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Did Jackie Tonawanda Posthumously Bamboozle the Boxing Hall of Fame? (Part Two)

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The year 2019 was the first year that women appeared on the ballot for the International Boxing Hall of Fame. The ladies were sorted into two categories: Trailblazer and Modern.

Barbara Buttrick, a nonagenarian residing in Florida, had the distinction of being the first Trailblazer (which sounds redundant). An ex-boxer, born and raised in England, Buttrick is the founder of the Women’s International Boxing Federation. Christy Martin and Lucia Rijker were the first inductees in the Modern category.

The list of Trailblazers swelled to three the following year with the additions of Jackie Tonawanda and Marian Trimiar. Contemporaries who crossed paths at Gleason’s Gym which was then located in midtown Manhattan, Tonawanda and Trimiar shattered a glass ceiling when they were licensed to box in New York. It took a court order for the hidebound state athletic commission to acquiesce.

Jackie Tonawanda, who died in 2009, was quite the self-promoter. Newspaper stories about her first surfaced in the mid-1970s. Periodically she would be re-discovered. Whenever female boxing showed signs of coming out of the closet, as in 1996 when Christy Martin was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated, or 2001 when the daughters of Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, respectively Laila Ali and Jacqui Frazier-Lyde, clashed in a bout that attracted international media coverage, the legend of Jackie Tonawanda would grow.

Randy Gordon, the former chairman of the New York State Athletic commission who currently hosts a SiriusXM radio show with Gerry Cooney, first became acquainted with Jackie Tonawanda in 1975. At the time, he was an assistant editor for G.C. London, a publishing house whose portfolio included several boxing and wrestling magazines.

As Gordon relates in his Feb. 15 piece for “NY Fights,” he was at his desk when the receptionist patched in a call from Tonawanda who identified herself as the Female Ali and said that she would be fighting the next night at the Golden Nugget in Las Vegas. She would be defending her World Female Light Heavyweight Title and requested that Gordon write a story about her. A quick call to Las Vegas boxing writers Royce Feour and Mike Marley revealed that there were no boxing events scheduled in Las Vegas that week, let alone at the Golden Nugget. Tonawanda called Gordon the next week to inform him that she had won her bout by a knockout in the first round.

Tonawanda continued to pester Randy Gordon during his tenure as editor-and-chief at The Ring. She would occasionally show up at his office unannounced. But Gordon never did write a story about her. Her attestations didn’t pass the smell test. But they sure passed the test of others whose radar wasn’t as finely honed.

Was Jackie Tonawanda a highly-skilled fighter, more exactly was she perceived that way? Here’s an excerpt from a story that appeared on Aug. 9, 1980 in a Pottsville (PA) paper by a reporter who visited Muhammad Ali’s Deer Lake, Pennsylvania training camp when the female boxer happened to be there: “When Tonawanda flicks off a fluid series of rowing stabs which blur the speed bag, there is an inkling that she is not just an ordinary fighter. It is an awesome and frightening display of strength and coordination.”

Tonawanda told the reporter that she had a fight lined up in England. This contradicted a widely syndicated Associated Press story by Deborah Mesce that ran a few months earlier. Tonawanda told Mesce that she had a rematch lined up with Diane Clark, the only woman to defeat her, and that the bout would take place in Brazil on a card that would include Muhammad Ali and Larry Holmes. In this article, Tonawanda was credited with having knocked out 31 of 32 opponents. (In the ensuing years, when it became known that the compilers at BoxRec were able to locate only one fight for her — her 6-rounder with Clark – all of those knockouts were said to have occurred when she was relegated to competing on a female underground circuit.)

The article by Herb Boyd that ran in the Amsterdam (NY) News on May 7, 2020 warrants a special citation because of the credentials of the writer. A journalist, educator, author, and human rights activist, Boyd, now 83 years old, has dedicated his life to telling the stories of prominent African-Americans whose contributions were left out of the history books. He established his bona fides as a boxing maven with his 2005 biography of Sugar Ray Robinson.

Boyd informs us that Jackie Tonawanda was born Jean Jameson, information at odds with the long-held belief that her legal surname was Garrett. He acknowledges that she lost her only professional fight, but says she was undefeated in 36 bouts on the amateur circuit. Boyd allows that the match in which she knocked out a male opponent may have been staged, but then contradicts himself by saying that it was a hard fight in which “she suffered several serious blows before felling her opponent in the second round, breaking his jaw.” Boyd then alludes to a second bout in which Tonawanda knocked out a male opponent, this match taking place in 1984 at the Nassau Coliseum. Good luck finding that fight on the internet.

Did Jackie Tonawanda take her name from the city of the same name in upstate New York, or was Tonawanda the maiden name of her mother, a full-blooded Cherokee? Let’s stop here. To list all the discrepancies in stories about Tonawanda would fill an entire notebook.

It should be noted that Randy Gordon, whose story inspired this story, had no axe to grind with the International Boxing Hall of Fame. He was an invited guest at the 1989 IBHOF ribbon-cutting and returned to Canastota the next year and spoke at the first induction ceremony. Before writing his article, he communicated with IBHOF President Don Ackerman who co-founded the Canastota shrine along with Executive Director Ed Brophy to express his concerns about Tonawanda’s selection.

Gordon reached out to Ackerman on Dec. 31, 2021, and received this text back on Jan. 5: “I met with Ed {Brophy} and we talked about Jackie.  She was inducted in the Trailblazer category. It doesn’t matter what her actual record was. It does matter that she was a voice for women’s boxing and was one of the first to be granted a license. After talking with Ed and some of our voters, we feel comfortable because of her influence on the sport.  Some of the bare knuckle boxers had very questionable records but made a mark in our sport.”

The rebuttal to Ackerman’s argument, articulated by several people quoted in Randy Gordon’s article, is that the commotion that she caused wasn’t calculated to advance women’s boxing but, to the contrary, was intended solely for the purpose of drawing attention to herself. (By the way, we checked with Gordon and he has had no correspondence from anyone with the IBHOF since that Jan. 5 text.)

Jackie Tonawanda wouldn’t be the first pathological liar to be enshrined in the Boxing Hall of Fame. One is reminded of Jack “Doc” Kearns, the wily manager of Jack Dempsey. Kearns, who was also associated with Mickey Walker, Archie Moore, and Joey Maxim, among many others, told so many lies that he couldn’t keep track of them all with the result that the details of his escapades changed from one re-telling to the next. But Kearns, unlike Tonawanda, was a true giant in the sport.

The International Boxing Hall of Fame, which overcame long odds to become a reality, has been criticized for its lack of transparency — vote totals aren’t shared with the media – and this writer has faulted the IBHOF electorate for some dumbfounding omissions in the non-boxer categories. One hesitates, however, to heap on another spoonful of negativity at this juncture. The pandemic which forced the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 Induction Weekends was a double-punch to the solar plexus that left the shrine holding on by a thread.

The good news is that this year’s IBHOF Hall of Fame Weekend, a “trilogy” that runs from June 9-12, figures to be the grandest event ever staged in Canastota. On the final day of the jamboree, Induction Sunday, the grounds will teem with the greatest collection of fistic luminaries, boxing journalists, and boxing facilitators ever assembled at one gathering.

By then, Jackie Tonawanda’s dubious bio may have been expunged from the IBHOF web site. But then again, maybe not. Stay tuned.

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Mizuki Hiruta Dominates in her U.S. Debut and Omar Trinidad Wins Too at Commerce

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Japan’s Mizuki Hiruta smashed through Mexico’s Maribel Ramirez with ease in winning by technical decision and local hero Omar Trinidad continued his assault on the featherweight division on Friday.

Hiruta (7-0, 2 KOs), who prefers to be called “Mimi,” made her American debut with an impressive performance against Mexican veteran Maribel Ramirez (15-11-4) and retained the WBO super flyweight world title by unanimous decision at Commerce Casino in Commerce, Calif.

The pink-haired Japanese southpaw champion quickly proved to be quicker, stronger and even better than advertised. In the opening round Ramirez landed on the floor twice after throwing errant blows. On one instance, it could have been ruled a knockdown but it was not a convincing blow.

In the second round, Ramirez again attacked and again was met with a Hiruta check right hook and down went the Mexican. This time referee Ray Corona gave the eight-count and the fight resumed.

It was Hiruta’s third title defense but this time it was on American soil. She seemed nervous by the prospect of getting a favorable review from the more than 700 fans inside the casino tent.

For more than a year Hiruta has been training off and on with Manny Robles in the L.A. area. Now that she has a visa, she has spent considerable time this year learning the tricks of the trade. They proved explosively effective.

Though Mexico City’s Ramirez has considerable experience against world champions, she discovered that Hiruta was not easy to hit. Often, the Japanese champion would slip and counter with precision.

It was an impressive American debut, though the fight was stopped in the eighth round after a collision of heads. The scores were tallied and all three saw Hiruta the winner by scores of 80-71 twice and 79-72.

“I’m so happy. I could have done much more,” said Hiruta through interpreter Yuriko Miyata. “I wanted to do more things that Manny Robles taught me.”

Trinidad Wins Too

Omar Trinidad (18-0-1, 13 KOs) discovered that challenger Mike Plania (31-5, 18 KOs) has a very good chin and staying power. But over 10 rounds Trinidad proved to be too fast and too busy for the Filipino challenger.

Immediately it was evident that the East L.A. featherweight was too quick and too busy for Plania who preferred a counter-puncher attack that never worked.

“He was strong,” said Trinidad. “He took everything.”

After 10 redundant rounds all three judges scored for Trinidad 100-90 twice and 99-91. He retains the WBC Continental Americas title.

Other Bouts

Ali Akhmedov (23-1, 17 KOs) blasted out Malcolm Jones (17-5-1) in less than two rounds. A dozen punches by Akhmedov forced referee Thomas Taylor to stop the super middleweight fight.

Iyana “Roxy” Verduzco (3-0) bloodied Lindsey Ellis in the first round and continued the speedy assault in the next two rounds. Referee Ray Corona saw enough and stopped the fight in favor of Verduzco at 1:34 of the third round.

Gloria Munguilla (7-1) and Brook Sibrian (5-2) lit up the boxing ring with a nonstop clash for eight rounds in their light flyweight fight. Munguilla proved effective with a slip-and-counter attack. Sibrian adjusted and made the fight closer in the last four rounds but all three judges favored Munguilla.

More Winners

Joshua Anton, Tayden Beltran, Adan Palma, and Alexander Gueche all won their bouts.

Photos credit: Al Applerose

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Avila Perspective, Chap. 309: 360 Promotions Opens with Trinidad, Mizuki and More

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Avila Perspective, Chap. 309: 360 Promotions Opens with Trinidad, Mizuki and More

Best wishes to the survivors of the Los Angeles wildfires that took place last week and are still ongoing in small locales.

Most of the heavy damage took place in the western part of L.A. near the ocean due to Santa Ana winds. Another very hot spot was in Altadena just north of the Rose Bowl. It was a horrific tragedy.

Hopefully the worst is over.

Pro boxing returns with 360 Boxing Promotions spotlighting East L.A.’s Omar Trinidad (17-0-1, 13 KOs) defending a regional featherweight title against Mike Plania (31-4, 18 KOs) on Friday, Jan. 17, at the Commerce Casino in Commerce, Calif.

“I’m the king of L.A. boxing and I’ll be ready to put on a show headlining again in the main event. This is my year, I’m ready to challenge and defeat any of the featherweight world champions,” said Trinidad.

UFC Fight Pass will stream the Hollywood Night fight card that includes a female world championship fight and other intriguing match-ups.

Tom Loeffler heads 360 Promotions and once again comes full force with a hot prospect in Trinidad. If you’re not familiar with Loeffler’s history of success, he introduced America to Oleksandr Usyk, Gennady “GGG” Golovkin and the brothers Wladimir and Vitaly Kltischko.

“We’ve got a wealth of international talent and local favorites to kick off our 2025 in grand style,” said Loeffler.

He knows talent.

Trinidad hails from the Boyle Heights area of East L.A. near the Los Angeles riverbed. Several fighters from the past came from that exact area including the first Golden Boy, Art Aragon.

Aragon was a huge gate attraction during the late 1940s until 1960. He was known as a lady’s man and dated several Hollywood starlets in his time. Though he never won a world title he did fight world champions Carmen Basilio, Jimmy Carter and Lauro Salas. He was more or less the king of the Olympic Auditorium and Los Angeles boxing during his career.

Other famous boxers from the Boyle Heights area were notorious gangster Mickey Cohen and former world champion Joey Olivo.

Can Trinidad reach world title status?

Facing Trinidad will be Filipino fighter Plania who’s knocked off a couple of prospects during his career including Joshua “Don’t Blink” Greer and Giovanni Gutierrez. The fighter from General Santos in the Philippines can crack and hold his own in the boxing ring.

It’s a very strong fight card and includes WBO world titlist Mizuki Hiruta of Japan who defends the super flyweight title against Mexican veteran Maribel Ramirez. It’s a tough matchup for Hiruta who makes her American debut. You can’t miss her with that pink hair and she has all the physical tools to make a splash in this country.

Mizukii Hiruta

Mizukii Hiruta

Two other female bouts are also planned, including light flyweight banger L.A.’s Gloria Munguilla (6-1) against Coachella’s Brook Sibrian (5-1) in a match set for six rounds. Both are talented fighters. Another female fight includes super featherweights Iyana “Right Hook Roxy” Verduzco (2-0) versus Lindsey Ellis (2-1) in another six-rounder. Ellis can crack with all her wins coming via knockout. Verduzco is a multi-national titlist as an amateur.

Others scheduled to perform are Ali Akhmedov, Joshua Anton, Adan Palma and more.

Doors open at 4:30 p.m.

Boxing and the Media

The sport of professional boxing is currently in flux. It’s always in flux but no matter what people may say or write, boxing will survive.

Whether you like Jake Paul or not, he proved boxing has worldwide appeal with monstrous success in his last show. He has media companies looking at the numbers and imagining what they can do with the sport.

Sure, UFC is negotiating a massive billion dollar deal with media companies, as is WWE, both are very similar in that they provide combat entertainment. You don’t need to know the champions because they really don’t matter. Its about the attractions.

Boxing is different. The good champions last and build a following that endures even beyond their careers a la Mike Tyson.

MMA can’t provide that longevity, but it does provide entertainment.

Currently, there is talk of establishing a boxing league again. It’s been done over and over but we shall see if it sticks this time.

Pro boxing is the true warrior’s path and that means a solo adventure. It’s a one-on-one sport and that appeals to people everywhere. It’s the oldest sport that can be traced to prehistoric times. You don’t need classes in Brazilian Jiujitsu, judo, kick boxing or wrestling. Just show up in a boxing gym and they can put you to work.

It’s a poor person’s path that can lead to better things and most importantly discipline.

Photos credit: Lina Baker

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Boxing Trainer Bob Santos Paid his Dues and is Reaping the Rewards

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Bob Santos, the 2022 Sports Illustrated and The Ring magazine Trainer of the Year, is a busy fellow. On Feb. 1, fighters under his tutelage will open and close the show on the four-bout main portion of the Prime Video PPV event at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. Jeison Rosario continues his comeback in the lid-lifter, opposing Jesus Ramos. In the finale, former Cuban amateur standout David Morrell will attempt to saddle David Benavidez with his first defeat. Both combatants in the main event have been chasing 168-pound kingpin Canelo Alvarez, but this bout will be contested for a piece of the light heavyweight title.

When the show is over, Santos will barely have time to exhale. Before the month is over, one will likely find him working the corner of Dainier Pero, Brian Mendoza, Elijah Garcia, and perhaps others.

Benavidez (29-0, 24 KOs) turned 28 last month. He is in the prime of his career. However, a lot of folk rate Morrell (11-0, 9 KOs) a very live dog. At last look, Benavidez was a consensus 7/4 (minus-175) favorite, a price that betokens a very competitive fight.

Bob Santos, needless to say, is confident that his guy can upset the odds. “I have worked with both,” he says. “It’s a tough fight for David Morrell, but he has more ways to victory because he’s less one-dimensional. He can go forward or fight going back and his foot speed is superior.”

Benavidez’s big edge, in the eyes of many, is his greater experience. He captured the vacant WBC 168-pound title at age 20, becoming the youngest super middleweight champion in history. As a pro, Benavidez has answered the bell for 148 rounds compared with only 54 for Morrell, but Bob Santos thinks this angle is largely irrelevant.

“Sure, I’d rather have pro experience than amateur experience,” he says, “but if you look at Benavidez’s record, he fought a lot of soft opponents when he was climbing the ladder.”

True. Benavidez, who turned pro at age 16, had his first seven fights in Mexico against a motley assortment of opponents. His first bout on U.S. soil occurred in his native Pheonix against an opponent with a 1-6-2 record.

While it’s certainly true that Morrell, 26, has yet to fight an opponent the caliber of Caleb Plant, he took up boxing at roughly the same tender age as Benavidez and earned his spurs in the vaunted Cuban amateur system, eventually defeating elite amateurs in international tournaments.

“If you look at his [pro] record, you will notice that [Morrell] has hardly lost a round,” says Santos of the fighter who captured an interim title in only his third professional bout with a 12-round decision over Guyanese veteran Lennox Allen.

Bob Santos is something of a late bloomer. He was around boxing for a long time, assisting such notables as Joe Goossen, Emanuel Steward, and Ronnie Shields before becoming recognized as one of the sport’s top trainers.

A native of San Jose, he grew up in a Hispanic neighborhood but not in a household where Spanish was spoken. “I know enough now to get by,” he says modestly. He attended James Lick High School whose most famous alumnus is Heisman winning and Super Bowl winning quarterback Jim Plunkett. “We worked in the same apricot orchard when we were kids,” says Santos. “Not at the same time, but in the same field.”

After graduation, he followed his father’s footsteps into construction work, but boxing was always beckoning. A cousin, the late Luis Molina, represented the U.S. as a lightweight in the 1956 Melbourne Summer Olympics, and was good enough as a pro to appear in a main event at Madison Square Garden where he lost a narrow decision to the notorious Puerto Rican hothead Frankie Narvaez, a future world title challenger.

Santos’ cousin was a big draw in San Jose in an era when the San Jose / Sacramento territory was the bailiwick of Don Chargin. “Don was a beautiful man and his wife Lorraine was even nicer,” says Santos of the husband/wife promotion team who are enshrined in the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Don Chargin was inducted in 2001 and Lorraine posthumously in 2018.

Chargin promoted Fresno-based featherweight Hector Lizarraga who captured the IBF title in 1997. Lizarraga turned his career around after a 5-7-3 start when he hooked up with San Jose gym operator Miguel Jara. It was one of the most successful reclamation projects in boxing history and Bob Santos played a part in it.

Bob hopes to accomplish the same turnaround with Jeison Rosario whose career was on the skids when Santos got involved. In his most recent start, Rosario held heavily favored Jarrett Hurd to a draw in a battle between former IBF 154-pound champions on a ProBox card in Florida.

“I consider that one of my greatest achievements,” says Santos, noting that Rosario was stopped four times and effectively out of action for two years before resuming his career and is now on the cusp of earning another title shot.

The boxer with whom Santos is most closely identified is former four-division world title-holder Robert “The Ghost” Guerrero. The slick southpaw, the pride of Gilroy, California, the self-proclaimed “Garlic Capital of the World,” retired following a bad loss to Omar Figueroa Jr, but had second thoughts and is currently riding a six-fight winning streak. “I’ve known him since he was 15 years old,” notes Santos.

Years from now, Santos may be more closely identified with the Pero brothers, Dainier and Lenier, who aspire to be the Cuban-American version of the Klitschko brothers.

Santos describes Dainier, one of the youngest members of Cuba’s Olympic Team in Tokyo, as a bigger version of Oleksandr Usyk. That may be stretching it, but Dainier (10-0, 8 KOs as a pro), certainly hits harder.

Dainier Pero

Dainier Pero

This reporter was a fly on the wall as Santos put Dainier Pero through his paces on Tuesday (Jan. 14) at Bones Adams gym in Las Vegas. Santos held tight to a punch shield, in the boxing vernacular a donut, as the Cuban practiced his punches. On several occasions the trainer was knocked off-balance and the expression on his face as his body absorbed some of the after-shocks, plainly said, “My goodness, what the hell am I doing here? There has to be an easier way to make a living.” It was an assignment that Santos would have undoubtedly preferred handing off to his young assistant, his son Joe Santos, but Joe was preoccupied coordinating David Morrell’s camp.

Dainer’s brother Lenier is also an ex-Olympian, and like Dainier was a super heavyweight by trade as an amateur. With an 11-0 (8 KOs) record, Lenier Pero’s pro career was on a parallel path until stalled by a managerial dispute. Lenier last fought in March of last year and Santos says he will soon join his brother in Las Vegas.

There’s little to choose between the Pero brothers, but Dainier is considered to have the bigger upside because at age 25 he is the younger sibling by seven years.

Bob Santos was in the running again this year for The Ring magazine’s Trainer of the Year, one of six nominees for the honor that was bestowed upon his good friend Robert Garcia. Considering the way that Santos’ career is going, it’s a safe bet that he will be showered with many more accolades in the years to come.

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