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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 19:01
by Dongee
Rick Farris wrote:Don Fraser on Hap Navarro . . .

"Hap Navarro was ahead of his time and responsible for the development of some of the greatest boxers in history. He was a young man, the new kid on the block and he caught many of the old timers off guard. He was one of the most honorable, positive influences in boxing during his era. He was an innovator and responsible for much of the legend of the great Hollywood Legion stadium."

While speaking with Don Fraser this morning, the name Hap Navarro came up. I told him of a photo Hap had given me, one of a very young Don Fraser interviewing Hap and Willie Vaughn at Soper's traing camp. "Hap was young too, he was operating with the big boys then, and making a name for himself, his reputation was solid." Fraser remembered.

We are very lucky to have mentors such as Hap Navarro, Don Fraser and Frank Baltazar Sr. Sincere thanks!


-Rick Farris
Thanks to you both, Rick and Don for the compliments.

There were about ten of us who started out together some 60 years ago. Lou Magana was the oldest, and three of the youngest were Don Fraser, Don Chargin and John Hall, of the L.A. Times.

In that group were also Jackie McCoy, Joey Olmos and Artie Aragon.
We were all of one mind when it came to boxing, and it was that nothing mattered more to us than an ideal fight game, where talent could be rewarded fairly and deservedly.

hap navarro

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 19:16
by kikibalt
Dongee wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:Don Fraser on Hap Navarro . . .

"Hap Navarro was ahead of his time and responsible for the development of some of the greatest boxers in history. He was a young man, the new kid on the block and he caught many of the old timers off guard. He was one of the most honorable, positive influences in boxing during his era. He was an innovator and responsible for much of the legend of the great Hollywood Legion stadium."

While speaking with Don Fraser this morning, the name Hap Navarro came up. I told him of a photo Hap had given me, one of a very young Don Fraser interviewing Hap and Willie Vaughn at Soper's traing camp. "Hap was young too, he was operating with the big boys then, and making a name for himself, his reputation was solid." Fraser remembered.

We are very lucky to have mentors such as Hap Navarro, Don Fraser and Frank Baltazar Sr. Sincere thanks!


-Rick Farris
Thanks to you both, Rick and Don for the compliments.

There were about ten of us who started out together some 60 years ago. Lou Magana was the oldest, and three of the youngest were Don Fraser, Don Chargin and John Hall, of the L.A. Times.

In that group were also Jackie McCoy, Joey Olmos and Artie Aragon.
We were all of one mind when it came to boxing, and it was that nothing mattered more to us than an ideal fight game, where talent could be rewarded fairly and deservedly.

hap navarro
Any accolade that come your way, Hap, my friend, you earned'em, you're not getting nothing for nothing here.... :TU: :bow: :bow:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 20:08
by Rick Farris
Sylvia Ramos . . .

Just spoke with Mando Ramos' wife Sylvia. Sylvia was at the benefit this past weekend for Genaro Hernandez and told me that $150,000 was collected, and would go directly to the boxer.

-Rick Farris

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 20:17
by Rick Farris
Dongee wrote:
Rick Farris wrote:Don Fraser on Hap Navarro . . .

"Hap Navarro was ahead of his time and responsible for the development of some of the greatest boxers in history. He was a young man, the new kid on the block and he caught many of the old timers off guard. He was one of the most honorable, positive influences in boxing during his era. He was an innovator and responsible for much of the legend of the great Hollywood Legion stadium."

While speaking with Don Fraser this morning, the name Hap Navarro came up. I told him of a photo Hap had given me, one of a very young Don Fraser interviewing Hap and Willie Vaughn at Soper's traing camp. "Hap was young too, he was operating with the big boys then, and making a name for himself, his reputation was solid." Fraser remembered.

We are very lucky to have mentors such as Hap Navarro, Don Fraser and Frank Baltazar Sr. Sincere thanks!


-Rick Farris
Thanks to you both, Rick and Don for the compliments.

There were about ten of us who started out together some 60 years ago. Lou Magana was the oldest, and three of the youngest were Don Fraser, Don Chargin and John Hall, of the L.A. Times.

In that group were also Jackie McCoy, Joey Olmos and Artie Aragon.
We were all of one mind when it came to boxing, and it was that nothing mattered more to us than an ideal fight game, where talent could be rewarded fairly and deservedly.

hap navarro
Hap . . . "rewarded fairly and deservedly" stands out in my mind. When it comes to recognition of the best, this is my goal.

-Rick Farris

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 20:54
by Ron C
kikibalt wrote:My late buddy John Martinez had this done, its a 1988 calendar

Image


That is an awesome picture!

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 20:57
by kikibalt
Ron C wrote:
kikibalt wrote:My late buddy John Martinez had this done, its a 1988 calendar

Image


That is an awesome picture!
Thanks Ron.... :TU:

Re:

Posted: 20 Jan 2009, 23:45
by Rick Farris
kikibalt wrote:Image
Dwight Hawkins
Los Angeles, 1965 . . .

When Dwight Hawkins got word that riots had erupted in Watts, the 25-year-old featherweight left the Main St. Gym and hurried to his old neighborhood. Dwight had grown up in the dangerous Imperial Courts housing project. He knew the territory. The boxer hoped he might offer some help in diffusing the situation. Dwight had been working with the youth of Watts, trying to offer a diversion to gang life.

Upon reaching Watts, the LAPD had sealed off the war zone and turned Hawkins away. He drove around the block, parked his car and watched four young boys run toward a men's store across the street. The biggest of the four picked up a metal trash can and tossed it thru the men's store window. The energized youths were laughing and jumped thru the window into the store.

Hawkins got out of his car, and walked across the street as the looters emerged from the store, carrying a variety of expensive suits and jackets. As Hawkins moved toward the boys he shouted, "Why are you doing this? Don't you think it's dumb?"

The biggest kid, the one who'd tossed the can thru the window, turned to face Hawkins, dropped the clothes to the sidewalk and moved toward the featherweight contender. As he got closer, he saw something in the eyes of the smaller man and stopped. The young man said nothing as Hawkins tried to convince them not to make a mistake they might regret for the rest of their lives. The big kid shook his head, turned around, picked the clothes up off the sidewalk and ran off with the others. All were laughing at the funny little peace-maker.

Hawkins returned to his car, he took in the turmoil, buildings burning, cars being tipped over, beatings, looting, people running wild, out of control, feeding off the frenzy of hate, resentment, ignorance.

Dwight Hawkins drove away. His heart was broken.


-Rick Farris

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 00:18
by dagosd2000
HOPE AND DREAMS

A new President took office today. We speak of friends who are battling illnesses. Today the kids in our school district began their end of course exams. We hope all the above come through with flying colors.

The President has a fresh start. There are medicines and treatments for the sick. There are hopes and dreams. The kids in the district have been set up. "No Child Left Behind" sounded optimistic,but after years of standardized tests more and more kids are being left at the gate.

I teach U.S. History. The test results is all that's talked about. Have to reach that mark. What are you doing to get them prepared? You review. There's study hall. Tutors. In the end it's like when they threw me in with Ken Norton in the gym 40 years ago. I didn't know how to defend myself.

These exams are ready made for a college course. Fine details. Abstract concepts. Trivial information. Awkward wording. Knowlege that couldn't be covered adequately in a year's time wanted to be regurgetated in a semester. After the test the kids leave the room demoralized.

Standard scores are 40%. Then it will be back to the drawing board. What are we doing wrong? Is it an economic question? The time the kids spend with video games and TV? Latch key families? Language barriers? Alcohol and drugs in the house?It's all of that and more.

The solution our country ,decided in Congress by partisan vote, was "No Child Left Behind." Or standardized tests that are virtually impossible to pass on a broad scale. A collage exam given to an eigth grader who's focus ,at best ,is on the opposite sex. In boxing,they call it a "fix". A "set up".

Eventually when "No Child Left Behind" is assessed,public eduation will die a contorted death. And considering what it's up against,it will be welcome. Kids who don't know who the Vice President is won't be going to collage anyway. Schools will be privatized. School will belong to the big corporations. The thin veneer of students at the top of the ladder will be OK. The rest?

So our new President will have education on his plate. Obama,along with the Republicans and Democrats thought "No Child Left Behind" was a good idea. They voted for it. They want charter schools. The kids in the barrios and ghettos? Charter school or probably trade school that will also fall into the hands of corporations.

If you're sick,you've got a fighting chance the way I see it. I hope the new President sees that education will only be for a few.The rest won't have a chance. The rest will be left behind.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 04:06
by bennie
Rick Farris wrote:Sylvia Ramos . . .

Just spoke with Mando Ramos' wife Sylvia. Sylvia was at the benefit this past weekend for Genaro Hernandez and told me that $150,000 was collected, and would go directly to the boxer.

-Rick Farris
That is truly fantastic.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 05:50
by bennie
New heavyweight star David Haye still plans to lure one of those dastardly Klitschkos into a domestic or at least a European boxing ring. His proposed superfight in London with Vitali went by the board when the giant Ukrainian agreed to the showdown in principle, then turned round and announced a defence of his WBC title against Cuba's Juan Carlos Gomez in Germany on March 21. This leaves Vitali's younger brother Wladimir, another giant of a man who holds IBF and WBO versions of the world heavyweight title.
Tantalisingly, 32-year-old "Wlad" has delayed plans to announce his next challenger, despite reliable claims that Los Angeles pudding Chris Arreola would be the man. Klitschko recently derided Haye as "too small" for the current crop of heavies but one look at Arreola may have convinced him otherwise. Haye, the former undisputed world cruisweight champion, stands 6ft 3ins and weighs an impressive-looking 215 pounds, as opposed to the poundage made up largely of blubber on Arreola. Moreover, the 6ft 6ins Klitschko, who weighs around 240 pounds, seems to have taken a dislike to the cocky new kid on the block and we all know that dislike can speed up negotiations.
The confident, charismatic, quick, heavy handed Haye brings a refreshing fearlessness to the heavyweight division after cleaning up at cruiserweight. He made a stunning official debut at the weight in November in London: a rip-roaring five-knockdown stoppage of New York gatekeeper Monte Barrett. Interestingly, if nothing more than that, "Wlad" had also stopped Barrett in London. He also floored him five times.
Klitschko is known in the trade as an 'on top' fighter who has been sparked a few times when fighters refused to be intimidated and rallied hard. He was actually Haye's original target, and while Haye could still do with a few more heavyweight fights before facing either Klitschko, in my opinion (why the rush at 28?), the Londoner definitely stands more of a puncher's chance with the 'chinny' Wlad than he does with the iron-jawed Vitali.
Of course Haye looks a little suspect around the chin himself, which is what makes it all so exciting (and may explain the rush). What would you cross the street to watch, Klitschko v Arreola, or Klitschko v the swashbuckling, bomb-dropping Haye? As they say in all the worst media outlets, watch this space.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 08:17
by kikibalt
Image
The new "First Couple"

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 10:08
by kikibalt
Art Aragon vs Jimmy Carter I....1951

Image

Question, who is the the babe at ringside, Artie's wife or girlfriend?

Image

Image

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 10:16
by bennie
kikibalt wrote:Art Aragon vs Jimmy Carter I....1951

Image

Question, who is the the babe at ringside, Artie's wife or girlfriend?

Image

Image
I dunno, Frankie, but she looks pretty hot from behind.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 10:17
by kikibalt
Yes she does, Bennie, I see you too have an eye for the ladies.... :TU:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 10:27
by bennie
kikibalt wrote:Yes she does, Bennie, I see you too have and eye for the ladies.... :TU:
Aye, but I have less success than you, Frankie. :wink:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 10:42
by kikibalt
bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Yes she does, Bennie, I see you too have and eye for the ladies.... :TU:
Aye, but I have less success than you, Frankie. :wink:
You have to work at it. Bennie...... :lol:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 11:49
by bennie
When Jeff Lacy walked into the MEN Arena in Manchester for the Calzaghe fight hand-in-hand with a woman, I seriously regretted the demise of ringside betting.
I wonder if they walked out holding hands.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 12:21
by kikibalt
bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Art Aragon vs Jimmy Carter I....1951

Image

Question, who is the the babe at ringside, Artie's wife or girlfriend?

Image

Image
I dunno, Frankie, but she looks pretty hot from behind.
Nice behind too... :TU: :bow:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 12:57
by kikibalt
Image
Kirk Douglas in "Champion"

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 13:18
by Boxingnut
kikibalt wrote:
Ron C wrote:
kikibalt wrote:My late buddy John Martinez had this done, its a 1988 calendar

Image


That is an awesome picture!
Thanks Ron.... :TU:
Great picture, whatever happened to Dino Ramirez Frank?

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 13:44
by kikibalt
Boxingnut wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
kikibalt wrote:My late buddy John Martinez had this done, its a 1988 calendar

Image


Great picture, whatever happened to Dino Ramirez Frank?
Rob...Dino was a good amateur fighter that John martinez and I were training, John did most of Dino's training and I did the booking, when he was ready to turn pro his older brother and dad decide that they knew more then John and I, and said they were going to manage his boxing career, these two guys didn't know anything about boxing, they just started hanging around the gym because of Dino and now they thought they knew enough to take Dino to the top, they didn't know how to pick the right opponents for Dino, they threw him to the wolfs, it was a sad case of the brother and the father having more guts then brains, and Dino was the one that paid for it.

I think he only had about 9-10 fights and then he retired.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 15:57
by kikibalt
Steroids in Boxing: Dr. George Exposes Shane Mosley

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Interview by Dan Hernandez

“Shane (Mosley) used to be that way, but when his wife came into the picture, everything became money, and everything became ‘Let’s cut corners.’”--Dr. George

Dr. George Del Junco is a friend of mine. This friendship began when a mutual friend, Brian Washington of the Big Bear Training Center in Big Bear, California, introduced us over a year ago. Brian informed me that if I wanted the “real” scoop on all things boxing, Dr. George was the man to see. An informative and entertaining interview developed from that meeting and a strong personal relationship has been established.

I learned that Dr. George, as he is referred to in boxing circles, speaks from his heart, without reservation, about which he has spent a good part of his 59 years. That is boxing, boxers, and all aspects of the sport, he spent many years working with, training, and advising such notable boxers as Shane Mosley, Oscar De La Hoya, Chicanito Hernandez, Paul Gonzalez, and a score of others. Instrumental in making headgear mandatory in all Olympic Boxing since and including the 1984 Olympics, Dr. George, a former professional football prospect for the Los Angeles Ram Football Team and former chiropractor too many star athletes and entertainers, called me to throw himself in the ring to aide in the battle Chicanito Hernandez is having with cancer.

While discussing the attributes of Hernandez and his honest approach to boxing and life, the conversation developed into an indictment of Shane Mosley, who seemingly developed muscles overnight, the travesty of most of the Oscar De La Hoya affiliated boxing promotions, and the general state of boxing. In the following interview, the doctor places himself on the firing line and says he is ready and willing to face any adversity that may develop from his stating his feelings with such candor.

DH: Would you tell me how you feel about Chicanito?

I had the privilege to work with Chicanito and his brothers and also his dad, way back when I was at the Great Western Forum. Throughout the years I was able to go to the gym where he would train, he would spar and he was one of the hardest working fighters that I ever worked with that I ever knew. And, he was always a gentleman, inside and outside of the ring. He was a very respectful individual, very low-key, very humble. I believe he has been a tremendous role-model from the South-Central part of Los Angeles, he really loves kids and I never heard him say a bad word or a bad thing.

He has always been true to his sport and true to his championship style of living. I met his family a couple of times at different little gatherings and he and they have always been outstanding. It’s a shame that life is what it is and we all have to go through that same path at one time or another, but I would like to see how we could help someone like him to see if he could get well, whether it be with City of Hope assisting him or another big hospital that does cancer research.

I remember vividly the wars that he and Shane Mosley would have in the ring while in training. People would come from miles to see these two, and this was just sparring, they would help each other get ready for fights and championship bouts and so on. You know you see somebody like Chicanito, who struggled to make weight, who struggled to be the best that he could be and then talking about Mosley. It is sad that Shane actually used steroids to cheat and get ahead of the other fighters, specifically for the second De La Hoya fight. I remember very clearly going up to camp to do my job up there. As a second, I didn’t just work the corner, I was also a chiropractor for Shane, I massaged him and helped him with his nutrition. I would him adjustments, help him withy running, and every aspect of his training. I was always there, his shadow.

DH: How long did you work with Shane?

Off and on, for about 23 years, since he was 8 years old.

DH: Were there others working with him also?

Well, when we turned pro, there was just Jack (Shane’s father), and myself. It wasn’t until 1997 when we fought for the title against Phil Holliday, that Cassius Green came on to be the cut man, I had been the cut man and second prior to that. So here we were, the second fight against Oscar De La Hoya, Mosley had already suffered two losses against Vernon Forrest, and I guess Shane was insecure about his power and his ability to stay in the ring. There was another conditioning coach that was brought in by his wife, a young man that was in his own rights, a track star…a running star. This man was then doing more things with Shane and I was more like in the background. When I reported to camp for the second De La Hoya fight, I noticed right away, my first visual of Shane, was that he was much, much, bigger than when I had seen him 4 to 6 weeks earlier.
I said, “Shane, what are you doing, you’ve gotten so big.”

In the back of my mind, I had a feeling it was steroids. I have been around football players and weight lifters, all my life, so I knew right away what had happened, but I questioned him anyway. Mosley responded, “I’ve been lifting weights.” He then puffed up and showed me his muscles in his chest and I said, “Hey, don’t lie to me, that’s not from weights. You might have been doing some weights, but you’ve been shooting steroids.” Right away he went from the sweet mild-mannered Shane Mosley, I had known, to a very aggressive, very uncharacteristic person, using foul language, which he never did before, and told me that, “It was none of my business, you didn’t do it so don’t worry about it.” I told him in reply that, “People have a notion that people by your side are the one’s doing things with you. And since I’ve been with you all these years, anyone might think that I’ve been giving you steroids instead of the B12 that I’ve been giving you for the last 12 years.” Shane responded with, “I told you, you didn’t do it, it has nothing to do with you, it’s none of your business. Don’t get involved.” And I walked away.

That particular camp, I was used very sparingly and even at that I witnessed terrible mood swings in Shane, to his father, to other people in the camp, and to myself. When I arrived in Las Vegas, there were a lot of problems made by his wife, Jin, being his new manager and calling all the shots. I didn’t even have a room at the MGM, and as you know in boxing, the Team stays together. When I went to register at the MGM, Jin told me that I was down at the Barbary Coast and when I told her that I didn’t have a car since I flew in and that I didn’t know where the Barbary Coast was, she said, “You can walk!”

I’ve never forgotten those words and I went upstairs to the 29th floor to speak with Shane and I asked him, “What was going on here, for the last 20 years I have stayed close to you at all times, and all of a sudden, I don’t even have a room in the same hotel.” Shane told me, “My wife is the manager, you do as you’re told and that’s it, you can leave.” It was very harsh and very cold.

I found my way to the Barbary Coast, which was a few blocks down the street; I was there for the rest of the day. The night of the fight, Shane was going in different directions, Gary Shaw the Promoter and his wife were having problems as far as the actual fight, the seating, and all kinds of different things. I didn’t think it was a good atmosphere for a fighter to be in and I tried to tell Shane that maybe he should go to another room, and so forth. No one was listening to me.

The fight started and I really thought that we lost that fight; I feel that a lot of people that know the boxing profession well, felt the same. In fact, after the fight I went over and congratulated Oscar, who I had also worked with since he was a youngster. In fact, in the ninth round, Shane had Oscar hurt, he caught him with a real good left hook, but he didn’t finish him. So when he came and sat down in the corner, I said “Son,” I used to call him son, because we were so close, I said “Son, you had him in trouble, when you get back in there go back to that left hook and follow-up with a right-handed body shot and come up with a second left hook and you’re going to take him out.” I was dumbfounded as Shane yelled at me and said, “Shut up, you don’t know anything!” At that time, I came down the corner and that was the end of me with the Mosley Team. I never reported to any further camps, I never called him and he’s never called me back.

But the fact that he was using steroids, I just want to clear that with myself, people in boxing, people that might be interested to know whether he did or not, he did. Now he should be man enough to say I use steroids, instead of saying he didn’t know he was using steroids, he was made to use steroids, or any other excuse. If you want to be a man in this society, you have got to pay the price. I’m not a rich man, but I sleep well at night, I don’t have to be maliciously embarrassed in front of people by my wife, I don’t have to be arrogant because of money, and I don’t have to treat people underneath me the way they do. That’s another reason I chose to leave after that particular fight, because it was no longer a family situation, it was no longer a Mosley situation. It became somebody else running the camp.

It’s sad that his father has been fired, a couple of times. It’s sad that Shane himself, does not have any kind of relationship with his sister or even with his mother, because his wife won’t let him. That’s their problem, but I am a family man, I love my children, I love the sport of boxing and I hate what has happened to it because of people like Shane. Cheating, stealing, however, you want to call it, that’s what he has done.

If Mosley reads this, or if he finds out about this, hey, the truth, that’s what it is. If he doesn’t like it, then he shouldn’t have done it. I don’t have any regrets in my life. Nobody can point a finger and say I’ve ever done anything wrong to anybody.

Contrary, I’ve been used and abused, but I’m still here and I still have a good heart. I will still try and help my people, no matter what day of the week it is. It is a shame that when some people get a lot of money, it all goes to their head. They forget who got them there, and they forget even their own families.

DH: What would you like to see happen?

It doesn’t matter what he feels about me, because he’s going to have to answer to the real man up above. When that happens, it will be reckoning day.

DH: It sounds like you’re more upset with the way Mosley has treated the boxing world in general that how he treated you specifically, is that correct?

Of course. You know, if anybody cheats at anything, whether it be a test, playing cards, any kind of cheating, morally, it is wrong! Yet, some of these people are looking at cheating as just another way of making the big money. They are becoming successful and the people that are out there really trying hard and doing it right, seldom get a break.

DH: Like Chicanito?

Like Chicanito. You know, Chicanito was a real champion, he worked so hard. He was a tall skinny guy who threw more punches than anybody could count, and he had a heart as big as a lion. When he fought De La Hoya at Caesars Palace, I was sitting there ringside and I was rooting for him because I knew what he had overcome. He didn’t go to the Olympics, he didn’t have corporate America behind him, he didn’t have a big promoter. That’s why I consider Chicanito a real, real, champion. He didn’t earn his titles politically or with outside help, like some of these people that we’re talking about. When you get down to the nitty, gritty, that’s what really matters. Chicanito and his type, made it on their own, they fought hard, and they lived hard. But even now, he’s facing death or at the least, a crippling disability. He’s facing a way that nobody wants to go, but he’s doing it bravely. And again, he’s trying to do it on his own. That’s why I think we must come to his rescue and help him through his hard times. I’ll be the first one to stand up there, shake his hand, and hug him. I will tell him that I’m here to help you son, that’s what Chicanito deserves now.

DH: So what I hear you saying is that Mosley’s success comes at the expense of more worthy fighters like Chicanito, is that correct?

That’s true. A dear friend of mine, Mando Ramos, who recently passed, and I were trying for many years to get a union for boxers because we wanted to help them with things like a retirement fund, health care upon retirement, aide in obtaining employment and it never materialized. However, this is why Mando and I wanted to do something, because there are so many fighters that after their day in the ring is over, they have nothing. Even the fighters that made a lot of money, unfortunately by means of crook and rook lost it all. Take Mike Tyson for instance, 300 million dollars, blown. That’s incredible and there are many others.

I’ll tell you, I actually questioned God the day of the second De la Hoya - Mosley fight. After the fight was over, I was walking back to my hotel room and I actually looked up to the sky and said to God, “How can you allow a cheater, someone who is not righteous enough to be a champion, to not only get the win, he actually lost the fight, God, why did you give him a win?”

I remember clearly saying that out loud and I’m sure people were standing around me in Las Vegas saying that I was an idiot, but that’s how strongly I believed in what I was doing. I didn’t want to have anything top do with anybody that was going to cheat and exploit the sport that has had such greats throughout the years. A lot of men have paid the price, some have died in the ring, and you know. That’s something that we have got to be proud of. It’s a very tough sport, but it’s a sport that people take to heart. Shane used to be that way, but when his wife came into the picture, everything became money, and everything became “Let’s cut corners.” Everything became, how can we cheat some more? How can we get more than we are already making?

DH: What is your ultimate goal here? What are you trying to accomplish?

My ultimate goal is to see if we could re-establish boxing to what it used to be. It is no longer that.

DH: In your opinion, what has boxing lost?

Integrity, focus, I mean the reason PPV were started was to show off 5 or 6 world champions all on the same card. Putting their titles on the line, not this crap with PPV’s with has-beens fighting 10 rounds and charging 50 bucks. This is ridiculous, this is why people no longer want to talk about boxing. The people feel that all the fights are fixed, if they thought Don King put up fixed fights, it’s a joke now. Even people that are not experts in boxing, even women will come up to you and tell you, “Wow, I used to really look forward to fights, but this is a circus now.” And that is being polite, that’s why the sport is in shambles, some people have taken it to another level just to make money.

DH: Give me a for instance.

50 years ago, a 130 pounder would not have been able to put on 25 or 30 pounds to get in the ring to fight for 20 millions dollars. And a non-title fight to boot, that is ludicrous. It doesn’t even make sense that the state athletic commissions allow this farce to go on!

DH: So then you are hoping to clear this up and get back to realistic promotions and behavior, is that right?

Yeah, we need to get some regulations. We need to get some real honest-to-goodness promoters that are going to bring up the sport of boxing again. Not fight, whomever they want to fight, whenever they want to fight, and make hundreds of millions of dollars at the stake of the fans. After the fight that took place between Manny Pacquiao and Oscar De La Hoya, I guarantee you. We dropped another 30% of following in the sport of boxing. It was atrocious and Chicanito said it best, “No athlete, no matter what sport, can slack off and eat, drink, and not be training and expect in 5 or 6 weeks time to get in shape to fight a pound-for-pound type of fighter.” Or any fighter for that matter. That is ridiculous, it is an insult to the sport and its fans.

I remember many years ago, a fight between Larry Holmes and the “White Hope,” Gerry Cooney, Cooney came in really in bad shape, he wasn’t ready for that fight and Holmes destroyed him just with his jab. At the end of the fight, Gerry was sitting in the middle of the ring crying and apologizing to his fans. Even in a loss, that’s what matters the most, the fans. But not today. These people, they cheat, they lie, and they laugh all the way to the bank. How sad is that?

DH: Thank you for sharing. Are there any final words you would like to add to this?

God bless America, and we still have the very best in the world, we just have to bring it back.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 16:21
by Rick Farris
deleted

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 16:41
by kikibalt
Closet Classic: Frankie Baltazar vs. Juan Escobar (1983)
By Ted Sares -

Image
photo courtesy of Frank Baltazar

The historic Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles was home to any number of great fights. Some were pure classics; others flew a bit under the radar. One such bout was when hard hitting LA area native Frankie Baltazar took on rugged Juan Escobar on June 17, 1983. Escobar was 26-8-2 while Frankie was 33-2-1. Baltazar had gone undefeated in 30 of his last 31 outings having lost to “Bazooka” Limon in a bid for the NABF super featherweight title. Escobar, who had fought some tough customers like Ruben Castillo, was best known for his draw with the legendary Salvador Sanchez in 1978 when he decked the great Sanchez in the fifth canto. He was not one to be taken lightly. The baby faced Juan was the underdog but insiders were saying “watch out..”

The stage was set for a solid fight between two well schooled southpaws and that’s exactly what occurred as Escobar controlled the first round with strong left crosses, and then opened up on Frankie in the second stanza and almost took him out with a flurry of flush shots, his strong left being the most prominent.

In the fourth, the stylish Mexican had Baltazar’s right eye all but closed as he worked both upstairs and downstairs putting Frankie in sudden jeopardy. But then, midway in the fifth stanza, Baltazar found his right hand and rocked the Tijuana native with a hard overhand right. He continued to land this same punch until the bell rang. All of a sudden, he was back in the fight. The turnaround in the sixth round as Baltazar continually landed right hooks and straight lefts, often in combination. Clearly, the tide had turned as the bell rang.

Frankie kept the pressure on in the seventh as the fight evened. However, his right eye was just about closed and terribly discolored prompting the ringside doctor to take a long look. Meanwhile, Escobar no longer had the look of confidence that he possessed in the first four rounds. Baltazar now had become the stalker. After an eighth round that could have gone to either fighter, the fight appeared even going into the last two stanzas. The ninth also was close as both fighters exchanged heavy shots and Escobar finished the stronger of the two moving Frankie into a corner with heavy shots.

Going into the last round, the fight was there to be won. Frankie’s face opened up as his eye totally closed and his nose now bled profusely due in part to a number of unintentional head butts. Then, with just 30 seconds remaining, Frankie landed a right counter that sent Escobar to the deck and opened up a severe cut over left his eye.

As a very young Jimmy Lennon, Jr. read the scoring, fans threw money into the ring which was a custom at the Olympic when they appreciated a great fight. Referee James Jen-Kin and judge Vince Delgado had it 95-94 and 96-94, respectively, for Baltazar. Judge Rudy Jordan saw it 95-96 for Escobar. Frankie Baltazar had pulled out a dramatic split decision thanks to a last minute knockdown.

Image
(Photo courtesy of Frank Baltazar)

Baltazar would go on to win six of his last seven and finish with a fine slate of 40-3-1 and an impressive KO percentage of 61.36. Escobar would not be as fortunate. He would KO the limited Felipe Urguiza just a week later, but then would lose his final five bouts all by way of stoppage. The opposition was stiff including Aussie Graeme Brooke, Sergio Zambrano (31-1-1 coming in), future world champion Jorge Vaca, and Primo “Kid Durango” Ramos.

Later than same evening, Frankie’s brother, Tony “The Tiger” Baltazar decisioned Roque “Rocky” Montoya. As always, their father, Frank Sr., was in the corner for both fights.

There have been many great boxing families, but none more exciting in the ring than the Baltazar’s. Fittingly, Tony, Frankie and Frank Sr. are members of the California Boxing Hall of Fame. As well, they captured the adoration of “pochos” (a. k.a Chicanos), something only a few would accomplish, guys the likes “Mando,” Bobby, “Little Red,” but something Oscar never could.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 21 Jan 2009, 21:54
by dagosd2000
Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:Image
"The broad will ruin the dumb bastid!"

-Mel Epstein
"THE PUG WILL RUIN THE BROAD."

Ok.Ok. Messing around with the softer sex ain't no good to build up your conditioning,but I'm going to speak up for the women on this one.

For starters the only females that really enjoyed watching their men in the squared circle were the Quarry girls to my recollection. Most of the time the wives and girlfriends worry. Worry about other women throwing themselves at their big strong men,or having to see their guys take physical punishment. Often later these faithfull dames wind up being loving and dedicated caretakers.

Joe Louis would be gone for days with the likes of Lana Turner,Sonia Henie,and Lena Horne. Nothing wrong with that from a guy's perspective? Boys will be boys.

How about my gooma,the Rock? Had a greater appetite for the broads than his mother's spaghetti.

How about Ali bringing his girlfriend to Manila when he fought Frazier? More than one Thrilla' for that frisky fighter.

Jumping the fence for the testosterone laden pugilists is one thing. How about the times they practiced combinations on their mates. Sugar Ray's kids witnessed their mother,Edna Mae,on the recieving end of numerous punches from their dad. His rival Jake The Bull practiced his swings on Vicky more than a few times.

What I'm saying is look at the other side. Maybe one of these abused wives should post a story for us.

However,she probably would be afraid to do so.