Re: Classic American West Coast Boxing
Posted: 25 May 2012, 15:00





Randyman wrote:
The Last Milestone.....
Today marks the 31st anniversary of my father's death on May 7, 1981. A lifetime ago, and yet in some ways it is like yesterday for our family. There are events and dates by which we mark time in this world. My father's death is one of those marks. My father was 57 when he died from prostate cancer. I am 57, and as of September of last year I have lived on this Earth longer than my father. My father died the day before my 27th birthday. Tomorrow, I'll be 58, an age my father never reached. I will officially be older than my father. It is a day that I have thought about for so many years. Still trying to wrap my head around that concept.
This photo of my father was taken a couple of years before his death. We were in the backyard of my parents home. I remember that day well. I was no longer boxing but as was my father's way, he continued to instruct my brother and I on the value of the jab and his belief that every other punch worked off the jab. He wasn't wrong.
Rick Farris wrote:kikibalt wrote:
Mando Ramos vs Raul Rojas
I opened the show that night with a win in a four rounder.
Expug wrote:Randyman wrote:
Brian,I once in a while look at the thread. Always good to hear from you. Rick keeps in touch. So does Randy and Dan.
See where Johnny Tapia passed away. You say sometimes life can be short. For Johnny ,he lived a thousand years in a brief time on this earth.
The Last Milestone.....
Today marks the 31st anniversary of my father's death on May 7, 1981. A lifetime ago, and yet in some ways it is like yesterday for our family. There are events and dates by which we mark time in this world. My father's death is one of those marks. My father was 57 when he died from prostate cancer. I am 57, and as of September of last year I have lived on this Earth longer than my father. My father died the day before my 27th birthday. Tomorrow, I'll be 58, an age my father never reached. I will officially be older than my father. It is a day that I have thought about for so many years. Still trying to wrap my head around that concept.
This photo of my father was taken a couple of years before his death. We were in the backyard of my parents home. I remember that day well. I was no longer boxing but as was my father's way, he continued to instruct my brother and I on the value of the jab and his belief that every other punch worked off the jab. He wasn't wrong.
Nice tribute to your Father Randy.
Sorry I missed this earlier. Gets me thinking how life is a little short.
I'm gonna make a pitch. Maybe we can get the ball rollin again. Bring back a couple guys from the past and see if we can resurrect some of the good fellowship. Rog,Rick,I'm in if old pals are in...

Johnny used up all his nine lives. I was never a big follower of Johnny but there is no doubt he could really fight - quick hands, great movement, good chin.


Well deserved and should serve as a warning to anyone else it the division. There is nothing to dispute.bennie wrote:What do you guys make of Carl Froch's win over Lucian Bute here?
Zelley wrote:CALIFORNIA BOXING HALL OF FAME
Have a blast in October and congratulations to all the new inductees.
california boxing has always been a touch of gold in the treasure chest
of boxing's golden memories.![]()
I miss the old days here, no doubt about it. Good to hear from you Brian. Doing okay?Expug wrote:Randyman wrote:
The Last Milestone.....
Today marks the 31st anniversary of my father's death on May 7, 1981. A lifetime ago, and yet in some ways it is like yesterday for our family. There are events and dates by which we mark time in this world. My father's death is one of those marks. My father was 57 when he died from prostate cancer. I am 57, and as of September of last year I have lived on this Earth longer than my father. My father died the day before my 27th birthday. Tomorrow, I'll be 58, an age my father never reached. I will officially be older than my father. It is a day that I have thought about for so many years. Still trying to wrap my head around that concept.
This photo of my father was taken a couple of years before his death. We were in the backyard of my parents home. I remember that day well. I was no longer boxing but as was my father's way, he continued to instruct my brother and I on the value of the jab and his belief that every other punch worked off the jab. He wasn't wrong.
Nice tribute to your Father Randy.
Sorry I missed this earlier. Gets me thinking how life is a little short.
I'm gonna make a pitch. Maybe we can get the ball rollin again. Bring back a couple guys from the past and see if we can resurrect some of the good fellowship. Rog,Rick,I'm in if old pals are in...
Braxton was a monster. He was an intimidater like Mike Tyson. He used the jab to get inside and then went to work. Thanks for reminding us about him!bennie wrote:Randy's dad is bang on about the left jab. I like the shorter guys who deploy a great jab - someone like Dwight Braxton, a stocky light-heavyweight who jabbed the head off bigger fighters.
raylawpc wrote:

dagosd2000 wrote:Expug wrote:Randyman wrote:
Brian,I once in a while look at the thread. Always good to hear from you. Rick keeps in touch. So does Randy and Dan.
See where Johnny Tapia passed away. You say sometimes life can be short. For Johnny ,he lived a thousand years in a brief time on this earth.
The Last Milestone.....
Today marks the 31st anniversary of my father's death on May 7, 1981. A lifetime ago, and yet in some ways it is like yesterday for our family. There are events and dates by which we mark time in this world. My father's death is one of those marks. My father was 57 when he died from prostate cancer. I am 57, and as of September of last year I have lived on this Earth longer than my father. My father died the day before my 27th birthday. Tomorrow, I'll be 58, an age my father never reached. I will officially be older than my father. It is a day that I have thought about for so many years. Still trying to wrap my head around that concept.
This photo of my father was taken a couple of years before his death. We were in the backyard of my parents home. I remember that day well. I was no longer boxing but as was my father's way, he continued to instruct my brother and I on the value of the jab and his belief that every other punch worked off the jab. He wasn't wrong.
Nice tribute to your Father Randy.
Sorry I missed this earlier. Gets me thinking how life is a little short.
I'm gonna make a pitch. Maybe we can get the ball rollin again. Bring back a couple guys from the past and see if we can resurrect some of the good fellowship. Rog,Rick,I'm in if old pals are in...
Randy, I cant begin to tell you what an Honor it is to have my father Inducted into the CA BHOF in Oct. alongside you.Randyman wrote:


That is sad news Frank. Enrique was one of the greats from the 40's. Lulu Constantino is considered here on the East Coast as one of those guys you didnt want to face in the ring. Much like Jake LaMotta was with middleweights. Bolanos backed up Constantino into the ropes all night. Thats saying something. Same with Terry Young, who fought tough fights here as well.The LA Fans must have loved him every time he stepped into the ring.kikibalt wrote:Sad news, my boyhood hero Enrique Bolanos died today.
http://boxrec.com/list_bouts.php?human_id=44&cat=boxer