
Now git out there champ and do us proud!

I remember when you gave him that portrait.dagosd2000 wrote:
Bobby Chacon with the portrait I made of him.
jj5000 wrote:Does anyone know when Frankie Crawford died? The date(year ?) of his death is not listed on his record. Wasn't there a question about how he died-murder or suicide ?

El Gallo wrote:jj5000 wrote:Does anyone know when Frankie Crawford died? The date(year ?) of his death is not listed on his record. Wasn't there a question about how he died-murder or suicide ?
jj5000 . . . Frankie Crawford took his life in 1982.
I was caught off guard by the question, and despite knowing Frankie pretty well, I couldn't remember the year.
So I called Jeff Crawford, Frankie's son whom I also know, and he provided the year.
As for the murder rumors, they are just rumors. -Rick Farris
Rick,El Gallo wrote:To Paul "Cholo" . . .
Thanks for sending that great news clip from the Los Angeles Mirror. I had heard that the lights had gone out at the Olympic right before Art Aragon stepped into the ring to fight Jimmy Carter. Somebody who claims to have been to all these fights says "The lights never went out." I had heard that story from several people over the years (people who actually attended the match) and this articale validates the story. What a line up of Hollywood stars turned out to see the Golden Boy that night . . . Dean MArtin, Tony Curtis, Georgie Jessel, Ann Miller and so many others.


Excellent Rog!!!dagosd2000 wrote:
Ken Norton
El Gallo wrote:Want to see a hot featherweight prospect ready to make his pro debut . . . Prince "Tiger" Smalls
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OsSVWERk ... e=youtu.be
What great history, Paul. I didn't know that, and I guarantee that nobody else whoever posted here knew it either! I trained at the Massacre Canyon Inn just once, and that was in early 1971. I boxed there just one day with both Ruben Navarro and Ronnie Cisneros. I was scheduled to fight a six-rounder on the undercard of Buchanan vs. Ramos in five days, but Mando pulled out, and Ruben got the call to replace him. So we all went home that night, and a few days later Ruben almost won the title on one day of training! Also, my favorite LA fighter, Dwight Hawkins, was a sparring partner for Davey Moore at that camp fpr both Moore's fights with Hogan "Kid" Bassey and Sugar Ramos. Dwight told me that he and Moore would run to the top of a mountain, then sit and talk. Hawkins loved Davey Moore, and his death after the Ramos fight devistated "The Hawk".Cholo wrote:Massacre Canyon Inn, Gilman Hot Springs, San Jacinto Mountains Of Southern California.
The first fighter ever train at the Gilman resort was Elmer "Rocky" Beltz, a stiff-punching Los Angeles welterweight who drilled there for his meeting with Art "Golden Boy" Aragon in 1953. Elmer probably was in marvellous condition after six weeks of rigorous training in the smog-free high desert-but he somehow failed to duck when Aragon cut loose with a haymaker at the opening bell, and it was all over before you could say "Gilman Hot Springs." The Beltz debacle almost ruined the Massacre Canyon Inn for ever as a training camp. Boxing people, always a superstitious lot, are quick to form opinions concerning "lucky" and "unlucky" training sites. The Orner camp a stone's throw down the road, was always "lucky"-and it's a matter of record that no fighter who ever trained there or at the Inn ever ran out of gas in a fight. But when Beltz failed to last half a minute with the original "Golden Boy," it was rumoured that the "Indian Sign" had been placed on him by the long-extinct Ivahs of Massacre Canyon. Whatever the reason, it was several years before another fighter trained at the Inn. Among the well known fighters who trained there at different times were Art Aragon, Sugar Ray Robinson, Davey Moore, Don Jordan, Paul Andrews, Cisco Andrade, Jose Luis Cotero, Hedgemon Lewis, Jerry and Mike Quarry, Ruben Navarro, Mac Foster, Richie Sue and Mike Nixon.
Cholo wrote:Rog, excellent paintings, thanks for sharing.
El Gallo wrote:Excellent Rog!!!dagosd2000 wrote:
Ken Norton![]()
El Pintor De Los Campeones!
Rick, thanks for the Info on Dwight Hawkins and Davey Moore, Art Aragon also trained there for his fight with Basilio.El Gallo wrote:What great history, Paul. I didn't know that, and I guarantee that nobody else whoever posted here knew it either! I trained at the Massacre Canyon Inn just once, and that was in early 1971. I boxed there just one day with both Ruben Navarro and Ronnie Cisneros. I was scheduled to fight a six-rounder on the undercard of Buchanan vs. Ramos in five days, but Mando pulled out, and Ruben got the call to replace him. So we all went home that night, and a few days later Ruben almost won the title on one day of training! Also, my favorite LA fighter, Dwight Hawkins, was a sparring partner for Davey Moore at that camp fpr both Moore's fights with Hogan "Kid" Bassey and Sugar Ramos. Dwight told me that he and Moore would run to the top of a mountain, then sit and talk. Hawkins loved Davey Moore, and his death after the Ramos fight devistated "The Hawk".Cholo wrote:Massacre Canyon Inn, Gilman Hot Springs, San Jacinto Mountains Of Southern California.
The first fighter ever train at the Gilman resort was Elmer "Rocky" Beltz, a stiff-punching Los Angeles welterweight who drilled there for his meeting with Art "Golden Boy" Aragon in 1953. Elmer probably was in marvellous condition after six weeks of rigorous training in the smog-free high desert-but he somehow failed to duck when Aragon cut loose with a haymaker at the opening bell, and it was all over before you could say "Gilman Hot Springs." The Beltz debacle almost ruined the Massacre Canyon Inn for ever as a training camp. Boxing people, always a superstitious lot, are quick to form opinions concerning "lucky" and "unlucky" training sites. The Orner camp a stone's throw down the road, was always "lucky"-and it's a matter of record that no fighter who ever trained there or at the Inn ever ran out of gas in a fight. But when Beltz failed to last half a minute with the original "Golden Boy," it was rumoured that the "Indian Sign" had been placed on him by the long-extinct Ivahs of Massacre Canyon. Whatever the reason, it was several years before another fighter trained at the Inn. Among the well known fighters who trained there at different times were Art Aragon, Sugar Ray Robinson, Davey Moore, Don Jordan, Paul Andrews, Cisco Andrade, Jose Luis Cotero, Hedgemon Lewis, Jerry and Mike Quarry, Ruben Navarro, Mac Foster, Richie Sue and Mike Nixon.