1.
Handball, swimming, running, jumping, basketball, and boxing were as much a part of me as breathing.
Gene Tunney
2.
As a West Side kid fooling around with boxing gloves, I had been, for some reason of temperament, more interested in dodging a blow than in striking one.
Gene Tunney
3.
Exercise should be regarded as tribute to the heart.
Gene Tunney
4.
The way to know about championship quality is to learn from champions, and that I did; studying them with professional purpose during my time in the ring and from habitual interest afterward.
Gene Tunney
5.
The greatest fighter I ever saw
Gene Tunney
6.
To enjoy the glow of good health, you must exercise.
Gene Tunney
7.
Though I was not a belligerent kid, I do not think I ever passed up a good opportunity to fight.
Gene Tunney
8.
Upon awakening in the morning, I wondered if the proceedings of the night before had been a dream. It was hard to believe that I was the world's heavyweight champion.
Gene Tunney
9.
If all human lives depended upon their usefulness - as might be judged by certain standards - there would be a sudden and terrific mortality in the world.
Gene Tunney
10.
Normally, I could hit hard enough, as anyone who studied my fights might have known. But the impression was that I was essentially defensive, the very reverse of a killer, the prize fighter who read books, even Shakespeare.
Gene Tunney
11.
A boxer must exercise and develop every part of his body.
Gene Tunney
12.
I've seen Dempsey fight and I was impressed with his lack of knowledge.
Gene Tunney
13.
A boxer's diet should be low in fat and high in proteins and sugar. Therefore you should eat plenty of lean meat, milk, leafy vegetables, and fresh fruit and ice cream for sugar.
Gene Tunney
14.
My own ambition in the ring had always been skillful boxing, speed and defense - on the order of Mike Gibbons.
Gene Tunney
15.
I did six years of planning to win the championship from Jack Dempsey.
Gene Tunney
16.
Never eat less than four hours before boxing. Then eat only lightly.
Gene Tunney
17.
Fat is one of the chief enemies of the heart because it has to be plentifully supplied with blood and thus needlessly increases the pumping load that the heart must sustain.
Gene Tunney
18.
The man who has allowed his body to deteriorate cuts a pitiful figure - chest collapsed, stomach protruding.
Gene Tunney
19.
A concave chest means that your diaphragm is sagging.
Gene Tunney
20.
Ever since boyhood I've made a religion of keeping in shape by regular, conscientious exercise.
Gene Tunney
21.
But I do say that, if you will regularly devote 15 minutes a day, preferably before breakfast, for 60 days to the simple set of exercises that I devised for conditioning men in the navy, I guarantee that you will enjoy increased physical buoyancy and mental vigor.
Gene Tunney
22.
In youth, we get plenty of exercise through games and running around, but as middle life approaches, we settle down, literally and figuratively.
Gene Tunney
23.
Many complain of a chronic weariness that sleep will not banish. Their trouble is that too little blood is pumped through the body per minute; this sluggishness, permitting poisonous waste matter to accumulate in every cell, clogs the channels of energy.
Gene Tunney