Rocky Lockridge's legacy

Discussion in 'Classic Boxing Forum' started by Longhhorn71, Apr 26, 2019.


  1. Longhhorn71

    Longhhorn71 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Rocky Lockridge was involved in 10 Superfeatherweight title fights, losing some and winning some.

    In his prime Lockridge, lost to two ATGs, Wilfredo Gomez and prime J.C Chavez by Majority Decisions in
    title fights. (If he wins these, his legacy jumps dramatically.)

    Julio Cesar Chavez defeats a spirited Rocky Lockridge to move to 53-0


    DESPITE going in to the August 3, 1986 fight with Julio Cesar Chavez as an underdog, Rocky Lockridge had thrived in that role before in his first notable victory, when picking up the WBA super-featherweight title, knocking out Floyd Mayweather Jnr’s uncle, Roger Mayweather. Roger had also been defeated by Chavez, in two rounds in July 1985.

    PRIOR to the Lockridge fight, Chavez had amassed 52 victories. He had also suffered a disqualification defeat against Miguel Ruiz in 1981. But it was changed to a knockout victory for Chavez, when the verdict was altered the following day, by the local boxing commission in Culiacan. Chavez’s manager happened to be a member of the commission at the time.

    LOCKRIDGE’S camp believed that their man would be at an advantage going into the fight, due to the contest being scheduled for 12 rounds, as opposed to 15, as they admitted that Lockridge appeared to fade towards the latter part of his first two 15-round point’s defeats, against Wilfredo Gomez and Eusebio Pedroza.

    IN an attempt to avoid fading in his fight with Chavez, Lockridge recruited Tim Hallmark, the Houston fitness specialist who contributed to Evander Holyfield’s tremendous conditioning in his 15-round points victory over Dwight Muhammad Qawi.

    DESPITE that, and having the fight cut from 15 to 12 rounds, Lockridge only had one fight in 1986 going into the Chavez fight, whereas the latter had had three, including two world title defences in the space of 30 days.

    LOCKRIDGE’S conditioning training may have prevented him from getting knocked down in the contest, as Chavez landed a lot of eye-catching punches – left uppercuts and right-handers had the Washington man in trouble in the second-round. Lockridge managed to survive the onslaught, and even fought back well by the fifth, as he appeared to be getting back into the fight, but the cool, calm Chavez’s crisper, cleaner punches managed to catch the eye of two of the three judges, who scored it to Chavez, with one deciding on a draw.

    AFTER the fight, Chavez admitted that Lockridge had given him his most difficult fight to date, but claimed that the challenger didn’t hurt him, despite appearing shaky in the eighth-round, after Lockridge landed his biggest punch of the fight, a huge right-hander.

    CHAVEZ added he had hurt his right hand in the fight, preventing him from taking the decision out of the judges’ scorecards. He also claimed that he had had problems in camp, due to the fight being on and off. Lockridge, meanwhile, insisted he had done enough to win.

    TWENTY SEVEN years after the Chavez defeat, Lockridge displayed his
    punching power again, this time out of the ring, when he knocked out an aggressive man in the streets, who approached Lockridge, and started shouting abuse at him. Rocky claimed that the fight with Chavez was the highest payday of his 53-fight career, receiving $200,000. Despite being a two-time world boxing champion, alcohol and drug abuse, along with a divorce, resulted in Lockridge eventually becoming homeless, on the rough streets of Camden, in the U.S.

    AFTER beating Rocky, Chavez remained unbeaten in his next 37 contests. His first defeat came against Frankie Randall. Chavez had a point taken off for a low-blow, a point that resulted in a split-decision defeat. In the same year, a rematch was set-up, where, as in the first fight, a point-deduction decided the winner of the fight. Chavez was declared the winner, after Randall lost a point due to a clash of heads.

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  2. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

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    Lockridge is under-rated and not talked about enough. He deserved that decision against Gomez, it was a robbery.
     
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  3. Saad54

    Saad54 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Sadly, his legacy seems to be that of a crack addict with a weird cry.

    He is vastly underrated.

    Kod an undefeated Roger Mayweather in less than a round to finally win a world title.

    Comprehensively outpointed a very good CBE.

    Barely lost to long reigning champion Pedroza.

    Robbed of his title by WBA politics against Wilfredo Gomez.

    Gave a prime JC Chevez avvery tough fight, losing a competitive decision.

    Managed to win a second 130 lb title, beating a very good Harold Knight, before giving an absolute prime Tony Lopez a competitive war, although being clearly past his prime.
     
    Last edited: Apr 26, 2019
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  4. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

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    Quite a few scored that first fight to Lockridge too.
     
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  5. Saad54

    Saad54 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    True.

    In a truly pathetic display of WBA cronyism, Panamanian judge Rodolfo Hill scored it for Pedroza by 12 points. LOLLL.
     
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  6. JohnThomas1

    JohnThomas1 VIP Member

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    There used to be some goings on around the time with that WBA!!!!!! Pedroza was in pretty deep.
     
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  7. Cobra33

    Cobra33 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    I scored thought Rocky beat Eusebio the first time .
    And the Gomez bout was just outright robbery.
     
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  8. Longhhorn71

    Longhhorn71 Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Rocky Lockridge ((January 10, 1959 – February 7, 2019)
    Lockridge died over 2 months ago from 4/26/2019.

    Later years and death
    For the last two decades of his life, Lockridge had drug problems. He became homeless and suffered a stroke which forced him to walk with a cane. He was featured on A&E's Intervention TV series, on which he claimed that the intervention and the help of his sons saved his life.[4] His appearance on the show is noted for a heartbreaking moment where his son Lamar says, "Because I know, somewhere deep down in my heart, I still love you," which caused Lockridge to break down crying hard enough to the point where he was screaming at the top of his lungs. This spawned the internet meme "Best Cry Ever".[5][2] He was also caught on video defending himself by knocking out a bully with a single one-two jab-cross combination near a convenience store.[6] In interviews, he expressed a desire to be drug-free, having stated that he had never been this clean, even in his fighting days. "I feel so good today that if I hadn't suffered the stroke I would go for a title shot," he stated. He was also interested in becoming a boxing trainer.[citation needed]

    Lockridge died on February 7, 2019 at the age of 60, after being placed on home hospice care following another series of strokes. He was removed from life support about one week prior to his death.[1]
     
  9. robert ungurean

    robert ungurean Богдан Philadelphia Full Member

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    I liked Lockridge style. Very unique IMO. He was another favorite of mine. He definitely beat Gomez..gave Chavez all he could handle and was in one pick em fight with Pedroza. First fight? I forget now. Anyway a really superb all action fighter.
     
  10. zadfrak

    zadfrak Boxing Junkie Full Member

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    Sure is a tough sport when you just don't get the breaks. And Rocky never did. Some good fortune in decisions and the guy might be a hall of fame candidate, and I think makes it. He sure put Mayweather in a heap, didn't he? I thought everyone in the arena saw the punch coming--except Roger.

    I also do not think he was an ideal fit for the Main Events/Duva braintrust.