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By
Joe Rein
Most everybody on
a boxing board like this thinks fighters are a
tough, tough breed; they don't have the same
feelings we do. They live in the land of Macho.
Maybe this story shows we're more alike than you'd
imagine.
I used to train
at Stillman's with a really rugged pro middleweight
who was undefeated in over 20 fights, and people
were starting to talk about him as a possible
contender.
He had a walk-in,
crowd-pleasing style, and he idolized Carmen
Basilio, who was also handled by his manager,
Al Braverman. Every opportunity he got, he asked
Braverman to introduce him to Basilio.
Well, the fighter
wound up on the undercard of one of Basilio's fights
in Syracuse. And he begged Braverman again to meet
Carmen. So, Braverman arranged it, and Carmen said
hello, shook his hand, and wished him luck.
When Basilio
walked away, the fighter turned to Braverman: "I'm
not gonna look like him, am I?"
****
The picture
RAGING BULL doesn't begin to give you a hint of how
volcanic and homicidal Jake LaMotta's rages
were. Anything would set him off. Any time. Any
place.
He was capable of
murder...and the worst bad guys wanted no part of
him.
But when LaMotta
left the ring and he went into show business, he had
to keep a tight rein on that temper. And he was
tested daily.
These two
incidents should give you some idea:
When LaMotta
stopped fighting, he began to get work in films as a
character heavy. He took it seriously and wanted to
be as good an actor as he was a fighter. So, he
enrolled in John Cassevettes' Theatre Workshop in
New York, and did scenes to perfect his craft.
One day, I went
to watch him, and he was on the stage doing some
Tennessee Williams' monologue. It was curious
listening to those poetic lines coming out of
LaMotta's mouth-- half cement truck and all Bronx.
While LaMotta was
walking the stage reciting his lines, a young,
slight actor, who had no idea who LaMotta was,
jumped on the stage and said to Jake -- much too
loudly, "Your rehearsal time is over! It's my time
now! Get off the stage!"
LaMotta said
softly, Ill just be a minute"
The kid, wanting
to be an intense dramatic actor, stepped closer to
LaMotta: "No. Now! Get off!"
LaMotta said,
"But... And the kid interrupted him and SLAPPED Jake
LaMotta in the face, and said," NOW!"
LaMotta just
looked at him, like a Great White Shark poised above
chum... and said ever so gently, "Don't do that,"
and walked off the stage.
That actor had no
idea how abruptly his career almost came to an
end.
****
On another
occasion, I was in PJ Clarke's, a bar on the
Eastside of New York for the sports world, the media
and show biz. LaMotta could be found at the bar
daily in the afternoon with his long-time friend
Pete, who wrote RAGING BULL.
LaMotta was
relaxing with his back against the bar with his
trademark cigar in his mouth. In through the front
door comes a sweaty little guy in a cheap suit, and
he lights up when he sees LaMotta, and heads right
for him.
Mr. Cheap Suit
stands in front of LaMotta, regaling him, and all in
the bar, with how he saw Jake the night he knocked
some guy out in New Orleans, demonstrating by wind
milling punches furiously in the air...much too
close to LaMotta's face.
LaMotta doesn't
move a muscle or change expression. The guy's swings
are an eyelash away from him.
And, sure enough,
one lands flush on the cigar and flattens it against
LaMotta's face, like a character in a cartoon.
All LaMotta can
do...after a long pause, is look heavenward: "Why
me?"
***
Just
thinking of Willie Pep brings a smile; he was
a floorshow every place he went.
He
wanted to laugh and would stop at nothing to break
everybody else up. He always had all of us in the
gym in stitches. He'd rib us and make us feel like
he was just one of the boys. With his
Graziano slouch and pork-pie hat, he was better able
to carry that off goofing on a street corner but
never in the ring.
When
Pep was at Stillman's, you could count on practical
jokes and a florid Lou Stillman. But, he
could do all of that because he was a dream in the
ring. It was almost a religious experience watching
him.
But he
took nothing serious. NOTHING. He came to the gym
mostly, I think, to have a good time. It was like
an extension of being at the track or playing
cards.
Pep
never learned anything; it was all God given. His
feet didn't touch the ground and he was all but
invisible.
And,
that 's the Pep I'd always seen at the height of his
career.
After
he hung up the gloves, briefly, he tried his hand at
training.
I was
once was in the
5th St. Gym in
Miami
and Pep was in the corner of a big, beefy
heavyweight.
Pep
was screaming at the heavyweight from the ring
apron, and getting red in the face. This wasn't
stand-up comic Willie: this was more like Vince
Lombardi or Mike Ditka.
When
the round ended, Pep went berserk and attacked his
own fighter. He was screaming at him, punching him,
whipping him with his pork-pie hat, kicking him in
shins; he had to be dragged off him.
Pep
just couldn't get it in his head that what he did,
as natural as breathing, nobody else could.
***
In the mid 50's,
Cleveland Williams was considered one of the
hardest hitting heavyweights in the world...and a
MONSTER.
And, none of that
did him justice. The only thing he was missing was
the big red "S" on his chest.
He was a walking
anatomy chart, and we're talking here when he was at
his best, before he got shot.
Willie Pep was in
the waning days of his career, but still had more
than enough in his tank to run rings around most
anybody. But he was only doing it now for the
"walking around money."
Willie was
"Peck's bad boy", with a twinkle in his eye and no
muscle tone at all. Most fighters look bigger in
trunks; he looked smaller.
The 5th St. Gym
in Miami was not a large place, so Williams and Pep
had to train and do their floor exercises almost
side by side.
The gym rats kept
trying to stoke Willie's ego:
" Willie, You
could kill that big bum! He'd never touch you."
"You'd make him
look like a jerk, Willie And, it went on and on
like that for weeks.
There was no way
that Williams didn't hear it.... And he was nine
feet tall, so it started to get under his skin. And
if it was possible, he even looked meaner.
One day when all
those guys were really egging Pep on:
"You could kick
his ass, Willie"
"You'd make him
look like fool, Willie!"
Pep just turned
to them: "All I can tell you is: I'd hate to have
him hang his hammer on me!"
To which,
Williams burst out laughing.
***
When I was a
youngster, my dad took me to Jack Dempsey's
Restaurant on Broadway in New York.
It was a
landmark...a fixture... but no longer there. (I hate
progress)
There was Dempsey
sitting in a booth at a window table signing
autographs.
My dad took me in
to meet him.
Dempsey looked at
me for a moment, bent down and challenged me: "Put
up your dukes!" I jumped into a stance, and Dempsey
did likewise, rolling those HUGE fists right in
front of my eyes.
Then he broke
into a broad grin, grabbed me up with one arm and
ruffled my hair.
Till this day, I
can still see that legend face -- big as a monument
-- right up next to
me.
***
When
Roberto Duran was training to fight Carlos
Palomino at Madison Square Garden, he worked out
at Howard Albert's gym, an old factory loft in the
Garment Center, just a few blocks from the new
Garden.
It was
summertime, and sweltering, and every Latino worker
in the garment area-- and their families-- would go
to watch their hero train at lunchtime.
The
gym was like a steam room, and jammed cheek-to-jowl
with the adoring. . They pressed so close; they
barely left Duran enough room to do his floor
exercises. And then he went into the ring to shadow
box.
Spanning what looked like a crowded subway, you
could see chests swell and faces full of pride.
Plump mothers holding babies in their arms stood
right at the ring apron, while their little ones
looked up saucer-eyed at this god.
In the
midst of all of this, somebody in the
back--unbelievably! -- kept yelling at Duran in
Spanish: "PIPINO CUEVAS WILL KILL YOU!
Duran
paid him no mind and continued to shadow box. But
the heckler was relentless: "PIPINO CUEVAS WILL
KILL YOU! "PIPINO CUEVAS WILL KILL YOU!
Finally, Duran fixed a glare at him, stretched as
far over the ropes as he could -- just above the
glowing faces of mothers and infants -- and yanked
down his trunks, grabbed his nuts, and roared in
Spanish: "PIPINO CUEVAS CAN SUCK MY COCK!
***
In the early
70's, Duran was the terror of the lightweight
division. Nobody in their right mind would get in
there with him without a whip, a chair and a gun.
There was a
really a talented Puerto Rican boxer who trained at
the Gramercy Gym named Edwin Viruet, but he
wasn't big hitter, and he got a chance to fight
Duran.
Viruet couldn't
punch, but he also had no nerves. The reality of
facing Duran didn't bother him one bit. If they took
his pulse, I'm sure it wouldn't have registered a
blip.
Fight night,
everybody was prepared to see Duran butcher Viruet.
Or at least: a panicked fighter running for his
life.
But, Viruet did
the unthinkable, he made fun of Duran, he made faces
at him, he taunted him, he stuck his tongue out at
him, he punched behind his back in clinches. Vintage
Jorge Paez.
The fans loved it
and howled with laughter; Viruet was making Duran
look like a fool. And Duran got more crazed. He
didn't just want to kill Viruet; he wanted to
dismember him.
Duran was winning
handily, but by the 10th round, everybody was
chanting for Viruet's courage. One guy yelled out
with admiration: "HE DOESN'T KNOW THE MEANING OF THE
WORD FEAR!" Somebody else shot back: "...OR CAT OR
DOG!"
***
When I was in
London years ago, Henry Cooper, the former
British and European heavyweight king, told me a
very funny story:
Cooper was
training for Ali, and he and two of his huge
sparring partners, Joe Bygraves and Joe
Erskine, were in a lorry driving some place.
They were laughing and having such a good time,
Cooper wasn't paying as close attention to traffic
as he should have and he cut a driver off.
At the light,
this scrawny little civil-servant type jumped out
his car, livid, and raced over to Cooper's window
and screamed at him.
Cooper tried to
apologize, but the guy was having none of it... and,
suddenly slapped Cooper in the face.
With that, the
doors of the lorry flew open and Cooper and the two
menacing sparring partners surrounded the little
guy. The little guy looked around a few times, then
said to Cooper: "YOU'RE LUCKY YOU'RE WITH YOUR
MATES!"
Cooper said they
all exploded with laughter and just got back in the
Lorry and drove off.
***
This was back in
New York at the old Gramercy Gym on 14th St.
I was sitting
ringside watching sparring and talking fights with
some of the other regulars, and another guy joined
the conversation and introduced himself as Harold
Green.
Harold Green was
a helluva middleweight from the 40s, who beat
Rocky Graziano twice.
As soon as one of
the guys heard him say: Harold Green, he was all
over him with questions. He wanted to know every
detail of what it was like facing Graziano. Was
Graziano as hard a puncher as everyone said? Did
Graziano every hurt him? And on and on and on...
The guy couldn't
have been nicer; he spent about two hours answering
every question before he had to leave. The guy that
was asking the questions was Harold Green.
Questions? Comments?
Contact me at
johngarfield@fightworld.us
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