Nino Benvenuti and Joey Archer, Tiger sensed that 
                            his career might be drawing to an end. He appealed 
                            to the New York State Athletic Commission to arrange 
                            a rematch on what he termed as 'neutral ground.' He 
                            even went as far as to call upon the W.B.A. to have 
                            the match nullified. Both request were politely turned 
                            down. Retirement now beckoned. Much of his earnings 
                            had been invested in property back home in Nigeria. 
                            There were apartment blocks, a customised jewellery 
                            establishment, a bookshop and a two thousand seat 
                            cinema complex. He drove a top of the range Mercedes 
                            Benz and lived in a nine-bedroom mansion. 
                          But the trappings of wealth failed 
                            to diminish his hunger. There was still a lot of fight 
                            in him and he moved up a division to challenge Jose 
                            Torres for the world's light heavyweight title. The 
                            fact that this Cus D'Amato nurtured Puerto Rican was 
                            younger, taller, heavier and nominally more the naturally 
                            talented boxer failed to dampen Tiger's ambition and 
                            desire. There is a moment from the fight, beautifully 
                            recounted by Torres in an obituary he would write 
                            for Tiger that captures the spirit of Dick Tiger. 
                            Torres saw an opening and connected solidly with a 
                            combination of punches before stepping back to watch 
                            Tiger fall to the canvas; a pause long enough for 
                            Tiger to riposte with a stunning left hook. The first 
                            thing Torres noticed when his head cleared and his 
                            vision returned was the exposed brown coloured mouthpiece 
                            of Tigers; Tiger was smiling. Tiger upset the odds 
                            when he obtained the unanimous verdict and became 
                            only the second man in sixty-three years to have one 
                            both middle and light heavyweight titles. This feat 
                            was acknowledged by New York's sportswriters who awarded 
                            him the Edward J. Neill Award. Five months later in 
                            May 1967, he repeated his victory, this time with 
                            a split decision. 
                          Afterwards he returned to Nigeria 
                            to give his support to the act of secession by his 
                            native Eastern Region. During 1966, Tiger's Igbo kith 
                            and kin had endured much suffering in a concatenation 
                            of bloodletting. In May and October, many lost their 
                            lives in a vicious ethnic pogrom executed in the Northern 
                            part of the country. Between these events, in July, 
                            a mutiny orchestrated by Northern Soldiers toppled 
                            the military regime headed by General Aguiyi-Ironsi, 
                            an Igbo who suffered a particularly brutal assassination. 
                            Much of the commercial and public sector of in Northern 
                            Nigeria was dominated by the Igbo's whom the Northerners 
                            feared were hell bent on establishing a form of tribal 
                            hegemony. The subsequent accession of a Northerner 
                            as Head of State was disputed by Colonel Ojukwu, the 
                            military govenor of the East whose eventual proclamation 
                            of the rebel republic of Biafra triggered off the 
                            ensuing civil conflict. Tiger did not remain unaffected 
                            by events. In February 1967, he staged a charity bout 
                            in the city of Port Harcourt with one Abraham Tonica, 
                            Nigeria's Middleweight champion in order to raise 
                            funds for the worsening plight of the refugee's swarming 
                            into the Eastern region to escape the killings. Tiger 
                            himself was not unknowing of the risk Igbo's such 
                            as himself faced. Such was the climate of fear that 
                            when in November of 1966 he left to challenge Torres 
                            for the first time, he did not venture through Lagos 
                            airport, controlled now by the North, but, instead 
                            made the first of many circuitous journeys via Francophone 
                            Africa and Portugal.
                          It is a habit of peoples involved 
                            in wars to appoint their celebrities to aid the national 
                            morale effort. Biafra had Tiger; and after his successful 
                            defence of his light heavyweight title against Roger 
                            Rouse, he returned to receive a direct commission 
                            into the Morale Corps of the rebel army. His remit 
                            was to put recruits into shape at Biafran army training 
                            camps and to keep up the spirits of townsfolk suffering 
                            from devastating raids of the Nigerian Air Force. 
                            Never far from the terror (he recounted a story of 
                            serving as a body collector in the aftermath of an 
                            air raid of a market town) he grew bitter at what 
                            he perceived be the indiscriminate bombing of civilian 
                            targets.
                          Before the end of 1967, Biafra was 
                            blockaded by the Federals and virtually cut off from 
                            the outside world. But Tiger found his way out to 
                            fight Bob Foster. The huge $100,000 guarantee extracted 
                            from Fosters handlers by Jersey Jones represented 
                            the risk that Tiger would be taking against the man 
                            avoided by light heavyweight champions Willie Pastrano 
                            and Jose Torres as well as the funds Tiger needed 
                            to support his family and the cause. At six-foot three, 
                            Fosters spindly physique bore a certain resemblance 
                            to the freakish anatomies of Panama Al Brown and Sandy 
                            Saddler. But his punches carried tremendous power. 
                            Indeed the right upper cut and left hook that devastated 
                            Tiger in the fourth round at the fourth incarnation 
                            of Madison Square Garden was one of the hardest combinations 
                            seen in a boxing ring. Gamely, Tiger tried raising 
                            himself up, but could not recover. Afterwards, he 
                            intrigued the reporters who visited him with an insightful 
                            rendition of the sensations felt by the fighting man 
                            trapped in the throes of the 'blacklights': 'I do 
                            not see anything. I do not hear anything. Everything 
                            is all quiet and it is dark.' It was the first and 
                            only time that he was counted out in his career.
                          But the war, and perhaps pride, would 
                            not permit him the luxury of retirement. So fighting 
                            only for what he termed 'daily bread,' he prolonged 
                            his career. In October 1968, he tussled memorably 
                            with a hard hitting New Jersey fighter named Frankie 
                            DePaula. Both men visited the canvas on two occasions 
                            each, before Tiger was awarded the unanimous verdict. 
                            It was voted Ring magazines fight of the year. The 
                            contest also received Tigers vote: four large sized 
                            photographs, capturing the scene of each knockdown, 
                            were framed and mounted on his living room wall. In 
                            May of 1969, he outpointed the world middleweight 
                            champion Nino Benvenuti in an over the weight contest. 
                            But an offer by the Garden to stage a title bout between 
                            both men was declined on account of Tiger's belief 
                            in the futility of maintaining strength and stamina 
                            at the one hundred and sixty pound weight limit. These 
                            battles in his twilight years endeared Tiger to the 
                            New York fight public in a manner few non-American 
                            fighters succeeded in doing. "The thing about 
                            Dick Tiger," commented Teddy Brenner, "is 
                            that he has an honest heart and willing hands. If 
                            he gets beat, it's only because the other guy was 
                            a better fighter that night. He usually gives away 
                            height and weight and age, but, he never gives heart."
                          A dreary albeit winning duel against 
                            light heavyweight contender Andy Kendall and a decision 
                            loss to Emile Griffith in July 1970 rounded up his 
                            eighteen year career. There had also been an ending 
                            to the Nigerian civil war. Outnumbered, outgunned 
                            and finally out manoeuvred, the Biafran rebels capitulated 
                            in January of 1970. Tiger remained in New York an 
                            exile from his reunited homeland. His wife and children 
                            who initially had resided in Portugal had since joined 
                            him. After his defeat to Griffith, he struggled to 
                            remain in the topflight visiting gyms and Harry Marksons 
                            offices at the Garden desperately trying to make one 
                            last 'big time' fight. When this failed to materialise, 
                            he took a job as a security guard at New York's Natural 
                            History Museum -not as has being frequently claimed 
                            due to financial emaciation, but according to his 
                            family, as a means of fulfilling a natural urge to 
                            keep himself occupied. Then came the prognosis of 
                            liver cancer made during a weeklong stay at the New 
                            York Polyclinic Hospital in July of 1971. Given a 
                            few months to live, Tiger resolved to go back to Nigeria 
                            where a generous peace had being formulated by General 
                            Gowon, the Head of State. Under the banner slogan 
                            'No victor, No vanquished,' a general amnesty had 
                            been granted to those who had played a part in the 
                            rebellion. But Tiger continued to have doubts about 
                            this and feared reprisals in the event of his return. 
                            And not for good reason: his propagandising of the 
                            Biafran effort caused anger among many military officials. 
                            In numerous interviews he had alluded to war crimes 
                            committed by the Nigerian Armed Forces. Leaflets alleging 
                            the same had being distributed at fights at Madison 
                            Square Garden. Furthermore, Tiger's insistence that 
                            the Biafran anthem be played before his bouts and 
                            the return of his M.B.E. civil medal, albeit British 
                            but nevertheless complete with a publicised note condemning 
                            its moral and military support for Nigeria in its 
                            'genocidal war against the people of Biafra, were 
                            all considered highly provocative and virtually unforgivable 
                            by influential officers in the ruling junta. Tiger's 
                            doubts could not be quelled by the assurances given 
                            by the Nigerians that he would be allowed to return 
                            safely and so he called on Larry Merchant, then a 
                            columnist with the New York Post to bear witness to 
                            a formal guarantee of safe passage issued by a Nigerian 
                            consulate official in Manhattan.
                          He returned unmolested (apart from 
                            a three hour interview conducted by Nigerian security 
                            agents who confiscated his passport) and was able 
                            to account for most of his properties. One was never 
                            returned. Neither was his passport. In an act of spitefulness, 
                            the military regime refused his request to be let 
                            out of the country to undergo radical treatment for 
                            his ailment. He succumbed, finally, aged 42 on December 
                            15 1971. The funeral five days later brought out the 
                            mourners in their thousands. Among the graveside rites 
                            was twenty-one gun salute.
                          His premature death, occasioned as 
                            it was in the wake of the defeat suffered by the renegade 
                            Biafran state on which he staked so much upon, has 
                            unsurprisingly served to cast an enduring pall that 
                            has tended to overemphasize the tragic aspect of his 
                            life. But while his ending was tragic, his life was 
                            far from being catastrophic, indeed, it was an inspiring 
                            tale of progress and self improvement; from humble 
                            bottle trader to to wealthy realtor; from obscure 
                            boxing booths to that pinnacle of boxing venues known 
                            as Madison Square Garden. Dick Tiger was a man of 
                            many parts: a courageous fighter, a Nigerian patriot, 
                            Biafran rebel, a devoted family man and a gentleman, 
                            all roles which he underscored with a rich vein of 
                            integrity.
                          'He was,' eulogised Ted Carroll, 'that 
                            rare individual whose abilities in his chosen profession 
                            matched his qualities as a man.'
                          Copyright Ade Makinde 
                            2001.