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Glimpses from the Past (Part Two)
The glimpses are not as sharp as they once were, but they still provide me with guilty pleasure. Now closing in on 85, I’m not about to walk away.
A Dip to the Left
The Ring magazine 1951 “Fight of the Year” took place between Ezzard Charles and Jersey Joe Walcott (real name Arnold Cream) and featured one of the greatest left hooks ever witnessed in a boxing ring. Hall of Fame boxing writer Bernard Fernandez ranked it #1 on his personal list of all-time one-punch knockouts.
Fernandez described the scene thusly: “Moving forward while rocking side to side, the 9-1 underdog dipped to his left and exploded upward with a thunderous hook that caught Charles flush on the jaw. The semi-conscious champion pitched forward onto his face.”
Having worked with Jersey Joe’s brother, Joe Cream, in the 60’s in New Jersey, I was able to hear first-hand his brother Arnold’s personal description of the hook and it was all about the dip to the left. What a fantastic glimpse into the past that was.
The Schoolteacher and Hercules
In November 1984, I watched in amazement as the “Fighting Schoolteacher” Tony Anthony (16-2), ran across the ring and inexplicably struck Mike “Hercules” Weaver with a malevolent left hook from behind after the bell ending the first round. Weaver was stunned and fell slowly to the canvas. Poor Mike had done nothing to deserve it. Anthony was DQ’d., This would be a precursor to what the terribly troubled “Harlem Hammer” James Butler, would do to Richard Grant some years later.
42-1 Odds
Probably everyone knows where they were when JFK was assassinated and the same goes for 9/11. I sure do, but I also know where I was when Buster Douglas beat Mike Tyson at the Tokyo Dome on February 11, 1990. Most boxers have that one (or two) fights that define their careers. None can top Buster’s.
The Blue Horizon
On March 10, 1992, welterweight Tim Rabon out of Broussard, Louisiana, met Philadelphia’s William “The Hammer” Jones at the Blue Horizon in a scheduled 10-rounder that was televised on Tuesday Night Fights. The fight was a closet classic deluxe. Those who were fortunate enough to see it will never forget it.
Both fighters were tall and skinny and immediately teed off on each other with long and looping shots that had extreme malice written all over them. The punishment absorbed by both fighters was frightening, no, alarming. Those at ringside were sprayed by sweat as each heavy shot landed with pinpoint accuracy. Then, in the incredible third round, things heated up as “The Hammer” lived up to his nickname by decking and punishing Rabon in the early going and appeared to be on his way to a crunching finish. But miraculously, Rabon caught Jones with a solid hook coming in that had him hurt and hanging on.
Rabon then stalked Jones down like a tiger sensing fresh meat and decked him twice, but in so doing he had punched himself out and was soon helplessly gassed. Jones began his own stalk. The tables had turned and the fans were howling. A bleeding Rabon was ready to be hammered into submission as time was running out. With just seconds to go in the round, Jones backed Rabon into a corner and took him out with a single debilitating right to the liver. The bell had rung but Tim could not get up. He was counted out four seconds after the round was over. These nine minutes of unmitigated mayhem and Philly fury featured everything: give and take, ebb and flow, courage, determination, multiple knockdowns, and ferocity. And the third round had to be seen to be believed.
They call it the “Legendary Blue Horizon.” Fights like this contributed greatly to that moniker—-and to my memory bank.
The Look on Buddy’s Face
On January 4, 1994, “Jesse” James Hughes fought tough and savvy Buddy McGirt in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Even though he lost a ten-round decision, Hughes gained respect from those who witnessed the fight, but, more importantly, he gained self-confidence knowing he could hang with somebody as solid as McGirt. I recall the look on McGirt’s face toward the end of that fight, and it was one of extreme caution as he was being stalked until the final bell. Michael Dokes had the same look of caution when he fought and barely beat a stalking Tex Cobb in 1981. I sensed that here was someone to keep an eye on.
Specializing in come-from-behind KO wins against very tough competition, Hughes quickly became one of my very favorite fighters. I had found my Bobby Chacon, Danny Lopez, and Saad Muhammad all wrapped into one fighter. I couldn’t wait for Monday so I could rap about this fighter with my fellow boxing enthusiasts. But unfortunately, within a month after what would be his final fight, Hughes was murdered, his body ending up in a dank swamp.
The Fan Man
This was another amazing memory thanks to the “Fan Man,” James Miller (a complex and highly intelligent person). He endangered many fans during the 1993 heavyweight fight between Riddick Bowe and Evander Holyfield when he paraglided into the ring and landed in Riddick Bowe’s corner, the lines of his parachute getting tangled in the ropes. One of his legs got caught in the top rope of the ring. Aroused fans dragged him down and beat him unconscious. Charged with operating an aircraft in a reckless manner, was fined $4,000 by the FAA, pleaded guilty to trespassing and spent 10 days in the Clark County Detention Center. ”It was a heavyweight fight,” Miller would say later, ”and I was the only guy who got knocked out.”
Later and after many personal setbacks, Miller hanged himself in Alaska where he had moved in 1996. ”He was one of those rare people…He dared to be his own man,” said Pat Lynn, owner of the Valdez Star newspaper. All in all, a sad story.
“Ding-A-Ling Man”
Darnell “The Ding-A-Ling-Man” Wilson starched hard-punching Emmanuel Nwodo on June 29, 2007 with a fully leveraged left hook from hell. ESPN announcer Teddy Atlas called it the most devastating knockout ever on ESPN’s Friday Night Fights. As Teddy went bonkers, Joe Tessitore went full-tilt boogie and screamed, “ Ohhhhhhhhhh, a left hook like you cannot believe…Oh my! Oh my, this fight is over.” For me, It ranked alongside Derrick Jefferson’s near decapitation of Maurice Harris and Samuel Peter’s wipe out of Jeremy Williams.
One Last One
On August 22, 2020, heavily favored Dillian Whyte met a shaky 41-year-old Alexander Povetkin at Matchroom HQ in Essex, U K. Povetkin was nearing the end of his admirable career, while Whyte was coming off a number of spectacular knockouts including KOs of Lucas Browne and Derek Chisora.
In this one, Whyte started off well and controlled the fight in the first four rounds. He decked Povetkin twice in the fourth round and most observers felt the end would come in the next round. They were right about the round but wrong about the winner. Thirty seconds into the following round, Povetkin landed a sneak left hook/uppercut that sent Whyte to dreamland and shocked everyone in the arena including this writer. An immediate rematch was won by Whyte and the popular Russian announced his retirement.
What are some of your best boxing memories?
Ted Sares can be reached at tedsares@roadrunner.com
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Boxing Odds and Ends: Ernesto Mercado, Marcel Cerdan and More
The TSS Fighter of the Month for January is super lightweight Ernesto “Tito” Mercado who scored his sixth straight knockout, advancing his record to 17-0 (16 KOs) with a fourth-round stoppage of Jose Pedraza on the undercard of Diego Pacheco vs. Steven Nelson at the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Las Vegas.
Mercado was expected to win. At age 35, Pedraza’s best days were behind him. But the Puerto Rican “Sniper” wasn’t chopped liver. A 2008 Beijing Olympian, he was a former two-division title-holder. In a previous fight in Las Vegas, in June of 2021, Pedraza proved too savvy for Julian Rodriguez (currently 23-1) whose corner pulled him out after eight rounds. So, although Mercado knew that he was the “A-side,” he also knew, presumably, that it was important to bring his “A” game.
Mercado edged each of the first three frames in what was shaping up as a tactical fight. In round four, he followed a short left hand with an overhand right that landed flush on Pedraza’s temple. “It was a discombobulating punch,” said one of DAZN’s talking heads. Indeed, the way that Pedraza fell was awkward. “[He] crushed colorfully backward and struck the back of his head on the canvas before rising on badly wobbled legs,” wrote ringside reporter Lance Pugmire.
He beat the count, but referee Robert Hoyle wisely waived it off.
Now 23 years old, Ernesto “Tito” Mercado was reportedly 58-5 as an amateur. At the December 2019 U.S. Olympic Trials in Lake Charles, Louisiana, he advanced to the finals in the lightweight division but then took sick and was medically disqualified from competing in the championship round. His opponent, Keyshawn Davis, won in a walkover and went on to win a silver medal at the Tokyo Games.
As a pro, only one of Mercado’s opponents, South African campaigner Xolisani Ndongeni, heard the final bell. Mercado won nine of the 10 rounds. The stubborn Ndongeni had previously gone 10 rounds with Devin Haney and would subsequently go 10 rounds with Raymond Muratalla.
The Ndongeni fight, in July of 2023, was staged in Nicaragua, the homeland of Mercado’s parents. Tito was born in Upland in Southern California’s Inland Empire and currently resides in Pomona.
Pomona has spawned two world champions, the late Richie Sandoval and Sugar Shane Mosley. Mercado is well on his way to becoming the third.
Marcel Cerdan Jr
Born in Casablanca, Marcel Cerdan Jr was four years old when his dad ripped the world middleweight title from Tony Zale. A good fighter in his own right, albeit nowhere near the level of his ill-fated father, the younger Cerdan passed away last week at age 81.
Fighting mostly as a welterweight, Cerdan Jr scored 56 wins in 64 professional bouts against carefully selected opponents. He came up short in his lone appearance in a U.S. ring where he was matched tough against Canadian champion Donato Paduano, losing a 10-round decision on May 11, 1970 at Madison Square Garden. This was a hard, bloody fight in which both men suffered cuts from accidental head butts.
Cerdan Jr and Paduano both trained for the match at the Concord Hotel in the Catskills. In the U.S. papers, Cerdan Jr’s record was listed as 47-0-1. The record conveniently omitted the loss that he had suffered in his third pro bout.
Eight years after his final fight, Cerdan Jr acquired his highest measure of fame for his role in the movie Edith et Marcel. He portrayed his father who famously died at age 33 in a plane crash in the Azores as he was returning to the United States for a rematch with Jake LaMotta who had taken away his title.
Edith et Marcel, directed by Claude Lelouch, focused on the love affair between Cerdan and his mistress Edith Piaf, the former street performer turned cabaret star who remains today the most revered of all the French song stylists.
Released in 1983, twenty years after the troubled Piaf passed away at age 47, the film, which opened to the greatest advertising blitz in French cinematic history, caused a sensation in France, spawning five new books and hundreds of magazine and newspaper articles. Cerdan Jr’s performance was “surprisingly proficient” said the Associated Press about the ex-boxer making his big screen debut.
The French language film occasionally turns up on Turner Classic Movies. Although it got mixed reviews, the film is a feast for the ears for fans of Edith Piaf. The musical score is comprised of Piaf’s original songs in her distinctive voice.
Marcel Cerdan Jr’s death was attributed to pneumonia complicated by Alzheimer’s. May he rest in peace.
Claressa Shields
Speaking of movies, the Claressa Shields biopic, The Fire Inside, released on Christmas day, garnered favorable reviews from some of America’s most respected film critics with Esquire’s Max Cea calling it the year’s best biopic. First-time director Rachel Morrison, screenwriter Barry Jenkins, and Ryan Destiny, who portrays Claressa, were singled out for their excellent work.
The movie highlights Shields’ preparation for the 2012 London Olympics and concludes with her training for the Rio Games where, as we know, she would win a second gold medal. In some respects, the movie is reminiscent of The Fighter, the 2010 film starring Mark Wahlberg as Irish Micky Ward where the filmmakers managed to manufacture a great movie without touching on Ward’s famous trilogy with Arturo Gatti.
The view from here is that screenwriter Jenkins was smart to end the movie where he did. In boxing, and especially in women’s boxing, titles are tossed around like confetti. Had Jenkins delved into Claressa’s pro career, a very sensitive, nuanced biopic, could have easily devolved into something hokey. And that’s certainly no knock on Claressa Shields. The self-described GWOAT, she is dedicated to her craft and a very special talent.
Shields hopes that the buzz from the movie will translate into a full house for her homecoming fight this coming Sunday, Feb. 2, at the Dort Financial Center in Flint, Michigan. A bevy of heavyweight-division straps will be at stake when Shields, who turns 30 in March, takes on 42-year-old Brooklynite Danielle Perkins.
At bookmaking establishments, Claressa is as high as a 25/1 favorite. That informs us that the oddsmakers believe that Perkins is marginally better than Claressa’s last opponent, Vanessa Lepage-Joanisse. That’s damning Perkins with faint praise.
Shields vs. Perkins plus selected undercard bouts will air worldwide on DAZN at 8 pm ET / 5 pm PT.
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Ringside at the Cosmo: Pacheco Outpoints Nelson plus Undercard Results
Ringside at the Cosmo: Pacheco Outpoints Nelson plus Undercard Results
LAS VEGAS, NV – Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom Promotions was at the Cosmopolitan in Las Vegas tonight for the second half of a DAZN doubleheader that began in Nottingham, England. In the main event, Diego Pacheco, ranked #1 by the WBO at super middleweight, continued his ascent toward a world title with a unanimous decision over Steven Nelson.
Pacheco glides round the ring smoothly whereas Nelson wastes a lot energy with something of a herky-jerky style. However, although Nelson figured to slow down as the fight progressed, he did some of his best work in rounds 11 and 12. Fighting with a cut over his left eye from round four, a cut that periodically reopened, the gritty Nelson fulfilled his promise that he would a fight as if he had everything to lose if he failed to win, but it just wasn’t enough, even after his Omaha homie Terence “Bud” Crawford entered his corner before the last round to give him a pep talk (back home in North Omaha, Nelson runs the B&B (Bud and Bomac) Sports Academy.
All three judges had it 117-111 for Pacheco who mostly fought off his back foot but landed the cleaner punches throughout. A stablemate of David Benavidez and trained by David’s father Jose Benevidez Sr, Pacheco improved to 23-0 (18). It was the first pro loss for the 36-year-old Nelson (20-1).
Semi wind-up
Olympic gold medalist Andy Cruz, who as a pro has never fought a match slated for fewer than 10 rounds, had too much class for Hermosillo, Mexico’s rugged Omar Salcido who returned to his corner with a puffy face after the fourth stanza, but won the next round and never stopped trying. The outcome was inevitable even before the final round when Salcido barely made it to the final gun, but the Mexican was far more competitive than many expected.
The Cuban, who was 4-0 vs. Keyshawn Davis in closely-contested bouts as an amateur, advanced his pro record to 5-0 (2), winning by scores by 99-91 and 98-92 twice. Salido, coming off his career-best win, a 9th-round stoppage of former WBA super featherweight title-holder Chris Colbert, falls to 20-2.
Other TV bouts
Ernesto “Tito” Mercado, a 23-year-old super lightweight, aims to become the next world champion from Pomona, California, following in the footsteps of the late Richie Sandoval and Sugar Shane Mosely, and based on his showing tonight against former Beijing Olympian and former two-division title-holder Jose Pedraza, he is well on his way.
After three rounds after what had been a technical fight, Mercado (17-0, 16 KOs) knocked Pedraza off his pins with a short left hand followed by an overhand right. Pedraza bounced back and fell on his backside. When he arose on unsteady legs, the bout was waived off. The official time was 2:08 of round four and the fading, 35-year-old Pedraza (29-7-1) was saddled with his third loss in his last four outings.
The 8-round super lightweight clash between Israel Mercado (the 29-year-old uncle of “Tito”) and Leonardo Rubalcava was a fan-friendly skirmish with many robust exchanges. When the smoke cleared, the verdict was a majority draw. Mercado got the nod on one card (76-74), but was overruled by a pair of 75-75 scores.
Mercado came out strong in the opening round, but suffered a flash knockdown before the round ended. The referee ruled it a slip but was overruled by replay operator Jay Nady and what would have been a 10-9 round for Mercado became a 10-8 round for Rubalcava. Mercado lost another point in round seven when he was penalized for low blows.
The scores were 76-74 for Mercado (11-1-2) and 75-75 twice. The verdict was mildly unpopular with most thinking that Mercado deserved the nod. Reportedly a four-time Mexican amateur champion, Rubalcava (9-0-1) is trained by Robert Garcia.
Also
New Matchroom signee Nishant Dev, a 24-year-old southpaw from India, had an auspicious pro debut (pardon the cliché). Before a beaming Eddie Hearn, Dev stopped Oakland’s Alton Wiggins (1-1-1) in the opening round. The referee waived it off after the second knockdown.
Boxers from India have made large gains at the amateur level in recent years and Matchroom honcho Eddie Hearn anticipates that Dev, a Paris Olympian, will be the first fighter from India to make his mark as a pro.
Undefeated Brooklyn lightweight Harley Mederos, managed by the influential Keith Connolly, scored his seventh knockout in eight tries with a brutal third-round KO of Mexico’s Arturo de Isla.
A left-right combination knocked de Isla (5-3-1) flat on his back. Referee Raul Caiz did not bother to count and several minutes elapsed before the stricken fighter was fit to leave the ring. The official time was 1:27 of round three.
In the opener, Newark junior lightweight Zaquin Moses, a cousin of Shakur Stevenson, improved to 2-0 when his opponent retired on his stool after the opening round.
Photo credit: Melina Pizano / Matchroom
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Najee Lopez Steps up in Class and Wins Impressively at Plant City
Garry Jonas’ ProBox series returned to its regular home in Plant City, Florida, tonight with a card topped by a 10-round light heavyweight match between fast-rising Najee Lopez and former world title challenger Lenin Castillo. This was considered a step-up fight for the 25-year-old Lopez, an Atlanta-born-fighter of Puerto Rican heritage. Although the 36-year-old Castillo had lost two of his last three heading in, he had gone the distance with Dimitry Bivol and Marcus Browne and been stopped only once (by Callum Smith).
Lopez landed the cleaner punches throughout. Although Castillo seemed unfazed during the first half of the fight, he returned to his corner at the end of round five exhibiting signs of a fractured jaw.
In the next round, Lopez cornered him against the ropes and knocked him through the ropes with a left-right combination. Referee Emil Lombardo could have stopped the fight right there, but he allowed the courageous Castillo to carry on for a bit longer, finally stopping the fight as Castillo’s corner and a Florida commissioner were signaling that it was over.
The official time was 2:36 of round six. Bigger fights await the talented Lopez who improved to 13-0 with his tenth win inside the distance. Castillo declined to 25-7-1.
Co-Feature
In a stinker of a heavyweight fight, Stanley Wright, a paunchy, 34-year-old North Carolina journeyman, scored a big upset with a 10-round unanimous decision over previously unbeaten Jeremiah Milton.
Wright carried 280 pounds, 100 pounds more than in his pro debut 11 years ago. Although he was undefeated (13-0, 11 KOs), he had never defeated an opponent with a winning record and his last four opponents were a miserable 19-48-2. Moreover, he took the fight on short notice.
What Wright had going for him was fast hands and, in the opening round, he put Milton on the canvas with a straight right hand. From that point, Milton fought tentatively and Wright, looking fatigued as early as the fourth round, fought only in spurts. It seemed doubtful that he could last the distance, but Milton, the subject of a 2021 profile in these pages, was wary of Wright’s power and unable to capitalize. “It’s almost as if Milton is afraid to win,” said ringside commentator Chris Algieri during the ninth stanza when the bout had devolved into a hugfest.
The judges had it 96-93 and 97-92 twice for the victorious Wright who boosted his record to 14-0 without improving his stature.
Also
In the TV opener, a 10-round contest in the junior middleweight division, Najee Lopez stablemate Darrelle Valsaint (12-0, 10 KOs) scored his career-best win with a second-round knockout of 35-year-old Dutch globetrotter Stephen Danyo (23-7-3).
A native Floridian of Haitian descent, the 22-year-old Valsaint was making his eighth start in Plant City. He rocked Danyo with a chopping right hand high on the temple and then, as Danyo slumped forward, applied the exclamation point, a short left uppercut. The official time was 2:17 of round two.
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