
"Sonny"
By Diego

Shit!, man!, can you imagine, its been 56 years since that pic, was shot, damn!!kikibalt wrote:Yeah! I guess I been here and there a few times in my life.Randyman wrote:Frank, that is a classic photo. I'm saving a copy for myself. You've been around man.kikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
Randy
Frank,Randy,Rickkikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
Rog, as I'm sure all of us on this thread have learned by now, there are different kinds of tough. In all seriousness, I have no idea if Chavez (despite that great fighting name) would or could have been a fighter in the physical sense. His was a different arena. In that arena he was a tireless, hard fighting champ. I wrote a few days ago about a guy I knew from school named Kerry Riley. Wasn't a fighter in way we know it but there weren't too many tougher. I admire courage, real courage in all it's forms.dagosd2000 wrote:It's a good thing Chavez became a Union Leader. If he'd been a boxer,he would have kicked some ass. This guy was tough. Soft spoken,but wouldn't budge on his principles.He's up there with MLK.kikibalt wrote:Cesar Chavez
"Cesar"
By Diego


Great picture. I was born in 1952.kikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
Hey, not bad Frank but I thought you were sent up there to work!kikibalt wrote:
A couple of pics. from my time working up north.
I don't remember the girls names.
RickRandyman wrote:Great writing Rick, If this is how you write when you aren't feeling well............Frank . . . I'm not feeling well and don't plan to return to work until monday. In the mean time, I'm going to get some rest and focus on this forum. I have an idea, a short series of memories related to fighting at the Olympic. I already chronicled my memories of the dressing room, and actually stepping into the ring, but I'd like to expand on this for the guys. Just random thoughts, as they pass thru my mind, as they have quite a bit lately, since you began this thread. I have a great photo of the Olympic "as we knew it", taken by the great Theo Eret, official Olympic Auditorium photographer from the 60's thru the 70's. I'll get it off to you, and under that photo, I'll begin a short series of memories.
The Olympic was very special to us L.A. Boxing afficianados. It was kinda like the Madison Square Garden of the West, only more exclusive. In it's heyday, the Olympic catered only to Boxing, Wrestling & the Roller Derby, Tuesday thru Thursday. Aside from occasional "fund raisers", etc. it basicly sat dark the rest of the week. Unlike the Garden, you didn't see The Ringling Bros. Circus at the 18th & Grand arena, nor Pavoratti and the other two tenors, or indoor track meets, etc The Olympic catered only to the rough side of entertainment, and she did it with her own sense of class.
You know, the Olympic had a special following, an audience made up of a mixture of blue collar workers, celebrites, gangsters, etc. I'll never forget Johnny Flores and I standing in the corner of the ring, before Jimmy Lennon's introductions on December 10, 1970. Johnny would try to take the edge off by pointing out various personalities at ringside, Ryan O'Neal, Bill Cosby, Connie Stevens, Chuck Connors and others. One night, as I stood in the ring as a prelim fighter, in the opening bout to a sold-out house that had come to see Mando Ramos take on his old stablemate Raul Rojas, in a grudge match, Johnny pointed down to a short, stocky, well dressed old man wearing an expensive hat.
"That's Mickey Cohen", Johnny informed me. As the old gangster stared up toward me, his lady friend, B-movie actress Edie Williams, smiled from ear-to-ear, waving to the crowd, dipping forward to deliberatly expose her clevage. The crowd went crazy, and when Williams tore off her top, exposing her bare boos, Aileen Eaton ran over and personally tossed the actress out. "Sorry Mickey, but she's outta here", Aileen told Cohen. One thing was certain, there was enough electricity flowing thru that audience to light up the entire City of L.A. on that night . . . Mando Ramos was fighting! That was all it took.
After I won a hard fought decision in the opening four rounder, Armando Muniz KOed Cipriano Hernandez in the scheduled six, followed by Ramos' stablemate Frankie Crawford, who KOed Jose Luis Martinez with a whistling left hook that landed a couple seconds after final bell. When TV announcer Jim Healy asked Crawford why he punched his opponent after the bell had rang, Frankie cocked his head to the side, blinked and answered, "What bell?" Typical Frankie Crawford.
After weeks of drama promoting the Ramos-Rojas affair, the former lightweight champ, who'd just turned 22, iced Raul Rojas with a picture perfect left hook to the chin, in the sixth round, I believe, thus settling a fued that had raged for a couple of years. I have pics of the weigh-in, and I'll get them off to Frank, so he can post them here for the world to see.
Like Randy said, "better it's being managed by God at the moment, than transformed into parking lot." I'll give you that, Randy.
-Rick Farris
Yeah! But I could play too.....Randyman wrote:Hey, not bad Frank but I thought you were sent up there to work!kikibalt wrote:
A couple of pics. from my time working up north.
I don't remember the girls names.
I forgot to mention. Everytime these wiseguys would come out for a visit,the FBI would be over in a half hour. They were pretty nice fellas. The Special Agent In Charge was a guy named Jack Armstrong. Yeah,Jack Armstrong.Armstrong and my father became good friends. After Armstrong retired,my father and him would often have lunch. Armstrong liked hearing stories about Al Capone and the rest of Chcago's mob guys.When my father died,Armstrong felt real bad.Sometimes I think he wished he was on the other side. Only sometimes. Funny,when my father would make contact with Armstrong ,my father used an alias,"Joe Brazil".dagosd2000 wrote:Joey Giardello died . Everytime I think of Giardello,I think of a guy who looked at fighting as an easy way to make a living. Yeah,an easy way. I say that because he liked fighting.It was no big deal. He wasn't scared of anyone,and wanted to fight everybody. The more he fought,the more money he made.
When my father moved out to San Diego,the Outfit would come out to visit. What was discussed probably had something to do with gambling or skimming from the casinos in Vegas. I know they fronted my father a lot of money once to open up the book in Mexico. The deal fell through when the Mexican officials started getting greedy. One sfternoon some of the Outfit guys came to San Diego to set something up with my father. My father pointed out Jackie"The Lackey" Cerone and Frank LaPorte . He introduced them to me. With them that day was Joey Giardello. I don't think Giardello was mixed up with those guys. He was a friend. Italian mob guys liked hanging around fighters. Italian fighters. Not to bask in their limelight,but because they were all greaseball to some degree. When they "got down" ,it was greaseball Italian. Giardello fit the mold. It was like the old neighborhood. It was like when he fought. So what? I ain't afraid. An easy way to make a buck. Don't even think about it. Yeah,Joey blended in with that crew all right. Those Outfit guys were afraid of nothin' too.
Now Joey's dead. He probably punched the coroner in the face before he checked out.
How about a shot of Mescal instead? You know Rog, after Dwight Hawkins flattened Jose Beccera in L.A., a rematch was scheduled in Beccera's hometown of Guadalajara. Beccera was close to challenging Halimi for the bantam crown when the 17-year-old Hawkins upset him, on the undercard of the Halimi-Macias title fight at the L.A. Sports Arena. This time, they wanted the future champ to have all the edges and this is why the rematch took place in his hometown.dagosd2000 wrote:RickRandyman wrote:Great writing Rick, If this is how you write when you aren't feeling well............Frank . . . I'm not feeling well and don't plan to return to work until monday. In the mean time, I'm going to get some rest and focus on this forum. I have an idea, a short series of memories related to fighting at the Olympic. I already chronicled my memories of the dressing room, and actually stepping into the ring, but I'd like to expand on this for the guys. Just random thoughts, as they pass thru my mind, as they have quite a bit lately, since you began this thread. I have a great photo of the Olympic "as we knew it", taken by the great Theo Eret, official Olympic Auditorium photographer from the 60's thru the 70's. I'll get it off to you, and under that photo, I'll begin a short series of memories.
The Olympic was very special to us L.A. Boxing afficianados. It was kinda like the Madison Square Garden of the West, only more exclusive. In it's heyday, the Olympic catered only to Boxing, Wrestling & the Roller Derby, Tuesday thru Thursday. Aside from occasional "fund raisers", etc. it basicly sat dark the rest of the week. Unlike the Garden, you didn't see The Ringling Bros. Circus at the 18th & Grand arena, nor Pavoratti and the other two tenors, or indoor track meets, etc The Olympic catered only to the rough side of entertainment, and she did it with her own sense of class.
You know, the Olympic had a special following, an audience made up of a mixture of blue collar workers, celebrites, gangsters, etc. I'll never forget Johnny Flores and I standing in the corner of the ring, before Jimmy Lennon's introductions on December 10, 1970. Johnny would try to take the edge off by pointing out various personalities at ringside, Ryan O'Neal, Bill Cosby, Connie Stevens, Chuck Connors and others. One night, as I stood in the ring as a prelim fighter, in the opening bout to a sold-out house that had come to see Mando Ramos take on his old stablemate Raul Rojas, in a grudge match, Johnny pointed down to a short, stocky, well dressed old man wearing an expensive hat.
"That's Mickey Cohen", Johnny informed me. As the old gangster stared up toward me, his lady friend, B-movie actress Edie Williams, smiled from ear-to-ear, waving to the crowd, dipping forward to deliberatly expose her clevage. The crowd went crazy, and when Williams tore off her top, exposing her bare boos, Aileen Eaton ran over and personally tossed the actress out. "Sorry Mickey, but she's outta here", Aileen told Cohen. One thing was certain, there was enough electricity flowing thru that audience to light up the entire City of L.A. on that night . . . Mando Ramos was fighting! That was all it took.
After I won a hard fought decision in the opening four rounder, Armando Muniz KOed Cipriano Hernandez in the scheduled six, followed by Ramos' stablemate Frankie Crawford, who KOed Jose Luis Martinez with a whistling left hook that landed a couple seconds after final bell. When TV announcer Jim Healy asked Crawford why he punched his opponent after the bell had rang, Frankie cocked his head to the side, blinked and answered, "What bell?" Typical Frankie Crawford.
After weeks of drama promoting the Ramos-Rojas affair, the former lightweight champ, who'd just turned 22, iced Raul Rojas with a picture perfect left hook to the chin, in the sixth round, I believe, thus settling a fued that had raged for a couple of years. I have pics of the weigh-in, and I'll get them off to Frank, so he can post them here for the world to see.
Like Randy said, "better it's being managed by God at the moment, than transformed into parking lot." I'll give you that, Randy.
-Rick Farris
I don't want to sound negative either,but whenever you feel like writing I got a bottle of water from Tijuana.


kikibalt wrote:
Two Joeys, Giardello and Giambra
dagosd2000 wrote:Frank,Randy,Rickkikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
I'm serious as hell on this. Very few outsiders understand the tenacity and struggle the farm workers endured in California. Most were Mexican. That's why I have such a reverence for people on farms on ranches. The work is hard. The field workers worked the hardest. It was Chavez who outlawed the use of the "short handled" hoe. Farm owners wanted to see the workers on their hands and knees. That was proof they were working.So many mexicans today worked in the fields under terrible conditions. They still do. I have respect for what they did. They put food on my table. Gracias amigos.
The Mexicans who worked in those fields are somewhat forgotton. Say Cesar Chavez,and they think of the fighter. But they are thinking of the wrong fighter. Cesar Chavez was a humble man who loved his family and wanted rights for the farm worker. I think Julio Cesar Chavez was ducking this guy. He knows he would have been turned inside out. i will never forget Cesar Chavez.
A church! Even JC would double-take a little at that.Rick Farris wrote:The Olympic Today . . .kikibalt wrote:
The Olympic today...![]()
Ironically, I passed by the Olympic Auditorium very early this morning, about 2am on my way home from work. I was tired, but hadn't seen it since it's conversion to a church, so I pulled off the freeway and circled the place. It was kinda sad. On the west wall, A huge sign had been painted that reads, "Jesus Saves Lives!" On the north wall, a big electric sign is exposed to those passing on the freeway, advertising it as a Christian church, in both English and Korean. The walls looked scrubbed clean. Of course, the Olympic of old had lost it's original luster to me in the early 90's, when it's new owner Jack Needleman renovated the old girl, removing seats, painting over the huge mural of a boxer that had adorned it's walls since it's opening in 1926.
It had been renamed, "The Grand Olympic Aud." about 15-years-ago. Grand??? Hell, we know it was grand, anybody who ever sat ringside on thursday nights didn't need to be reminded of that reality. Also removed in the '90's renovation was that legendary marquis, the one that used to have the names of the weeks boxing wrestling main-eventers. However, no longer a "girl", the old broad almost looked as if she were laughing, as if enjoying a bad joke society was trying to play on it. Something kept going thru my mind, like, the building was saying, "You can paint me, change me, call me what you want, but I know who I am, I'm the Olympic, America's last great boxing venue . . . and one day, when somebody comes to their senses, I'LL BE BACK!"
I hope you are right, baby. Damn, I miss you!
-Rick Farris
Joey, even as a boxer, always had one of those 'old' faces; consequently, it seems like he lived for a thousand years, to me.Randyman wrote:My condolences to his family. Rest in peace Champ!kikibalt wrote:Joey Giardello has died,
RIP, Joey....
I agree Bennie, you certainly hit the nail on the head when you referred to Joey having an "old face". Like you, I saw it when I first started out and it seems he was always there, even long after he retired and no longer was seen much in the public eye. Even so, that "old face' was alwas around, at least in my mind. I feel the same away about Carlos Ortiz.bennie wrote:Joey, even as a boxer, always had one of those 'old' faces; consequently, it seems like he lived for a thousand years, to me.Randyman wrote:My condolences to his family. Rest in peace Champ!kikibalt wrote:Joey Giardello has died,
RIP, Joey....
Good old Joey. You know, I'm pretty sure every man and woman, of a certain generation, knows the name Joey Giardello, even if they don't know too much else about him.
He had one of those names, one of those faces.
In a perfect world, Gene Lebell buys the place and starts promoting Boxing and Wrestling following in his Moms footsteps.bennie wrote:A church! Even JC would double-take a little at that.Rick Farris wrote:The Olympic Today . . .kikibalt wrote:
The Olympic today...![]()
Ironically, I passed by the Olympic Auditorium very early this morning, about 2am on my way home from work. I was tired, but hadn't seen it since it's conversion to a church, so I pulled off the freeway and circled the place. It was kinda sad. On the west wall, A huge sign had been painted that reads, "Jesus Saves Lives!" On the north wall, a big electric sign is exposed to those passing on the freeway, advertising it as a Christian church, in both English and Korean. The walls looked scrubbed clean. Of course, the Olympic of old had lost it's original luster to me in the early 90's, when it's new owner Jack Needleman renovated the old girl, removing seats, painting over the huge mural of a boxer that had adorned it's walls since it's opening in 1926.
It had been renamed, "The Grand Olympic Aud." about 15-years-ago. Grand??? Hell, we know it was grand, anybody who ever sat ringside on thursday nights didn't need to be reminded of that reality. Also removed in the '90's renovation was that legendary marquis, the one that used to have the names of the weeks boxing wrestling main-eventers. However, no longer a "girl", the old broad almost looked as if she were laughing, as if enjoying a bad joke society was trying to play on it. Something kept going thru my mind, like, the building was saying, "You can paint me, change me, call me what you want, but I know who I am, I'm the Olympic, America's last great boxing venue . . . and one day, when somebody comes to their senses, I'LL BE BACK!"
I hope you are right, baby. Damn, I miss you!
-Rick Farris
Frank looks exactly the same now. And who left that car door open?kikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
My buddy Juvie (R) did, he was in a hurry to get in the pic........bennie wrote:Frank looks exactly the same now. And who left that car door open?kikibalt wrote:Randy,
Thats me on the left, "1952"
No-Cal
OK, Frankie, which one was yours?kikibalt wrote:Yeah! But I could play too.....Randyman wrote:Hey, not bad Frank but I thought you were sent up there to work!kikibalt wrote:
A couple of pics. from my time working up north.
I don't remember the girls names.
bennie wrote:Randyman wrote:kikibalt wrote:
A couple of pics. from my time working up north.
I don't remember the girls names.
OK, Frankie, which one was yours?