Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Posted: 03 Jul 2011, 20:54
Thanks, Frank and Rick. 
Randy, I have the perfect cure-all for that. Lately, whenever I get roped into 'going shopping' which is just a cover for what she calls 'retail therapy' I need to talk boxing, so I call Rick. Usually the conversation lasts awhile which compensates for the trudging around I have to do following her around. I always laugh when one of our conversations lasted through the shopping and into the car. He and I are going on and on talking about this fighter or that fighter. Finally, when I got off the phone she is staring at me curiously and exclaims, "Who the hell is Scrapiron Johnson?" Still makes me laugh to this day. Chicks just don't get it.Randyman wrote:"Honey, I'm going to the mall real quick, you should go, you know you need to get a few things too" Says Jeri. "The mall? Says I "How long is this going to take?" "Not long!" She says. "Okay, I'll go". I fall for it every time.
I went in to JC Penny's, got two pair of Levi's and some underwear, went and got Jeri and said "Okay, let's go!" "In a few minutes, I'm thinking of getting a purse". Well, I knew then and there that this wasn't going to go as planned. After about an hour of "A few more minutes" I needed a place to sit. Men have absolutely no stamina for shopping.
I said to Jeri "How come I can go in grab two pairs of Levi's and underwear and you still can't find anything?" "I'm a woman, we need to try things on" she said nonchalantly. As bad as things were for me I looked over and saw some guy holding his wife's purse. Poor bastid!
Traversing through that barren commercial desert known as "The Mall" is just too much for the male psyche. Once the average male realizes that he was once again snookered into going to the mall, he becomes awash with that wave of tiredness peculiar to a visit to the mall. I'll not soon fall for that one again, no sirree!!
Mike Duffau did a great job Randy. I read your interview and hung on every word. I love reading that stuff, especially of times past. You had a great life in boxing with the Best yet to come. A baptism by fire kinda start, I loved it. A great read. Cant wait to shake your hand.kikibalt wrote:Great interview Randy, congrats....Rick Farris wrote:Check out this great story on Randy! . . .
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"In this corner - Randy De La O"
An Interview by Mike Duffau
http://www.broowaha.com/articles/9999/i ... dy-de-la-o
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Tommyrot? Sounds like something you get when you drink tap water below the border.Randyman wrote:Tommyrot! I saw this word used in an article to describe the Klitschko-Haye fight. I looked it up. It means utter foolishness, nonsense. It's British/English in origin. What a perfectly descriptive word, and so true in the case of last nights fight.Tommyrot, I love it!
Fighting for an "Even Break" . . .scartissue wrote:Randy, I have the perfect cure-all for that. Lately, whenever I get roped into 'going shopping' which is just a cover for what she calls 'retail therapy' I need to talk boxing, so I call Rick. Usually the conversation lasts awhile which compensates for the trudging around I have to do following her around. I always laugh when one of our conversations lasted through the shopping and into the car. He and I are going on and on talking about this fighter or that fighter. Finally, when I got off the phone she is staring at me curiously and exclaims, "Who the hell is Scrapiron Johnson?" Still makes me laugh to this day. Chicks just don't get it.Randyman wrote:"Honey, I'm going to the mall real quick, you should go, you know you need to get a few things too" Says Jeri. "The mall? Says I "How long is this going to take?" "Not long!" She says. "Okay, I'll go". I fall for it every time.
I went in to JC Penny's, got two pair of Levi's and some underwear, went and got Jeri and said "Okay, let's go!" "In a few minutes, I'm thinking of getting a purse". Well, I knew then and there that this wasn't going to go as planned. After about an hour of "A few more minutes" I needed a place to sit. Men have absolutely no stamina for shopping.
I said to Jeri "How come I can go in grab two pairs of Levi's and underwear and you still can't find anything?" "I'm a woman, we need to try things on" she said nonchalantly. As bad as things were for me I looked over and saw some guy holding his wife's purse. Poor bastid!
Traversing through that barren commercial desert known as "The Mall" is just too much for the male psyche. Once the average male realizes that he was once again snookered into going to the mall, he becomes awash with that wave of tiredness peculiar to a visit to the mall. I'll not soon fall for that one again, no sirree!!
Scartissue
raylawpc wrote:My take on the Klitschko's is that neither is a bum, or gutless. I think they are extremely limited fighters who are blessed to fight in the weakest heavyweight era of all-time. That's not their fault; they've done everything asked of them. I think they try hard within the limitation of their abilities. But if they had fought in my era . . . the 1970s . . . I don't think either could have broken into the top ten. . . maybe not even into the top 20.
Can you imagine either against George Foreman? Think the old Foreman v. Gerry Cooney, and you've got the young Foreman vs. either Klitschko. Frazier would chopped them down like trees. Quarry would have stopped either inside five. I could go on and on . . .
Timing is everything, and these guys are fighting at just the right time for them.
that was a beautifully lit filmRick Farris wrote:My grandfather lit that. I was just a year or two old at the time, but I grew up listening to how he lit the night exteriors at the Observatory, how James Dean pulled his Porshe into Waner Bros. on a Friday afternoon on his way up north. That's a Warner Bros. Classic!!kikibalt wrote:Watching a classic on TCM, "Rebel Without A Cause", do I keep watching it or watch a boring fight??![]()
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I'm going to watch the fight, I saw Rebel more times than you could imagine. I have a great photo (my mother does) of my grandfather with a young Natalie Wood sitting on his lap, with Jim Backus and Sal Mineo standing beside. The film was very slow then, the early days of color,lots of light was needed for exposure. I was taught that it was filmed in 3-Strip Technicolor, using cameras so big that they required four grips to mount it on a crane or Dolly. Sorry guys. Rambling . . .

Sounds good to me. I'm going to have to go "Shopping" for the perfect site.Rick Farris wrote:Fighting for an "Even Break" . . .scartissue wrote:Randy, I have the perfect cure-all for that. Lately, whenever I get roped into 'going shopping' which is just a cover for what she calls 'retail therapy' I need to talk boxing, so I call Rick. Usually the conversation lasts awhile which compensates for the trudging around I have to do following her around. I always laugh when one of our conversations lasted through the shopping and into the car. He and I are going on and on talking about this fighter or that fighter. Finally, when I got off the phone she is staring at me curiously and exclaims, "Who the hell is Scrapiron Johnson?" Still makes me laugh to this day. Chicks just don't get it.Randyman wrote:"Honey, I'm going to the mall real quick, you should go, you know you need to get a few things too" Says Jeri. "The mall? Says I "How long is this going to take?" "Not long!" She says. "Okay, I'll go". I fall for it every time.
I went in to JC Penny's, got two pair of Levi's and some underwear, went and got Jeri and said "Okay, let's go!" "In a few minutes, I'm thinking of getting a purse". Well, I knew then and there that this wasn't going to go as planned. After about an hour of "A few more minutes" I needed a place to sit. Men have absolutely no stamina for shopping.
I said to Jeri "How come I can go in grab two pairs of Levi's and underwear and you still can't find anything?" "I'm a woman, we need to try things on" she said nonchalantly. As bad as things were for me I looked over and saw some guy holding his wife's purse. Poor bastid!
Traversing through that barren commercial desert known as "The Mall" is just too much for the male psyche. Once the average male realizes that he was once again snookered into going to the mall, he becomes awash with that wave of tiredness peculiar to a visit to the mall. I'll not soon fall for that one again, no sirree!!
Scartissue
Monica thinks she's a "black belt shopper". She makes her own money so I don't care what she buys, I just don't want to be a part of the shopping experience. Frank gave me a tip out of the Kept Man Manuel, and that is, make sure the shopping takes place to a comfortable bar, maybe watcha game, have a couple beers, shoot pool, things I consider worthwhile. Nordstrom's Rack, where all the stores over stock is discounted is a Monica favorite, and it just so happens to be located across from BJ's, a trendy Micro-Brew Sports Bar. When Monica finishes with her retail therapy, she knows where to pick me up. That's as close to a WIN-WIN situation I get.
I'm with you, Charley, on Adamek, I was there to see Adamek beat Arreola. He did it round by round, never lost his cool, stayed with his plan, and used his jab. Smart fighter. Looking at the Kitschko vs Haye fight again, I noticed a pattern that shows up in all of the challenger. A lack of commitment when they throw their punches. This keeps them for getting close enough to connect. Fear? Most likely or fear of looking bad. Haye was a good example of that. Screw his big toe excuse.CNorkusJr wrote:I watched my DVR recording of the Haye/Klitschko fight. Boy do I wish my father was around and still fighting today in his prime.
DVR does no justice- because Mr Klitschko decided to sit on his throne to prove a point or send a message for 15 minutes before he decided to show his ass to the crowd, I luckily got the fight in its entirety, but few seconds later after final bell rung, the DVR stopped recording. I didnt get the official decision but I did not need it to know who got it.
The only Mercy I got here was that I was probably saved from Merchants rants and Lampleys over assessment of punch stats.
Klitschko best stay over in Germany and such, because he would be a disgrace on American soil called a Champion fighter. Saw it with the Ibragmov fight and very little has changed.
Hayes had me duped. He's laughing all the way to the bank right now.
Adamek vs other Klitschko ,I'm hoping will be a better show. Still with Adamek on this.
Thanks Charley, someday we will shake hands!!CNorkusJr wrote:Mike Duffau did a great job Randy. I read your interview and hung on every word. I love reading that stuff, especially of times past. You had a great life in boxing with the Best yet to come. A baptism by fire kinda start, I loved it. A great read. Cant wait to shake your hand.kikibalt wrote:Great interview Randy, congrats....Rick Farris wrote:Check out this great story on Randy! . . .
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"In this corner - Randy De La O"
An Interview by Mike Duffau
http://www.broowaha.com/articles/9999/i ... dy-de-la-o
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Can you imagine Dempsey whining over his "big toe". It will not take a talented fighter to defeat either one of the K brothers, just somebody willing to go in and fight. A Leon Spinks is all it would take. The Leon that whipped Ali first time out would knockout both of these gentleman. It does not take a big heavyweight, just one who is committed and knows how to break down the body. Look at that huge target, the K boy's torsos. All these bums try to do is hit these big guys on the chin. Neither of the K boys are explosive punchers, the weight of their bodies gives them a sense of power. I've seen both unwind in past fights, it's really quite humorous. As has been pointed out here, these guys are educated, they are gentleman, etc. etc. That's great when you can combine those qualities with true heavyweight talent, but I'd rather a Sonny Liston hold the heavyweight title, somebody who just might leave an opponent on the canvas for good. In a game of tag, I'd prefer a "nice guy", in a boxing match, I prefer a finisher who does not quit as they K boys will do (ala Victor ORtiz) when the chips are down. Something about Eurpopean boxers (and of course, Victor Ortiz), they don't consider it wrong to "retire" themselves on the stool when things get out of hand.Randyman wrote:I'm with you, Charley, on Adamek, I was there to see Adamek beat Arreola. He did it round by round, never lost his cool, stayed with his plan, and used his jab. Smart fighter. Looking at the Kitschko vs Haye fight again, I noticed a pattern that shows up in all of the challenger. A lack of commitment when they throw their punches. This keeps them for getting close enough to connect. Fear? Most likely or fear of looking bad. Haye was a good example of that. Screw his big toe excuse.CNorkusJr wrote:I watched my DVR recording of the Haye/Klitschko fight. Boy do I wish my father was around and still fighting today in his prime.
DVR does no justice- because Mr Klitschko decided to sit on his throne to prove a point or send a message for 15 minutes before he decided to show his ass to the crowd, I luckily got the fight in its entirety, but few seconds later after final bell rung, the DVR stopped recording. I didnt get the official decision but I did not need it to know who got it.
The only Mercy I got here was that I was probably saved from Merchants rants and Lampleys over assessment of punch stats.
Klitschko best stay over in Germany and such, because he would be a disgrace on American soil called a Champion fighter. Saw it with the Ibragmov fight and very little has changed.
Hayes had me duped. He's laughing all the way to the bank right now.
Adamek vs other Klitschko ,I'm hoping will be a better show. Still with Adamek on this.
Great post, Randy. I can relate to those guys who try to show they are "men" by trying to cruch your hand after an introduction. Usually, it's somebody who knows that you boxed and they want you to know that they aren't impressed. A couple of these guys have no clue just how close I came to responding with a left hook. Nobody expects that, they think they can disrespect you and get away with it. You never know what side of the bed a person gets up on in the morning?Randyman wrote:Shaking a man's hand............
I was taught early on, by my father, the value of a good and sincere handshake. "Always look a man in the eye" he would say. This is not just to read another man but showing who you are as well, it's the purest form of honesty. I would rather shake a fighter's hand than get his autograph. Mel Epstein was big on handshaking, a good firm honest handshake. There was no deception in the man.
A handshake is one of the most honest form of communication and expression between men and also one of the most deceptive, or at least attempted deception. Most men expose themselves in an honest handshake. You ever shake hands with someone who seems to want to break your hand as he shakes it, at the very least, he seems to want to hear you cry uncle. The opposite is a limp, almost feminine handshake both say a lot about the man but the first one says the most.
When a man says to me "can't wait to shake your hand" it says a lot about that man as well. Can't wait to shake your hand too, Charley!
kikibalt wrote:http://youtu.be/DF2A4ZJLn-4
Frankie Baltazar vs Juan Escobar
Shades of Camen Basilio vs Sugar Ray Robinson II
Would Victor Ortiz keep fighting with a shut eye like Frankie and Carmen Basilio did??
Thank You Randy, The pleasure will be all mine as to greet all my friends at CAWCB.Randyman wrote:Shaking a man's hand............
I was taught early on, by my father, the value of a good and sincere handshake. "Always look a man in the eye" he would say. This is not just to read another man but showing who you are as well, it's the purest form of honesty. I would rather shake a fighter's hand than get his autograph. Mel Epstein was big on handshaking, a good firm honest handshake. There was no deception in the man.
A handshake is one of the most honest form of communication and expression between men and also one of the most deceptive, or at least attempted deception. Most men expose themselves in an honest handshake. You ever shake hands with someone who seems to want to break your hand as he shakes it, at the very least, he seems to want to hear you cry uncle. The opposite is a limp, almost feminine handshake both say a lot about the man but the first one says the most.
When a man says to me "can't wait to shake your hand" it says a lot about that man as well. Can't wait to shake your hand too, Charley!