May 30, 2006

Cha-cha or rhumba

Pacquiao-Larios tango
by Hermie Rivera

Less than a month into the fight, Manny Pacquiao and Oscar Larios have started beating up their sparmates as they stepped up work for their July 2 slugfest at the Araneta Coliseum.

Pacquiao this early has been installed by the bookmakers as a heavy favorite owing to his ability to make sense of what he sees atop the ring anytime he fights. But Larios himself is not an easy out.

As we go into the so-called stretch ,essential aspects of the promotion such as ticket outlet locations and the like remain a guarded secret while inquiring minds want to know who is the real promoter of this mano a mano.

Pacquiao hasn’t really had a bona fide promoter since Murad Muhammad and Gary Shaw were removed from the scene

I gather that promotional activities are being handled by Manny’s managers, Shelly Finkel and Nick Khan, when they pulled together with Manny, a $4,000,000 package from ABS-CBN.

Question — Will Finkel and Khan be delivering the undercard, paying production costs, and making ancillary deals? If so, they could be running afoul of the Muhammad Ali Boxing Reform Act — 15 U.S.C. Section 6308 which provides:

(b) Firewall between promoters and managers
(1) In general, it is unlawful for:
(A) a promoter to have a direct or indirect financial
interest in the management of a boxer; or
(B) a manager -
(i) to have a direct or indirect financial interest in the
promotion of a boxer; or
(ii) to be employed by or receive compensation or other
benefits from a promoter, except for amounts received as
consideration under the manager’s contract with the boxer.

Manny has formed his own promotional company right?

Just what role will this company play in the promotion and who are the principals in charge? Will Finkel and Kahn use Pacquiao Promotions as a veil to shield their promotional activities? How will Finkel, Khan, Pacquiao Promotions and ABS-CBN operate? The roles are blurred — maybe purposely so — but it would be interesting to know “who’s on first?”

While we await for answers, may I suggest the immediate adoption or a strengthened version of the Muhammad Ali Act to help fighters who have been victimized by unscrupulous promoters and managers.

Our lawmaking officials can enact one if they so desire assuming they aren’t into something mischievious such as coup d’ etats or charter change.

Filed under Boxing by Hermie Rivera.
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May 25, 2006

Louie Espinosa and a science he once called sweet

Percy D. Della

Sacramento - How’ s the new job? I asked with the subtlety of a
sledgehammer.

The voice on the other end of the line paused for breath.

To keep the edge off my query, I segued into something mundane.

But Luisito Espinosa was his usual cool dude. “Everything’s fine and dandy, sir,” he responded in Pilipino.

From a two-time world boxing champion to a stocker for giant retail chain Costco.

If that’s not a radical job switch what is. A sea change is more like it.

Yet, leave it to a real champion like Luisito to give everything a positive spin.

“I work alongside buddies. I am finally experiencing what working life in America is about” said Louie, pride brimming in his voice.

Louie now favors work gloves for the usual boxing gloves. He has traded the groin cup for a back brace.

He still wakes up in the wee hours– not to jog but to drive or catch the bus for the short workday commute from San Francisco to Daly City.

As a new employee at Costco, he works the unholy 4 a.m. shift. He helps keep the store filled to the ceiling before the doors swing open for wholesalers and then the retail shoppers.

He has not said so publicly, but Luisito appears to have let go of his hold on a science he once called sweet.

At 39 and pushing 40, he has come to grips with age.

The trigger for his change of heart seems to be the sympathetic action — I call it a gesture by the California Athletic Commission.

The commission is unwilling to license Louie again — lest he suffers
more heart-rending losses to upstarts out to carve a name at the
expense of a future Hall of Famer.

Luisito was a constant source of pride for Filipinos when he ruled both the bantamweight and featherweight boxing classes - one of only seven fighters to don dual world crowns.

He once said that he’ll hang it up once the hard-earned $150,000 purse from a championship fight in South Cotabato nine or 10 years ago and still owed him by absconding promoters - “is stashed in my children’s bank.”

Hermie Rivera, Louie’s former manager had filed a civil suit to collect the purse. But the case had been in legal limbo for years.

The judge assigned to hear the case has outrageously taken the longest time deliberating whether to inhibit or to rule.

Louie has written President Arroyo about his plight. He even sought current boxing hero Manny Pacquiao’s help.

His pleas have fallen on deaf ears.

Ironically, Uncle Sam had finally granted Louie a green card after
years of waiting. At long last, he can find work outside his special skills of beak busting.

The Costco job is a start.

” I am serious about my job because I need to save for my family,” he stressed.

With wife Marie Cherie now living on her own in Las Vegas, Louie keeps family ties with his young children Janica, Niko and John Louie. The kids are in the care of his mother-in-law in Manila.

“It is important that my kids know that I still love them and that my hard work is for their well-being.”

Filed under Boxing by Hermie Rivera.
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May 21, 2006

Boxing RP Style

‘LITTLE BROWN DOLLS’

A gallery of Filipino world boxing champs

By JACK FISKE and HERMIE RIVERA

THEY were called “little brown dolls,” but how they could fight!
Twenty-seven world champions enshrined in the record books since the early ‘20s attest to the ability, speed, courage and flash of Filipino fighters, who campaigned mainly in the lower weight classes.

If there was a boxing resurgence in the Islands today, plus another steady stream of small ringmen to the States, the problems of American matchmakers and promoters would diminish.

Filipino fans still heatedly debate the relative merits of Pancho Villa, Ceferino Garcia, Flash Elorde, Ben Villaflor and Luisito Espinosa–the only Filipino to win the world bantamweight and featherweight titles– as to who was the best to come out of the Philippines. But, there are plenty more names to go around.

The old timers swear by Villa, the first ever Filipino to win a world title by a shocking knockout — no less — of incomparable flyweight champion Jimmy Wilde of England, the Mighty Atom, in Madison Square Garden in 1923.

Necessary credentials

Garcia, who held the middleweight crown in a career that spanned 1927-1944; Elorde, a junior lightweight champion and twice an unsuccessful challenger for the lightweight title; and more recently Espinosa, have the necessary credentials and adherents who loudly clarion their merits to be number one.

It all began with Frank Churchill, an American who migrated to Manila after World War 1 and struck it rich. What Churchill discovered was not gold but “little brown dolls,” Filipino fighters who were the Islands’ greatest sports heroes.

Churchill, a US Customs House clerk turned pugilistic entrepreneur exported the virtually untapped vein of talent to, first, Honolulu and then the United States and American fans eagerly paid to enjoy their quick moves, ringmanship and courage.

If there was one minus factor in the imported performer, it was a lack of punch, but it mattered not to the rabid fans who appreciated their boxing skills, speed and grit.

Knowledgeable

The Filipino fight fan is knowledgeable, behaves ideally, understands what he sees and at the same time will not hesitate to slow clap or boo a renowned fighter’s poor performance and demand he not be permitted to appear again.

California –particularly the San Francisco Bay Area – became the land of opportunity for the (mostly) flyweights and bantamweights.

San Jose, Stockton, Bakersfield, Watsonville, Oakland Sacramento, San Francisco and Modesto became second homes for the itinerant warriors who fought as often as once a week, usually against Mexicans and other groups of impoverished immigrants.

Opportunistic promoters were eager to utilize the little men who attracted big crowds of Filipino farm laborers from the California Valley and Delta towns. Saturday night concluded a week of labor in the fields and what better recreation and release than to swarm to the local arena to cheer on a fellow countryman.

World began to hear

Soon, championship opportunities followed for the most adept. The world begun to hear about Villa, Small Montana, Little Dado, Pete Sarmiento, Clever Sencio and Speed Cabanela and Ceferino Garcia among others. Later Leo Espinosa and Flashy Sebastian came into prominence.

The ill-fated Villa (Francisco Guilledo) called the second best flyweight of all time (after Wilde) by Ring Magazine authority Nat Fleischer, died in San Francisco in 1925 from an ulcerated tooth ten days after losing a non-title match in Oakland to Jimmy Mclarnin. He had 105 registered bouts and a record ( 88-9-5 and 22) knockouts with three no contests. His knockout of Wilde put the Philippines on the boxing map.

Elorde, the hero of the modern day Filipino fan came to San Francisco in 1956 after beating world featherweight champion Sandy Saddler in a non-title 10 in Manila. They were rematched in the San Francisco Cow Palace for the title and after Elorde had piled up an early lead he became the target of Saddler’s elbows and ugly tactics on a damaged eye and finally was a TKO victim in the late rounds.

Elorde’s reign

He went on to capture the world 130-pound title, was twice repulsed by Carlos Ortiz for the world lightweight crown on 14th-round stoppages. Gabriel Elorde who died in 1985 in Manila, fought 11 times in Northern California and three times in New York City, finished with a record of 88-25-2 with 34 knockouts from 1951 through 1971.

He won the 130-pound title from Harold Gomes in Quezon City by a seventh round KO and repeated with a first round stoppage in San Francisco in the rematch in 1960 and successfully defended 10 times.

A “big man” by Filipino standards, was 160-pounder Garcia (95-26-9 with 65 KO’s) who won his title from Fred Apostoli in New York in 1939. During a career that spanned (1927-1944,) Ceferino,noted for his so-called bolo punch later adopted by Cuban Kid Gavilan –defended his title successfully against Henry Armstrong in Los Angeles in 1940 with a highly disputed draw that prevented Armstrong from becoming the holder of four world titles. Garcia died in San Diego in 1981 at age 75.

Villaflor (35-4-6, 20 KO’s) decisioned Alfred Marcano in 1972 and after losing the title to Kuniaki Shibata regained it seven months later and overall, successfully defended it six times.

Small Montana (Benjamin L. Gan) from Negros, campaigned from 1931 to 1941, moved permanently to Northern California and became a merchant seaman after retiring from the ring. In 1935 Montana beat Midget Wolgast for the New York Version of the world flyweight title and lost it Benny Lynch in London two years later. His 111 total bouts include 79 wins, 22 losses and ten draws with 10 knockouts.

Recent champions

Little Dado (Elevetero Zapanta fought 36 times in Northern California in an 11-year career, beating Small Montana in 1938 for the California-recognized world flyweight crown and finished with a 51-7-11, 2 no-contest record including 20 knockouts.

Other notables who became titleholders were Luisito Espinosa who knocked out Kaokor Galaxy of Thailand in one round in 1989 in Bangkok to win the WBA 118 pound title and had two successful title defenses before losing the title to Israel Contreras of Venezuela in 1992.

After the loss of his bantamweight tiara, Luisito won the WBC featherweight crown with a devastating kayo of Alejandro ‘Cobrita’ Gonzalez in Guadalajara but lost it in a controversial rematch with Cesar Soto in El Paso.

Morris East (15-3-0) gained the WBC junior. welterweight diadem in an 11th round KO of Nobutushi Hiranaka in Tokyo. East at 20, became the youngest Filipino to win a world championship. He lost his title to Juan Martin Coggi of Argentina in his first defense, January 1993.

Other world champions from the Islands include Roberto Cruz, Pedro Adigue, Rene Barrientos, Bernabe Villacampo, Erbito Salavarria, Rolando Navarette, Frank Cedeno, Dodie Penalosa, Eric Chaves, Tacy Macalos, Bobby Berna, Rolando Pascua, Rolando Bohol, Gerry Penalosa, Malcolm Tunacao, Joma Gamboa and Manny Melchor.

Title challengers but not champions, include Socrates Batoto, Dommy Ursua, Johnny Sato, Fel Clemente, Danny Kidd, Arnel Arozal, Miguel Arozal, Pretty Boy Lucas, Fernando Lumacad, Johnny Jamito, Tirso del Rosario, Aniceto Vargas, Rod Sequinan, Juanito Rubillar, Noel Tunacao, Eric Jamili, Wendell Janiola and Rodel Mayol

Filipino fighters can fight. Don’t be misled by the ‘20s description of “little brown dolls,”

Greatest boxing spectacle

With such a rich boxing heritage, it is surprising that the amateur program in the Philippines has not kept pace with the professionals. Two silvers (featherweight Anthony Villanueva in Tokyo and light flyweight Mansueto Velasco in Atlanta ) and four bronze are the only Olympic medal winners from the Philippines.

Dado Marino and Jesus Salud who both won world titles as residents of Honolulu were born in the Philippines but migrated at an early age. And so is the rage in the WBC light flyweight division– Brian Viloria– who was born in Honolulu but now fights for his native Philippines.

The hottest draw is Manny Pacquiao who continue to waylay the opposition in the super featherweight category . He was a flyweight as well as a super-bantamweight world champion before campaigning in his current weight class.

Give the Filipino a fight worthy of attendance and he will show up despite his lack of allegiance to either boxer.

The greatest boxing spectacle ever in the Philippines was the 1975 “Thrilla in Manila,” between two Americans, heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali and challenger Joe Frazier. Araneta Coliseum, designed for 20,000 spectators was filled to capacity with 10,000 more standees.

(Hermie Rivera, a freelance sports chronicler managed world champions Luisito Espinosa and Morris East. Jack Fiske was the boxing columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle for 40 years. He was inducted in the Boxing Writers Hall of Fame in 2004).

Filed under Boxing by Hermie Rivera.
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“Noble exits from the noble art are just not the way of fighting men, particularly the men who have ruled boxing’s exalted dominion.” Brian Doogan Ring Magazine

How true!

While great ones quit when their call came, others refused to relinquish their hold on a science they call sweet. Some did it reluctantly while a few persisted in clinging to the last strands of the roped square.

There is now an ongoing refusal by Luisito Espinosa to recognize the reality of aging, a move that daggle the sport and it’s practitioners as well as its followers who have come to support it.

Once the country’s constant source of pride, Louie is resisting pressure to hand in the reins despite the need for it.

One of seven dual world champions (bantamweight and featherweight crowns) Luisito is now feeling the tiredness of a lifetime spent bustin’ beak and noggins.

He remain upbeat he still can find one who can book him a fight. But I suppose there would’nt be offers to choose from even for an adios fight.

Fact is, he may no longer be able to come back owing to a string of heart-rending losses administered by upstarts out to carve a name at his expense.

Once, the hall of fame candidate who owns an obsessive ability to bounce back from setbacks did offer to hang it in.

But the Tondo-born ringmaster had to forego such plan as he stroved to raise the wherewithal for his kids; training yuppies and stocking stores to make ends meet. .

Frankly, he is driven to extremes since the money owed him by his absconding promoters is not forthcoming.

In a rare admission after his recent stoppage, Luisito, admitted, he’ll call it a day once his hard-earned prize money “is stashed in my children’s bank.”

I do indeed feel for him. I’ve not been unflagging in lending my assistance.

But the case we filed to collect his purse has been in legal limbo for about a decade already while the hearing judge takes her time deliberating whether to inhibit or to rule.

Just rule Judge.

To archive it would not just be cruel.

It would deprive Luisito his only way out of the fistic jungle he’s mired in.

Filed under Boxing by Hermie Rivera.
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