NEW
YORK
“Ever”
is defined classically as being timeless – or on Facebook and Twitter as being
off the top of the head of the writer who cannot remember what he had for lunch
yesterday. As in Saturday’s Manny Pacquiao-Juan Manuel Márquez fight was “the greatest
I have ever seen.”
Yawn.
Nice fight. But it did not even come close to the greatest sports event I have
ever seen. Yes, I – who never says
ever – said ever.
It
was 30 years ago today – Saturday, December 11, 1982 – when I was 23 years old,
50-60 pounds lighter, parting my hair down the middle and being so bold as to
wear blue sunglasses inside the old Sacramento Memorial Auditiorium.
Google
“Limón-Chacón 1982.” Better yet, YouTube it. If you see a better fight or
sports event than that in your own version of “ever,” you should consider
yourself both fortunate and privileged.
Mark
Whicker of the Orange County Register
reminded me – and all of his readers the other day – that Bobby Chacón and
Rafael “Bazooka” Limón staged their own best-of-four series that ended with Ring magazine’s 1982 Fight of the Year.
I
was working at the time in Northern California for KORV Radio and the Oroville Mercury-Register – both small outlets. As
I do now, I thought I had all the answers. But at age 23, I truly had far fewer
of them. And I spent that year learning a lot covering Chacón, who had only
recently moved from Southern California to Oroville.
Among
the things I learned was that Chacón moved north to get away from the slippery
slopes of his San Fernando Valley upbringing. Translation: drugs. His wife
wanted him to stop boxing. To use all that money he earned to buy their young
family some stability.
Chacón
promised Valerie he would quit fighting. He broke that promise. At age 30 he
said he had one more title run in him. She did not. On the Ides of March in
’82, Valerie Chacón took her own life. One day and an hour’s drive to
Sacramento later Bobby Chacón beat the hell out of some guy named Sálvador
Ugalde who played the role of the Other Guy in the ring for three rounds.
That
was the last Chacón fight that year that I did not attend. Again, I was still
learning – this time how to cover a prize fighter and prize fights – especially
at the just-shy-of-big-time level at which Chacón was competing barely two
years after he lost his first world championship.
I
had taken over the beat from a guy named Mac McDonald, who decided to leave the
Mercury to take over the Carmel Pine Cone. Only in California. Me?
I was a guy who knew his way around high school and small college sports and
even how to call the San Francisco 49ers and get game credentials for the NFC
Championship. But this boxing thing was a whole, new world.
I
eventually came to learn about who to listen to and who to ignore. Self-styled
friends of Chacón who glommed onto media tykes like me were the sorts of B.S.
artists that boxing especially attracts. And that the moment I wrote or
broadcast something they did not like, I would find myself out of their favor.
Maybe getting access to Chacón through them – one husky fellow in particular –
was a bad idea.
That’s
also when I learned I should go directly to the subject I was covering. To that
end Chacón was great. When he gave me his phone number I could bypass those
“friends” of his who had about as much loyalty as big-time college coach
looking for a better job.
After
two more victories that spring, Chacón and his growing legion of followers in
Oroville had to wait and see if a title shot would be coming. Finally, it
arrived when Don King bought Chacón’s contractual rights away from Don Chargin
– the modest, nice-guy promoter from L.A. who had put on Chacón’s shows that
year in Sacramento.
Chacón
signed a contract full of options that King held, and the day would come that
he would break the contract and keep plenty of lawyers busy (I remember some
cat named Sy Swerdlow swooping in from L.A.). But not before he had one more
shot at a world title – the World Boxing Council super-featherweight
championship held by his rival Limón. In their three prior fights, each won
once with the odd “technical draw” in between when Limón could not continue
after an accidental head butt from Chacón.
My
radio station and newspaper wanted blanket coverage of this fight, but they
also wanted me to do my usual announcing and writing duties back in Oroville.
So I did a lot of driving that week. I broadcast a couple high-school
basketball games, and in between I raced to Sacramento to check in on Chacón. I
even managed to extract a private dinner with Limón and his manager – who was
there to translate Limón’s Spanish that sounded a lot more like silence to me.
Again, I was only 23 – and learning.
As
big a story as Chacón was, he was not the biggest on fight day for the people
of Oroville. That morning there was a march to promote racial tolerance. My
foggy recollection is that some extremists had been putting hatred-promoting
flyers into the lockers of school children, provoking an outcry that led to the
organization of the march. It attracted thousands of participants, and it led
to a fair amount of tension for a town of about 30,000-40,000 people, most of
which preferred to hide and hope everything would return to whatever passed for
normal.
Back
in Sacramento there were only about 3,500 seats available in that relic of a
building on J Street downtown – so tickets for the average fan from Oroville
were next to impossible. The old Memorial Auditorium was 56 years old at the
time, but with a balcony that looked like it could have been the scene of some
gunfights in the Old West, it seemed at least twice that age.
I
remember getting to the arena extremely early. A short time later Bill Royer,
the sports editor of the Mercury,
showed up to take photos. Bill was and I presume remains an especially talented
photographer – a fact that many would learn shortly after the fight.
We
made small talk about what was going on with the march back in Oroville, about
the fight, about the 49ers and whatever else we could think of. A mutual
acquaintance came up to us and noticed one of the long, cylindrical microphones
put at ringside for the telecast on ABC. He made a rude joke about it that I
still dare not repeat 30 years later – even as it still resonates in my mind’s ear.
Bill
took his place with his camera positioned on the east apron of the ring. I sat
in the ringside media section on the south side. The place slowly filled, and
there were preliminary fights that I simply do not remember. No, I could not
have told you until I just now looked it up that Julio César Chávez made his
U.S. debut that afternoon with a knockout of Jerry Lewis on the undercard. Yes,
it was that Julio César Chávez. (No,
it was not that Jerry Lewis. I don’t
think.)
Being
the child of media that I was, I took notice that the ABC cameras were on the
stage north of the ring and would be pointed at me through the entire fight. I
also took note of Keith Jackson in the northwest corner of the ring preparing
to broadcast the main event. Years later I reminded him of that day, and he
remembered every detail of the fight as if it were going on right in front of
him all over again.
Just
after 2 p.m., after the anthems were sung and Hank Renner introduced the fighters
and the anthems, it was time for boxing. The whole fight I was chattering away
at the reporter next to me – and he back at me. I think he was from the San Jose Mercury News, but that is just
a blurry guess all these years later. I took a ton of notes non-stop without
ever looking at my pad. How I translated them later is anyone’s guess.
You
can find the whole fight on line and see Chacón get floored in the third and
10th rounds. Limón seemed on the verge of victory at least twice when the
attending doctor looked at the huge gashes spewing blood down Chacón’s nose and
cheek.
But
the fight went the distance, and back then the distance was not 12 but 15
rounds. A month earlier Duk Koo Kim died from the injuries he received in the
14th round of a loss to Ray “Boom Boom” Mancini. The WBC almost immediately declared
an end to its 15-round title fights effective in 1983. That meant Limón-Chacón
would be perhaps the last sanctioned only by the WBC to go 15.
For
Chacón it’s a good thing, since he needed nearly every second of those 45
minutes. A hard-charging right floored Limón with 12 seconds left. Limón would
rise, but it was the last punch of a fight that that writer next to me called a
real-life version of “Rocky II.” Or III or IV.
Now
came the obligatory confusion. The rows of seats at ringside were becoming
disarrayed as the crowd edged forward. I happened to be near the place where the
judges cards were being tallied.
Royal
Courtain, then of KHSL-TV in Chico (near Oroville) was asking me, “Who won? Who
won?”
I
read the total on the first card. “One judge has Chacón,” I yelled.
Then
I looked at the second. “Another one for Chacón.”
I
didn’t wait for the third. Chacón, it turned out, won by one point on two cards
and two points on the other, meaning the very last punch of the fight was the
difference between a victory and a majority draw.
I
raced toward the door to stand and watch the announcement of Chacón’s victory,
to see everyone’s reaction – and then to muscle my way to a pay phone to call
KORV. In an era before Twitter and before texting, there was also no live
telecast of the fight on the West Coast. Being part of ABC’s “Wide World of
Sports,” the bout was on a three-hour delay in California. So for Oroville, I
would be bearing the news.
Once
I breathlessly got on the air to say what happened, I realized I had left a bag
back at my ringside seat. In it was a camera with a long, zoom lens. When I
went back it was long gone. Having lost a camera, I could not now lose Chacón.
I finally found where he was doing interviews – in some anteroom that may well
have been used as a dressing area for a USO show in World War II. I talked to
Chacón but never again found Limón. That was fine; I had what I really needed –
save an explanation for my Mercury bosses
about that camera.
That
night I returned to Oroville, where I was told the big march was peaceful – and
that it turned into a real positive for everyone involved.
Since
the Mercury was a
Monday-through-Saturday paper, I had an extra day to write my story and concoct
an alibi. And without the reality of digital cameras, Bill relished the extra
day to develop his photos in the newspaper’s darkroom. That is where his
brilliance was delivered, since he shot the quintessential photo of the last
punch of the fight. I remember it was printed and reprinted and reprinted
again. It got around so much that Bill was robbed of the credit for it when he
should have received it over and over.
When
Chacón got back to town, the mayor planned a big day in his honor. High school
bands played. Speeches were offered. So was a key to the city. And our
newspaper’s coverage of the fight was packaged and reprinted into a special
section – the better to attract a few more advertising dollars.
Thirty
years later that paper exists only as a shadow publication of another one
across the county. The newsroom is now being used as a community theater.
Me?
I am in New York City working for Fox News Radio as well as serving as
international correspondent for the Australian sports radio station RSN.
I
lost track of Bill Royer, who I believe retired from his work for an insurance
association in Colorado.
I
still chat regularly with Royal Courtain, who spent something like quarter
century doing TV sports in Chico. Now he is selling TV advertising there.
Don
Chargin is still going at 84, according to what I just read, although his
wonderful wife and aide-de-camp Lorraine passed away a couple years ago. They
were married about 49 years. I last talked to Don about 10 or 15 years ago for something
I was working on for ESPN.
I
presume Don King is still around. He’s like styrofoam.
Sacramento
Memorial Auditorium is still there – although it was vacated so it could be
brought up to code and made part of a new convention center. All the fights
were moved to the two arenas north of town that the Sacramento Kings called
home from 1985 to whenever they are moved out of their mercy in the next couple
years.
Limón’s
whereabouts are a mystery to me. His name came up with Héctor Camacho died last
month, since Camacho beat Limón in 1983 after Chacón refused to fight him. More
accurately he refused to give another fight to Don King.
And
Chacón? He had a couple more decent paydays – beating Cornelius Boza Edwards in
Las Vegas in 1983 before losing a lopsided fight to Mancini in Reno in ’84. He
remarried at least once that I know of. He was eventually divorced from Melissa
Chacón, who kept his surname and I believe is still an assignment editor at
KCRA-TV in Sacramento.
As
the years went by Chacón was in and out of retirement, on his way out of money
and, sadly, on his way into pugilistic dementia. He just turned 61 last month,
and the last I heard he was being looked after in Los Angeles by some
kind-hearted people at a church. He also lost his son to a gang-war murder.
For
all the events I have seen and covered since, including three years in
Australia and a month covering soccer’s World Cup in South Africa, and all the
Super Bowls and World Series and Olympics and big-time horse races, that
Saturday afternoon in Sacramento is still the best.
Yes,
Limón-Chacón IV was the greatest fight I have ever seen. The greatest sporting
event I have ever covered.
There
I said it. I just didn’t Tweet it.