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Rocco Marchegiano (September 1, 1924 - August
31, 1969), better known as Rocky Marciano, was a boxer who holds the
distinction of being the only Heavyweight Champion of the World to retire
undefeated.
Marciano had to fight practically since the start of his life. He contracted
pneumonia when he was one year old, and he almost didn't survive. But
Marciano was a strong baby, and he was able to overcome that infection.
Marciano was a chubby kid with strong arms as a pre-teen, but he benefitted
from living next to a park. He used to go to the James Edgar Playground to
play baseball every day, and he would hit ball-after-ball and then go pick
the balls up. After that, he'd go home to lift some homemade weightlifting
equipment. It was during this time of his life that Marciano grew
responsibility for proper, everyday sports training.
Rocky at the time used a stuffed mail bag that hung from a tree in his
backyard as a punching bag. He and his friends would use it, and if it was
hot, they'd race for a drink of water at a local soda fountain afterward.
Because it was widely known that Rocky had an interest in boxing, he would
get involved in street fights as a teenager more than the average kid. But
Rocky wanted to be a baseball player, not a boxer. So he also became famous
for his potential as a possible major league star. During this time also,
Rocky developed an interest in aviation.
When Rocky was fifteen, he entered Brockton High School and made the
football team. Legend has it that center Rocky once intercepted a pass and
ran 60 yards with the ball to score a touchdown.
He also made the school's baseball team as a catcher, but was told he was
slow and moved to right field. Shortly after, Rocky joined a church league,
violating a school rule that players could not join other teams. Cut from
his school's team, Rocky felt frustrated and started cutting class and later
on, dropped out completely.
Rocky had been urged by a teacher to attend a vocational center in Brockton,
and realized he had few working skills, so he decided to get a job as a shoe
salesman. Soon, Rocky found work as a chute man instead, on delivery trucks
for the Brockton Ice and Coal Company. Rocky hated working there; the job
was hard and filthy.
After World War II was over, shoe sales went up, and Rocky's father was able
to get him a shoe salesman job. Rocky enjoyed the many features of that job,
especially working with his father.
When Rocky was 20, he was called up by the US Army to serve in England.
However, the war was drawing to an end, and Rocky was flown back to the
States. After the Atomic bomb was dropped in Japan, Rocky waited to see if
the Army still would need him or if he'd be discharged.
While he was waiting, Rocky decided to take in an amateur boxing
competition, where he represented the Army and won. Upon being given a
month's furlough from the Army, Rocky went back home and bragged about his
newly found talent to his family and friends. It was his uncle who told him
about a boxer who was looking for an opponent, and that maybe Rocky should
try being this guy's opponent for a night. The boxer was Henry Lester, a
Golden Gloves champion. Rocky didn't seem to care that his opponent was an
award-winning amateur and took on Lester. Rocky was lucky it wasn't an
official bout because, according to people present, he was on his way to
defeat when he hit Lester in the groin and was disqualified. Rocky was so
embarrassed by this fight and the newspapers' accounts of it, that when he
went back to the military facilities, he cut out all the drinking, smoking,
and partying from his schedule and started concentrating solely on his
training habits.
His next big responsibility was the national AAU championships. Rocky won
his first two bouts there by knockouts in the first round, but by the third
bout, his knuckles were hurt, and he lost by decision for the championship.
His hand later required surgery because of the injuries, and the doctor who
performed the surgery, a Japanese friend of his, told him he would "never
make it as a Heavyweight".
Rocky by then was playing semi-pro baseball, and he was signed by the
Chicago Cubs to a minor league contract. But, while playing in a minor
league team, he heard his coach say that none of the players on his team
would ever make it to the big leagues. Rocky took this personally and soon
returned to Brockton, where he felt dejected by the whole baseball system
and started training with his sights set on becoming a professional boxer.
There, he met Allie Colombo, a man who put Rocky on a very strong training
regime.
On March 17, 1947, Rocky finally stepped into the ring as a professonal
competitor for the first time. That night, he beat Lee Epperson by a
knockout in three rounds. He won all his first sixteen bouts by knockout,
all but one before the fourth round, and nine before the first round was
over. On May 23, 1949, Don Mogard became the first boxer to last the
distance with The Rock, but Rocky won by decision.
He won three more by knockout, and then he met Ted Lowry who, according to
many scribes and witnesses, probably managed to take three or four of the
ten rounds away from Rocky. Nevertheless, Rocky kept his winning streak
alive by beating Lowry by decision. Four more knockout wins followed, and
then another hard-fought ten-round decision victory, over his future world
title challenger Roland LaStarza. He won three more knockouts in a row, and
then there was a rematch with Lowry. Marciano again won, by a unanimous
decision. After that, he won four more by knockout and, after a win in six
over Red Applegate, he was showcased on national TV for the first time, when
he knocked out Rex Layne in six rounds on July 12, 1951. One more win, and
he was again on national TV, this time against Joe Louis. In Louis' last
career bout, Marciano won by a knockout in the eighth round. After that
series of wins, Marciano was a ranked Heavyweight. After four more wins,
including victories over Lee Savold and Harry Matthews, Marciano faced world
Heavyweight champion Jersey Joe Walcott in Philadelphia on September 23,
1952. After being dropped in round one, Marciano got up and knocked Walcott
out in the thirteenth round, becoming the world's Heavyweight champion. A
rematch was fought one year later and, in Marciano's first title defense, he
retained the title with a first-round knockout of Walcott. Next, it was
LaStarza's turn to challenge Marciano, and after building a small lead on
the judges' scorecards all the way to the middle rounds, LaStarza was
knocked out in eleven by the champion. Then came former world Heavyweight
champion Ezzard Charles, who Marciano beat by a decision in their first
bout. After having his nose broken in round five of the rematch, Marciano
retained the title with an eighth-round knockout win. Then Marciano met
British and European champion Don Cocknell, beaten in nine, and in his last
bout, Marciano got up off the canvas in round two to retain his title by a
knockout in nine against the equally-legendary former Light-Heavyweight
champion of the world, Archie Moore.
Marciano managed his money well after his retirement, and he lived a
comfortable life the rest of his days. He hosted a weekly boxing show on TV,
and lived in a mansion. Rumors that one of his trainers, Al Weill, had
connections to the mafia surfaced later and, according to the rumors, Rocky
hated the fact Weill 'was connected'.
Rocky got his pilot's license, and in 1969, while flying home from a
business meeting, his plane developed engine trouble and crashed, killing
him. He was buried in Forest Lawn Memorial Cemetery, Fort Lauderdale,
Florida.
Rocky had a record of 49-0 with 43 knockout wins. While his record as the
Heavyweight champion to go the longest undefeated and his position as the
only world Heavyweight champion to go undefeated thru his whole career were
challenged by Larry Holmes in 1985 (when Holmes went 48-0 before losing to
Michael Spinks), Marciano's records still stand. After Holmes lost to
Spinks, he caused some controversy by making some unfortunate comments about
Marciano, but he later apologized.
Marciano was the subject of a biographical movie, and in the movie Rocky,
the Rocky Balboa character told his trainer Mickey that Marciano was his
favorite boxer. Marciano has been also the subject of several paintings, and
he is on a US postage stamp commemorating his life.
Marciano, like rivals Louis, Walcott, and Moore, is a member of the
International Boxing Hall Of Fame. |
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ROCKY MARCIANO PICTURES |
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