Very true, Rog. Sad to see special boxers end up in such a place. I never saw Moyer fight live. Mel Epstein, who had promoted in the Pacific Northwest, would comment on Denny Moyer on occasion. Years later, when I'd meet Joey Giambra in Las Vegas, he spoke of Denny Moyer, whom he'd fought in the first Jr. Middleweight title fight. Moyer won a close one, Giambra was a little bitter. The fight had taken place after he'd suffered what should have been a career ending car accident. Yet, he never criticized Moyer in anyway, just the outcome.dagosd2000 wrote:TRUTH IS A MOVING TARGET
When Denny Moyer came out to San Diego he didn't have much left. He fought way too much. He needed the money. It was risky for him to go in there,but he didn't care. A lot of those guys like Moyer, when they should have hung them up long ago,keep on fighting. They don't worry about it. Moyer certainly didn't worry about it. I don't know what he worried about. Prohibition wasn't coming back.
He plugged along at the old Coliseum. Sometimes he was in there with a young talent. He'd lose,but what his young opponents learned from Denny in the ring,they should have split their half of the purse with him. Sometimes though Moyer would have a "mark." A fighter who had no qualifications being in the ring with him. One of these guys was a fellow named Vicente Medina.
Medina's career never had any golden era. There wasn't a peak. No fights in the Garden. No Sugar Rays or Griffiths on his resume. One night he had the opportunity to chalk up a win against a man who had been in there with the aforementioned. Now when Denny beat you,you didn't wind up in the hospital. You just went back to school. You had learned a lesson. How to slip punches. How to work inside. Movement and leverage. You learned a lot when you fought Moyer.
Well that night Vicente should have filmed the proceedings. Everything Moyer could do ,Vicente couldn't. Medina was pissin' into the wind. He'd lead and couldn't follow. He countered too late. He stumbled,Moyer moved. Vicente was looking at a moving target. He didn't have enough ammunition to hit a bulls eye.
After it was over Medina stayed in Palookaville. Moyer lived there too now. The sad thing was Denny had no business taking up residence in a place like that..
-Rick Farris

