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Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 06:32
by bennie
THEHAMMER321 wrote:
kikibalt wrote:
bennie wrote:Britain's Amir Khan continues his safety first campaign when he takes on Cuban veteran Joel Casamayor in a 12-rounder on these shores in the summer.
The quick but fragile Khan comes off a one-sided 11-round stoppage of Brooklyn's Paulie Malignaggi in Madison Square Garden last month. He dominated Malignaggi in the way Ricky Hatton had dominated Malignaggi a couple of years earlier, so it was a win which really proved nothing. Frankly, trainer Freddie Roach talks of big fights for his man but then comes an opponent who reeks of caution. The feather-fisted Malignaggi posed no risk to Khan's notorious glass jaw and southpaw Casamayor is so much smaller than Khan – and so much older – that you wonder how Roach keeps a straight face.
The 38-year-old Casamayor, who won Olympic gold at bantamweight in 1992 and peaked at super-featherweight as a pro with a win over Diego Corrales in 2003, has really struggled since moving up to lightweight a year later which culminated in a heavy 11-round stoppage to Mexico's Juan Manuel Marquez two years ago, since when he has boxed just once, beating a nobody last year.
Casamayor was stopped for the first time in his career by Marquez and the question has to be asked: if Casamayor has struggled at lightweight, what chance does he have against Khan at light-welterweight? Khan, 23, defends his WBA light-welterweight title.
So true, Bennie, so true.... :witzend:
I was thinking about fighters who were successful despite having a '' glass jaw'' Roger Mayweather is the first one who comes to my mind because he lived and made his career here in Vegas, oh I forgot the younger Klitschko has one imo but he is so tall and uses his jab to keep guys away so most of the time he doesn't get hit, so you can have some success just remember to duck. :lol:
Beniitez was also chinny but his majestic defence belied that for many years.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 09:13
by kikibalt
Boeing, striking C-17 factory workers back in talks

Image

Sharon Jones joins striking co-workers as Boeing employees who assemble C-17 cargo planes in Long Beach walk off their jobs. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times / May 11, 2010)

Los Angeles Times

June 4, 2010

Boeing Co. and C-17 factory workers in Long Beach were back at the negotiating table Thursday, hoping to break an impasse in a strike that has shut down Southern California's last remaining major airplane factory for nearly a month.

It marked the first time that the two sides had met since 1,700 assembly-line workers walked off their jobs May 11. They objected to a labor contract that they said entailed too many concessions.

The strike came as Boeing was facing the prospect of closing the plant in 2012 because of slowing orders for the C-17, a four-engine military cargo plane. Although the plane has been a workhorse for the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Air Force has said it now has enough C-17s to fulfill its airlift mission. Boeing has been able to win several small contracts with foreign buyers to help extend the life of the factory until 2012.

The Thursday meeting was arranged and moderated by federal mediator Linda Gonzalez. The United Auto Workers Local 148 has said the labor contract has too many concessions, including a lower company contribution for pensions and higher co-payments for medical plans.

U.S. officials said the labor dispute needed federal mediation because of the strike's effect on the economy. The strike has affected nearly 700 suppliers employing 30,000 people in 44 states. In Long Beach, the Boeing plant is the largest private employer. In addition to the striking assembly workers, the C-17 program employs an additional 3,000 people in various support and administrative positions.

"A strike is lose-lose for everybody," said Stan Klemchuk, Local 148 president, during a break in the talks Thursday. "This mediator is a godsend. Hopefully, this will lessen the hostilities, so we can put this thing to rest."

Union members received their last check May 20 and their healthcare coverage stopped May 31. Union workers receive $200 a week in strike pay and get partial health coverage through the union's international strike fund.

"We're hopeful that the union will reconsider the company's offer," said Cindy Anderson, a Boeing spokeswoman. "Anything that brings about a resolution is welcomed."

[email protected]

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 09:54
by bennie
When one thinks of Joel Casamayor, one thinks of a dangerous old b astard. The Cuban will be 39 by the time he steps in the ring with Britiain's Amir Khan next month in London – 16 years older than Khan - but the last thing a fighter loses is his punch and Casamayor proved that when he bounced young Aussie mauler Michael Katsidis off the canvas three times in a stirring encounter in the States in March 2008. Casamayor caught Katsidis - a man highly regarded here - napping in the first round and dropped him twice. Katsidis, known as "Rocky", fought back hard and sent Casamayor sprawling through the ropes in the sixth but Casamayor used all his experience to ride out the storm before nailing Katsidis with an inch-perfect left in the 10th. Forget "G'day, mate," it was Goodnight Vienna.
Casamayor has stood a lot of opponents on their head in his time, just as he has stood the test of time. He turned pro back in 1996, already a career amateur, and picked up the WBA super-featherweight title with a win over Mexico's long-forgotten and long-retired Antonio Hernandez in Miami in 1999. Casamayor rattled off six defences before Brazilian golden boy Acelino Freitas outscored him in a unification showdown in Las Vegas in 2002. He later featured in a couple of crackers - real up-and-downers – with the Banzai-like Diego Corrales, losing the second, then moved up to lightweight where Jose Luis Castillo outscored him in WBC title encounter.
Casamayor looked close to the end when Kid Diamond held him to a 12-round draw in Madison Square Garden in 2005 but the hard-headed, stubborn, canny, often spiteful southpaw scored another win over "Chico" Corrales and rode his luck in fights with Jose Armando Santa Cruz and the previously unbeaten Katsidis to secure what seemed like a last payday against gifted Mexican Juan Manuel Marquez in Las Vegas in September 2008. Casamayor, 37 at the time, gave it a good go but the pinpoint counters of Marquez took their toll and Casamayor was dropped twice in the 11th round to be stopped for the first time in his long career. Usually so dangerous with the big left, Casamayor failed to dent Marquez, a long-time featherweight, nor American 'opponent' Jason Davis on the way to an eight-round decision in November, in his only appearance since Marquez. Davis was later stopped in three rounds by Colombian giant Breidis Prescott.
Size is firmly against Casamayor in this one. Khan, the defending WBA light-welterweight champion, looks huge for the weight, big and quick and with energy to burn; Casamayor has boxed only once at light-welter, against the limited Davis. He looks rusty. Nevertherless, Casamayor has a winner's mentality and will look to test the suspect chin of Khan, once blasted in under a minute by the aforementioned Prescott. He stands a puncher's chance but to use another boxing cliche: a good big 'un always beats a good little 'un.
The bigger, quicker, fresher Khan has to be favoured.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:15
by THEHAMMER321
kikibalt wrote:Boeing, striking C-17 factory workers back in talks

Image

Sharon Jones joins striking co-workers as Boeing employees who assemble C-17 cargo planes in Long Beach walk off their jobs. (Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times / May 11, 2010)

Los Angeles Times

June 4, 2010

Boeing Co. and C-17 factory workers in Long Beach were back at the negotiating table Thursday, hoping to break an impasse in a strike that has shut down Southern California's last remaining major airplane factory for nearly a month.

It marked the first time that the two sides had met since 1,700 assembly-line workers walked off their jobs May 11. They objected to a labor contract that they said entailed too many concessions.

The strike came as Boeing was facing the prospect of closing the plant in 2012 because of slowing orders for the C-17, a four-engine military cargo plane. Although the plane has been a workhorse for the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Air Force has said it now has enough C-17s to fulfill its airlift mission. Boeing has been able to win several small contracts with foreign buyers to help extend the life of the factory until 2012.

The Thursday meeting was arranged and moderated by federal mediator Linda Gonzalez. The United Auto Workers Local 148 has said the labor contract has too many concessions, including a lower company contribution for pensions and higher co-payments for medical plans.

U.S. officials said the labor dispute needed federal mediation because of the strike's effect on the economy. The strike has affected nearly 700 suppliers employing 30,000 people in 44 states. In Long Beach, the Boeing plant is the largest private employer. In addition to the striking assembly workers, the C-17 program employs an additional 3,000 people in various support and administrative positions.

"A strike is lose-lose for everybody," said Stan Klemchuk, Local 148 president, during a break in the talks Thursday. "This mediator is a godsend. Hopefully, this will lessen the hostilities, so we can put this thing to rest."

Union members received their last check May 20 and their healthcare coverage stopped May 31. Union workers receive $200 a week in strike pay and get partial health coverage through the union's international strike fund.

"We're hopeful that the union will reconsider the company's offer," said Cindy Anderson, a Boeing spokeswoman. "Anything that brings about a resolution is welcomed."

[email protected]
No fair wheres Randy in that picture, hope they come to an agreement, being without health care could become a big problem for workers, with families lets hope this ends soon.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:46
by kikibalt
Just came back from having menudo con pata for breakfast.... :TU: :bow:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:56
by THEHAMMER321
Went out to the Orleans casino last night, ate at Don Miguel's Mexican restaurant there,as you walk in there is a girl making fresh tortillas, everybody on here was talking about Chimichanga's, so that's what I ordered, my wife had steak Fajitas, we both enjoyed. :TU:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 12:58
by THEHAMMER321
kikibalt wrote:Just came back from having menudo con pata for breakfast.... :TU: :bow:
you are gonna put Wheaties slogan out of business ''The breakfast of champions'' :lol:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 21:30
by Rick Farris
Forty years ago today . . . I made my pro boxing debut at the Olympic Auditorium.
June 4, 1970. One of the best days of my life! :box:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 21:35
by raylawpc
Rick Farris wrote:Forty years ago today . . . I made my pro boxing debut at the Olympic Auditorium.
June 4, 1970. One of the best days of my life! :box:
:TU: :TU: :TU:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 21:35
by kikibalt
Rick Farris wrote:Forty years ago today . . . I made my pro boxing debut at the Olympic Auditorium.
June 4, 1970. One of the best days of my life! :box:
:TU: :TU: :bag: :KO: :box:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 21:39
by Rick Farris
Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, California, United States - June 4, 1970

Antonio Gomez W Centavito Hernandez SD 10 10
Freddie Jones W Jose Luis Armenta KO 1 6
Rick Farris D Antonio Villanueva PTS 5 5
Rodrigo Contreras W Humberto Reyes PTS 4 4

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 22:19
by kikibalt
Forty years ago today. June 4th, 1970 . . .

Image

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 22:40
by kikibalt
John Wooden dies at 99; coach won 10 national basketball titles at UCLA

Known as the 'Wizard of Westwood,' Wooden's accomplishments with the Bruins during his 27-season tenure made him one of the greatest coaches in sports history. He also created the 'Pyramid of Success' motivational program.

Image

Wooden delivers instructions during a timeout in the 1972 NCAA championship game at the L.A. Sports Arena. UCLA defeated Florida State, 81-76; Bill Walton, seated at left, was named the tournament's most outstanding player. (Rich Clarkson / Sports Illustrated)

By Bill Dwyre and David Wharton

June 4, 2010

John Wooden, the UCLA basketball coach who became an icon of American sports while guiding the Bruins to an unprecedented 10 national championships in the 1960s and '70s and remained in the spotlight during retirement with his "Pyramid of Success" motivational program, has died. He was 99.

Though his fame extended beyond the sports world, it was Wooden's achievements during 27 seasons at UCLA that put him in the company of such legendary coaches as the Green Bay Packers' Vince Lombardi and Notre Dame's Knute Rockne.

Wooden's string of championships began with back-to-back victories in 1964 and '65. Starting in 1967, his team ran off seven consecutive NCAA titles -- going 38 tournament games without a loss -- a feat unmatched before or since in men's college basketball.

The Bruins won with such dominant big players as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton. They also won with teams -- such as Wooden's last squad in 1974-75 -- that had no marquee stars.

That team defeated Kentucky, 92-85, in the national championship game to give Wooden his 10th and final title. Mike Krzyzewski of Duke won his fourth national title this spring, matching the total won by the late Adolph Rupp of Kentucky.

In 40 years of coaching high school and college, Wooden had only one losing season -- his first. He finished with 885 wins and 203 losses, and his UCLA teams still hold an NCAA record for winning 88 consecutive games from 1971 through 1974.

The man known as the "Wizard of Westwood" -- a nickname he despised -- built his dynasty on simple precepts. He insisted that his squad be meticulously prepared and in top physical condition. He demanded crisp fundamentals and teamwork. He wanted his players to be smart, both on the court and in their lives away from the game.

To that end, the stern, dignified Midwesterner developed his "Pyramid of Success" -- a teaching system based on such traditional values as cooperation and personal responsibility. Years later advocates of the program used it as a motivational tool in the corporate world.

John Robert Wooden was born Oct. 14, 1910, in Hall, Ind., the third of six children. His father was a farmer who guided the family through tough economic times by stressing hard work, honesty and the value of education.

In 1932, Wooden, a three-time All-American, led Purdue to its only national basketball championship and married his high school sweetheart, Nell Riley. After graduation, he went to work as a coach and English teacher at Dayton, Ky., High School, where his first team went 6-11, and then at South Bend, Ind., Central High, where he nurtured a string of winning teams.

During World War II, Wooden enlisted in the Navy to serve as a physical trainer for combat pilots. Upon his discharge in 1946, he took a job as athletic director and coach of the basketball and baseball teams at what is now Indiana State University.

After two winning seasons there, it was on to UCLA in 1948. Wooden had highs and lows at first, his teams advancing to the NCAA tournament a few times but then falling to 14-12 in 1960.

The UCLA team of 1963-64 had no one taller than 6 feet 5 in the starting lineup but compensated for lack of size with veteran leadership and great quickness.

The so-called "Bruin Blitz" -- a zone press -- smothered opponents and allowed guards Walt Hazzard and Gail Goodrich to score in bunches. The Bruins stormed into the NCAA tournament undefeated and in the championship game pulled away for a 98-83 victory over Duke.

The winning continued into the next season, with the Bruins losing only twice. In the NCAA title game UCLA scored a 91-80 victory over Michigan.

Those first two championships had been won with strategy and fundamentals. After a mediocre season in 1965-66, Wooden and his Bruins would resume their streak with something else: star power.

The winter of 1966 brought Lewis Alcindor -- who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar -- to the starting lineup. Alcindor actually had enrolled the previous year, recruited from Power Memorial High School in New York City. However, he had to wait a season because at that time NCAA rules did not allow freshmen to play on the varsity team.

Alcindor, at 7 feet plus, dominated the game over the next three seasons, with the team playing in brand-new Pauley Pavilion. Not even a controversial rule change -- college basketball outlawed the dunk in a move thought to be aimed directly at Alcindor -- could faze him. In all, he led the Bruins to an 88-2 record and three straight titles.

Even with historic success, those years were not idyllic. Wooden, the ultimate conformist, was coaching in a time of great social upheaval.

Though UCLA players would always be conservative in appearance -- continually warned about the length of their sideburns -- they sometimes bristled at the coach's mandates. Alcindor spoke openly of his unhappiness at Westwood and at one point nearly transferred. On the court, there was constant pressure to be perfect.

After Alcindor moved on to the NBA, the Bruins pushed their championship streak to five in a row with titles in 1969-70 and 1970-71.

From the moment that center Bill Walton stepped on the court at the start of the 1971-72 season, the Bruins seemed untouchable. With the smooth-shooting Keith Wilkes at forward, the "Walton Gang" stormed through consecutive 30-0 seasons, winning their sixth and seventh straight titles.

It was during this era that the Bruins won 88 consecutive games, a streak that ended with a loss at Notre Dame on Jan. 19, 1974. UCLA's championship run finally ended that season with a double-overtime loss to North Carolina State in an NCAA semifinal game.

Wooden reportedly considered retiring that winter but decided to stay for one more season.

On his final night as a coach -- March 31, 1975 -- in the NCAA final the Bruins outran and out-hustled a stronger Kentucky squad, winning 92-85.

"I've always said my first year in coaching was my most satisfying," Wooden reflected during the tournament. "My last year has been equally satisfying. This is as fine a group of youngsters as I've ever had."

In 1977, the Los Angeles Athletic Club established the Wooden Award, recognizing the best college player of the year -- a basketball version of football's Heisman Trophy.

With each year that passed since his retirement, it seemed less likely that any coach would match his record of success. The NCAA tournament expanded significantly, meaning that teams had to win more games to reach the championship. Wooden's legacy seemed complete.

But the early 1980s brought troubling allegations about past associations with prominent UCLA booster Sam Gilbert.

After several former players told The Times that Gilbert had supplied athletes with improper benefits ranging from buying players' game tickets at inflated prices to helping them purchase cars and arranging for loans at steep discounts, the NCAA put UCLA on probation.

None of the violations were tied to Wooden, but the retired coach acknowledged harboring suspicions about Gilbert during the 1960s and '70s, and former players spoke of Wooden's see-no-evil relationship with the booster.

In 1985, Wooden suffered the devastating loss of Nell, his wife of 53 years.

Yet until this past season he remained a presence at Pauley Pavilion, where seven coaches have come and gone in the 35 years since his retirement. Only once have the Bruins won a national championship, under Jim Harrick in 1995.

One of Wooden's last major appearances was in December 2008, when he and Dodger announcer Vin Scully sat for a 90-minute, televised question-and-answer session with Times sports columnist T.J. Simers at the sold-out Nokia Theatre in downtown Los Angeles.

Wooden is survived by his son, Jim; daughter, Nan; seven grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.One of his great-grandchildren, Tyler Trapani, is a non-scholarship player on the UCLA basketball team.

Services will be private, but a public memorial is being planned at UCLA.

[email protected]

[email protected]

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 22:43
by Rick Farris
d

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 23:05
by Rick Farris
The Wizard of Westwood . . .

One thing I liked about growing up in Los Angeles was two great College sports dynasties; USC Football and UCLA Basketball.
When I was young, John McKay was the Trojan's football coach, with guys like Mike Garrett and O.J.
John Wooden, UCLA's basketball coach, had players such as Lew Alcindar who became Kareem, and Bill Walton.
At the moment, I've no clue who USC's new football coach is, and who cares about Bruin basketball when we have the Lakers?

Wooden was like a God in Westwood. During his era he walked on water, and I used to live in Westwood during the 70's.
There was an Ice Cream parlor right in the heart of Westwood Village, just off campus, popular place, very busy. There was a seperate, private dining room in the back, that was reserved for the UCLA Basketball team. The room was there for years, just for John Wooden and his champion Bruins.

In the late 90's, I had a four day visit at UCLA Medical Center, a tumor removed.
I had a room to myself for two days, then shared it with a dying UCLA professor, a close friend of Wooden.
Wooden's son, Jim, visited my hospital room mate, and other UCLA dignitaries as well.
I hoped John Wooden himself would visit him, but if he did, it was after I was released.

I have special memories of Westwood Village from a special time in my life.
At that time, John Wooden's legend was intact and he was making history.

May he rest in Peace.


-Rick Farris

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 04 Jun 2010, 23:57
by CNorkusJr
" The Fight was a Brawl from the opening bell with Farris doing most of the heavy damage........"

And that my friends, you can take to the bank.

Though 40 yrs ago, I'm guessing it seemed liked yesterday. Right, Rick ?
:box: :bag: :OhYes: :box:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 01:46
by Chuck1052
I went to the same school as Jamaal Wilkes, Cabrillo Junior High School in Ventura, California. Wilkes would go on to star on the UCLA basketball team featuring Bill Walton, the San Francisco Warriors featuring Rick Barry, and the Los Angeles Lakers featuring Magic Johnson and Kareem Abul-Jabbar. John Wooden praised Wilkes as both a basketball player and a student at UCLA.

I hope that Wooden's family, friends and family accept my condolences.

- Chuck Johnston

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 12:13
by Rick Farris
Chuck1052 wrote:I went to the same school as Jamaal Wilkes, Cabrillo Junior High School in Ventura, California. Wilkes would go on to star on the UCLA basketball team featuring Bill Walton, the San Francisco Warriors featuring Rick Barry, and the Los Angeles Lakers featuring Magic Johnson and Kareem Abul-Jabbar. John Wooden praised Wilkes as both a basketball player and a student at UCLA.

I hope that Wooden's family, friends and family accept my condolences.

- Chuck Johnston
Chuck, Jamal Wilkes was great.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:22
by CNorkusJr
6 hrs to fight time here in NY. Cotto weighed in 153 1/2 Foreman 154 at the limit. Newspapers here say Arum sold 17,000 tickets and hoping for another 6,000 in walkups. All prices still available $50-$400.

Weather Hot, very hot 95 degrees with high humidity a factor. Severe weather can come at anytime now through Sunday. A storm probably wont cool down the area but make it even more steamier than it is already. Probably keep any walkups from coming-since its on HBO. Not much talk on the undercard here. Vinny Rainone (Spell ck) on card, local washup hoping to revive career against unknown.

Either way, Foreman/Cotto going to lose alot of stamina in this hot weather unless they trained for it. Foreman getting the nod from local writers (probably because he's a Brooklyn Boy) but one writer says Cotto has a big shot.

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:23
by Randyman
Rick Farris wrote:Forty years ago today . . . I made my pro boxing debut at the Olympic Auditorium.
June 4, 1970. One of the best days of my life! :box:
:TU: :TU:
Go Here: http://boxing-ring.blogspot.com/

Randy :box:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:24
by Randyman
kikibalt wrote:Forty years ago today. June 4th, 1970 . . .

Image
You gotta love it! :TU:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:32
by Randyman
CNorkusJr wrote:6 hrs to fight time here in NY. Cotto weighed in 153 1/2 Foreman 154 at the limit. Newspapers here say Arum sold 17,000 tickets and hoping for another 6,000 in walkups. All prices still available $50-$400.

Weather Hot, very hot 95 degrees with high humidity a factor. Severe weather can come at anytime now through Sunday. A storm probably wont cool down the area but make it even more steamier than it is already. Probably keep any walkups from coming-since its on HBO. Not much talk on the undercard here. Vinny Rainone (Spell ck) on card, local washup hoping to revive career against unknown.

Either way, Foreman/Cotto going to lose alot of stamina in this hot weather unless they trained for it. Foreman getting the nod from local writers (probably because he's a Brooklyn Boy) but one writer says Cotto has a big shot.
Nothing against Cotto and I'm not particularly impressed by Foreman but I just think the back to back beatings by Pacquiao and Margarito, and the tough fight with the defensive minded Joshua Clottey (Cotto did not look that great), finished him off. They should have saved the Yankee Stadium for the big one, Pacquiao vs Mayweather. My gut instinct says that Cotto will go into a shell and possibly stopped if Foreman can put his punches together and muster up a little power in his punches.

Still, let the best man win!
Randy :TU:

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:35
by Panzerfaust
Hey Randy, hows the strike going?

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:39
by Randyman
kikibalt wrote:John Wooden dies at 99; coach won 10 national basketball titles at UCLA

Known as the 'Wizard of Westwood,' Wooden's accomplishments with the Bruins during his 27-season tenure made him one of the greatest coaches in sports history. He also created the 'Pyramid of Success' motivational program.

Image

Wooden delivers instructions during a timeout in the 1972 NCAA championship game at the L.A. Sports Arena. UCLA defeated Florida State, 81-76; Bill Walton, seated at left, was named the tournament's most outstanding player. (Rich Clarkson / Sports Illustrated)

By Bill Dwyre and David Wharton

June 4, 2010

John Wooden, the UCLA basketball coach who became an icon of American sports while guiding the Bruins to an unprecedented 10 national championships in the 1960s and '70s and remained in the spotlight during retirement with his "Pyramid of Success" motivational program, has died. He was 99.

Though his fame extended beyond the sports world, it was Wooden's achievements during 27 seasons at UCLA that put him in the company of such legendary coaches as the Green Bay Packers' Vince Lombardi and Notre Dame's Knute Rockne.

Wooden's string of championships began with back-to-back victories in 1964 and '65. Starting in 1967, his team ran off seven consecutive NCAA titles -- going 38 tournament games without a loss -- a feat unmatched before or since in men's college basketball.

The Bruins won with such dominant big players as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton. They also won with teams -- such as Wooden's last squad in 1974-75 -- that had no marquee stars.

That team defeated Kentucky, 92-85, in the national championship game to give Wooden his 10th and final title. Mike Krzyzewski of Duke won his fourth national title this spring, matching the total won by the late Adolph Rupp of Kentucky.

In 40 years of coaching high school and college, Wooden had only one losing season -- his first. He finished with 885 wins and 203 losses, and his UCLA teams still hold an NCAA record for winning 88 consecutive games from 1971 through 1974.

The man known as the "Wizard of Westwood" -- a nickname he despised -- built his dynasty on simple precepts. He insisted that his squad be meticulously prepared and in top physical condition. He demanded crisp fundamentals and teamwork. He wanted his players to be smart, both on the court and in their lives away from the game.

To that end, the stern, dignified Midwesterner developed his "Pyramid of Success" -- a teaching system based on such traditional values as cooperation and personal responsibility. Years later advocates of the program used it as a motivational tool in the corporate world.

John Robert Wooden was born Oct. 14, 1910, in Hall, Ind., the third of six children. His father was a farmer who guided the family through tough economic times by stressing hard work, honesty and the value of education.

In 1932, Wooden, a three-time All-American, led Purdue to its only national basketball championship and married his high school sweetheart, Nell Riley. After graduation, he went to work as a coach and English teacher at Dayton, Ky., High School, where his first team went 6-11, and then at South Bend, Ind., Central High, where he nurtured a string of winning teams.

During World War II, Wooden enlisted in the Navy to serve as a physical trainer for combat pilots. Upon his discharge in 1946, he took a job as athletic director and coach of the basketball and baseball teams at what is now Indiana State University.

After two winning seasons there, it was on to UCLA in 1948. Wooden had highs and lows at first, his teams advancing to the NCAA tournament a few times but then falling to 14-12 in 1960.

The UCLA team of 1963-64 had no one taller than 6 feet 5 in the starting lineup but compensated for lack of size with veteran leadership and great quickness.

The so-called "Bruin Blitz" -- a zone press -- smothered opponents and allowed guards Walt Hazzard and Gail Goodrich to score in bunches. The Bruins stormed into the NCAA tournament undefeated and in the championship game pulled away for a 98-83 victory over Duke.

The winning continued into the next season, with the Bruins losing only twice. In the NCAA title game UCLA scored a 91-80 victory over Michigan.

Those first two championships had been won with strategy and fundamentals. After a mediocre season in 1965-66, Wooden and his Bruins would resume their streak with something else: star power.

The winter of 1966 brought Lewis Alcindor -- who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar -- to the starting lineup. Alcindor actually had enrolled the previous year, recruited from Power Memorial High School in New York City. However, he had to wait a season because at that time NCAA rules did not allow freshmen to play on the varsity team.

Alcindor, at 7 feet plus, dominated the game over the next three seasons, with the team playing in brand-new Pauley Pavilion. Not even a controversial rule change -- college basketball outlawed the dunk in a move thought to be aimed directly at Alcindor -- could faze him. In all, he led the Bruins to an 88-2 record and three straight titles.

Even with historic success, those years were not idyllic. Wooden, the ultimate conformist, was coaching in a time of great social upheaval.

Though UCLA players would always be conservative in appearance -- continually warned about the length of their sideburns -- they sometimes bristled at the coach's mandates. Alcindor spoke openly of his unhappiness at Westwood and at one point nearly transferred. On the court, there was constant pressure to be perfect.

After Alcindor moved on to the NBA, the Bruins pushed their championship streak to five in a row with titles in 1969-70 and 1970-71.

From the moment that center Bill Walton stepped on the court at the start of the 1971-72 season, the Bruins seemed untouchable. With the smooth-shooting Keith Wilkes at forward, the "Walton Gang" stormed through consecutive 30-0 seasons, winning their sixth and seventh straight titles.

It was during this era that the Bruins won 88 consecutive games, a streak that ended with a loss at Notre Dame on Jan. 19, 1974. UCLA's championship run finally ended that season with a double-overtime loss to North Carolina State in an NCAA semifinal game.

Wooden reportedly considered retiring that winter but decided to stay for one more season.

On his final night as a coach -- March 31, 1975 -- in the NCAA final the Bruins outran and out-hustled a stronger Kentucky squad, winning 92-85.

"I've always said my first year in coaching was my most satisfying," Wooden reflected during the tournament. "My last year has been equally satisfying. This is as fine a group of youngsters as I've ever had."

In 1977, the Los Angeles Athletic Club established the Wooden Award, recognizing the best college player of the year -- a basketball version of football's Heisman Trophy.

With each year that passed since his retirement, it seemed less likely that any coach would match his record of success. The NCAA tournament expanded significantly, meaning that teams had to win more games to reach the championship. Wooden's legacy seemed complete.

But the early 1980s brought troubling allegations about past associations with prominent UCLA booster Sam Gilbert.

After several former players told The Times that Gilbert had supplied athletes with improper benefits ranging from buying players' game tickets at inflated prices to helping them purchase cars and arranging for loans at steep discounts, the NCAA put UCLA on probation.

None of the violations were tied to Wooden, but the retired coach acknowledged harboring suspicions about Gilbert during the 1960s and '70s, and former players spoke of Wooden's see-no-evil relationship with the booster.

In 1985, Wooden suffered the devastating loss of Nell, his wife of 53 years.

Yet until this past season he remained a presence at Pauley Pavilion, where seven coaches have come and gone in the 35 years since his retirement. Only once have the Bruins won a national championship, under Jim Harrick in 1995.

One of Wooden's last major appearances was in December 2008, when he and Dodger announcer Vin Scully sat for a 90-minute, televised question-and-answer session with Times sports columnist T.J. Simers at the sold-out Nokia Theatre in downtown Los Angeles.

Wooden is survived by his son, Jim; daughter, Nan; seven grandchildren; and 13 great-grandchildren.One of his great-grandchildren, Tyler Trapani, is a non-scholarship player on the UCLA basketball team.

Services will be private, but a public memorial is being planned at UCLA.

[email protected]

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I'm no basketball fan but you would have to have lived on Mars to not know who John Wooden is. A true legend. My condolences to his family and many fans.

In 1992 my son Andrew and I had the pleasure, privilege and honor to meet and shake John Wooden's hand at the Long Beach Sports Arena and Convention Center. I forgot my camera.

Randy

Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing

Posted: 05 Jun 2010, 15:47
by Randyman
Panzerfaust wrote:Hey Randy, hows the strike going?
A Federal mediator was brought in Thursday. The company and the union bargaining committee met and hammered out a new proposal. From what I can tell it's the same old shit as the original offer. We will vote again on Wednesday. The buzz going around is that we were sold out. We'll see.

I have been documenting the strike since it started. You can go here to see the photos.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/randyman05 ... 053387544/

You can look at them individually or click on the slideshow tab on the upper right hand side of the page.

Thanks for asking.
Randy