By Chris Mannix
Arturo Gatti won't be remembered by anyone for his superior
boxing skills. His name won't be recalled for the handful of titles he
won over the course of a 16-year career. And, to be fair, Gatti won't
be canonized as one of the greatest fighters in his weight class. But
he will be remembered for one thing, something perhaps no fighter will
ever be able to match.
His heart.
Before boxers
became movie stars and before fighters were more concerned with
avoiding punishment than inflicting it on their opponent, their was
Arturo Gatti, a 5-7 human cyclone who regularly thrust his skull in
harms way, who broke his hand five times in his career and who once
said that he "liked to bleed." Gatti, who was found dead in a Brazil
hotel room on Saturday, was a warrior's warrior, a relentless puncher
who was never happier than when he was standing toe-to-toe with an
opponent -- any opponent -- and trading haymakers.
His signature moments came in an epic trilogy of fights with Mickey Ward,
the first of which is considered by many boxing historians to be among
the greatest fights of all time. In that fight -- a furious flurry of
fists that nearly killed both men -- Gatti was battered and bruised in
ways that few fighters allow themselves to be today. His lone
motivations was winning, and despite dropping that first fight in the
narrowest of decisions he rebounded to take the next two from Ward in
decisive fashion.
"You can kill him and kill him and kill him," Ward once said. "But he'll just get back up and get back up and get back up."
It's
unfortunate that many people will remember Gatti as the shell of the
fighter who limped his way to two lopsided defeats at the end of his
career; the first to welterweight champion Carlos Baldomir in 2006 and the second to journeyman Alfonso Gomez in '07. Because Gatti was so much more than that. In his prime, Gatti was as flashy as Oscar De La Hoya,
pounding opponents -- he won 26 of his first 27 fights, 13 in the
opening round -- and captivating crowds with his heavy handed style and
engaging personality. In Atlantic City, Gatti's adopted home where he
fought many of his fights, Gatti was as beloved as De La Hoya in Los
Angeles or Julio Cesar Chavez in Mexico. The blue-collar south
Jersey crowd admired him for his courage and loved him for his
willingness to absorb a big shot if it meant he could deliver an even
bigger one.
His peers admired him too, as several attested to in a 2004 Sports Illustrated story:
He reminds me of me," said former middleweight champ Jake LaMotta. "He takes a lot of shots to the head and doesn't care."
"He's a gutsy fighter of action who thinks his way through a match in a way you don't see anymore," said Tony DeMarco, who became king of the welterweights in '55. "Nobody today is tougher than Gatti. Nobody."
"He slugs it out as if he's in a barroom: Whatever's in front of him, he pounds down," said former light heavyweight champ Dwight Qawi. "He's got finesse, but [you wouldn't know it looking at] his face."
In
a few years, Gatti's name will begin to fade. His record (40-9) is far
from exceptional and the next generation of boxing fans will only be
able to measure the greatness of Gatti if they choose to dig a little
deeper. Here's hoping they do; they will surely find something special.###
Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZvr0Bl_uPs&feature=related
-Dax
\"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.\" -Henry David Thoreau \"The harder I work, the luckie