
Bobby Chacon and Rick Farris











(hic)...excuse me ...(hic)kikibalt wrote:Borracho's....bennie wrote:
The Boys from Classic American West Coast Boxing
Brian Higgins, Dan Hanley Jr., Randy De La O, Roger Esty and Ed Hernandez
Look at all those beers!![]()
John, my apologies to your sister Cleo for forgetting her name.Randyman wrote:
Congratulations to the Entire Bardelli Family on the Induction of Guido Bardelli (Young Firpo) to the 2008 World Boxing Hall of Fame at the
29th Annual Banquet of Champions at the Los Angeles Airport Marriott
Young Firpo - Guido Bardelli - The Uncrowned Light Heavyweight Champion
and 2008 World Boxing Hall of Fame Inductee
John Bardelli and sister (My apologies for forgetting her name) and World Boxing Hall of Fame Board of Directors member and friend of the Bardelli family, Rick Farris
John Bardelli and Rick Farris
John Bardelli remembering his father
John Bardelli and Emcee Tom Kelly
To read more on Young Firpo go here: http://boxing-ring.blogspot.com/search?q=firpo





As with all your paintings Rog, you did a great job. Looking good Frank.kikibalt wrote:Photo by Diego
Orlando De La Fuente, holding a portrait of me, done by Diego.
Thanks Diego....
"Tex" Cohen. Now that's a new one on me. :)kikibalt wrote:Pound for Pound Nationalism Style: Mexico
By Daniel “Tex” Cohen
Nationalism and Boxing are connected at the hip. Some of the best fights in history are based on a nationalistic divide between two fighters. Russians and the US. Mexicans and Filipinos. Italians and Jews.
Race seems to be multiplied several times over in the sport of boxing. There are times when racism seems to prevail to the extent that the business can only scratch its head and wonder whether we have progressed as people. Other times, the influx of racial divide is central to the dramatic conflict; The prejudice is the juice.
This fine line is one that is hardly ever discussed (save when promoters slap together something as ridiculous as “America’s Last Stand”). While one of the most powerful countries in the world has elected its first black president (apologies to Bill Clinton), Boxing is in the frame of mind that race is, if not everything, essential.
Members of this community have several different options available we can pretend that prejudice does not exist, acknowledge and transform it, or redirect it into creative concepts. For example, we could give a geographic breakdown of the best fighters in the world so that we know who is from where. That way, when the next big racially-oriented fight rolls around, such as the “Dream Match” between Oscar De La Hoya and Manny Pacquiao this December, we can all talk about which nationalities actually have the best fighters as of right now.
To do that, we have to identify these fighters. Presented below for you is the Pound for Pound List for one of the greatest boxing countries in the world… Mexico! (Note: These fighters are actually from Mexico. Americans of Mexican descent will be classified as American).
Mexico
This piece could address any number of countries first. Since we are embracing generalizations in this exercise, I may as well plainly state that the Mexican fan base seems to be a loyal group with plenty of great fighters to boot. Also, almost all of the top candidates for the 2008 Fight of the Year have at least one Mexican participant.
#1- Juan Manuel Marquez
Marquez is by far the best fighter from Mexico. He may be the best Mexican fighter since Julio Cesar Chavez retired. His business decisions have not always been solid, but there is plenty of reason to believe that a fight between Marquez and Marco Antonio Barrera when both men were in their primes would have been a masterpiece to watch. Marquez never fought Erik Morales, but that fight could have been absolute gold at one point as well. Marquez has had a great year, with a close decision loss to Pacquiao and a knockout of Joel Casamayor.
#2 - Antonio Margarito
Margarito has a head of stone, and he has used it to take out two A-List competitors this year. After dominating Kermit Cintron in a rematch that was a replica of its predecessor, Margarito knocked out Miguel Cotto in the eleventh round to earn the title of baddest welterweight on the planet.
#3 - Israel Vazquez
One half of the Fight of the Year and part of perhaps the greatest fight trilogy of all time, Vazquez has given more blood than a charitable spirit after natural disaster. He took enough punishment in his one fight in 2008 to cover the bumps and bruises for the rest of the decade. He also is the likely favorite against almost everyone in his weight division.
#4 - Rafael Marquez
The other half of the Fight of the Year could have won his trilogy with Marquez if he had caught a couple of breaks. One of those breaks would have been staying on his feet at the end of the fight. I won’t beat up on Marquez (Vazquez already did that. If you see Rafael Marquez, I didn’t say that). He deserves this rank, right underneath the victor in their series. We can not as commentators and fans repay him for the gut he has shown.
#5 - Ulises Solis
A shout-out to little men nets Solis the number five spot. Solis is a great fighter with a unanimous decision always waiting in his gloves and a knockout always well within his reach. Solis took a title off of Glenn Donaire earlier this year and knocked down Nerys Espinoza several times en route to a unanimous decision.
#6 - Fernando Montiel
Inconsistent but brilliant when at his best, Montiel has absolutely dominated the ring lately. Montiel is probably the quietest semi-legitimate case for 2008 Fighter of the Year, going 3-0, 2 KO’s, and taking out a top tier opponent and two solid contenders. He is also a joy to watch; Montiel’s knifing finishing flurries are among the best in the business.
#7 - Cristian Mijares
Mijares was the man in his division until Vic Darchinyan took him out with pulverizing, winging hooks. Mijares has great movers but did not have it in him that night to defend his title. Mijares will finish the year 3-1, 1 KO. His victory over Jose Navarro was a split decision that should have been a unanimous decision. Mijares is still very dangerous; Underestimating him is the height of stupidity.
#8 - Humberto Soto
Between his loss to Kevin Kelley and his decision loss last year to a very good fighter in Joan Guzman, Soto went-five years without a loss. He should have been 3-0, 3 KO’s this year, but the debacle with Francisco Lorenzo cost him a victory. Soto is a true warrior, unafraid to hit and be hit. He will fight anyone anywhere, and he is not to be taken lightly.
#9 - Julio Diaz
After suffering a wickedly painful loss to Juan Diaz in which Julio quit on his stool, Julio Diaz had had a moderately successful 2008. Diaz took on the undefeated David Torres and beat him like pizza dough en route to a fifth round knockout, then scored a unanimous decision over a game veteran in Fernando Trejo. Torres’ record is inflated by poor competition and Trejo is not exactly an A-List fighter either, but Diaz took care of business at a time when he needed to gain solidify his momentum. On his better days, he might be able to take out some of the best lightweights in the world.
#10 - Jorge Solis
Everyone’s image of Solis is probably as the guy that got the crap kicked out of him by Manny Pacquiao in between Pacquiao’s handlings of Erik Morales and Marco Antonio Barrera. Personally, I give him credit for even getting in the ring with Pacquiao. Aside from the loss, Solis has beaten all and pummeled most.
Honorable Mention: Daniel Ponce De Leon, Jhonny Gonzalez, Jorge Arce, Edgar Sosa, Raul Garcia…And even Jose Luis Castillo and Marco Antonio Barrera.
Good to hear it, Pug. I'm going to do the same thing next year, all you and the guys have to do is get there. This years event was very disorganized and below it's potential. It'll just get better.Expug wrote:Had a great time meeting all the guys and their wonderful spouses this past weekend in LA.
As I said, its an honor getting to know all of you.
This will be a yearly tradition for me. Next time, Frank, Bennie and the rest of those who couldnt make it this year can hopefully come next year.
Its hard to articulate on a website how great it was spending time with all of you. Thanks for having me.
Roger, Rick, Randy and their wonderful wives.Ed, Dan and his wonderful Father, Im truly honored to be able to call all of you friends.
Brian
Has Dan nicked Mando's Bud? 8)kikibalt wrote:Photos and caption by Rick Farris
Dan Hanley, Pops, Rick Farris & Armando Muniz
Rick Farris and Tom kelly
Some real quality on show. George and his ant-drugs campaign is always worth a mention and this man tells it as it is. He reveals to those who think taking drugs may be 'cool' how his sons defecated themselves (with excitement) before taking heroin, and would clean themselves up afterwards.Randyman wrote:
George Chuvalo and Tommy Morrison
Jesus Pimentel, Rodolfo "El Gato" Gonzalez, Danny "Little Red" Lopez and Paul Gonzalez
Pops looks like someone just mentioned Mike Spinks.Randyman wrote:
Former Light Heavyweight Champion Marvin Johnson and wife
2008 World Boxing Hall of Fame Inductee
Former Heavyweight Champion Lennox Lewis and wife
2008 World Boxing Hall of Fame Inductee


