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Jake LaMotta, The Raging Bull, Passes Away at 95

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http://www.boxingscene.com/jake-lamotta-raging-bull-passes-away-95--120662

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Boxing legend Jake LaMotta, the former middleweight world champion of the world who was played by Robert De Niro in 1980’s “Raging Bull,” died Tuesday, his fiancee told the Associated Press. He was 95.
LaMotta passed away in a Miami-area hospital from complications of pneumonia.

"I just want people to know, he was a great, sweet, sensitive, strong, compelling man with a great sense of humor, with eyes that danced," his fiancee told TMZ.

De Niro told Fox News of LaMotta's passing, "Rest in peace, champ."

jake-lamotta.jpg


The International Boxing of Fame, who inducted LaMotta in 1990, revealed he began boxing at a young age when his father made him fight other neighborhood kids in The Bronx to entertain adults. His aggressive style earned him the nickname “The Bronx Bull.”

The aspiring fighter turned pro in 1941 at age 19. The Boxing Hall of Fame added a six-fight series with Sugar Ray Robinson defined his career. He handed Robinson his first defeat. He lost the middleweight title to him in what became known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.

In the fight before he lost the title, LaMotta saved the championship in movie-script fashion against Laurent Dauthuille. Trailing badly on all three scorecards, LaMotta knocked out the challenger with 13 seconds left in the fight.

On June 16, 1949, he became middleweight champion when Marcel Cerdan couldn't continue after the 10th round. The two were scheduled for a rematch, which had to be called off after Cerdan died in a plane crash. LaMotta then successfully defended his title against Tiberio Mitri and Laurent Dauthuille.
LaMotta later said, “I fought Sugar Ray Robinson so many times it’s a wonder I don’t have diabetes.”

The famous fighter retired in 1954 with 30 knockouts, 83 wins and 19 losses.

LaMotta was married six times, most famously to Beverly “Vikki” Thailer. They wedded in 1946 when she was 16. The couple divorced in 1957 and she later appeared in a nude pictorial for Playboy at age 51. LaMotta joked, “She always complained she had nothing to wear. I never believed her until I saw her in Playboy.”

Both of their sons died in 1998. Vikki later passed away in 2005 at age 75.

In 2012, LaMotta became engaged to 62-year-old actress Denise Baker, who previously collaborated with him on a cabaret show.

The 1980 film "Raging Bull" was based on LaMotta's memoir. Actor Robert De Niro won an Academy Award for it.

A second movie on his life, entitled LaMotta: The Bronx Bull, released in 2015, starred such notable actors as William Forsythe, Paul Sorvino and Joe Mantegna.

LaMotta is survived by Baker, her daughters Meggen Connolley and Natalia Baker; his daughters Jacklyn O'Neill, Christie LaMotta, Elisa LaMotta, and Mia Day; brothers Joe LaMotta and Al LaMotta; sisters Maria Hawfield and Anne Ramaglia. He is pre-deceased by two sons, Jack and Joseph, who died seven months apart in 1998.

Funeral will be private. A memorial service will be held in New York, date and location to be determined.

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One of the greatest and toughest fighters who ever lived and one whom had a very eventful life. RIP, at 95 he decides to hang up his gloves; rest well champ.
 
He had quiet the sense of humour :))

During the prime of undisputed greatest pound for pound fighter who ever lived in Sugar Ray Robinson, literally no one would want to step in the ring with him especially when it came to some of the top fighters in the division except Jake Lamotta who was also one of the most avoided fighters, thus the two just kept fighting each other ! arguably the greatest rivalries in the history of boxing and he was also the first man to defeat Sugar Ray Robinson.
 
His biopic was one of the greatest movies i have seen.

When i started watching mma back in 2009, i would search on the net for guys with best chins. His name was always mentioned in every thread. Lot of posters said he had the best chin.

I watched some of his matches highlights where sugar ray robinson would push him in corner in later rounds and would unleash a flurry of uppercuts to his head & body but this dude would just eat them and refuse to fall down.
 
RIP

Boy was he one tough cookie! Boxers in his era were tough but LaMotta took some very hard shots and made them look like slaps by chilldren. Nearly a 100 proffesional fights is incredible.

I need to watch Raging Bull again as respect for his passing.
 
RIP. Don't know much about LaMotta's career but I saw the film. Had a powerful ending.
 
Jake's chin was incredible, he was the true man of steel; the punishment he absorbed was incredible, over his 83 fight career he was never knocked flat out; out of his 19 defeats, 4 are listed as KO defeats (all came when he was past his peak) but in 3 of them he was not knocked down, they were either corner retirements after the doctor examined him or stoppages from the ref while he was still on his feet.

The first knock down of his career came in his 81st fight in 1952 ! In his fight against light heavyweight contender Danny Nardico, Jake was still savvy and tough, but with each passing round he was falling further behind. But then, his legendary granite chin would finally fail him and LaMotta was dramatically knocked down for the first time in his long career.

The Spokesman-Review which was a broad street newspaper, in an article titled “Nardico Stops Jake LaMotta in 8th Round,” wrote:

MIAMI, Fla., Dec 31. (AP) Danny Nardico, a fierce young Tampa, Fla., battler, earned a possible light heavyweight title shot tonight as he beat out an eight-round technical knockout over Jake LaMotta, former middleweight champion, at the Coral Gables coliseum.

A smashing right knocked LaMotta down for the first time in his career in the seventh and when the round ended, the “Bronx bull” was hanging helplessly to the ropes, his eyes glazed, as Nardico beat him with merciless rights and lefts.

Nardico, the aggressor all the way, caught LaMotta with a right as he backed away from a flurry in the middle of the ring. The bull fell back into the ropes, then went down, almost falling out into the crowd.

No Chance

As LaMotta groped his way to his feet, Nardico never gave him a chance to recover. He drove Jake along the rope to a corner and pounded his punches home furiously. As the round ended, Jake, his face bloody and puffed, staggered uncertainly to his corner.

A Florida boxing commission doctor was called into the ring and after an examination of LaMotta, his seconds yelled to referee Bill Regan: “That’s all.”

It's also worth noting that in those days, when a fighter was knocked down they were not given as much time to recover as fighters are today; they didn't go to their neutral corner and would stand near the fallen fighter before pouncing on you the very moment you'd get up; it resulted in many fatalities which then caused a revamp when it came to the rules.
 
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RIP

Boy was he one tough cookie! Boxers in his era were tough but LaMotta took some very hard shots and made them look like slaps by chilldren. Nearly a 100 proffesional fights is incredible.

I need to watch Raging Bull again as respect for his passing.

I was just highlighting his toughness in the post above ! it truly was unreal [MENTION=142288]TQ89[/MENTION], people say GGG has an unreal chin but they have no idea; Jake Lamotta was from another planet. Same here, incredible movie and both robert de niro and martin scorsese done him and boxing a lot of justice; I thank them.
 
Jake's chin was incredible, he was the true man of steel; the punishment he absorbed was incredible, over his 83 fight career he was never knocked flat out; out of his 19 defeats, 4 are listed as KO defeats (all came when he was past his peak) but in 3 of them he was not knocked down, they were either corner retirements after the doctor examined him or stoppages from the ref while he was still on his feet.

The first knock down of his career came in his 81st fight in 1952 ! In his fight against light heavyweight contender Danny Nardico, Jake was still savvy and tough, but with each passing round he was falling further behind. But then, his legendary granite chin would finally fail him and LaMotta was dramatically knocked down for the first time in his long career.

The Spokesman-Review which was a broad street newspaper, in an article titled “Nardico Stops Jake LaMotta in 8th Round,” wrote:



It's also worth noting that in those days, when a fighter was knocked down they were not given as much time to recover as fighters are today; they didn't go to their neutral corner and would stand near the fallen fighter before pouncing on you the very moment you'd get up; it resulted in many fatalities which then caused a revamp when it came to the rules.

Missed this final part from the Spokesman Review's article:

Despite the pounding that LaMotta takes after the seventh round knockdown, Jake fights with characteristic disdain, holding the rope for support with one hand and punching with the other even as Nardico’s punches wail in.
 
I was just highlighting his toughness in the post above ! it truly was unreal [MENTION=142288]TQ89[/MENTION], people say GGG has an unreal chin but they have no idea; Jake Lamotta was from another planet. Same here, incredible movie and both robert de niro and martin scorsese done him and boxing a lot of justice; I thank them.

Great read bro.

American Italians were great boxers in his ear, now there isnt many of them around. Pauli has been the recent success but they have always been really tough guys.
 
Great read bro.

American Italians were great boxers in his ear, now there isnt many of them around. Pauli has been the recent success but they have always been really tough guys.

Very well said, they are as tough as nails. I think Pauli suffered a broken eye socket in the first round of his fight with Cotto, then his orbital bone and jaw during the course of the fight but he didn't take a knee once or quit, battled on till the final bell with the heart of a champion, he was desperate to win the world title. His in-ring IQ was so high, if only he hadn't suffered so many injuries to his hands which were numerously operated on he'd have accomplished even more with some more power but he did really well regardless.
 
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