Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Utah's Lamar Clark went from 44 straight knockouts to being KO'd by Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali)

Ever heard of heavyweight boxer Lamar Clark, of Utah? Probably not, but 60 plus years ago Clark, born in Cedar City, Utah, was briefly a hot commodity in the sport. The heavyweight, who fought mostly in Northern Utah, including Ogden, scored 44 consecutive knockouts, including six in one night! Not all the KOs were sanctioned, although most likely shouldn't have been as Clark, after scoring a decision win in his first bout, fought a long array of novice fighters whom he destroyed. His official record was 43-3 with 42 KOs. He was managed by Marv Jenson, who helmed world middleweight champ, Gene Fullmer, and his brother, contender Don Fullmer. I often wonder why Jenson allowed Clark to fatten his record with nop-hopers, but perhaps Jenson knew Clark was overhyped and wanted to give him a big payday. The great Jack Dempsey is in the above photo with Clark.

Unfortunately, the Clark hype ended at 42-0 at Weber High School, in Ogden, on April 8, 1960. In a nationally televised bout, designed to introduce Clark to the nation, the undefeated was stopped in the ninth round by New York City's Bartoli Soni, 12-2-1, a prospect who had just lost in Madison Square Garden. Clark started well but ran out of gas late. 

A couple of months later Clark, seeking to rebound, invited former Olympics heavyweight champion Pete Rademacher, who had unwisely challenged current heavyweight champion Floyd Patterson in his pro debut. The battering Rademacher received affected his entire career, and he faced the 42-1 Clark with a shaky 6-3-1 record. It was a rare easy bout for Rademacher as he battered the way overrated Utah slugger around the ring, flooring him early toying with Clark through the bout before stopping him late in the final round 10. (Photo and article on the fight is below)


At this point, most boxing observers gave up on Clark. To his credit, though, Lamar attempted a comeback, scoring a KO win in Las Vegas in March 1961. In April 1961, Clark traveled to Louisville, Ky., to face Olympics champion turned young pro Cassius Clay, who would later of course change his name to Muhammad Ali, perhaps the greatest heavyweight boxer of all time. 

It was a dreadful mismatch, Clay, 5-0, stopped Clark 97 seconds into the second round. YouTube claims to have a partial recording of the bout, but I'm skeptical it is Clay versus Clark. The broadcast claims there is a fourth round. However, that could be a video typo. In the fight, "Clark" seems game but is hopelessly overmatch. In the comments, a Dave C says he knew Clark in the late 80s and describes the retired boxer as "a cheerful, kind man who spoke highly of Ali."


Clark retired after the Ali bout. There was talk of him moving to light heavyweight to compete but that never occurred. He died at at age 72 in 2006 in South Jordan, UT

Enjoy this montage of newspaper clippings, courtesy of NewspaperArchives.com, of Clark's career. Three, of course, are placed above. The Utah Fight Game blog hopes to do a series of prominent Utah boxers periodically over the next year. 













 

Monday, December 14, 2020

Collard's 2020 boxing run ends with decision loss to LaVallais in a rematch

 


Clay Collard's remarkable boxing year 2020 ended on a slightly down note on Saturday in Las Vegas, in The Bubble, as he lost an 8-round decision to taller New Orleans boxer Quincy LaVaillas, It was a rematch of a 2019 draw between Collard (9-3-3) and LaVallais (10-0-1).

It was a close middleweight fight. Two judges scored it an acceptable 77-75. Another erred in a too-wide 78-74 margin. This blog scored the bout a draw, giving the more aggressive Collard (seen above on the left) rounds 1, 2, 5 and 7. However, there's no doubt that the judges were impressed with repeat right hands that LaVallais landed on Collard's head/ They didn't seem to hurt the Burley, Idaho, boxer, but he rarely could get out of their way.

In the latter half of the fight, LaVallais also had success slipping punches when the more aggressive Collard pinned him in a corner. Collard was often effective, however, when he followed a retreating LaVallais, landing hooks to the head and body. In the final round Collard started strongly but LaVallais excelled in the final moment.

It's been a remarkable two years for Collard, who merits great respect for barnstorming around the nation, taking on local favorites in their home locations and usually pulling out a win or a draw. Things improved even more this year when Top Rank took notice of his talents and fan appeal. He was 5-0 in this Covid-19 year until Saturday's loss.

Collard, who until recently fought out of Utah, is well known as an MMA pro with UFC experience. He will be taking a year off to compete in the Professional Fighter League MMA tournament for 2021 that promises weight class winners a $1 million prize. We wish him the best and thank him for providing us a lot of cheers in the boxing ring.

Friday, December 4, 2020

Gomez decisioned by Ceballo in welterweight title bout

 


(UPDATED WITH CLAY COLLARD OPPONENT FOR DEC. 12) West Jordan, Utah professional boxer Larry Gomez, (shown above at left in a bout earlier in his career), traveled to Los Angeles, Calif., on Dec. 3 for a nationally televised (NBCSports) bout against Brian Ceballo, of New York City.

After 10 rounds, Ceballo, 12-0, won the WBO Intercontinental welterweight championship, with a unanimous decision over Gomez, 10-2. 

Ceballo, started strongly, winning four of the first five rounds, according to this observer. He dictated the pace, with head movement, an effective jab and some strong left hand shots to the body, particularly in round four. Gomez rallied to make the second half of the bout even, scoring with the left hook and right hand more often. I gave him rounds six and seven and the final round.

I scored the bout 96-93 for Ceballo, as did one judge. Gomez was docked a point in the final round for losing his mouthpiece for the fourth of fifth time. Two other judges over-scored the bout for Ceballo, giving him eight and nine rounds. Ceballo earned the win, but a tally giving him six or seven rounds is a more fair assessment.

The fight was a grueling, hard-fought affair, the most competitive one on the card. We hope to see Larry back in the ring soon.

NOTES ... We reported that Utah/Idaho middleweight boxer Clay Collard will be fighting on Dec. 12, presumably in The Bubble in Las Vegas on the Shakur Stevenson title defense card. It's not listed on Collard's boxrec.com page yet. UPDATE: Collard ,9-2-3, will face Quincy LaVallais, 9-0-1. The pair fought a draw in June 2019 when Collard was 1-1-2 and LaVallais 7-0.  ... As we updated in our last blog post, the Grantsville, Utah boxing card planned for Dec. 12, has been postponed due to Covid-19 related issues. ... SteelFist MMA is planning to resume MMA cards after Covid-19 stalled the promotion the final nine months of 2020. Jan. 23 at the Union Event Center is the plan.