Rick Farris wrote:kikibalt wrote:Rick,Rick Farris wrote: Frank, as you know, everybody associated with L.A. boxing during the sixties, seems to have memories the Little Bird, Pajarito Moreno. Here is mine.
In 1966, my favorite L.A. featherweights were Raul Rojas & Dwight Hawkins. The previous year, Rojas suffered his only loss, a 15 round KO by champ Vicente Saldivar. He was on the comeback trail, and match with Moreno was expected to be an explosive war, one that would put the winner in line for a title shot.
In March of 1966, at the Olympic, Rojas and Moreno exchanged bombs before a deep cut above Moreno's eye forced the fight to be stopped in the third round. Moreno had had his moments, rocking the strong Rojas with whistling left hooks in the opening round.
Three months later, a rematch would be held at the larger L.A. Sports Arena, where promoter Aileen Eaton could pack in another 4,ooo fans, with the overflow filing the 10,400 seat Olympic Auditorium for a closed-circuit TV broadcast. This time Rojas flattened Moreno in two, and began his climb to a world title.
That night, I remember Manuel Ramos defeating a tired looking Eddie Machen in preliminary ten rounder. This fight put Manuel Ramos just outside top ten ranking in the heavyweight division, which would lead him to something known as sure death back then, Joe Frazier.
-Rick Farris
I remember Pajarito from when he first came to L.A., 1957, I believe, he got such a build-up that he was drawing 5000-6000 people at the Hollywood Legion just to see him hit the bags, that was before he even had a fight in L.A., my wife and I went to see him work-out before his first fight in L.A. at the Legion, and we also went to his fight against Tommy Bain, which was his first fight in L.A..
In his fight with Bain, in the first or second round, Moreno lets go with one of his trade-mark left hooks and hits the referee knocking him down.
It was a crazy nite of boxing.
We were ringside for his two fights vs Rojas.
Frank, I remember Moreno as a guy who either KOed his opponent, or was KOed himself. Moreno's Boxrec. record is listed as 60-12-1, 59 KO's/9 KO losses. Only one of Moreno's five dozen wins went the distance, and I had to look up this obscure legend's name, and when I tried, I found that the boxrec version of Pajarito's record lists 59 Ko's in 60 wins, but it does not have a decision victory, or one that required he be around at the final bell (of his wins).
If somebody knows the name of the guy who extended Pajarito Moreno to the final bell, in a Moreno win, please enlighten me. Gracias!
-Rick
OK, I have the answer. It's Bennie Burton, who retired after five rounds against Moreno, after having four of his front teeth knocked out. The win is labeled a RTD, as in he "retired" with a broken face. Seems to me that also qualifies as a KO, considering some of the so-called KO's on Roy Jones record. Am I wrong?
As far as I'm concerned Moreno scored KO's in all sixty of his pro wins. I believe he was shot to death, whilke driving a cab? Anybody know the details?
-Rick
















