Classic American West Coast Boxing

Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

Viva Mark Sanchez! (See how we L.A. fans blow with the wind :OhYes: )

USC may have a tough road in the future, but NFL rookie QB Mark Sanchez, a USC alum, has led the NY Jets to an AFC Championship game.

As USC fans, Charlie and I might not have much to get excited about in the near future, but our alums are in the NFL mix.
Bush for New Orleans and rookie Sanchez with the Jets. :OhYes:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:Viva Mark Sanchez! (See how we L.A. fans blow with the wind :OhYes: )

USC may have a tough road in the future, but NFL rookie QB Mark Sanchez, a USC alum, has led the NY Jets to an AFC Championship game.

As USC fans, Charlie and I might not have much to get excited about in the near future, but our alums are in the NFL mix.
Bush for New Orleans and rookie Sanchez with the Jets. :OhYes:
Even if the Jets don't win another game this season, Mark Sanchez has much to be proud off...Yes, VIVA SANCHEZ.... :bow:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Image

La India Maria

TURN ON THE MEXICAN CHANNEL

"Pete,turn on the Mexican channel. They always have women on there with big boobs."
I was talking to Pete the cop. We had been watching the Charger game at my sisters' house and decided to repair across the street at his place after the game was over. The Chargers stunk the place up,but I couldn't have cared less. Like the boss said in the movie "A Bronk Tale" to the kid who didn't rat hm out to the cops when the kid was talking about how much he loved Mickey Mantle.
"Kid. get smart. Mickey Mantle don't pay my rent."
Neither do the San Diego Chargers. I see all these guys wearing LaDamian Tomlinson jerseys sitting in bars watching the game and then the Chargers stink the joint out and this Tomlinson is sitting on the bench brooding because he ain't playing when he should be standing on the sideline rooting for his team. Screw those overpriced prima donnas.

Anyway, me and Pete the cop are drinking Patron and Pete's got the remote looking for something good to watch on the TV. He puts on this program about parolees and pit bulls.Then it was the Golden Globe awards with all these self absorbed actors. He's flipping through the channels like a frustrated teenager with his fancy cell phone.

So I suggested the Mexican channel. Seems like if you're a female on Mexican TV you need at least a C cup to qualify to be on the air. Mexican comedies and novelas aren't exactly candidates for the Pulitzer Prize,but that doesn't concern the watchers south of the border. So Pete put on the Mexican channel.

Low and behold,instead of seeing some guera with her boobs falling into our laps,there was an India Maria movie on the channel.
"What's this?"asked Pete.
"It's the India Maria,"I answered. "She's like a legend of comedy in Mexico."
Yeah. La India Maria is a legend. A female counterpart to Cantinflas. The poor underdog who gets through life with a laugh,and in the end always comes out of it unharmed. Sort of like Chaplin was in this country.

But we weren't going to see any cleavage. I told him that I knew my wife would be watching La India Maria. Sure enough,when I opened the door to our place after finishing off the Patron, there was my wife on the couch watching the India Maria. My wife was laughing her ass off. My wife always laughs at her movies. Her mother was a big fan of La India Maria too. For the old fashioned ,La India Maria will always be remembered in Mexico. The poor.The invisible. The people who go through their lives without, and without complaining,they have an identity with the Maria who gets through it all making people laugh.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

Randyman wrote:Happy Birthday Champ
Image
Muhammad Ali

What can I or anyone else say about Muhammad Ali that hasn’t already been said countless times in every language, in every country and medium imaginable. Muhammad Ali (then Cassius Clay) was the 1962 gold medalist at Rome. Muhammad Ali, three time Heavyweight Champion of the world, defeating Sonny Liston, George Foreman and Leon Spinks to win the heavyweight titles. Muhammad Ali, a Muslim, a member of The Nation of Islam and a civil rights activist, who was thrust into the turbulent political battlefield of the 1960’s when he refused to be inducted into the U.S. military. Muhammad Ali, one half of the greatest rivalry in boxing’s rich history, the other half of course, being “Smoking” Joe Frazier. Their trilogy may be the greatest rivalry in sports, period.


I was just a kid but I knew who Muhammad Ali was early on, he was still Cassius Clay then. My father a former boxer in the U.S. Army was still a fan of the sport so I always picked up bits and pieces of the sport just by listening to him. I knew Ali was big when I saw a photo spoof of him and Sonny Liston on the back of a Mad Magazine. I mean, if you’re in Mad Magazine you have to be somebody, right? I thought so.

I don’t know if my father actually hated Ali but he sure as hell didn’t like him. Not too many did back then. Ali, the master of bombastic verbal assault, could infuriate anyone within earshot. My father was old school and Ali was definitely something new. Ali was not afraid to say what was on his mind, whether it was about himself, boxing or race in America.

In the ring Ali was something else. He was 6’ 4” and averaged around 220 pounds but he moved like a middleweight. His type of speed had never been seen before. If the truth be known, Ali never learned to box correctly, or as his long time trainer Angelo Dundee once said “Ali does everything wrong, he just does it better than anyone else”. The guy fought with his hands down, brought his feet together, pulled back from a hook and rarely slipped a punch, preferring to throw his head back to avoid them. Yet, he kept winning and he kept talking.

At the time, 1962, I really didn’t understand the significance of Ali’s fight with Archie Moore. I didn’t know who Moore was other than another boxer, nor did I know that Moore was an old man when Ali fought him. Looking back, it was not one of Ali’s finest moments, I think he realizes that now. I know he has expressed some deep regret over much of his behavior during his career. He predicted he would stop “Moore in four” and he did.

Ali had a much stiffer test the following year in a tough fight with Henry Cooper, when Coop knocked him down in the fourth round before he was stopped on cuts in the next round. They would fight again a few yews later, this time Ali would stop him in the sixth round, again on cuts.

I don’t think anyone gave Ali a chance against Sonny Liston. Despite his gold medal and a string of victories leading up to his challenge, no one took him serious. This fight would change everything. The fight was stopped in the seventh round when Liston remained on his stool. Ali displayed skills and a maturity in the ring that no one, especially Sonny Liston, expected. Ali stopped Liston in the first round of their rematch.

Ali ran up a string of victories over Floyd Patterson, the always tough Canadian, George Chuvalo, Henry Cooper, Karl Mildenberger, and “The Big cat” Cleveland Williams before fighting Ernie Terrell in February of 1967, at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas. Again Ali showed his penchant for cruelty to an opponent when he punished Terrell over 15 rounds, for refusing to recognize him as Muhammad Ali. For some reason, Terrell refused to recognize him as Ali, instead he referred to him as Cassius Clay. I listened to the fight that night on the radio with my father.

In 1967, Ali refused induction into the U.S. Armed Forces and was subsequently arrested, tried and found guilty of draft evasion. He was stripped of his title and his boxing license was revoked. Ali did not fight again until 1970 when he defeated “Irish” Jerry Quarry and Oscar Bonavena, setting up “The Fight of the Century” with Smoking Joe Frazier, who had become heavyweight champion by beating everyone that mattered in the heavyweight division. Frazier was no mere token champion waiting for Ali to return. He was the real deal, a legitimate champion and he was eager to prove it to Ali, the world and to anyone who doubted him.

Frazier got his chance on March 8, 1971 when he won a hard fought decision against Muhammad Ali at New York’s Madison Square Garden. It was the pinnacle of Joe Frazier’s career, his finest moment. The fight is one of the greatest in the heavyweight division and one of my personal favorites.

Ali was far from through though, he would fight Ken Norton twice, splitting a pair of split decisions, the first a loss, in which Ali suffered a broken jaw, the second ended in a controversial win for Ali. He had one more tune-up fight with Rudi Lubbers, winning a 12 round decision, before fighting Joe Frazier for the second time.

Ali vs. Frazier II seemed to lack the excitement of the first fight, neither fighter was undefeated now, and no title was on the line, with Frazier having lost his title to George Foreman and much of his invincibility with it. Still, whenever the two met there was magic in the air, even if it was just in anticipation. Ali got the nod and a shot at George Foreman’s title. The fight which was to take place in Kinshasha, Zaire in Africa was billed as “The Rumble in the Jungle” As with his first fight with Sonny Liston, no one gave Ali a chance. Who could blame them? George Foreman was knocking everyone out and had won the Heavyweight title in a devastating fashion by knocking Frazier down six times before the referee stopped the fight.

Ali won the title from George Foreman by knocking him out in the eighth round, using his now famed rope a dope tactic to wear down the hard punching Foreman. Foreman never left room for a plan B, in the event he did not knock out Ali early and it cost him his title. Ali again shocked the world. Foreman would shock the world himself when he won the championship from Michael Moorer on November 5, 1994, twenty one years after losing his title to Ali. The heavyweights of that era were exceptional!

Ali KO’ed Jean Pierre Coopman in five and remained undefeated in his next five fights, posting victories over the likes of Jimmy Young (a controversial win), Richard Dunn, a third win over Ken Norton, Alfredo Evangelista and Ernie Shavers before facing the lightly regarded Leon Spinks in defense of his title on February 15, 1978.

This one caught everyone off guard. Spinks, a member of the 1976 Olympic team and a gold medal winner had only seven fights prior to his challenging Ali, none of them against quality opponents, yet, due to circumstances and Ali’s declining physical condition, Spinks won this fight. Ali would regain the title the following September winning a 15 round decision. Ali never won another fight. His next two fights were losses against Larry Holmes and Trevor Berbick, two fights that never should have happened.

The night that Ali lost to Spinks, on February 15, 1978, my wife Jeri and I were busy moving into our house in Whittier, my friends, Ken Robledo, Mike Teran and Sergio Billings came by after the fight to help. When they told me that Ali had lost to Spinks, I was in complete disbelief. We all were. With the exception of the period when Ali was stripped of his title and came back to defeat George Foreman to regain the heavyweight title, Ali had been the heavyweight Champion for most of my childhood, my teen years and all my adult years up to that time. It seemed that Ali would be champion forever. It was tough finding out that he was human, just like the rest of us. Well, maybe not exactly like the rest of us, Ali was an extraordinary human being but he was human nonetheless. I still miss those days.

In 1991 I met Ali. He signed his book Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times and we had a chance to speak with him. He was decent to my family, hugging my wife and kids and planting a (soft) right hand on my chin. I consider it an extraordinary day in my life and my family has never forgotten it.

There was a time when Muhammad Ali roared like a lion, a king of his domain. Muhammad Ali is quiet now. Silenced by Parkinson’s disease. He talked a lot of smack and he backed up everything he ever said. He ducked no one in his career. Love him or hate him, Ali was unlike any heavyweight champion before him.
Great post (and portrait), Rog. Ali has to be included in everybody's all-time top 10.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

dagosd2000 wrote:
bennie wrote:Amir Khan takes on New Yorker Paulie Malignaggi in New York in the Spring.
Bolton man Khan hammered another New Yorker, Brooklyn’s Dmitriy Salita, in just 76 seconds in December, but the quick, flashy Malignaggi poses more of a threat, coming off a big win over Houston’s Juan Diaz as he does, although Paulie is not a puncher and suffers from brittle hands.
This is crucial because Khan looks a bit ‘chinny’, as they say in the trade, and has the talent to beat non-punchers every night of the week. Malignaggi’s lack of power really showed - and really let him down - against Khan’s big Lancashire rival Ricky Hatton, with whom Khan is now inevitably linked, when he was pounded in 11 unpleasant rounds in 2008. Malignaggi just couldn’t keep the Manchester Hitman away.
It should be said he was never off his feet against Hatton and has rebounded exceptionally well, culminating in that impressive decision over “Baby Bull” Diaz in Chicago last month on a unanimous 12-round decision. He possesses plenty of skill, guts and confidence (and chat) but really trades on his speed and Khan is one of the fastest fighters in the world today.
This match, Khan’s long-awaited American debut, will give him real exposure in the States, where he is now trained and apparently managed, promoted and spoon-fed by Freddie Roach out of California. Even in the other man’s hometown, Khan looks the hot favourite.

Bennie
You're in fine form with the reporting. Good to have you back.

BTW. I follow the Premier League over here. I like Manchester United with Hatton's pal Wayne Rooney. Which team do you lean towards? Rog
Khan's defection permanently to the States is causing a lot of fallout here. Freddie Roach has persuaded Khan to drop his WBA light-welterweight title rather than take on an Argentine puncher next, who is the mandatory. Roach wants the fragile Khan to fight a soft puncher in Malignaggi and then to cash in against the faded Hatton. Has Roach overstepped the mark? He is Khan's trainer, not his manager.

PS: I follow the football as a neutral, Rog. Everton are looking hot at the moment.
Last edited by bennie on 18 Jan 2010, 05:58, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

kikibalt wrote:
scartissue wrote:Thanks Frank I saw it on utube already but a fight loses something when you know the result already,would have liked to have seen the fight
when it happened btw Frank was just reading page 25 got to see Jimmy Montoya with kid meza as you and I had talked about Jimmy a couple of weeks ago I loved Jimmy in the corner man was he emotional he could really light a fire under a fighter when he wasnt being busy enough .

Did I hear recently that Jimmy Montoya was taking over as trainer for Mikkel Kessler?

Scartissue
Yeah, Dan, he is the new trainer, don't think it is gonig to make a difference in Kessler..
Who has Montoya trained outside Meza?
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
scartissue wrote:Thanks Frank I saw it on utube already but a fight loses something when you know the result already,would have liked to have seen the fight
when it happened btw Frank was just reading page 25 got to see Jimmy Montoya with kid meza as you and I had talked about Jimmy a couple of weeks ago I loved Jimmy in the corner man was he emotional he could really light a fire under a fighter when he wasnt being busy enough .

Did I hear recently that Jimmy Montoya was taking over as trainer for Mikkel Kessler?

Scartissue
Yeah, Dan, he is the new trainer, don't think it is gonig to make a difference in Kessler..
Who has Montoya trained outside Meza?
Bennie...Jimmy has worked with many, many fighters, some champions, other not, some he trained other he did not, he would be brought in to work the corner as he did with my boys in some, not all of their fights, Jimmy was a good motivator, but he couldn't tell a fighter what he was doing right/wrong during a fight.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Image

Martin Luther King JR.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Randyman »

dagosd2000 wrote:Image

Martin Luther King JR.
“I’ve decided what I’m going to do. I ain’t going to kill nobody in Mississippi … [and] in Vietnam. I ain’t going to study war no more. And you know what? I don’t care who doesn’t like what I say about it. I don’t care who criticizes me in an editorial. I don’t care what white person or Negro criticizes me. I’m going to stick with the best. On some positions, cowardice asks the question, ‘is it safe?’ Expediency asks the question, ‘is it politic?’ Vanity asks the question, ‘is it popular?’ But conscience asks the question, ‘is it right?’ And there comes a time when a true follower of Jesus Christ must take a stand that’s neither safe nor politic nor popular but he must take that stand because it is right. Every now and then we sing about it, ‘if you are right, God will fight your battle.’ I’m going to stick by the best during these evil times.” ....
...Martin Luthor King JR.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by bennie »

kikibalt wrote:
bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote: Yeah, Dan, he is the new trainer, don't think it is gonig to make a difference in Kessler..
Who has Montoya trained outside Meza?
Bennie...Jimmy has worked with many, many fighters, some champions, other not, some he trained other he did not, he would be brought in to work the corner as he did with my boys in some, not all of their fights, Jimmy was a good motivator, but he couldn't tell a fighter what he was doing right/wrong during a fight.
Can you name one or two champs he trained, Frankie, just for me to pad out a preview on Froch-Kessler.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

bennie wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
bennie wrote: Who has Montoya trained outside Meza?
Bennie...Jimmy has worked with many, many fighters, some champions, other not, some he trained other he did not, he would be brought in to work the corner as he did with my boys in some, not all of their fights, Jimmy was a good motivator, but he couldn't tell a fighter what he was doing right/wrong during a fight.
Can you name one or two champs he trained, Frankie, just for me to pad out a preview on Froch-Kessler.
Bennie....Jimmy trained Hector Comacho for his title wining fight against Jose Luis Ramirez, we were in camp with Jimmy and Hector in Las Vegas for that fight, he co-trained with Tony Cerda Richie Sandoval when he won the title from Jeff Chandler, just two that come to my head right now.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by dagosd2000 »

Image

Scrap Iron Johnson
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

Hi good am morning guys, I have a question for you Frank regarding Tony Cerda,is he in the CBHOF or is that his son who is in I am assuming Tony Cerda jr who fought Alex Ramos to a draw is his son.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:Hi good am morning guys, I have a question for you Frank regarding Tony Cerda,is he in the CBHOF or is that his son who is in I am assuming Tony Cerda jr who fought Alex Ramos to a draw is his son.
Hammer...Tony Cerda Sr. is in the CBHOF, was inducted in 2009, Jr. will be inducted this year, he is the same one that fought the draw with Ramos.
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

dagosd2000 wrote:Image

Scrap Iron Johnson

George Raft "Scrap Iron" Johnson . . .

The son of an Oklahoma scrap yard owner, young George worked for his father as a boy.
His father was a fan of actor George Raft, his son's name sake, but we just knew him as "Scrap Iron".
He fought the best of a tough era . . . Liston, Frazier, Foreman and Quarry, to name a few.
In the mid-1960's, when Cal & Aileen Eaton pumped life back into L.A. boxing, Scrap Iron Johnson was a headliner.
In those days, ring announcer Jimmy Lennon tagged the Olympic Auditorium, the "Home of the Heavyweights".

With Aileen taking advantage of local talent such as Jerry Quarry, Joey Orbillo, Manuel Ramos, Scrap Iron Johnson and contenders Sonny Liston, Floyd Patterson, Amos "Big Train" Lincoln, Jimmy Fletcher, Eddie Machen and others, the Olympic truly was the "Home of the Heavyweights".

"Scrap Iron" Johnson vs. Sonny Liston - 1969:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tY24J3dtoXY


-Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

Found something on boxrec I didnt know they had you go to location then type in a year I typed in the year 1970 venue the olympic and got all the fight cards held at the olympic that year I am very envious of you Frank and Rick lol you guys got to see all those great fight cards and Rick got to fight on some I found Rick on a great fight card featuring Armondo Muniz,Frankie Crawford,and Mando Ramos vs Raul Rojas and of course Rick Farris got a win over Antonio Villanueva I was born 15 years to late lol
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

kikibalt wrote:I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:
We are having the same kind of weather out here in Vegas :TU:
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Name: Al Cruz
Nationality: US American
Hometown: Los Angeles, California, USA

Image

As an amateur, Cruz was the 1950 Los Angeles Times Golden Gloves Featherweight champion. He also won the National (Chicago) Golden Gloves bantamweight champion.

won 23 (KO 8) + lost 6 (KO 1) + drawn 2 = 31
rounds boxed 209 KO% 25.81

1956-11-20 122¼ Larry Bataan 126½ 23-5-4
Memorial Auditorium, Fresno, California, United States L TKO 5 10
~ time: 0:14 | referee: Frank Manfredo ~
The bout was stopped after Cruz rose at nine, unsteady, from a knockdown.

1954-09-25 125 Rudy Garcia 125¾ 23-6-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States L UD 12 12
~ USA California State featherweight title ~

1954-07-03 125½ Humberto Carrillo 123 55-13-4
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States D PTS 10 10
~ referee: Frankie Van 59-51 | judge: John Thomas 55-55 | judge: Abe Roth 56-54 ~
Carrillo was knocked down in the 2nd round.

1954-04-20 124 Kenny Davis 125 6-3-2
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L UD 12 12
~ referee: Mushy Callahan 61-71 | judge: Dynamite Jackson 62-70 | judge: Frankie Van 61½-70½ ~
Vacant California State Featherweight Title Eliminator


1954-01-19 121 Billy Peacock 118½ 19-3-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 10 10
~ referee: Charley Randolph 58-52 | judge: Tommy Hart 59½-50½ | judge: Joe Stone 60½-49½ ~
Cruz scored a knockdown an 8-count knockdown in the ninth round.

1953-12-08 124½ Rudy Garcia 126 23-5-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W SD 12 12
~ referee: Charley Randolph 70-61 | judge: Lee Grossman 65-66 | judge: Frankie Van 66-65 ~
California State Featherweight Title Eliminator
Garcia was knocked down for an eight-count in the 3rd round.

1953-09-16 Oscar Torres 17-18-2
Inyokern, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1953-06-16 125 Auburn Copeland 125 25-2-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States D PTS 10 10
~ referee: Mushy Callahan 53½-56½ | judge: Charley Randolph 55-55 | judge: Lee Grossman 55-55 ~

1953-04-28 126 Jorge Manjarrez 123 4-5-0
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W RTD 8 10
~ referee: Frankie Van ~
Manjarrez was knocked down for an eight-count in the 1st round. His corner stopped the bout after the 8th round.

1953-03-27 125 Tenejeros Boy 126 6-6-0
Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines W UD 10 10

1953-03-15 123½ Flash Elorde 124 18-2-2
Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines L PTS 10 10
1952-10-07 125 Dave Gallardo 125½ 41-11-5

Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States L SD 12 12
~ referee: Frankie Van 65-67 | judge: Reggie Gilmore 67-65 | judge: Jimmy Wallace 65-67 ~
~ vacant USA California State featherweight title ~

1952-09-09 125 Chico Rosa 125 31-15-2
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 12 12
~ referee: Reggie Gilmore 67½-64½ | judge: Tommy Herman 68½-63½ | judge: Jimmy Wallace 68-64 ~
Vacant California State Featherweight Title Eliminator

1952-08-26 122 Hector Rios 121 8-5-3
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W TKO 3 10
~ time: 3:00 | referee: Abe Roth ~
The referee stopped the bout after the 3rd round, as he felt Rios was in no condition to continue.

1952-08-14 124 Freddy Bravo 125 3-6-3
San Diego, California, United States W PTS 10 10

1952-07-29 125½ Bobby Garza 125½ 31-22-17
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-07-22 124½ Jimmy Dunn 127 27-23-3
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-07-01 126½ Freddy Bravo 130 3-4-3
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W TKO 4 6
~ referee: Dynamite Jackson ~
A cut over Bravo's right eye, ended the bout.

1952-06-21 124½ Bobby Romo 128½ 16-12-8
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-06-03 125 Pete Aguirre 126¼ 9-2-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W UD 6 6

1952-04-19 125 Ramon Carrillo 127 1-2-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W SD 6 6
~ referee: Jimmy Wallace ~
Cruz was knocked down in the 3rd round.

1952-04-05 125 Johnny Malloy 124 15-9-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 6
A cut over Malloy's right eye, ended the fight.

1951-03-05 122½ Javier Gutierrez 124 15-6-3
Arena, Ocean Park, California, United States L TD 8 10
~ referee: Mushy Callahan ~
According to the Los Angeles Times a headbutt in the 8th round, quickly closed Gutierrez's left eye, forcing a technical decision win for Gutierrez who was slightly ahead.

1951-02-27 122 Cecil Schoonmaker 116 36-13-7
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W KO 1 6

1951-02-09 125 Johnny Malloy 124 6-2-0
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 2 4

1950-08-22 125 Roy Higa 122 7-3-2
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W TD 3 6
~ referee: Joe Stone ~
A headbutt from Higa opened a cut over Cruz's left eye, leading to a stoppage.

1950-08-04 125 Bob Holliday 127½ 12-8-2
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W TKO 1 4

1950-07-11 123 Jesse Morales 128 3-8-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1950-06-30 121¾ Bob DiGiovanni 126½ 6-4-3
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4

1950-06-27 121 Javier Gutierrez 119 9-3-1
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States W KO 1 4

1950-06-16 124½ Jesse Morales 123½ 3-7-1
Legion Stadium, Hollywood, California, United States W PTS 4 4
Cruz's pro debut according to the Los Angeles Times
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:
We are having the same kind of weather out here in Vegas :TU:
Do you like it?
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by THEHAMMER321 »

kikibalt wrote:
THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:
We are having the same kind of weather out here in Vegas :TU:
Do you like it?
No I am used to hot like it is in the summer here only Arizona is hotter I think
Rick Farris
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Rick Farris »

kikibalt wrote:I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:

Frank . . . We were scheduled to film outside today, on a hillside of the Universal Studios back lot. :witzend: .
It was pouring buckets when I pulled into my parking space. I braced myself for a nasty day.
I was ready to "gear up", put on the boots, rain gear, etc. when a little angel of an assitant director approached me.

The cute little thing brought with her good news: "We've changed locations, we'll be on stage all this week."
Stage= Inside, warm, no rain, no mud, no fighting the elements, no tempers, no wishing I'd have studied harder and had a better career. :DDD

Yeah Frank, now I can enjoy the rain too, from inside! :OhYes:
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Rick Farris wrote:
kikibalt wrote:I'm really enjoying this wet and windy weather we're having... :TU:

Frank . . . We were scheduled to film outside today, on a hillside of the Universal Studios back lot. :witzend: .
It was pouring buckets when I pulled into my parking space. I braced myself for a nasty day.
I was ready to "gear up", put on the boots, rain gear, etc. when a little angel of an assitant director approached me.

The cute little thing brought with her good news: "We've changed locations, we'll be on stage all this week."
Stage= Inside, warm, no rain, no mud, no fighting the elements, no tempers, no wishing I'd have studied harder and had a better career. :DDD

Yeah Frank, now I can enjoy the rain too, from inside! :OhYes:
:TU: :TU:
kikibalt
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by kikibalt »

Name: Mario Trigo
Born: 1927-02-08
Birthplace: Torreon, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico
Nationality: Mexican
Hometown: Torreon, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico
Boxing Record: click
Stance: Southpaw
Managers: Roger Leighton, Joe Barnum

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Trigo was a switch-hitting southpaw who had a reputation as a spoiler in the Lightweight and Welterweight ranks on the American Pacific Coast during the late 1940s and early-to-mid 1950s. Trigo was at times ranked as a contender in both of those divisions. He had a notable six-fight series with Art Aragon; Aragon won 4-1-1, with three knockouts, although two of those were when Trigo was past his prime.

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Expug
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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Post by Expug »

Chicago weather.
Twenties today and snow on the ground.
The older I get, the less amusing this crap is.
Character builder my as. Im ready for some sun. 8)
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