
Roland LaStarza...1965






kikibalt wrote:
Roland LaStarza...1965
I have to agree, Frank. I've been watching videos of Jofre, especially the two very close losses to Fighting Harada.kikibalt wrote:
Eder Jofre. Jofre was the second best bantamweight I seen fight live, Manuel Ortiz been the best I seen.
kikibalt wrote:
Mando Ramos with Enrique Bolanos, dad, Ray Ramos & Jake Shgue (Spelling)
I couldn't agree more Rick.Rick Farris wrote:kikibalt wrote:
Mando Ramos with Enrique Bolanos, dad, Ray Ramos & Jake Shgue (Spelling)
West Coast boxing royalty.
One bad dude!kikibalt wrote:
Ernie Shavers
Mel would have a lot to say about it.Rick Farris wrote:bennie wrote:Lee McAllister was stopped in eight rounds by unbeaten John Murray in a crack at the British lightweight title in January 2009, since when Joe Jordan has been busier than the slippery Scot, out for over a year with an elbow injury. The 28-year-old McAllister, a ticket-seller from the granite city of Aberdeen, finally returns against Hungarian trier Istvan Nagy on Saturday night in Aberdeen, bizarrely scheduled for 12 rounds.
Frankly, this is just a warm-up for McAllister, 31-2 (7), as he checks out his left elbow before concentrating on defences of his Commonwealth lightweight title against the potential likes of Alex Arthur, Willie Limond, Derry Matthews or even hot Cardiff puncher Gary Buckland, who stopped Nagy in the first round in November 2009 in Stoke (down twice).
Nagy, 29, regularly tours the European fight circuit and lasted five rounds with young Scot Paul Appleby in Motherwell in 2007, so he knows what he is up against. In fairness, the gutsy visitor rarely gets stopped and he carries a bit of a dig at 15-8 (8), but McAllister is big, quick and talented enough to halt Nagy from the middle round.
I wish Mel Epstein could see this one.
The Staples Center can get bad but the Dodgers Stadium has them all beat. It's a madhouse trying to get out. The Angels Stadium on the other hand is a piece of cake.Rick Farris wrote:CNorkusJr wrote:I am intrigued by the parking lot sign " $5.00 all day".
This past weekend I drove my friend and I into midtown Manhattan to go to the St Johns vs Pittsburg college basketball game. (He has season tickets and a St John's grad).
We had option of taking train, but I said I would drive. There is parking around Mad. Sq. Garden. Sign states "Weekends up to 12 hrs. $18.33, Garden events $24.50, Special events $31.50 up to 12 hrs" Final Result on return to pick up car: On Saturday, In Mad. Sq.Garden 5 hrs-total bill $37.00.
Mgr says- special event plus city tax- that I still had 7 more hours at that price.
Tried to figure out his definition of Garden events and Special Event. Ever argue with a foreigner who has no clue either way.? Know what; I gather-EVERY dam day is "Special Event" no matter if Garden is involved or not.
I'm slowing down, mind lapses after working in city for years.
I should have saw it coming.
On even second thought- I got my car back intact and nothing missing, Thanks to God on that one too.
Charlie . . . Parking in downtown L.A. can be crazy too, especially around the Staples Center.
And isn't it strange that some guy you just heard speaking perfect English, suddenly speaks nothing but Farsi when money is the issue.

Randyman wrote:
It appears that when they knocked down the Main Street Gym they did away with 318 & 1/2. Probably expect bigger buildings in the future. For those of us that trained here this will always be a special place. It's still strange to see nothing there.
Note the $50.00 for special events. Kinda steep.
bennie wrote:David Haye moves closer to unification showdowns with the Klitschko sisters when he defends his WBA heavyweight crown against, so they say, one of four opponents on the night of May 21 at London's O2 Arena, including old man Roy Jones, but the less said about that one the better. The other three consist of Alexander Povetkin, Denis Boytsov and Ruslan Chagaev.
The unbeaten Povetkin, a former Olympic gold medallist from Russia, has done everything right in six years as a pro and looks ready to go at the age of 31, a good age for a heavyweight, after 21 solid wins. He lacks Haye's chilling brand of speed and power but puts punches together smoothly and firmly, and reads opponents well (unlike most heavies) as he showed when outboxing Philadelphia's "Fast" Eddie Chambers over 12 rounds in 2008, although few heavies, if any, are as fast as Haye, a former undisputed cruiserweight champion of the world who would most likely have destroyed Chambers inside six rounds.
Nevertheless, Povetkin ranks as an outstanding challenger for our man, unlike the despicable Audley Harrison. Yes, Haye comes off that pathetic three-round win over Harrison in Manchester in November in front of a disgusted world, a world that moaned long and hard afterwards - none of which was Haye's fault. A gifted fighter with long arms and a dangerous array of punches, Haye went out there and did his job. He made it look easy - too easy - and has now stopped eight of his last 10 opponents, in good company (overlooking Harrrison). Haye coolly outboxed the two men who did survive, including gigantic Russian Nikolai Valuev to win the WBA heavyweight title in Germany in November 2009, retaining the title twice since.
The Harrison debacle behind him, Haye's heavyweight future looks rosy. Still only 30, the charismatic Londoner often hints at retirement but all fighters do when intense training gets them down, Believe me, Haye has yet even to reach his heavyweight peak; the hard training all pays off, of course, when Haye nails opponents to the canvas or cruises to 12-round decisions, the latter of which he's done twice. Povetkin, in contrast, is one of those lazy, fleshy types who trains half-heartedly and likes to fight at his own often sedate pace. This will hurt him on the night (if he and Haye meet). Haye is all smiles outside the ring but in there, he has the power and the killer instinct to drain the colour from anyone's face and Povetkin is pale-looking as it is.
To the next Russian challenger, Boytsov, a stocky fellow who has racked up impressive stats of 28-0 (23 early) but is largely avoided and yet to fight anyone of Haye's talent and stature, although he did stop a shopworn Taras Bidenko in six rounds in 2009, the Ukrainian who wobbled the colossal Valuev in the 12th and last round of a points defeat dating back to July 2002, can you believe. (Haye also wobbled Valuev in the 12th and last round, but Haye won.) Boytsov, who has boxed only five times in the last three years, winning them all by stoppage, is clearly dangerous but so is Haye at 25-1 (23 early), and the Londoner holds all the edges in size, speed, fluidity, top-flight experience and ring intelligence.
Haye refused to walk into Harrison, for example, with Harrison looking to counterpunch, picking him off instead from the outside and flooring him with a few casual right hands. Long before that, Haye took a shrewd 'knee' when Jean Marc Mormeck hurt him in the early rounds of a big fight at cruiserweight, allowing his head to clear and coming back to chop down the bull of a Frenchman in the seventh of what ranks as a vastly underrated performance from the exciting Haye, one which showed he had learned from his only defeat when he stayed on his feet under fire from Bolton's Carl Thompson and was halted in five rounds at Wembley in 2004. Today, Haye enjoys it in there because he knows he can hurt opponents and take any hurt back, and he knows he can do the full 12 rounds, a mental thing that bothered him for some years. All this will expose the untested Boytsov who looks out of his depth against the superfit, determined, aggressive Haye, a champion who relishes in his fitness, who relishes in dishing it out, and dish it out he undoubtedly will.
Southpaw Chagaev, the mandatory challenger with Hepatitis-B, has been a naughty boy before. He licked Cuban great Felix Savon (14-4) in the heavyweight final of the 1997 world amateur championships in Hungary but had turned pro in the States beforehand (winning two fights by knockout) and was stripped of his medal (shades somewhat of Ingemar Johansson), although he was allowed to rejoin the vested ranks and won super-heavyweight gold at the world championships in Belfast in 2001, where Haye lost in a thrilling heavyweight final to Odlanier Solis. Based in Hamburg, Chagaev, an Uzbekistani, then turned pro openly and stopped 59-fight American Everett "Big Foot" Martin in his official debut in September 2001 (four rounds). The usually durable Martin never fought again.
Chagaev, 32, can undoubtedly fight and has lost only to Haye's bitter rival Wladimir Klitschko in 29 outings, in June 2009, so he will serve as a great sounding board if he does tackle Haye in May. Klitschko dropped Chagaev early in their German encounter in front of an astonishing 61,000 fans but needed nine full rounds to finish him off and never floored him again (it ended on a corner retirement, Chagaev horribly busted up), since when Chagaev has boxed twice - unconvincingly - and was taken to the wire by American 'opponent' Travis Walker last time out in November before taking an eight-round decision.
The man dubbed "White Tyson" looks over the mountain. Chagaev is far more boxer than puncher, anyway, using good movement and boxing skills to offset a lack of height and reach, although he likes to press forward and apply educated pressure once an opponent is tiring. However, the Hepatitis thing is only exacerbated by Chagaev's left eyebrow these days, which is busting open repeatedly, meaning blood and lots of it. The eyebrow let him down terribly against Klitschko but even then, he did tag the giant Ukrainian a few times, who said afterwards: "You can't underestimate Chagaev.
"He did everything today, but I was better."
Nevertheless, Chagaev has largely failed to impress since outscoring that half-man, half-beast Valuev over 12 rounds four years ago, while Haye has continued to look good since outscoring the same man, destroying John Ruiz in nine rounds (four knockdowns), a man who had held Chagaev to a split decision, and toying with Harrison, a southpaw punch-picker like Chagaev.
The form fighter is the British fighter, no matter who he meets.
Morning Rick. I think Paul is still at the tables in Vegas......Rick Farris wrote:4:55am. Gotta go (to work). Good morning Frank & Bennie. Where is Paul?


Wow, I dont feel so bad now. $50 for parking. I have a picture of one of my fathers fight card (vs. Roy Harris in Houston) Ringside back then was $3.50.Rick Farris wrote:Randyman wrote:
It appears that when they knocked down the Main Street Gym they did away with 318 & 1/2. Probably expect bigger buildings in the future. For those of us that trained here this will always be a special place. It's still strange to see nothing there.
Note the $50.00 for special events. Kinda steep.
In the early 70's, gym dues were $5 a month.
And "Skid Row" parking was about 50 cents?