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Boxing History

35 years ago: Great kid Chocolate has died – the greatest Cuban boxer of all time?

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35 Years Ago Today: The Great Kid Chocolate Died – The Greatest Cuban Boxer Ever?

God knows that a miniature Cuban island has produced so many boxing greats – champions, technicians, fighters, sluggers and combinations of all four and more. But it could be that the best and greatest boxer that the still communist island produced was a certain Kid Chocolate, or rather Eligio Sardinas Montalvo. Nicknamed the “Cuban Bon Bon” in his heyday, this Kid, or “Keed,” was unique.

Fascinated by the art of nobility at a juvenile age, with few prospects open to him in boxing or otherwise, the teenage Chocolate studied the films of such greats as Jack Johnson and Benny Leonard. And he knew. He just knew. He would do what those giants did. Legend has it that Kid set an amateur record of 100 wins without defeats and 86 KOs. It may be just a legend, but Chocolate quickly proved its greatness at a world level.

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Turning professional in October 1927, at the age of just 17, Chocolate won his first 22 fights. After boxing in Cuba for his first nine fights, Chocolate headed to Fresh York, where he boxed almost exclusively until the very end when he returned to his homeland to fight.

Skillful, masterful and incredibly stylish in and out of the ring, Chocolate lost in his first attempt at winning the world featherweight title when Battling Battalino won a 15-round decision against him in December 1930, with the fight taking place at Madison Square Garden . Before this fight, actually just a month earlier, Chocolate had lost a decision to Fidel LaBarba.

But then, in July 1935, sporting a record of 61-3-1!, Chocolate defeated Benny Bass by seventh-round KO to become the super featherweight champion of the world. The victory took place in Philadelphia. Chocolate, still only 21, retained the lightweight title once before losing a 15-round split decision to the incredible Tony Canzoneri for the lightweight crown the following November.

Dropping down to 126 pounds again, Chocolate scored massive victories over great fighters like Lew Feldman, Labarba in return and Seaman Tommy Watson. Previously, Chocolate had lost a decision to Jack “Kid” Berg (who is probably one of the top 5 British fighters of all time, the man who defeated Chocolate twice), and in 1933 he lost a rematch to Canzoneri, with him being stopped in just two rounds.

Chocolate lost the featherweight title to Frankie Klick, who retained it on December 7, 1933, and by then Chocolate had a rather astonishing record of 94-7-1. Having lived life “in the grand scheme of things,” as one might say today, Chocolate lived and loved and fought many battles while battling the effects of syphilis and possibly gonorrhea.

At the age of 24, Chocolate looked nothing like the great warrior he once was. Fighting on, “The Keed” fought in the US, in Cuba, in the US again, and finally in Cuba again. His fortune long gone (Chocolate loved costly suits, fine dining, women and songs), Kid lived a silent life in Cuba in the 1950s when Fidel Castro came to power.

In later years, chocolate was forgotten, with only a commission from Ring magazine to track him down, revealing the misery of his life in his final year (“The Horror Of Kid Chocolate” by Jonathan Rendell, truly moving). But Kid’s legacy was protected and intact. The one and only Sugar Ray Robinson studied Chocolate’s fight tapes, and the greatest P-4-P in history noted that he had never seen anyone box like Kid Chocolate.

The best (probably) of Kuba died destitute and forgotten 35 years ago. But the truth is, boxing will never forget Kid Chocolate. He was really great. Just ask boxing historian Mike Tyson.

Final record: 136-10-6(51). Kid died at the age of 78 on August 8, 1988. He was only arrested twice in a fight.

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Boxing History

Floyd Mayweather talks about his first fight with Castillo: “I suffered”

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Floyd Mayweather Talks About His First Fight With Castillo: “I Was Hurting”

To this day, many fans and critics argue that Floyd Mayweather should actually be 49-1, not the perfect and flawless 50-0. Why? It was April 20, 2002, and Mayweather had moved up to the 135-pound division with tough Mexican Jose Luis Castillo. 12 tough sessions later, most of the crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas had Castillo winning the fight.

Officially, Mayweather, not yet “Money”, but “Pretty Boy”, won via UD with scores of 116-111, 115-111, 115-111. But since then, Mayweather has heard about the fight and how he lost it. To his credit, Mayweather gave Castillo an immediate rematch, this time winning without a debate (although this time it was closer according to the official cards). Recently, Mayweather was a guest on the Drink Champs program on Revolt TV, and Floyd said he went into the fight with Castillo injured. Mayweather also said that the Mexican won three rounds against him.

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“Jose Luis Castillo, tough cookie. You just never saw me lose a round. It’s more like I can fight my opponent and win nine rounds. He can win three rounds,” Mayweather said. “Then they’ll say, ‘You know what – do a rematch.’ Or: “Mayweather didn’t win.” It’s been like that my whole career. Going into the first fight (against Castillo) I felt pain. The weigh-in took place on Friday. I was actually shaking to gain weight. The weight was 135 pounds and it was my second world title. I hit the massive bag and it was shaking. I was too close [to the bag]. The rotator cuff got really fucked up. So I thought, “Fuck it, my kids have to eat anyway.” A true champion can overcome anything. So I said, ‘Fuck it, let’s do it.’

Mayweather had the toughest fight of his HOF career that night, there’s no doubt about it. But did Castillo really deserve this decision? It was a close fight, as we can see when we watch it, and many fans are hoping to see flaws in Mayweather’s performance. Imagine if Mayweather woke up and never gave Castillo a rematch? How controversial would the April 202 fight and its decision be today?

Mayweather is adamant that he won the first fight, but this is one of those decisions that many fans will never stop complaining about. Floyd lost, his critics say. And even if Mayweather was indeed struggling with an injury, these people won’t give him a pass.

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Boxing History

35 years ago: Mike Tyson, Michael Spinks and 91 seconds of terror

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35 Years Ago: Mike Tyson, Michael Spinks And 91 Seconds Of Terror

What were you doing 35 years ago when the fight called “One And For All” took place at the Convention Hall in Atlantic City? Maybe you were there… for all 91 seconds of the action. It was, of course, the fight between Mike Tyson and Michael Spinks; a fight that carried with it super fight bragging rights. Maybe. As it turned out, no, not at all.

It all ended in, well, you know how quickly, in those 91 seconds, arguably the most eminent and perhaps most ridiculed in heavyweight boxing history.

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Tyson, who is not yet 22 and has a record of 34-0(30), against Spinks, who was a decade older and had a record of 31-0(21). Tyson, of course, stormed into the heavyweight division in all-consuming fire style in 1985. Nicknamed “Kid Dynamite”, Tyson, the prodigy of the behind schedule, great Cus D’Amato, took the WBC/WBA/IBF titles from good fighters, but the “Spinks Jinx” problem remained to be solved.

Spinks, who reigned as the king of the lithe heavyweight division and one of the best in the field, shocked the world and an aging Larry Holmes by becoming heavyweight champion the same year Tyson turned professional. And Spinks has faced some real killers in Eddie Mustafa Muhammad and Dwight Muhammad Qawi. But against Tyson, something happened to Spinks. Before the Tyson fight, Spinks was recognized as the lineal heavyweight champion. For some, Tyson didn’t fully rule the planet yet.

We’ve all heard the story of how Butch Lewis, going to Tyson’s locker room to check his gloves, witnessed in horror as Tyson punched holes in the wall. In the wall.

“And he was getting ready to fight my man… my little boy,” the always colorful Lewis repeated many times, looking back.

Tyson was indeed furious. According to boxing experts, Tyson was going through complex times with his wife Robin Gives and was only content in the ring. That may have been the case, but Tyson never allowed Spinks to smile for a moment when the war, such as it was, had just begun.

Tyson, as outraged as he was exceptional, dropped Spinks with a nasty right hand to the body after just a minute. Just seconds later, Tyson hit Spinks with a left-right combination to the head. That was the end. Spinks had been defeated and Tyson was now the undisputed heavyweight king of the world, beyond dispute.

As it turned out, Spinks never fought again, instead investing wisely and enjoying his millions of dollars. Tyson was in his prime and as great as he had ever been. There was only one way left and that was down. It took some time, almost two years, but Tyson himself was knocked down in spectacular fashion in February 1990.

But on this day 35 years ago (phew! I was a teenager), “Iron Mike” looked just like this: a real, unyielding piece of iron masquerading as a boxer.

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Boxing History

British heavyweights are a powerhouse now, but 100 years ago Jack Dempsey had no rival

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With Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury, Dillian Whyte, Daniel Dubois and Joe Joyce currently among the top 12 in the world, Britain is dominating the heavyweight division in a way they have never done before. The USA fields only one candidate in this group – Deontay Wilder.

It’s a far cry from the 20th century, when there were so many great American heavyweights and so few from these shores. Most of the great American heavyweight champions have defended their world title against a Briton from time to time, such as the Tommy Farr vs. Joe Louis fight, the exaggerated annihilation of Don Cockell at lightweight heavyweight by Rocky Marciano and Henry Cooper, who put the great Ali on his back (see the photo of the fight below) still causes comments among fight fans. One of the few true champions who never fought a Briton was Jack Dempsey.

Dempsey reigned supreme from 1919 to 1926, and although he didn’t defend his title as often as he should have, there was no one on this side of the pond who could live with him in the ring.

In early 1919 our champion was Joe Beckett, who in December 1919 was defeated by the great Frenchman Georges Carpentier in less than a minute. Carpentier repeated the feat in 1923, this time defeating Beckett in just 15 seconds. Frank Goddard then won the British title in 1923, defeating Jack Bloomfield in a terrifying contest at the Royal Albert Hall. In 1920, Goddard was knocked out in two rounds by Frank Moran in a top American fight.

Goddard did not defend his title until 1926, when Phil Scott blew him apart in three rounds. Scott was the top heavyweight in the 1920s, but when he made his U.S. debut in 1927, he was knocked down in one round by Knute Hansen, a moderate Danish heavyweight. He managed to regain some status there, but quick defeats to Jack Sharkey and Teenage Stribling in 1930 brought his end.

Throughout the decade, Phil Scott was the only British heavyweight worthy of a top ten world ranking and it wasn’t until the mid-1930s, when Jack Petersen, Larry Gains and Tommy Farr restored some prestige, that we were able to maintain our position. head a little higher. Most of our “great” fighters of that era came from lower weight classes.

Jack Dempsey liked Britain and visited it more than once. He made his first visit in April 1922, when, after descending from… Akwatiahe was greeted in Southampton by Ted “Kid” Lewis and Boy McCormick. After meeting Joe Beckett, Jack advised the Briton to go to the United States, where he could earn a lot of money. Unfortunately, Beckett didn’t heed this advice and never fought there.

Jack Dempsey

Dempsey returned in July 1925 as part of a European tour, hosted by Sir Harry Preston, a boxing impresario who rubbed shoulders with royalty. During this time, Preston occasionally performed enormous shows at the Dome in Brighton. After picking up Dempsey from the train at Victoria station, where Dempsey posed in typical fashion with a British policeman, he took the world champion to the south coast, where he arranged for him to have a series of exhibitions at one of his shows.

Dempsey boxed four times that evening, and his main opponents were Phil Scott and Harry Drake from Windsor. He handled both boys with ease and… editor John Murray commented: “Dempsey practically blew the press critics and the public off their feet. Few have ever witnessed such a display of combined strength, power, speed and skill. Several of these critics went into an ecstasy of admiration, seeing the almost uncanny genius in everything Jack did.”

Murray knew boxing and it was a real shame that we never had anyone good enough to face Dempsey at his best in a title fight.

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