Classic American West Coast Boxing

raylawpc
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Randyman wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
Randyman wrote: Frank, Congrats to the parents, grandparents and great grandparents!! :TU: :TU:
Thanks Randy, Anthony is a happy grandpa...
Frank, being a grandparent is a great thing. I forget that Tony is not too far behind me in age. In my minds eye I still see him as he was when he was fighting. Now he's a grandpa! Time flies when you're having fun.
Yes, it's the best! :TU: :TU:
Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

CNorkusJr wrote:Last night was our monthly Ring 8 meeting here in New York.
On hand as guests was a former heavyweight contender who fought alot of greats from the 1950's & 1960's. He fought fighters Eddie Machen, Harold Carter, Henry Cooper, Mike DeJohn,Nino Valdes,George Chuvalo,Zora Folley, Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay at time),and fought Jimmy Carter and in his last pro fight, against Jerry Quarry both of those in The Olympic Aud in LA.

He is Alex Miteff. Alex is about 76 yrs old now and was accompanied by his son and his son's friend. Alex suffered somewhat of a medical setback last month (son didnt go into detail) and to be placed in a nursing care facility now. He can stand and take a few steps,but travels mostly by wheelchair. His mind is still sharp,but speaks very low and slowly. He was born in Argentina (Held So.Amer. Hevywt Champ Title) and his son speaks to him in Spanish.

I managed to talk to him for about 10 minutes. We talked on his fights in the 50's mostly and he remembered that he fought a pre-lim fight vs John Henry in St Nicks in 1956.His 6th pro fight.He trained in Stillman's Gym with my father in New York.
My father was the televised Main Event against Joe Rowan that night.
I told his son that the original tape I have of broadcast has the TV show opening up and showing the last two RDs of the Miteff vs Henry fight before my dad's Main Event.
The posted videos on the web had cut out Miteff's fight ending.
I told son I'll send copy to him,as they only have the Ali-Miteff fight on tape.

Here is picture of Miteff (red shirt) from last nite and Ring 8 members.
Image

Also on hand was Gary Shaw, famed promoter of todays better boxing events.

He talked on many subjects,but it finally got around to Mayweather-Ortiz fight.
He said fault on the stoppage of the fight can be placed all around on this one.

He mentioned that Ortiz literally jumped up to intentional headbutt Mayweather was obvious
and halting the fight to deduct points was correct. He went on to say that 2 points should have been deducted not one point by Cortez. By rights, Cortez, after halting the fight,should have had Mayweather retreat to a neutral corner, and Ortiz led by hand to center of ring and faced each judge taking the 2 pts away from Ortiz. He then, after calling time in,turned to face judges-probably telling them that he is the most fair judge in the world, he should have called time in and kept facing fighters at all time.
But he said the biggest fault of night lies with Ortiz himself. Not adhering to the number one rule of fighters-Protect yourself at ALL times.
Charlie. I wrote a long post and accidentally deleted it. Just as well, long winded rambling.
Frustrated. I'm truly impressed with Ring #8, and I'd like that for Los Angeles, that solid support of generations of family. As far as I'm concerned boxing is dead. I have my own method for preserving boxing history, and that is what I will do. I wish I could start "selling" next year's CBHOF event right now. If it happens, I'll personally add 100 guests to the attendees and sell more adds than anybody ever thought possible. This is already in the works, but there is not much I can do about it right now until the event is a go.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Question for Boxrec? . . .

Boxrec usually posts the names of deceased world boxing legends at the top of their Main Page.
If the practice has not been stopped, George Benton's name deserves to be posted. My opinion.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

Image


Benn, Watson and Eubank
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Randyman wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
Randyman wrote: Frank, Congrats to the parents, grandparents and great grandparents!! :TU: :TU:
Thanks Randy, Anthony is a happy grandpa...
Frank, being a grandparent is a great thing. I forget that Tony is not too far behind me in age. In my minds eye I still see him as he was when he was fighting. Now he's a grandpa! Time flies when you're having fun.
Time sure does fly fast when you are having fun, Randy, for me it has flown so fast that I find myself being a great-grandpa for the fourth time. I can't complain though, it's been a fun life with Connie all the way... :bow: , even if I have to do house work now and then.... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

bennie wrote:Image


Benn, Watson and Eubank
Great picture, Bennie... :TU:
CNorkusJr
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by CNorkusJr »

kikibalt wrote:
bennie wrote:Image


Benn, Watson and Eubank
Great picture, Bennie... :TU:
Nigel Benn,wow,great fighter. In fact all 3 of them.
When was this picture taken Bennie ?
I wouldnt think this would be a recent shot as all 3 look like they can still go a few Rds in the ring. :box:
Bobbin & Weavin
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Bobbin & Weavin »

Rick Farris wrote:Question for Boxrec? . . .

Boxrec usually posts the names of deceased world boxing legends at the top of their Main Page.
If the practice has not been stopped, George Benton's name deserves to be posted. My opinion.
Positively, no doubt about it...if he's not a world boxing legend than who is... spot on Rick!
Bruce
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Bobbin & Weavin wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:Question for Boxrec? . . .

Boxrec usually posts the names of deceased world boxing legends at the top of their Main Page.
If the practice has not been stopped, George Benton's name deserves to be posted. My opinion.
Positively, no doubt about it...if he's not a world boxing legend than who is... spot on Rick!
Bruce
He would certainly seem to merit it either as a trainer or as a fighter. As both, it should have been automatic . . .
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

What the Oxnard "Cobarde" had to say about what happened Saturday night . . .

In a recent interview by TMZ, Ortiz who was making the first defense of the belt he won via decision in a fight of the year candidate with Andre Berto in April, told TMZ Floyd Mayweather caught him completely off-guard with a sucker punch and said he only put his hands down because he was waiting for the ref’s signal … and Floyd clocked him with a “totally unfair” left hook.
-------------------------------------

Personally, I wanted to shake Floyd's hand. :OhYes:
And I'm no fan of Floyd.
As video footage validates, nobody was happier by the outcome than Ortiz.
Smiling, raising the new champs hand, etc. If Floyd wasn't so quick, Ortiz would have likely kissed his ass. :oo
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

A local boy from yesteryear

Bobby Sedillo

division lightweight

country United States
residence Los Angeles, California, United States

won 14 (KO 5) + lost 8 (KO 4) + drawn 1 = 23
rounds boxed 141 KO% 21.74


1970-08-31 131 Mike Duarte 131 1-0-0
San Jose, California, United States L KO 2 10

1970-07-24 132 Jose Mendoza 129 9-4-0
San Jose, California, United States W KO 5

1970-02-13 127 Eddie Mazon 127 13-3-2
Coliseum, San Diego, California, United States L PTS 6 6

1970-01-30 Juan Tapiz 2-2-0
San Diego, California, United States L PTS 6 6

1969-10-23 146 Pajarito Corona 137½ 18-14-4
ports Arena, Portland, Oregon, United States L TKO 7 10
referee: Bill Connors

1969-07-02 136 Enrique Jana 135½ 35-10-8
Civic Auditorium, San Jose, California, United States D PTS 10 10

1969-06-13 Billy Coleman 10-15-0
San Bernardino, California, United States W KO 4

1969-02-20 134 Eddie Garcia 137 13-8-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L TKO 5 10
time: 2:25 | referee: Lee Grossman

1969-02-11 136 Jimmy Ligons 132 2-0-0
Valley Music Theatre, Woodland Hills, California, United States W KO 6 10

1968-10-29 134 Charley Harvey 135 5-6-2
San Bernardino, California, United States L KO 4

1968-10-04 133½ George Torres 136 8-8-0
Arena, San Bernardino, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1968-07-26 Willie Ray 11-5-2
Arena, San Bernardino, California, United States L PTS 10 10

1968-07-04 136 Felipe Torres 136 10-4-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1968-05-09 136 Felix Corral 137 2-3-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W SD 10 10

1968-02-22 131 Pete Gonzalez 133 18-11-2
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 10 10

1967-11-28 Felix Corral 2-0-1
San Diego, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1967-11-16 Al Holquin 3-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W KO 3 6

1967-10-12 132 Felix Jasso 133½
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1967-09-14 132 Pedro Pagan 135½ 1-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 5 5
Sedillo was knocked down in the 2nd round.

1967-08-24 133½ Ismael Rivera 134 0-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-08-10 134 Pedro Pagan 135 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-07-20 127½ Felipe Torres 126 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-07-13 132½ Gil Burzado 134
Convention Center, Anaheim, California, United States W KO 4
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:A local boy from yesteryear

Bobby Sedillo

division lightweight

country United States
residence Los Angeles, California, United States

won 14 (KO 5) + lost 8 (KO 4) + drawn 1 = 23
rounds boxed 141 KO% 21.74


1970-08-31 131 Mike Duarte 131 1-0-0
San Jose, California, United States L KO 2 10

1970-07-24 132 Jose Mendoza 129 9-4-0
San Jose, California, United States W KO 5

1970-02-13 127 Eddie Mazon 127 13-3-2
Coliseum, San Diego, California, United States L PTS 6 6

1970-01-30 Juan Tapiz 2-2-0
San Diego, California, United States L PTS 6 6

1969-10-23 146 Pajarito Corona 137½ 18-14-4
ports Arena, Portland, Oregon, United States L TKO 7 10
referee: Bill Connors

1969-07-02 136 Enrique Jana 135½ 35-10-8
Civic Auditorium, San Jose, California, United States D PTS 10 10

1969-06-13 Billy Coleman 10-15-0
San Bernardino, California, United States W KO 4

1969-02-20 134 Eddie Garcia 137 13-8-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L TKO 5 10
time: 2:25 | referee: Lee Grossman

1969-02-11 136 Jimmy Ligons 132 2-0-0
Valley Music Theatre, Woodland Hills, California, United States W KO 6 10

1968-10-29 134 Charley Harvey 135 5-6-2
San Bernardino, California, United States L KO 4

1968-10-04 133½ George Torres 136 8-8-0
Arena, San Bernardino, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1968-07-26 Willie Ray 11-5-2
Arena, San Bernardino, California, United States L PTS 10 10

1968-07-04 136 Felipe Torres 136 10-4-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1968-05-09 136 Felix Corral 137 2-3-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W SD 10 10

1968-02-22 131 Pete Gonzalez 133 18-11-2
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 10 10

1967-11-28 Felix Corral 2-0-1
San Diego, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1967-11-16 Al Holquin 3-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W KO 3 6

1967-10-12 132 Felix Jasso 133½
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1967-09-14 132 Pedro Pagan 135½ 1-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 5 5
Sedillo was knocked down in the 2nd round.

1967-08-24 133½ Ismael Rivera 134 0-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-08-10 134 Pedro Pagan 135 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-07-20 127½ Felipe Torres 126 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1967-07-13 132½ Gil Burzado 134
Convention Center, Anaheim, California, United States W KO 4

I remember Sedillo very well. I think he was from Indio, along with his brother Frank. They started as amateurs on the Olympic cards on thursday, along with a stablemate named Richard Armendariz. Later turned pro for awhile.
Last edited by Rick Farris on 22 Sep 2011, 19:49, edited 1 time in total.
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:
I remember Sedillo very well. I thought he was from Indio, along with his brother Frank. They started as amateurs on the Olympic cards on thursday, along with a stablemate named Richard Armendariz. Later turned pro for awhile.
I might be wrong but, I think they were from Chino...
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
I remember Sedillo very well. I thought he was from Indio, along with his brother Frank. They started as amateurs on the Olympic cards on thursday, along with a stablemate named Richard Armendariz. Later turned pro for awhile.
I might be wrong but, I think they were from Chino...
You are probably right. Chino and Indio are in the same area, I believe. I get them confused.
But I knew they were not from L.A. as listed on the record.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Frankie Sedillo

featherweight
Chino, California, United States
won 3 (KO 1) + lost 14 (KO 2) + drawn 1 = 18



1967-03-09 Tony Porter 0-4-0
Fremont Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States L PTS 5 5
1966-06-03 127 Dave Contreras 123 1-0-0
Sports Arena, Los Angeles, California, United States L TKO 5 6
time: 1:57 | referee: Dick Young

1966-04-02 Frankie Crawford 8-2-0
San Diego, California, United States L PTS 6 6
1965-12-09 127½ Bobby Valdez 128 6-1-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 6 6
1965-09-16 129½ Jerry Stevens 133 2-4-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 5 5
1965-09-02 128 Frankie Crawford 126 2-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 5 5
1965-07-01 130 Bobby Valdez 127 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L KO 3 5
1965-06-11 133 Billy Coleman 132 6-3-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 5 5
1965-06-03 128 Ricardo Casas 129½ 3-5-3
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 5 5
1965-05-27 128 Al Sandoval 128 2-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W KO 1 6
1965-04-09 128 Al Sandoval 128½ 1-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 5 5
1965-03-19 130 Jose Barrera 129½ 1-1-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States D PTS 6 6
1965-01-29 128 Jose Barrera 128
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 5 5
1965-01-19 Joey Aguilar 1-3-2
Hacienda Hotel, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States L PTS 5 5
1960-06-30 125 Beto Maldonado 124½ 13-4-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 4 4
1960-06-16 125 Maurice Morales 125 6-2-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 4 4
1960-06-07 124½ Art Ennis 126 1-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4
1960-05-17 126 Maurice Morales 128½ 5-2-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L PTS 4 4
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Ricardo Armendariz

Chino, California
won 0 (KO 0) + lost 0 (KO 0) + drawn 1 = 1

1968-12-05 Ismael Rivera 1-15-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States D PTS 6 6
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

The Campos brother's. Johnny Forbes fighters

Image

Frankie Campos

division bantamweight

alias The Fighting Barber

country United States
residence Los Angeles, California, United States

won 19 (KO 10) + lost 9 (KO 4) + drawn 0 = 28
rounds boxed 192 KO% 35.71


1958-11-09 Pimi Barajas 16-7-1
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico L KO 8

1958-10-31 Kildo Martinez 6-20-6
Ciudad Obregon, Sonora, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1958-10-04 Roque Fernandez 11-15-3
Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico W KO 9 10

1958-09-23 118 Raul Leanos 118 35-8-2
Plaza de Toros, Torreon, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico W KO 6 10

1957-12-07 118 Billy Peacock 117¾ 36-16-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 8 12
time: 2:36 | referee: Jimmy Wilson 63-68
vacant USA California State bantamweight title
A cut over Campos's right eye, led to the stoppage.

1957-09-14 Pat Supple 29-1-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1957-08-31 118 Jose Luis Mora 118 12-6-0
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico W KO 3 10

1957-05-01 122 Jose Toluco Lopez 124 34-6-2
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico L PTS 10 10

1956-12-13 Beto Couray 24-24-2
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1956-09-29 Ernesto Parra 121 16-6-1
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico L PTS 10 10

1956-06-23 118 Ricardo Moreno 122 21-2-1
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico L KO 4 10

1956-05-18 117½ Pimi Barajas 119¾ 7-2-0
Wrigley Field, Los Angeles, California, United States L SD 10 10

1956-03-19 118½ Joey Benson 123 4-5-0
San Francisco Gardens, San Francisco, California, United States L PTS 10 10 referee: Frankie Brown 54½-55½

1956-03-09 Jorge Gabino Gomez 2-6-2
Piedras Negras, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1956-02-22 121 Luke Sandoval 123 6-8-2
San Francisco Gardens, San Francisco, California, United States W TKO 5 6

1955-12-06 121 Joey Benson 121 4-2-0
Auditorium, Richmond, California, United States W PTS 10 10
referee: Ray Flores 59-51

1955-11-09 122 Vic Eisen 122 23-12-3
Auditorium, Oakland, California, United States W KO 2 10

1955-05-12 119 Pimi Barajas 116½
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 10 10 Barajas was knocked down in the 3rd round.

1955-02-10 118 Baby Moe Mario 118½ 21-6-4
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W TKO 3 10 Reported as first time Mario had ever been floored or stopped and as his first loss since 1953

1954-10-30 117 Jackie Spurgeon 113 4-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 10 10
referee: Tommy Hart 60-50 | judge: Frankie Van 61-49 | judge: Russ Bradford 59-51

1954-05-08 116½ Jesse Mongia 119¾ 26-6-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L UD 10 10
referee: Charley Randolph 50-60 | judge: Dynamite Jackson 49½-60½ | judge: Reggie Gilmore 51-59

1954-02-20 117 Jimmy Quinn 118 8-4-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 7 10
time: 1:22 | referee: Frankie Van

1953-12-26 115 Johnny Gonzalez 118 \
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 2 6
Gonzalez was knocked down twice.

1953-06-13 116½ Alex Fimbres 119½ 29-21-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 2 6

1953-05-09 116½ Jimmy Quinn 118 4-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 3 4

1953-04-18 George Jacquet 2-3-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1953-04-04 115 Alonso Aviles 116 0-3-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 2 4

1953-02-14 115½ George Jacquet 116 2-0-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4

Pro debut for Campos, according to the Los Angeles Tribune

Image

Juan Luis Campos

country United States
residence Hollywood, California, United States

won 12 (KO 6) + lost 7 (KO 5) + drawn 1 = 20
rounds boxed 117 KO% 30

1955-04-12 136½ Gilberto Muniz 137½ 23-11-5
Ocean Park Arena, Santa Monica, California, United States L TKO 7 10 time: 2:51 | referee: Dynamite Jackson

1954-11-15 135¼ Art Ramponi 135 14-4-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L TKO 6 10 time: 2:22 | referee: Tommy Hart

1954-10-12 135 Ray Castro 134½ 11-2-0
Ocean Park Arena, Santa Monica, California, United States W PTS 10 10 Castro was knocked down in the 9th round.

1954-04-06 133 Buddy Evatt 132½ 13-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L KO 3 10 time: 1:11 | referee: Joe Stone

1954-03-06 130 Fabela Chavez 131 46-21-5
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W SD 10 10
referee: Abe Roth 54-56 | judge: Dynamite Jackson 56-54 | judge: Frank Holborow 56-54

1953-12-19 129½ Fabela Chavez 128½ 46-21-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States D PTS 10 10
referee: Reggie Gilmore 55-55 | judge: Frankie Van 52-58 | judge: Lee Grossman 55-55

1953-06-27 129 Kenny Davis 127½ 5-1-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 6 10

1953-04-18 129½ Chico Rosa 129½ 31-16-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L UD 10 10
referee: Abe Roth 50-60 | judge: Lee Grossman 52-58 | judge: Frank Holborow 51-59

1953-03-14 127 Javier Gutierrez 123½ 20-12-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 10 10
referee: Mushy Callahan 57-53 | judge: Joe Stone 57-53 | judge: Tommy Hart 56-54

1952-12-27 126 Hector Rios 126 9-7-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 6
time: 1:42

1952-08-02 130 Freddy Bravo 130 3-5-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W SD 6 6

1952-07-05 130 Bobby Garza 126 30-22-17
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L SD 6 6

1952-05-24 Bobby Romo 16-11-8
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1952-04-19 132 John Richards 132¼ 5-15-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-03-22 129 Chucho Mendoza 123½ 0-3-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W KO 3 6
referee: Jimmy Wallace

1952-02-08 129 Jimmy Dunn 130 27-23-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 5 6

1952-01-11 127½ Johnny Malloy 129 14-7-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 6 6

1952-01-04 128 Jimmy Dunn 129 27-21-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 3 6

1951-07-20 126 Al Montalvo 126 0-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 4

1951-06-29 128¼ Pete Aguirre 128¼ 1-0-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W KO 2 4
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:
I remember Sedillo very well. I thought he was from Indio, along with his brother Frank. They started as amateurs on the Olympic cards on thursday, along with a stablemate named Richard Armendariz. Later turned pro for awhile.
I might be wrong but, I think they were from Chino...

Frank was the older brother, started before the Olympic featured amateurs, but Bobby and stablemate Armendariz were both part of the "Youth Development Program". Lots of pros came form those amateur fights.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:The Campos brother's. Johnny Forbes fighters

Image

Frankie Campos

division bantamweight

alias The Fighting Barber

country United States
residence Los Angeles, California, United States

won 19 (KO 10) + lost 9 (KO 4) + drawn 0 = 28
rounds boxed 192 KO% 35.71


1958-11-09 Pimi Barajas 16-7-1
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico L KO 8

1958-10-31 Kildo Martinez 6-20-6
Ciudad Obregon, Sonora, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1958-10-04 Roque Fernandez 11-15-3
Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico W KO 9 10

1958-09-23 118 Raul Leanos 118 35-8-2
Plaza de Toros, Torreon, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico W KO 6 10

1957-12-07 118 Billy Peacock 117¾ 36-16-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 8 12
time: 2:36 | referee: Jimmy Wilson 63-68
vacant USA California State bantamweight title
A cut over Campos's right eye, led to the stoppage.

1957-09-14 Pat Supple 29-1-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1957-08-31 118 Jose Luis Mora 118 12-6-0
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico W KO 3 10

1957-05-01 122 Jose Toluco Lopez 124 34-6-2
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico L PTS 10 10

1956-12-13 Beto Couray 24-24-2
Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1956-09-29 Ernesto Parra 121 16-6-1
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico L PTS 10 10

1956-06-23 118 Ricardo Moreno 122 21-2-1
Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico L KO 4 10

1956-05-18 117½ Pimi Barajas 119¾ 7-2-0
Wrigley Field, Los Angeles, California, United States L SD 10 10

1956-03-19 118½ Joey Benson 123 4-5-0
San Francisco Gardens, San Francisco, California, United States L PTS 10 10 referee: Frankie Brown 54½-55½

1956-03-09 Jorge Gabino Gomez 2-6-2
Piedras Negras, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico W PTS 10 10

1956-02-22 121 Luke Sandoval 123 6-8-2
San Francisco Gardens, San Francisco, California, United States W TKO 5 6

1955-12-06 121 Joey Benson 121 4-2-0
Auditorium, Richmond, California, United States W PTS 10 10
referee: Ray Flores 59-51

1955-11-09 122 Vic Eisen 122 23-12-3
Auditorium, Oakland, California, United States W KO 2 10

1955-05-12 119 Pimi Barajas 116½
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 10 10 Barajas was knocked down in the 3rd round.

1955-02-10 118 Baby Moe Mario 118½ 21-6-4
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W TKO 3 10 Reported as first time Mario had ever been floored or stopped and as his first loss since 1953

1954-10-30 117 Jackie Spurgeon 113 4-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 10 10
referee: Tommy Hart 60-50 | judge: Frankie Van 61-49 | judge: Russ Bradford 59-51

1954-05-08 116½ Jesse Mongia 119¾ 26-6-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L UD 10 10
referee: Charley Randolph 50-60 | judge: Dynamite Jackson 49½-60½ | judge: Reggie Gilmore 51-59

1954-02-20 117 Jimmy Quinn 118 8-4-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 7 10
time: 1:22 | referee: Frankie Van

1953-12-26 115 Johnny Gonzalez 118 \
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 2 6
Gonzalez was knocked down twice.

1953-06-13 116½ Alex Fimbres 119½ 29-21-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 2 6

1953-05-09 116½ Jimmy Quinn 118 4-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 3 4

1953-04-18 George Jacquet 2-3-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1953-04-04 115 Alonso Aviles 116 0-3-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 2 4

1953-02-14 115½ George Jacquet 116 2-0-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4

Pro debut for Campos, according to the Los Angeles Tribune

Image

Juan Luis Campos

country United States
residence Hollywood, California, United States

won 12 (KO 6) + lost 7 (KO 5) + drawn 1 = 20
rounds boxed 117 KO% 30

1955-04-12 136½ Gilberto Muniz 137½ 23-11-5
Ocean Park Arena, Santa Monica, California, United States L TKO 7 10 time: 2:51 | referee: Dynamite Jackson

1954-11-15 135¼ Art Ramponi 135 14-4-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L TKO 6 10 time: 2:22 | referee: Tommy Hart

1954-10-12 135 Ray Castro 134½ 11-2-0
Ocean Park Arena, Santa Monica, California, United States W PTS 10 10 Castro was knocked down in the 9th round.

1954-04-06 133 Buddy Evatt 132½ 13-0-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L KO 3 10 time: 1:11 | referee: Joe Stone

1954-03-06 130 Fabela Chavez 131 46-21-5
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W SD 10 10
referee: Abe Roth 54-56 | judge: Dynamite Jackson 56-54 | judge: Frank Holborow 56-54

1953-12-19 129½ Fabela Chavez 128½ 46-21-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States D PTS 10 10
referee: Reggie Gilmore 55-55 | judge: Frankie Van 52-58 | judge: Lee Grossman 55-55

1953-06-27 129 Kenny Davis 127½ 5-1-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 6 10

1953-04-18 129½ Chico Rosa 129½ 31-16-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L UD 10 10
referee: Abe Roth 50-60 | judge: Lee Grossman 52-58 | judge: Frank Holborow 51-59

1953-03-14 127 Javier Gutierrez 123½ 20-12-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 10 10
referee: Mushy Callahan 57-53 | judge: Joe Stone 57-53 | judge: Tommy Hart 56-54

1952-12-27 126 Hector Rios 126 9-7-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 6
time: 1:42

1952-08-02 130 Freddy Bravo 130 3-5-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W SD 6 6

1952-07-05 130 Bobby Garza 126 30-22-17
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L SD 6 6

1952-05-24 Bobby Romo 16-11-8
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 6 6

1952-04-19 132 John Richards 132¼ 5-15-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-03-22 129 Chucho Mendoza 123½ 0-3-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W KO 3 6
referee: Jimmy Wallace

1952-02-08 129 Jimmy Dunn 130 27-23-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 5 6

1952-01-11 127½ Johnny Malloy 129 14-7-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L TKO 6 6

1952-01-04 128 Jimmy Dunn 129 27-21-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 3 6

1951-07-20 126 Al Montalvo 126 0-1-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 4

1951-06-29 128¼ Pete Aguirre 128¼ 1-0-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W KO 2 4

Wasn't Campos one of Johnny Forbes' fighters?
Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Another Batman . . .

Tomorrow I begin work on the next Batman feature.
The production is already in progress and has about six weeks of filming left.
There is talk of us working seven days a week, which is kind of a killer, but I've done it before.
Thanks to the I-Phone, I can stay connected.
I'm setting it up so I will not have to work during June of next year.
If the CBHOF event takes place, I will have a full month to devote to helping Don & Frank.
Regardless of the inductees, we will out sell any previous event.
From my stand point, this is my favorite day of the year. I can make a difference, believe it or not!
raylawpc
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by raylawpc »

Frank, is there some thought that the CBHOF event won't happen next year? I defeated a 3-pound burrito in Denver last week (in 28 minutes). I'm planning on kicking the Manuel's a** next June . . . :OhYes:
bennie
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

CNorkusJr wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
bennie wrote:Image


Benn, Watson and Eubank
Great picture, Bennie... :TU:
Nigel Benn,wow,great fighter. In fact all 3 of them.
When was this picture taken Bennie ?
I wouldnt think this would be a recent shot as all 3 look like they can still go a few Rds in the ring. :box:
I'm not sure when it was taken, Charley. Watson suffered brain damage after he was stopped by Eubank back in 1992 but has learned to walk again. He stopped Benn in 1989, standing up to the unbeaten favourite and boxing his ears off. They are all friends now.
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

d
Last edited by kikibalt on 23 Sep 2011, 10:06, edited 2 times in total.
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:

Wasn't Campos one of Johnny Forbes' fighters?
Rick, both of the Campos brother's were started in boxing by Johnny Forbes, but at one point in their pro careers ended up with other managers. Johnny had many of his protégés; stolen from him by big money guys... :witzend:
Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:

Wasn't Campos one of Johnny Forbes' fighters?
Rick, both of the Campos brother's were started in boxing by Johnny Forbes, but at one point in their pro careers ended up with other managers. Johnny had many of his protégés; stolen from him by big money guys... :witzend:
I know that Forbes' fighters always seemed to be handled by others as pros, Gig Rooney, Ray Luna, etc. When you think of the absolute best trainers/teachers in boxing, I believe that very few are well known. Like Forbes, these men start a kid out, school him in the fundementals, spend their money, drive them to contests, teach them how to live as a boxer, and so on. Then after sterling amateur careers "the buzzards" as Mel Epstein would call them, swoop in and seperate the boxer from his mentor. Suddenly you see an Angelo Dundee, or Emmanuel Steward in their corners. We really don't see the best trainers as they are in the gyms developing the boxers that somebody else will eventually take credit for teaching.
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