"Middleweight Legend" Rocky Graziano Signed 10X8 Paperstock Photo COA

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Seller: historicsellsmemorabilia ✉️ (6,894) 99.5%, Location: Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US, Ships to: US & many other countries, Item: 156061221443 "Middleweight Legend" Rocky Graziano Signed 10X8 Paperstock Photo COA. Up for auction  "Middleweight Legend" Rocky Graziano Hand Signed 10X8 Paperstock Photo.   This item is authenticated By Todd Mueller Autographs and comes with their certificate of authenticity. ES-9780

Thomas Rocco Barbella  (January 1, 1919[1]  – May 22, 1990), better known as Rocky Graziano , was an American professional boxer who held the World Middleweight title.[2]  Graziano is considered one of the greatest knockout artists in boxing history, often displaying the capacity to take his opponent out with a single punch. He was ranked 23rd on The Ring  magazine list of the greatest punchers of all time. He fought many of the best middleweights of the era including Sugar Ray Robinson . His turbulent and violent life story was the basis of the 1956 Oscar -winning drama film , Somebody Up There Likes Me , based on his 1955 autobiography of the same title. Graziano was the son of Ida Scinto and Nicola Barbella. Barbella, nicknamed Fighting Nick Bob , was a boxer with a brief fighting record. Born in Brooklyn , Graziano later moved to an Italian enclave centered on East 10th Street, between First Avenue and Avenue A in Manhattan's East Village. He grew up as a street fighter and learned to look after himself before he could read or write. He spent years in reform school, jail, and Catholic protectories .[3]  Barbella, who got occasional work as a horseback rider, kept boxing gloves around the house and encouraged Graziano and his brothers to fight one another. When he was three years old, Barbella would make he and his brother, Joe (three years his senior), fight almost every night in boxing gloves. At age 18 he won the Metropolitan A.A.U. welterweight championship. Despite the fame and money that professional fighting seemed to offer, he didn't want to become a serious prize fighter. He didn't like the discipline of training any more than he liked the discipline of school or the Army. As he grew older and seeing no other way to raise his standard of living, Graziano signed a few boxing contracts, but the rigors of training disinterested him. He and his early managers went their separate ways but eventually, he was picked up by Irving Cohen who had the sense to give him a long leash. Cohen changed the young fighter's name from Barbella to Graziano (his grandfather's surname) and lined up a fight. Refusing to train much, Graziano nevertheless showed his killer instinct and won by a knockout. Other fights were lined up with Cohen trying, in his subtle way, to overmatch Graziano, get him defeated, and thereby show him the value of getting into condition. He even demanded a match against Sugar Ray Robinson . In March 1945, at Madison Square Garden , Graziano scored a major upset over Billy Arnold , whose style was similar to that of Sugar Ray Robinson : he was a slick boxer with lightning-fast combinations and a knockout punch. The Ring  magazine and various newspapers across the United States touted Arnold as the next Joe Louis  or Sugar Ray Robinson. Arnold was a heavy favorite to defeat Graziano and to then fight for the world title. Graziano absorbed a beating in the early going, before going on to batter and knock Arnold out in the third round of the scheduled eight-round bout.[7]  Following his loss to Graziano, Arnold was never the same. Graziano fought three middleweight title bouts against Tony Zale . In their first match (September 27, 1946), after flooring Graziano in the first round, Zale took a savage beating from him and was on the verge of losing the fight by TKO. However, Zale rallied and knocked him out in the sixth round to retain his title. The rematch, a year later in Chicago (July 16, 1947), was a mirror image of their first fight. The referee almost stopped the second fight in the third round because of a severe cut over Graziano's left eye, which would have awarded the victory to Zale. But Graziano's cutman, Morris ("Whitey") Bimstein, was able to stop the bleeding to let the fight continue. Battered around the ring, suffering a closed eye, and appearing ready to lose by a knockout, Graziano then rallied and knocked Zale out in the sixth round, becoming world middleweight champion. Their last fight was held in New Jersey the following year (June 10, 1948). Zale regained his crown, winning the match by a knockout in the third round. The knockout blows consisted of a perfect combination of a right to Graziano's body, then a left hook to his jaw. He was knocked unconscious. His last attempt at the middleweight title came in April 1952, when he fought Sugar Ray Robinson . He dropped him to his knee with a right in the third round. Less than a minute later, Robinson knocked him out for the count with a right to the jaw. He retired after losing his very next fight, a 10-round decision to Chuck Davey .

  • Sport: Boxing
  • Signed: Yes
  • Original/Reprint: Original
  • Product: Photo

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