Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Posted: 22 Jan 2009, 09:11
Yeah!, thats the name, "George", George Torres and Jim Lopez started the Resurrection Gym back in the early-mid 1960's.Rick Farris wrote:Frank . . .Baltazar Torres was a friend of mine, his brother's name was George (the one I knew). Baltazar and I boxed many times at Main St. Gym and I would always think to myself, "Baltazar" as a first name? I only knew of the Baltazar family. As for Art Frias, I didn't know he was from the Resurrection Club. Thanks Frank.kikibalt wrote:Rick...it was/is the Resurrection Gym on Lorena St. in E.L.A., we had Jr GG fights there in the 1960's when you were fighting in the Jr's.Rick Farris wrote:Hey Frank . . . about the time I turned professional, in spring 1970, I worked out after school for a couple weeks at an East L.A. Gym off La Reina, it was an old church turned into a gym. I was there to spar with a boxer who trained there. I think it was Resurrection Gym, the one that Oscar has put a lot of money into in recent years.
I know there isn't a man walking the planet that knows ELA gyms like you. Do you have any thoughts about the place. How and when it started? Who was behind the gym and what popular ELA boys trained there? Hey Frank, I just flashed back on an image from springtime 1968 . . . Eastside Boys Club, friday night. Your kids are all there, you are making the matches. I'm flying solo that night, Johnny Flores was in N.Y. with Jerry Quarry. My dad left work early that night, drove me to the Eastside. We came to you, you knew me, found a good match for me. My dad worked my corner with Dwight Hawkins. Tough kid, a little green. I won. The "Outstanding Fighter" that night was a 12-year-old from Pomona, Albert Davila.
Just a memory . . .
Rick Farris
That gym was started by Jim Lopez and Baltazar Torres and Torres's brother whom's name I don't remember, until Oscar, the biggest name out of that gym was Art Frias.
-Rick
kikibalt wrote:Hey Frank . . . about the time I turned professional, in spring 1970, I worked out after school for a couple weeks at an East L.A. Gym off La Reina, it was an old church turned into a gym. I was there to spar with a boxer who trained there. I think it was Resurrection Gym, the one that Oscar has put a lot of money into in recent years.
I know there isn't a man walking the planet that knows ELA gyms like you. Do you have any thoughts about the place. How and when it started? Who was behind the gym and what popular ELA boys trained there? Hey Frank, I just flashed back on an image from springtime 1968 . . . Eastside Boys Club, friday night. Your kids are all there, you are making the matches. I'm flying solo that night, Johnny Flores was in N.Y. with Jerry Quarry. My dad left work early that night, drove me to the Eastside. We came to you, you knew me, found a good match for me. My dad worked my corner with Dwight Hawkins. Tough kid, a little green. I won. The "Outstanding Fighter" that night was a 12-year-old from Pomona, Albert Davila.
Just a memory . . .
Rick Farris
Rick...it was/is the Resurrection Gym on Lorena St. in E.L.A., we had Jr GG fights there in the 1960's when you were fighting in the Jr's.
That gym was started by Jim Lopez and Baltazar Torres and Torres's brother whom's name I don't remember, until Oscar, the biggest name out of that gym was Art Frias.
Frank . . .Baltazar Torres was a friend of mine, his brother's name was George (the one I knew). Baltazar and I boxed many times at Main St. Gym and I would always think to myself, "Baltazar" as a first name? I only knew of the Baltazar family. As for Art Frias, I didn't know he was from the Resurrection Club. Thanks Frank.
-Rick
Yeah!, thats the name, "George", George Torres and Jim Lopez started the Resurrection Gym back in the early-mid 1960's.
"Baltazar" as a first name is use a lot in Mexico, people some times are surprise when I tell'em my last name is Baltazar, they tell me "But thats a first name" I tell'em, "Not for me it ain't"

Bennie . . . The world won't come to an end if Pac and Ricky don't fight. In this economy, if guys like Hatton and Manny can afford to walk away from millions in cash just for simply climbing into a ring and fighting for less than hour, more power to them. They will retire with less money than they would have otherwise. As for Oscar, I hope he doesn't fight. If he does, considering his wealth and the sub-par performances of late, I wish him nothing but the pain and embarrassment he desrves.bennie wrote:The dream is over for Ricky Hatton as his superfight with Manny Pacquiao in the States in May falls foul of the almighty dollar. I won't bore you with the emerging details - the fight is said to be off, as simple as that and Hatton and Pacquiao wake up to a list of new opponents. Oscar De La Hoya inevitably makes Hatton's list, despite an eight-round pounding he suffered at the hands of Pacquiao in December. The near-36-year-old Golden Oldie looked totally, totally 'shot' but, ever the promoter, will sell himself as a desperately weight-weakened fighter that night. Some people will buy it. Some people will buy the fight, if it happens. It stands a better chance than Hatton against Junior Witter, for sure.
Hatton will probably wind up fighting someone like Chicago's gutsy David Diaz, you know, another fighter to be outclassed by Pacquiao, while Witter takes on an unbeaten American kid by the name of Devon Alexander in April for one of those sickening 'interim' titles. Southpaw Alexander wears a No. 1 ranking with the WBC, courtesy of his relationship with Don King and in turn King's relationship with Jose Sulaiman. Love is everywhere in boxing, you know, a love of that almighty dollar.
King would have paid a man like Pacquiao what he wants, of course. Pacquiao, the Bruce Lee of Boxing, always looks great in the States; Hatton hardly ever excels there and his insistence on a 50-50 split jarred. Pacquiao was coming off that stunning win over De La Hoya, for example; Hatton, an 11-round pounding of the abysmal Paulie Malignaggi, a man Croydon's Clinton McKenzie would have toyed with 20 years ago. Yes, Hatton brings his phenomenal fan base but Pacquiao is probably just as popular. Ultimately, Team Hatton failed to deliver.
F rank Warren is the man chuckling most to himself right now. He recently announced a superfight in this country between Marco Antonio Barrera and Amir Khan and, right now, that fight is still very much a goer. The same cannot be said of Hatton-Pacquiao or David Haye's much-mooted clash with Vitali Klitschko.
Promoting, it seems, is still very much the domain of the dinosaurs.
Frank . . . I do recognize Lopez, but not Angel Soto.kikibalt wrote:kikibalt wrote:Hey Frank . . . about the time I turned professional, in spring 1970, I worked out after school for a couple weeks at an East L.A. Gym off La Reina, it was an old church turned into a gym. I was there to spar with a boxer who trained there. I think it was Resurrection Gym, the one that Oscar has put a lot of money into in recent years.
I know there isn't a man walking the planet that knows ELA gyms like you. Do you have any thoughts about the place. How and when it started? Who was behind the gym and what popular ELA boys trained there? Hey Frank, I just flashed back on an image from springtime 1968 . . . Eastside Boys Club, friday night. Your kids are all there, you are making the matches. I'm flying solo that night, Johnny Flores was in N.Y. with Jerry Quarry. My dad left work early that night, drove me to the Eastside. We came to you, you knew me, found a good match for me. My dad worked my corner with Dwight Hawkins. Tough kid, a little green. I won. The "Outstanding Fighter" that night was a 12-year-old from Pomona, Albert Davila.
Just a memory . . .
Rick Farris
Rick...it was/is the Resurrection Gym on Lorena St. in E.L.A., we had Jr GG fights there in the 1960's when you were fighting in the Jr's.
That gym was started by Jim Lopez and Baltazar Torres and Torres's brother whom's name I don't remember, until Oscar, the biggest name out of that gym was Art Frias.
Frank . . .Baltazar Torres was a friend of mine, his brother's name was George (the one I knew). Baltazar and I boxed many times at Main St. Gym and I would always think to myself, "Baltazar" as a first name? I only knew of the Baltazar family. As for Art Frias, I didn't know he was from the Resurrection Club. Thanks Frank.
-Rick
Yeah!, thats the name, "George", George Torres and Jim Lopez started the Resurrection Gym back in the early-mid 1960's.
"Baltazar" as a first name is use a lot in Mexico, people some times are surprise when I tell'em my last name is Baltazar, they tell me "But thats a first name" I tell'em, "Not for me it ain't"
Rick,
Thats Jim Lopez on the right, I know he is hard to see on this photo,
but you might recognize him, I'm sure you know him from back in the day.
The fighter is Angel Soto, who fought out of the Resurrection Gym, you might
know him too.







I feel compelled to say that there has never been a time in my life when I wasn't proud to be an American.Rick Farris wrote:Bruce . . . I'm proud to be an American again. The past eight years were disheartening, what went on before that, not much better. I'm not about politics or conservative/liberal differences. This man feels right, I like his class, his strength, his family and his dreams. I may be wrong, but I believe he will be the best president in modern history. He has to be, the last guy was a moron in the eyes of the world, so he hasn't big shoes to fill. In an age where nobody can afford to believe in anything, I choose to believe in Barrack Obama. Anybody who disagrees, cool . . . this is America, we have that right.Bobbin & Weavin wrote:Frank,kikibalt wrote:
The new "First Couple"
What a great picture, what a great day! I left work for a couple of hours to go watch the inauguration with my father he's 78 and said thoughout the election that he never would have believed he would see a woman or a person of color elected so he is thrilled. Throughout my life he has preached and practiced civil rights, rights for working people and their families as an elected union official in the construction trades in S.F. I am happy for him to be able to see this but even more happy for the rest of us because Change is coming and we're over due!
Bruce
-Rick
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________Rick Farris wrote:I feel compelled to say that there has never been a time in my life when I wasn't proud to be an American.
I take enduring pride in our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, and the collective greatness of our people.
My pride does not turn on who happens to occupy the Oval Office at any given time.
I don't remember him.kikibalt wrote:Ricardo "Guapo" Varela
You guys remember Ricardo?, he fought at the
Olympic a few times in the 1970s, maybe into
the early 1980s
I guess, Rick, I put my hope in the collective wisdom of the American people and the strength of our system of government. I do not put my faith in the abilities of one person.[/quote]raylawpc wrote:_______________________________________________________________________________________________________Rick Farris wrote:I feel compelled to say that there has never been a time in my life when I wasn't proud to be an American.
I take enduring pride in our Constitution, our Bill of Rights, and the collective greatness of our people.
My pride does not turn on who happens to occupy the Oval Office at any given time.
Too bad the last guy in office didn't share your values. Hopefully the new guy can clean up some of his mess. Luckily, the Constitution is still in tact, so we still have something to take enduring pride in. And in a few years, hopefully, we'll have even more to take pride in. There is a wave of positive energy enveloping America, it's called HOPE. Something absent from this society for a long time, long before the recent incompetent took office. The power of belief is incomprehensable. It's what motivates miracles, the same type that made this country great. Without that hope, or belief in something, people will falter.
This guy motivates people. One man alone cannot change things, but a man who can motivate a nation can change anything. So far, he's got the energy going and it feels very good to a lot of people. Of course, some people are frightened by change, so not everybody will be happy.
-Rick Farris