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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

On This Day: Thomas Hearns Flattens Roberto Duran

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Recalling The Thomas Hearns-James Kinchen Battle – An Underrated War

On this day in 1984, two all-time greats entered the ring at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Less than six minutes later, the fight, such as it was – a more apt description – a display of total destruction, was over. Thomas Hearns, at his absolute fighting peak, defeated the never-before-stopped Roberto Duran. Fans, pundits, fellow fighters – all were in awe, and jaws dropped as the order of the day.

Current WBC and Ring Magazine super-welter champion Hearns, who predicted a quick KO, kept his word. Fighting at his ideal weight of 154 pounds (Hearns was slightly undernourished during his welterweight boxing days, “The Hitman’s” sleek frame was not ideally suited to middleweight, super middleweight or airy heavyweight; only Hearns’ size saw him win belts in the heavier weights) – Tommy was the epitome of the unbeatable fighter.

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Could any 154-pounder beat Hearns that night?

Duran, coming off a close decision loss to the fearsome 160-pound Marvelous Marvin Hagler, was past his prime, but he wasn’t as finished as he might have thought after exchanging the ring with Hearns. Duran, just 33 years vintage, was cut down in the first round, dropped twice and the fight turned into a one-man show. Duran, dazed and confused, went to the wrong corner as the bell rang, ending the worst round of his entire boxing career.

The end of this brief fight came quickly.

The 26-year-old Hearns, on fire, drove Duran into the ropes, and then, while the smaller, shorter-armed Panamanian legend tried unsuccessfully to respond, Hearns unleashed the right hand of his career. A powerful, perfectly placed punch (see bomb) landed squarely on Duran’s jaw, and he fell, face first on the mat, unable to even think about getting up. Referee Carlos Padilla didn’t even bother to count.

Legends die relentlessly, as the saying goes, and Roberto Duran certainly experienced that day in 1984. It was the most brutal KO in the renowned Four Kings rivalry.

Hearns, who would never lose a fight at 154 pounds, now had only one fighter in his sights. A great fight with Wonderful awaited the best from Detroit.

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40 Years Later: Remembering the Pain and Tragedy of Billy Collins Jr.’s Fight with Luis Resto

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40 Years On: Remembering The Pain And The Tragedy Of The Billy Collins Jr-Luis Resto Fight

Forty years ago, on the undercard of Roberto Duran Vs. Davey Moore fights two men on opposite ends of their careers in Recent York in a ten-round welterweight fight. What happened next changed both men’s lives forever, and the events in the ring that night also changed boxing.

Billy Collins Jr., 21, was a 14-0 prospect who was expected to make the cut. Promoted by Bob Arum and trained by his father, former fighter Billy Collins Sr., the newborn Tennessee fighter was paired with a tough but not terribly unsafe fighter named Luis Resto. Resto, a 27-year-old Puerto Rican with a record of 19-8-2(8), would eventually become one of the most infamous fighters in all of boxing. The same could be said for the fight Resto “won.”

Trained by Panamanian Lewis Resto, to everyone’s surprise, defeated Collins Jr. Resto, not known as a particularly mighty hitter, moved into action that was usually aggressive and stimulating to watch Collins. Collins soon began to show severe facial damage, with both eyes rapidly swelling and his cheekbones and forehead also becoming gruesomely deformed by the end of the fight.

Collins really struggled, but he managed to stay tough until the final bell. It wasn’t until afterward, when people found out what had happened, that fans could truly appreciate just how tough Collins was. The two men met in the middle of the ring after the decision was announced, and as Resto went to pay his respects to Collins, Collins Sr. shook hands with the man who had just beaten his son and immediately noticed something was wrong – he could feel that Resto’s gloves were almost completely devoid of padding.

The trainer/father immediately raised the alarm bell and Resto did everything he could to get away, looking at his own trainer Lewis with desperation. There has indeed been significant tampering with the Resto gloves, resulting in approximately one ounce of padding being removed from each glove and, perhaps even worse, some Band-Aid placed on each Resto box. The beating of Collins Jr. is now seen by the world as simply the terrible thing it actually was. Resto denied any wrongdoing. Resto claimed it was all Panama’s fault. He was playing with Resto’s gloves without the warrior knowing.

Only he didn’t.

Years later, in 2009, when Eric Drath’s wonderful and moving documentary “Assault in the Ring” was released, Resto finally admitted that he knew about the gloves, the cast, and the drug that Panama gave him that helped him breathe during the fight, thus allowing him to get a second wind; Resto stating that the drug was given to asthma patients.

All of this was supposed to happen a few years earlier, and so far, both fighter and trainer have been paying the price. Panama was sentenced to a year in prison, Resto to two and a half, and both men had their driving licenses taken away. Resto would never fight again; Lewis would never be allowed to enter the ring as a trainer again. But for Collins Jr., it was much worse. Falling into depression, his career was torn away from him due to solemn facial injuries, the father and husband began drinking heavily, and by accident or on purpose, he crashed his car into a creek near his home, dying at the age of seven. It happened on March 6, 1984. Billy was only 22 years aged.

The events that took place at Madison Square Garden 40 years ago have never been forgotten and will never be forgotten. How could something like this be allowed to slip through the rules and regulations? How could such a heinous act of barbaric fraud have gone undetected? Panama, as we learned from Resto in Wrath, took care of his misbehavior in the locker room bathroom. Resto, who has shown and continues to show real remorse for what happened, has clearly suffered. Nevertheless, the hatred some people have for the former fighter remains unchanged.

Lewis, who died in September 2020, never showed remorse and never admitted to any crime. No obituaries were written after Lewis’ death.

The man’s life was nearly taken on the night of June 16, 1983, as a promising career in the ring was brutally cut miniature. Some firmly believe that Panama Lewis was the real bad guy behind the disgusting plan, while others claim that Resto was involved and equally guilty. Panama knew what he was sending his fighter to do, namely to inflict horrendous pain on another boxer through illegal violence, which he had to know about. While Resto certainly knew that he was fighting against a deck that was so stacked in his favor that he hit his opponent with gloves that were prepared.

Would Billy Collins Jr. have forgiven either man if his life hadn’t ended so prematurely and so tragically? We’ll never know. But there are plenty of people who will never forgive Lewis or Resto. And who can blame those people?

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Boxing History

The thieves who stole Zale grabbed Basilio’s championship belts; Unfortunately, the belts are lost forever

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Thieves Who Stole Zale, Basilio Championship Belts Caught; The Belts Sadly Lost Forever

Fight fans could read in 2015 how valuable world championship belts were stolen from the Hall of Fame in Canastota. Four belts belonging to the great Carmen Basilio and two belts belonging to the also great Tony Zale were stolen. Now, almost ten years later, the thieves who committed this crime have been caught. It’s a good news.

The bad news, however, as RingTV.com reports, is that the belts were likely melted down by the perpetrators so that they could move the metal around in discs or rods. If that is indeed the case, the belts are gone forever. Nine of the thieves have been named (they won’t be here), and several more are under investigation.

The 20-year-old gang of thieves not only stole the championship belts for which two all-time greats bled, but also valuable works of art and a number of championship rings belonging to the legendary Yogi Berra. According to an article in Ring, rings belonging to baseball great Berry fetched prices well over $1,000,000 on the open market. Can you put a price on the belts won by Zale and Basilio?

Haley Zale, a relative of the Man of Steel, released a tiny statement regarding the end of the “Bring Back the Seat Belt” campaign.

“It is with a ponderous heart that I announce that the Bring Back The Belts campaign has come to an end,” Zale wrote on social media. “Closing is just a word. The feeling runs deeper. The belts are gone. But the trash bags have finally stopped!”

It is of course a great pity that the six championship belts no longer exist, melted away in the pursuit of dollars, as most likely was the case. Some things are more valuable, much more significant than money. The great belts that these two boxing legends won in their great fights in the ring have now lost their examples. Just ask a die-hard boxing fan and they’ll tell you.

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