That was it Randy, can't party the way I used to, I am just like an old fighter with an empty tank. As we started our first dance Connie started to rub it in: "Do you want me to call 911?", I tried to BS my way thur the dance: "baby I am just getting started, just warming up, way til the fourth dance", I couldn't come out for the fourth dance, I said "No mas".....Randyman wrote:Orale Frank three dances and some coke (soda). Sounds like a good time to me.kikibalt wrote:Randy, I was a party animal last nite, Connie and I danced three times, I drank one coke and I had a hard time getting out of bed today, didn't get up til around 4:PM...![]()
Classic American West Coast Boxing
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Randy De La O!!!!!!Randyman wrote:Can you guess who that is peering over Sylvester Stallone's shoulder? Minus the grey hair and wrinkles and mustache.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
You're not alone Frank, I was a pretty fair dancer in my day. Used to go real low, limbo style, get up and spin. had some good moves. Once in a blue moon I can still cut the rug but I would rather sit and bullsh*t with all the other old farts.kikibalt wrote:That was it Randy, can't party the way I used to, I am just like an old fighter with an empty tank. As we started our first dance Connie started to rub it in: "Do you want me to call 911?", I tried to BS my way thur the dance: "baby I am just getting started, just warming up, way til the fourth dance", I couldn't come out for the fourth dance, I said "No mas".....Randyman wrote:Orale Frank three dances and some coke (soda). Sounds like a good time to me.kikibalt wrote:Randy, I was a party animal last nite, Connie and I danced three times, I drank one coke and I had a hard time getting out of bed today, didn't get up til around 4:PM...![]()
It used to be "Wine, Women and Song", now it's "Beer, the old lady and TV". How the mighty have fallen!
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Yup! This is a deleted scene. The scene used in the movie was a press conference that was shown on TV (in the movie). I remember it like it was yesterday. Somebody, maybe director John Avildsen, told us that Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) would be walking through the door and he wanted us to make a big fuss about. He asked to think about how we would act if Muhammad Ali walked through the door. That's what we did. Man, did Mel ham it up. You would have thought he was going for an Oscar. we had a good time. they treated all of us good.kikibalt wrote:Randy De La O!!!!!!Randyman wrote:Can you guess who that is peering over Sylvester Stallone's shoulder? Minus the grey hair and wrinkles and mustache.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Like my father would say about his movie parts- "If you blinked-you missed me"Randyman wrote:Yup! This is a deleted scene. The scene used in the movie was a press conference that was shown on TV (in the movie). I remember it like it was yesterday. Somebody, maybe director John Avildsen, told us that Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) would be walking through the door and he wanted us to make a big fuss about. He asked to think about how we would act if Muhammad Ali walked through the door. That's what we did. Man, did Mel ham it up. You would have thought he was going for an Oscar. we had a good time. they treated all of us good.kikibalt wrote:Randy De La O!!!!!!Randyman wrote:Can you guess who that is peering over Sylvester Stallone's shoulder? Minus the grey hair and wrinkles and mustache.
You said a mouthful about the Quarry clan-Rick, People would see a powerful boxer, but know little about their life outside the ring. Thanks.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, It came from The Knockout-Nov 17 1951, the headline, Dots...& Dashes---From Title Fight By Coy Williams, Los Angeles Mirror..kikibalt wrote:Coy Williams was a baseball writer for the Mirror. Don Fraser owned the Knockout magazine in 1951 and he don't remember Williams writing for the Knockout....Can you post the date of the Knockout, the Knockout was a weekly mag. it should have the week date on the front, maybe I have it, because I have a ton of those mags.Cholo wrote:Frank, It came from the Knockout Nov 1951, and it was by Coy Williams, Los Angeles Mirror..
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, I managed to find a tape of your son Tony fighting the Macho Man back in 1990, i liked Tony's left-hook, he had a
awesome hook to the liver, slowed Camacho up a few times with it.
But Camacho was one hell of a boxer real slick, did you work Tony's corner? i saw Jimmy Montoya in the corner.
Going back to the Left-Hook it was always my favorite punch in and out of the ring, being a short fella 5-7 there was always someone wanting to fight me....LOL. What do you remember about Tony's fight with Camacho..
awesome hook to the liver, slowed Camacho up a few times with it.
But Camacho was one hell of a boxer real slick, did you work Tony's corner? i saw Jimmy Montoya in the corner.
Going back to the Left-Hook it was always my favorite punch in and out of the ring, being a short fella 5-7 there was always someone wanting to fight me....LOL. What do you remember about Tony's fight with Camacho..
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Cholo wrote:Frank, It came from The Knockout-Nov 17 1951, the headline, Dots...& Dashes---From Title Fight By Coy Williams, Los Angeles Mirror..kikibalt wrote:Coy Williams was a baseball writer for the Mirror. Don Fraser owned the Knockout magazine in 1951 and he don't remember Williams writing for the Knockout....Can you post the date of the Knockout, the Knockout was a weekly mag. it should have the week date on the front, maybe I have it, because I have a ton of those mags.Cholo wrote:Frank, It came from the Knockout Nov 1951, and it was by Coy Williams, Los Angeles Mirror..

I have it and my copy has nothing by Williams. This program was printed BEFORE the fight, so no way Williams could be writing about what happened or did not happened the nite of the fight in this copy. I have been asking my old friends that were there that nite and nobody remembers the lites going out.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Yeah, I work was in the corner for that fight. Jimmy Montoya, Jerry Cheatham and I trained Tony for that fight. Not much of a fight. Tony and Hector were good friends at that time and didn't want to go all out, not a good fight to watch.Cholo wrote:Frank, I managed to find a tape of your son Tony fighting the Macho Man back in 1990, i liked Tony's left-hook, he had a
awesome hook to the liver, slowed Camacho up a few times with it.
But Camacho was one hell of a boxer real slick, did you work Tony's corner? i saw Jimmy Montoya in the corner.
Going back to the Left-Hook it was always my favorite punch in and out of the ring, being a short fella 5-7 there was always someone wanting to fight me....LOL. What do you remember about Tony's fight with Camacho..
Check my son Frankie in his fight with Chango Cruz below, you can find the rest of the on the right side bar on youtube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgDI91Q8 ... 4452415167
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, I'll check out the fight thanks buddy, going back to the Coy Williams writing i wonder if it was in the following weeks
edition of Knockout, have you that one?
Like i said i have a collection of Art Aragon newspaper cuttings i got it of ebay it's sort of a scrapbook.
Tony and hector did they spar alot together?
edition of Knockout, have you that one?
Like i said i have a collection of Art Aragon newspaper cuttings i got it of ebay it's sort of a scrapbook.
Tony and hector did they spar alot together?
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
No, I don't have any for the rest of '51, I do have some for early 1952....will check them out as soon as I have a chance.Cholo wrote:Frank, I'll check out the fight thanks buddy, going back to the Coy Williams writing i wonder if it was in the following weeks
edition of Knockout, have you that one?
Like i said i have a collection of Art Aragon newspaper cuttings i got it of ebay it's sort of a scrapbook.
Tony and hector did they spar alot together?
They did spar a lot when Jimmy M. was training Hector.....
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, Frankie jr what a smooth boxer, gave Cruz a boxing lesson first time i've seen that fight, and it was at the Olympic..
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, i'm going to get a scanner and i'll upload the Coy Williams writing...,kikibalt wrote:Cholo wrote:Frank, It came from The Knockout-Nov 17 1951, the headline, Dots...& Dashes---From Title Fight By Coy Williams, Los Angeles Mirror..kikibalt wrote: Coy Williams was a baseball writer for the Mirror. Don Fraser owned the Knockout magazine in 1951 and he don't remember Williams writing for the Knockout....Can you post the date of the Knockout, the Knockout was a weekly mag. it should have the week date on the front, maybe I have it, because I have a ton of those mags.
I have it and my copy has nothing by Williams. This program was printed BEFORE the fight, so no way Williams could be writing about what happened or did not happened the nite of the fight in this copy. I have been asking my old friends that were there that nite and nobody remembers the lites going out.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, I've been looking through the Basilio v Aragon program and there is a peice, GOLDEN BOY SPEAKING By Art Aragon,
Art says, You Know most people ask me how i got started in this fight game...Actually it was a necessity. I had to protect
myself from a kid who used to beat me up every day on the way to school, it wasn't a fair fight either , SHE was six months older then me.....LOL.
Art says, You Know most people ask me how i got started in this fight game...Actually it was a necessity. I had to protect
myself from a kid who used to beat me up every day on the way to school, it wasn't a fair fight either , SHE was six months older then me.....LOL.
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Cholo wrote:Frank, I've been looking through the Basilio v Aragon program and there is a peice, GOLDEN BOY SPEAKING By Art Aragon,
Art says, You Know most people ask me how i got started in this fight game...Actually it was a necessity. I had to protect
myself from a kid who used to beat me up every day on the way to school, it wasn't a fair fight either , SHE was six months older then me.....LOL.
Back through the years,every now and then, my father would come up against some loud mouth jerks (many had a few in them) who would try to get him to test them by swapping light punches.
My father had no desire and the common sense to brush all these guys off. One of my father's parting lines,said jokingly, before brushing these morons off was " The last girl I hit pulled through".
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
That's something Art would say...Cholo wrote:Frank, I've been looking through the Basilio v Aragon program and there is a peice, GOLDEN BOY SPEAKING By Art Aragon,
Art says, You Know most people ask me how i got started in this fight game...Actually it was a necessity. I had to protect
myself from a kid who used to beat me up every day on the way to school, it wasn't a fair fight either , SHE was six months older then me.....LOL.
-
Panzerfaust
- Heavyweight

- Posts: 560
- Joined: 18 Dec 2009, 17:13
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Randyman wrote:It used to be "Wine, Women and Song", now it's "Beer, the old lady and TV". How the mighty have fallen!
You might just have made a classic there Randy
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
I am going to copy and paste on my FB wall....Panzerfaust wrote:Randyman wrote:It used to be "Wine, Women and Song", now it's "Beer, the old lady and TV". How the mighty have fallen!
You might just have made a classic there RandyIve allready added it to my favourite quotes
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
I can't take credit for that guys, my pal, the late great Steve Wallace told me that back around 1979. I don't know if he made it up or what but I've used that so many times over the years. Ain't it the truth though!kikibalt wrote:I am going to copy and paste on my FB wall....Panzerfaust wrote:Randyman wrote:It used to be "Wine, Women and Song", now it's "Beer, the old lady and TV". How the mighty have fallen!
You might just have made a classic there RandyIve allready added it to my favourite quotes
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
I've read it before Randy, don't remember where though. And yes, it hits home!!!....Randyman wrote:I can't take credit for that guys, my pal, the late great Steve Wallace told me that back around 1979. I don't know if he made it up or what but I've used that so many times over the years. Ain't it the truth though!kikibalt wrote:I am going to copy and paste on my FB wall....Panzerfaust wrote:
You might just have made a classic there RandyIve allready added it to my favourite quotes
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Billy "Sweetpea" Peacock'
Circa 1955
Check out the poster on the wall
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, your favorite fighter Enrique Bolanos, did Bolanos have a brother who boxed pro?
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Frank, Did you see the Aragon v Trigo fights? in one of the fights Aragon was effected by gas fumes generated from a heater in the dressing room at the Olympic..
Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Kevin McBride has retired in the wake of his defeat to Poland's Tomasz Adamek over the weekend in New Jersey. The likeable if lumbering Irishman stuck it out for 12 rounds with the quicker, sharper Adamek, who moves on to Vitali Klitschko for the WBC heavyweight title, but was never in the hunt and lost widely on the scorecards.
"He's a hard man to catch," said McBride. "Speed is power. He has a lot of speed and there is a bit of power."
McBride, 37, will always be remembered as the man who ended the career of Mike Tyson in 2005 in the States, forcing an exhausted Tyson to quit on his stool after five rounds. Given no chance beforehand, McBride whipped himself into great shape and survived the early attacks of the bullying New Yorker, who resorted to desperate measures as the fight slipped away from him, including a blatant butt. By the fifth, the rusty, 38-year-old Tyson had nothing left as McBride thumped away to the bell. The memory of Tyson seemingly stuck to the canvas after slipping over in the round remains hard to forget. It was a genuine win for the big Clones man but he rested on his laurels so long that age and ring-rust also caught up with him. Kevin lost five of his seven fights after Tyson.
A pro since 1992, McBride, went unbeaten in his first 20 outings (16 early) before Louis Monaco, ironically a Tyson lookalike, outlasted him in five shocking rounds in Las Vegas in 1997. McBride, based in the States, struggled to recapture his early form and was going nowhere when he secured the Tyson fight eight years later on a sweltering night in Washington D.C. and finally proved his worth. McBride, 35-9-1 (25), overachieved and underachieved, looked good and not so good, disappointed and surprised... Oh yes, life was never dull in a boxing ring with Kevin McBride.

"He's a hard man to catch," said McBride. "Speed is power. He has a lot of speed and there is a bit of power."
McBride, 37, will always be remembered as the man who ended the career of Mike Tyson in 2005 in the States, forcing an exhausted Tyson to quit on his stool after five rounds. Given no chance beforehand, McBride whipped himself into great shape and survived the early attacks of the bullying New Yorker, who resorted to desperate measures as the fight slipped away from him, including a blatant butt. By the fifth, the rusty, 38-year-old Tyson had nothing left as McBride thumped away to the bell. The memory of Tyson seemingly stuck to the canvas after slipping over in the round remains hard to forget. It was a genuine win for the big Clones man but he rested on his laurels so long that age and ring-rust also caught up with him. Kevin lost five of his seven fights after Tyson.
A pro since 1992, McBride, went unbeaten in his first 20 outings (16 early) before Louis Monaco, ironically a Tyson lookalike, outlasted him in five shocking rounds in Las Vegas in 1997. McBride, based in the States, struggled to recapture his early form and was going nowhere when he secured the Tyson fight eight years later on a sweltering night in Washington D.C. and finally proved his worth. McBride, 35-9-1 (25), overachieved and underachieved, looked good and not so good, disappointed and surprised... Oh yes, life was never dull in a boxing ring with Kevin McBride.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Cholo wrote:Frank, your favorite fighter Enrique Bolanos, did Bolanos have a brother who boxed pro?

Yes he did, Roberto Bolanos, (R) shown here with Enrique.
