1868 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
National championship
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Events
Events
England
Major tournaments
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England
Australia
Canada
Ireland
USA
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The Boat Race
Other events
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1841 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1856 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1861 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1862 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1863 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1864 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1865 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1866 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1867 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1869 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1870 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1871 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1872 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1873 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1879 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
1885 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.
James "Jem" Mace was an English boxing champion, primarily during the bare-knuckle era. He was born at Beeston, Norfolk. Although nicknamed "The Gypsy", he denied Romani ethnicity in his autobiography. Fighting in England, at the height of his career between 1860 and 1866, he won the English Welterweight, Heavyweight, and Middleweight Championships and was considered one of the most scientific boxers of the era. Most impressively, he held the World Heavyweight Championship from 1870 to 1871 while fighting in the United States.
Joe Coburn was an Irish-American boxer. In 1862 he claimed the Heavyweight Championship from John Carmel Heenan when Heenan refused to fight him.
Mike McCoole, sometimes spelled McCool, was an Irish-born bare-knuckle boxing champion who came to America at the age of thirteen. He claimed the Heavyweight Championship of America in 1866 by defeating boxer Bill Davis after former champion Joe Coburn retired, and lost the title to Tom Allen in 1873.
Tom Allen was a British bare-knuckle boxer who claimed the Heavyweight Championship from 1873, when he defeated Mike McCoole, until 1876, when he lost to Joe Goss. For much of his earlier career he fought just above the middleweight range, around 165-75, making him smaller than most of the heavyweights he met, he became an American citizen later in life.