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Al Phillips

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Al Phillips

Al "The Aldgate Tiger" Phillips (25 January 1920 – 7 February 1999) was a Jewish English professional featherweight/lightweight boxer of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, who won the European Boxing Union (EBU) featherweight title, and British Empire featherweight title. Phillips took both the British Empire and sanctioned British Boxing Board of Control (BBBofC) British featherweight Title against the powerful black feather British Guianan Cliff Anderson in fifteen rounds at Royal Albert Hall in Kensington, England in 1947.

He was an unsuccessful challenger for the BBBofC British featherweight title, against Nel Tarleton in February 1945, and Ronnie Clayton in February 1951. His professional fighting weight varied from 124.5 lb (56.5 kg; 8 st 12.5 lb), (featherweight) to 137 lb (62 kg; 9 st 11 lb), (welterweight). The Ring ranked Al Phillips as the third best featherweight in the world in the mid-1940s and between 1944 and 1951, he remained a top ten featherweight in the world for 44 months.

Phillips was an action packed, two fisted pressure boxer who lacked the finesse of many earlier British and European champions. Former British and many European champions were expected to hit and retreat or avoid blows using ringcraft and long range boxing. Despite having fourteen years on Phillips, Ned Tarleton, a classic English stylist, gave Phillips problems in the ring.

He won his first eliminator bout for the British featherweight title in a sixth round disqualification against Len Davies, on 24 April 1943 at the Queensbury Club in Soho. Davies would later contend unsuccessfully for the Welsh Area BBofC Featherweight title in 1950. Phillips won his second eliminator bout for the British Featherweight title on 24 April 1944, against Jim Brady at Colston Hall in Leeds in a ten-round points decision. On 21 June 1944, Phillips won a third eliminator for the British Featherweight title by a first-round knockout of George Pook at the Queensbury Club in Soho.

On 25 February 1945, Phillips lost to Nel Tarleton for British Empire featherweight championship, in a fifteen-round points decision in Manchester. The fight was described as "one of the most sensational Britain had seen in many years". Tarleton was thirty-nine at the time of the bout, to Phillips fledgling twenty-five years. Tarleton, though in trouble at times, held on using ringcraft and finesse against the power and constant attack of Phillips. Tarleton regained the Lonsdale belt which he had won for the first time in 1931. The Sydney Morning Herald wrote that Tarleton "brilliantly outpointed Phillips".

On 3 July 1945 Phillips lost to Dave Crowley in an eight-round points decision in Soho. He defeated Crowley on 12 June in an eight rounds points decision at the same location.

On 3 October 1945, Phillips defeated black Montreal boxer Danny Webb in a sixth-round knockout at Seymoure Hall in Marylebone. With his aggressive style, Philips scored eight knockdowns in the first round, the first two coming from right hooks. In a rough bout, Phillips went down from a right hook to the jaw from Webb in the third, Webb's best round. Phillips attacked again in the fourth putting Webb down for a two-second count, and for the remaining two rounds dominated the bout. Phillips scored in the sixth with a series of straight lefts and then dropped Webb for the full count with a short right hook. On 16 April 1945 Phillips lost to Crowley at the Royal Albert Hall in an eight-round points decision. The victory confirmed Crowley's victory on a fourth round foul on at Newington on 18 December 1944 by referee Jack Hart. In their April bout, there was bad blood between the two, and Crowley took the sting from Phillips blows with a smothering defense, and gained points with left hand jabs, especially during the final rounds. His performance in the final rounds were sufficient to win the points decision.

On 18 March 1947, Phillips officially took the British Empire and sanctioned BBofC Featherweight Title against black feather British Guianan Cliff Anderson in fifteen rounds at Royal Albert Hall in Kensington, England. The decision of the referee Peter Muir was not popular with the crowd.

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