
Al Certo, Charley, "Jersey" Joe Walcott, Ernie Durando
Some tough hitters with roots in New Jersey visit NYC.






Gawd, they were frigging wimps in those days. Only 8 knockdowns in this fightCNorkusJr wrote:
Norkus rises after getting knocked down in his first bout with Danny Nardico. A real bloodbath war that Norkus won by TKO 9th round. Jan 1954







CNorkusJr wrote:This was posted in the ESPN-Big Fights INC room by me: I have been reading these posts with great interest. There has been a great interest lately of boxing fans wanting to see the fight of my father, Charles Norkus, against Danny Nardico that went off in Jan 1954. Using Ted Sares words "a real pier six brawl" 9 knockdowns.
The fight was not held on live TV in 1954. Rather, as my father stated,a TV production company were in Miami that week to set up cameras for the upcoming LT heavy Title fight with Archie Moore vs Joey Maxim at the Orange Bowl. They asked the Miami Beach Aud. owners along with Chris Dundee if they can film the Norkus/Nardico slate for a few rounds to test the lighting and lens positioning for the Moore fight. It was never meant to be recorded in its entirety. No announcers were present that evening either.
As the fight progressed, the production director saw what he thought was a epic battle ensuing before his eyes. He was right. He ordered more tape be brought in to capture the entire fight. When it was over- the fight results were quickly reported up to New York. Miami reporters wrote about the explosiveness of this fight. The tapes were quickly made into a film reel and overdubbed by announcers. A short hi-lite (7 mins) exist as well as the entire fight exist with no sound. You can see the lighting changes as the fight went on as camera techs adjusted their lenses. Later in 1954, the film was released to be seen. They were in the Jacobs/Cayton collection, that ESPN owns.
In 1971 or so, Jim Jacobs supplied a 16mm copy of both to my father as a friend, and we watched at home on a projector. In 1988 my father cut a deal with a film collector in Chicago to restore the films and supply my family with VHS films, the collector keeps the 16mm.
Since then the fight Norkus/Nardico 1 as well as the national TV rematch 2 months later exists as DVDs on the underground market. I contacted ESPN a few years back to try to obtain copies and try to buy rights to my fathers various fights. Through Bill Cayton Jr, Disney/ESPN refused at that time but acknowledged they do still have them on hand.


