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Boxing History

Jake Lamotta’s story

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Jake LaMotta

A blurred video appears on the internet, which appeared on the internet, the aged man, throws blows in a poorly lit room. It seems that he is in a dream and maybe he was, maybe he dreamed of the past, maybe trying to find out if he still has it. Jake Lamotta died on September 19, 2017 at the age of 95 and there are no more shadow boxes. He was one of the last links to another time, sometimes when Joe Louis was a heavyweight champion and every man wore a hat. Ancient Scoundrel survived them all, and now he is not there.

In his fight, Jake Lamotta, he was an impressive presence. He had a massive figure, highlighted by muscle plates glued on his hairy chest and wide pleat. He wore a robe with a leopard print on the ring, and when the bell rang, he took his business with a reckless warrior. Nobody had an simple time with a lamotta, even Sugar Ray Robinson. His life outside the ring was as turbulent as his fighting style. The son of an offensive father, Jake Lamotta, grew up needy, street smart and wild. The troubles were inevitable. He spent time in a reformator for youthful criminals, but did not reform.

Lamotta used women, including his wives, and defeated the man so seriously during the robbery that he thought he had killed him, an event that persecuted him over the years. Wine was a catalyst for his complex fighting style. Jake felt he didn’t deserve life.

This version of “Bronx Bull” was just a memory when he entered the Manhattan editorial office in the Ring Manhattan magazine in 1985. He was wearing a striped polo shirt and harm. With the exception of a retreating hairline and a few additional pounds in the middle, it looked almost the same as during his days of fighting. The experienced face like Jake’s is something that you will not forget, and his low ribbon was immediately recognizable.

Lamotta, who would celebrate his 64th birthday next month, was in a good mood. He just found out that he was finally voted for the boxer of the ring, 44 years after his last fight. The former medium and first man master who defeated Robinson has long been denied honor because he fought his fight with Blackjack Blackjack “Billy Fox in 1947.

Blackball Jake Lamotta was hypocritical when other fighters who were involved in established fights were already saved, including George Dixon, Abe Attell and Kid McCoy. Lamotta seemed to admit his crime. He did it in 1960 before the trickery of the US Senate leading to the impact of organized crime on boxing. You can feel that the boxing plant would prefer to keep his mouth closed.

Despite all the blows he took in 106 professional attacks, Jake Lamotta did not show any bad effects of his former occupation. His answers during the extensive interview that day were thought out, truthful and sometimes comic. He dealt with life as a stand-up comedian and could not resist throwing a little Shtick when he was asked if he regretted.

“I would never get married,” he said laughing. “No. No.

The wedding was one of the habits that Lamotta never kicked. When he died of complications of pneumonia, he married his seventh wife Denise Baker.

The uprising of Lamotta from poverty began when he changed the professional on March 3, 1941. Before he fought Fox, he already defeated Fritzi Zivic, Tony Janiro, Tommy Bell, Holman Williams, Lloyd Marshall, Bob Satterfield, Jose Besora and Robinson. Nevertheless, his refusal to cooperate with organized crime, which she had to strain in boxing at the time, was a problem that he could not solve with a blow to the lips.

“For five years I was an unacceptable champion,” said Lamotta. “Nobody wanted to try me … but the time is over. I got a little
Too aged. I wasn’t as good as I used to. I had to make a decision. Either I lose the fight against foxes or I don’t have a chance for the title. They offered me $ 100,000. I rejected them. I didn’t need money. I just wanted a chance to fight for the title. “

Even after Lamotta allowed Fox to stop him, it was not until June 16, 1949 that he received the promised fight with the prevailing champion Marcel Cerdan. The defining moment occurred in the first round, when Lamotta, who was known for his uncompromising style of fighting, threw Cerdan on canvas with what the historian Bert Sugar called “such a nice hip roller, as he was ever seen in wrestling fight.”

Cerdan wounded his left arm when he fell, making him practically a one -handed warrior. The Frenchman fought until the end of the ninth round, but he did not answer the bell at 10 .. Jake Lamotta finally fought to the top of the boxing world, but he had to give the mafia $ 20,000 to strengthen the contract. The only money he earned that night was what he won on himself.

It was supposed to be a rematch, but Cerdan died in a plane crash on his way to Fresh York from his house in France. Lamotta made two successful defense in 1950, winning a 15-round decision on the Italian Tiberio Mitri and by knocking Laurent Dauthuille in the needy moment of the 15th round. Lamott organized a furious rally from the last throw behind all three cards of results, knocking out the French pretender at 2-47. It was the quintessence of Lamota and the fight of the year. Lamotta’s joke about the fight with Sugar Ray has been surprised so many times that Diabetic was a classic, but there was nothing witty in their sixuta series. Although Jake won only the second fight, all six were tough to fight, and their fifth divided decision. The sixth with the title on the line was natural.

Robinson and Lamotta faced each other for the last time on February 14, 1951 in front of the packed house at the Chicago stadium. The master followed Robinson in an ordinary, gritty way, while Sugar Ray withdrew and counteracting. It was “trickery and guts, head versus heart and combinations versus courage,” wrote Sugar.

Lamotta fought for the first eight rounds, but Robinson began forward in ninth place. From that time, until she stopped in the 13th round of Lamotta, she took up such a terrible beating that the fight became known as the massacre of St. Valentine’s Day, named after the murder of Gangland Seven Men on the same day in 1929.

Jake was known on his feet when the fight was stopped, helpless, but still on his feet. It was a badge of honor for Lamotta, but just another night for his legendary chin.

Lamotta never fought for the title again. His bold position in Robinson’s last fight took everything from him. He lost three of the next seven duels and retired after Billy Kilgore became a room on April 14, 1954, because it can be expected that adapting to life was even more complex than fighting Robinson.

“I was a bit similar to Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde. When I was involved in boxing business, I was one figure. When I returned home to my children, I was a different figure,” said Lamotta. “After the end of my career I still had two characters and I had to get rid of one of them. I was frustrated. Before that I pulled her on my opponents. Then I started to go out to my wives.”

It was the beginning of a inheritance spiral, which caused Lamotta to take six months on charging in 1958. After she was convicted of presenting men to a juvenile girl at the nightclub in Miami.

There were many slim and unhappy years after his release. Bitka in films and public performances has dried. It became so bad that she wandered the streets of Fresh York in the streets of only 35 cents in his pocket, ashamed to return home because he can’t afford a tree or a tree.

In 1970, the situation changed positively when his autobiography, Raging Bull: My Story (Ghosted by Joseph Carter and Peter Savage) was published by Prentice-Hall. A hard-striking, tell-all book was well received, and in 1980 it was transformed into a film directed by Martin Scorsese, with the participation of Robert Deniro as Jake. Juicy Wola won the Deriro Academy Award for the best actor.

The film presented Lamotta warts and everything, emphasizing his volcanic temperament outside the ring, including the gritty Vikkie Lamotta (depicted by Cathy Moriarty), who was his wife while he won the title. “It was exaggerated,” said Lamotta. “I was a jealous guy and I threw my wives several times, but if I really spilled them, they wouldn’t live.”

The film put Lamota back into the spotlight. Sentiments about him, at least among boxing fans, clearly softened. When he was presented in Madison Square Garden before Marvin Hagler-Mustafa Hamsho in October 1984, Jake received a huge ovation.

“It made me feel good,” said Lamotta. “The reason for this is that the American people, or maybe the whole world, are for the weaker people. They thought I was weaker.”

Shortly after an interview, the Ring had dinner in Manhattan, where Lamotta was officially introduced. He wrote about it in the last chapter of his second book, Raging Bull II (Ghosted by Chris Anderson and Sharon McGehee). “And now, 36 years after I won the title, I was finally introduced to the boxing gallery of celebrities in the Ring magazine … It seems to me that it took a fresh, more forgiving generation to recognize my achievements in the ring, despite what I had to do to get a steady shot in the title.

“I stood in front of a diminutive restaurant in the city center, which I smoked before I entered my board. It was not exactly the Hall of Fame room in Madison Square Garden, but it was good enough for me.”

The decision to grant Lamotta his receivables was not widely popular, but five years later he was among the inaugural class of the newly opened International Gallery of Sław in Canastot.

Despite all the pain and misfortune, it can cause that boxing is one place where even a man like Jake Lamotta can find a measure of redemption.

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Boxing History

10 times WBC changed the game

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Vitali Klitschko WBC

  1. Reduction of 15-order
    After the death of Deuk Koo Kim during the fight with Ray Mancini in 1983, WBC issued a principle that stated that the maximum distance for the fight for the championship would be 12 rounds.
  2. I weigh at least 24 hours earlier
    Due to the fears of weakening of the boxers due to the weight production process, and then the fight on the same day as the indicator, the day before the introduction of defects.
  3. Intermediate weight classes
    Sport once had only eight classes, but now it has 17 (well, 18, if you include the producing weight). WBC introduced several novel divisions, recently in weight, super-medium weight and circuitous weight.
  4. Gloves without your thumbs
    In 1983, Everlast created the first thumb glove and was accepted by WBC due to fears related to eye injuries associated with the “thumb”. Today, the thumb is attached.
  5. Doping tests
    WBC were one of the first to enforce doping tests after the fight, and in 2016 introduced their immaculate boxing program, which required the fighters to want to be classified to register in random tests.
  6. Retired
    Masters who retire, still having the title of WBC, are usually awarded with the status of a “retired”, which means that if they return, they will automatically get a shot to the current master. Vitali Klitschko [above] He started it in 2008, when he returned to defeat Samuel Piotr.
  7. Four ropes
    It often happened that boxing rings have only three ropes, but WBC made it obligatory for all rings to put up the championships that consist of four.
  8. Diamond Championships
    A bit nonsense championship that appears in the “historical” battle in the division. Manny Pacquiao won the first welterweight division when he defeated Miguel Cotto in 2009.
  9. WBC Cares
    The organization performs a significant charity work with WBC Cares, which since founded in 2006 has over 160 volunteers around the world (their British branch is managed by Scott Welch).
  10. Franchise championship
    The franchise championships, which were introduced with great mockery in 2019, are different than diamond, silver, transient titles and allows masters to move between divisions, ignoring mandatory obligations and doing almost what they like. Probably it’s best not to start with this …

Read our interview with the President of WBC Mauricio Sulaiman HERE

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Boxing History

The Green Man: The Pub/Boxing Gym, which attracted Tommy Farr, David Bowie and more

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Tommy Farr

Blackheath-Urocza, a wealthy, relatively deciduous part of the south-eastern London-does not have obvious boxing ties. From sport, he is best known as a starting point in the London marathon and for the apartment of the world’s oldest open rugby club. But return 60 to 90 years, and the surrounding area had a prosperous boxing gym, popular among the best characters of this sport.

The green man was a pub on Blackheath Hill with boxeria above him. He shot in importance as a boxing plant in 1937, when two world warriors, Great Britain Tommy Farr And America Petey Sarron decided to train there. The British weighty title Farr was preparing for Showdown on April 15 with Max Baer, ​​who would ultimately lead him to a heavyweight title defining the career with Joe Louis four months later. The prevailing champion of the world featherweight, Sarron, was preparing to fight with the same Survivist-first in this country-a former British Lightweight King Harry Mizler.

At the beginning of April Boxing news The columnist “The Watcher” visited Green Man Gym, and then using the boxing manager Walter Daya and the seriously striking seafarer Jim Lawlor to see Train Farr and Sarron. The banner above the door proclaiming “Tommy Farr and Petey Sarron Tround here” told him that he was in the right place. However, he arrived too overdue to see how the warriors were working and said that Farr was changing after his session.

“Tommy welcomed me warmly when I regretted that I was too overdue. Jim Lawlor was at hand and he welcomed me a lot, invited me to a cup of tea, and I was very worried about showing me. The wardrobe was equipped with a shower bath, rubbing the table and everything. Large windows overlooked Blackheath and said that here was the perfect place to prepare here. to the competition, because such a wonderful open space – and it could be high – and it could be up – and it could be up.

“Tommy finished the dressing, and then I was taken over to junior high school. A full -size and properly staged ring was erected in a roomy and well -lit room, while ordinary amenities necessary for training had a desire for training. The place was vast enough to issue the program, and Lawlor told me that they introduced several amateur shows.

“The presence of Tommy Farr and Petey Sarron will undoubtedly bring them a lot of publicity and recommendations, because in addition to the fact that the British champion was very enthusiastically focused on it, later I learned from Jimmy Erwin, the world champion manager that he was looking at all training exercises in the south of England, not finding a place that suited him better.”

In 1939, Jock McAVoy trained at Green Man-Swoim with his first training in London-his last fight with Len Harvey’s rival, in a program that set a attendance record in Great Britain over 90,000. Seventeen years later the Green Man’s gym was still busy when Dick Richardson prepared for his clash of December 1956 Nino Valdes.

In the 1960s, the pub became a popular place of music where Paul Simon, Manfred Mann, Tubby Hayes and Ronnie Scott performed. In 1963, 16-year-old David Bowie played there with his first professional band The Konrads. At this memorable concert of Bowie, until then, the saxophonist entered as the main singer, when the band’s frontman cut his foot on a broken glass in the cloakroom in a pub. Then Bowie took the position of the singer. Unfortunately, for sentimental fans of boxing or music, in 1970 a green man was demolished. Today, there is an indefinite block of flats in its place.

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Boxing History

Version – Marco Antonio Barrera wins a furious and electrifying rubber match over Erik Morales

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Marco Antonio Barrera

Marco Antonio Barrera in MD 12 Erik Morales
November 27, 2004; MGM Grand, Las Vegas, NV
Mexican warriors Barrera and Morales ended their epic trilogy in a properly urgent style, creating another unforgettable war. Entering in the start, in the case of the Super Feather WBC Morales belt, the series stood with one winner per item. Morales won the initial meeting in Super-Bantam in 2000, and Barrera secured the creation of a rematch in 2002 in a featherweight-the decisions were questioned. Accordingly, the verdict in the rubber match also caused a debate. As in the previous two meetings, bitter enemies got involved in a furious fight, and the electrifying 11 round turned out to be particularly cruel. Ultimately, Barrera went to the top and adapted Morales’s achievement, becoming the three world letter.

Do you know? At that time, WBO Feather Highland Scott Harrison was interested in an observer in Ringside. He hoped to catch the winner.

Watch out for: In the middle of nine, the fighters are involved in the clinch, and Barrera is bursting morale at the back of the head with a legal apparatus. Uninvited by his opponent, Morales refuses to touch Barrera gloves when the judge was asked.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctlipjgecq

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