3/10/07 - Jim Amato

If There's A Barry, Then Where's Danny ?
By Jim Amato

Sorry...I just could not get over this one. I tried but but I could not come to terms with it. When it was first announced that Barry McGuigan was being inducted into the International Boxing Hall Of Fame in Canastota, New York in 2005 I was a bit surprised. Obviously to me there were more deserving potential inductees. Then it hit me. Hit me like a ton of bricks. How could McGuigan be inducted while Danny "Little Red" Lopez is still on the outside looking in ?
This is not a personal vendetta against Barry McGuigan. He was exciting and popular. He seems like a fine chap but his career accomplishments do not merit inclusion among the greatest fighters of all time. That is what a Hall Of Fame is supposed to represent. Lately I am begining to question the I.B.H.O.F. election process. What is the criteria for induction ? How could McGuigan be voted in before Danny Lopez ?
McGuigan beat an aging great in Eusebio Pedroza. He defended against decent challengers Bernard Taylor and Danilo Cabrera and then he lost his title to Stevie Cruz. Barry was never a major player again. Truth be told it is very likely that he was not even the best featherweight in the world while he held his piece of the title. Azumah Nelson was held in higher regard and although Azumah pursued a match with Barry it never came to pass. Too bad, it could have been a thriller.
Now let's look at the career of Danny Lopez. He won his first twenty three fights leading to showdown with West Coast rival Bobby Chacon. Danny was halted in nine rounds. In less the nine months he lost two more times to Shig Fukuyama and Octavio Gomez. Then Danny turned things around. He reeled off seven straight victories. All by knockout ! Former champion ChuChu Castillo KO-2, veteran contender Raul Cruz KO-6, Antonio Nava KO-6, the great Ruben Olivares KO-7, future lightweight champion Sean O'Grady KO-4. Then came a return match with Octavio Gomez who he destroyed in three rounds. Then he battered the rugged Art Hafey into submission in seven rounds. That was quite a run and it qualified him for a shot at W.B.C. featherweight champion David Kotey. To get his crack at Kotey, Danny had to meet him in his home country of Ghana. It did not matter to Danny who walked away with a decision and the title.
Now Danny would make eight successful defenses of the title. He stopped Kotey in a rematch. He blasted out Roberto Castanon in two rounds. He fought the 1979 Fight Of The Year halting the dead game Mike Ayala in the fifteenth and final round of a true thriller. Eventually he lost the title to a virtual unknown named Salvador Sanchez. Danny would fail in an attempt to regain the title from Sanchez and then retire. Before his tragic death August 12, 1982, Sanchez would forge a legend.
Danny lost his crown to a legend, Barry lost his to Stevie Cruz who does not have nearly the same stature as a Salvador Sanchez. I just don't see the justice here. Maybe the I.B.H.O.F needs to revise and restructure their election procedure. Only the best, the ABSOLUTE best should be enshrined.



MARCH 8, 1971...THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH

By Jim Amato

There are certain dates that will stick with you as long as you live. Your birthday, the birthdays of family members, anniversaries, the day that you got your divorce ( s ), etc...Happy and important days that mark milestones in your life.

One such date I'll always remember is March 8, 1971. The " Battle Of The Century ", it was so aptly named. Two undefeated boxers who each had a legitimate claim to being the heavyweight champion of the world would collide. When Muhammad Ali first won the title in 1964 his name was Cassius Clay. He would shortly thereafter change his name and then proceed to change the face of boxing. He dominated the scene until 1967 when he refused induction into the US Military due to his religious beliefs. Then came the Eight Man Elimination Tourney that was won by Jimmy Ellis. The powerful New York State Athletic Commission would recognize the winner of a match up between unbeaten boxers Joe Frazier and Buster Mathis. A bout in which Joe won. In 1970 Frazier stopped Ellis to claim the vacated title. Later that year Muhammad Ali returned to ring wars and halted highly ranked contenders Jerry Quarry and Oscar Bonavena. The stage was now set. Ali and Frazier would clash for the undisputed title.

The first Ali - Frazier bout was the epic that all others are compared to, even today. There is no reason in this article to describe the bout itself. Reams of print have appeared documenting the action that took place in the ring that magical night. What I would like to share is the impact that fight on me and probably millions of others. I have never before or since March 8, 1971 felt the same way about a prize fight. Yes there were a few that stirred my anticipation like Duran-DeJesus II and III, Leonard-Duran I, Leonard-Hearns I, Pryor-Arguello I, Hagler-Hearns and Leonard-Hagler. Still to this day Ali - Frazier I tops them all.

Was Ali - Frazier I the best action fight of all time ? I would have to say no but for sheer anticipation, drama and excitement, this fight was the whole package. You had movie star Burt Lancaster as a commentator and Frank Sinatra as a photographer. Each boxer would receive $ 2.5 million for their nights work. That was an unheard sum of money for one fight in 1971.

I have never been so wound up with anticipation for a boxing match in my life. I was a few months shy of my seventeenth birthday and had been a boxing fan from the time I was ten.I had closely followed all the events leading up this day in boxing history.

On fight night I was at a party and we gathered around the radio listening to the round by round summary. We were pretty much split on the outcome of the fight but almost all of us were rooting for " Smokin' Joe ". From the round by round reports we could sense that this was a bout with shifting momentums. The ever proud Ali realized that Joe had come to fight this evening. Maybe Ali took Frazier too lightly. Maybe Muhammad rushed too soon to get back in the ring after his lengthy layoff. Maybe, just maybe the Joe Frazier of March 8, 1971 was one of the greatest heavyweights of all time. I've never seen a boxer who laid it all out for one fight like Joe did that night. You've heard it said that a boxer would rather die then be defeated. On this night Joe would have died a hundred deaths before giving in to Ali.

Round after round went by and as we listened to the radio. In the eleventh Frazier rocked Ali and we as a collective group cheered. Even the ones who had bet on Ali to win. As the bout moved into the " championship " rounds, we were all on the edge of our seats. Then it happened. It was announced on the radio the Joe had decked Ali in the fifteenth round. More cheering and now the wait. Finally it was time to render the decision. The winner and still heavyweight champion of the world...Joe Frazier !

Oh what a night. Thirty six years later I can remember it like it was yesterday. Ali, Frazier, my friends and myself are now entering the twilight of our lives. Still when I think of that night it takes me back to my youth and to the ultimate excitement that probably the greatest single sporting event of all time brought me. Thanks Joe and Muhammad.

jimsboxing@zoominternet.net

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