@bflo1000not always. Alot of these boxers had great defensive skills and slipped and countered punches. Its not all about taking punches but evading them.
My grandfather called me Jake Lamotta. He is gone to a better place, passed in 2001, but I have always felt privileged that he called me that in reference. He said it was his favorite boxer and told me I don't need to box to be tough, "use your mind" to be tough and no one can defeat you.
Them boxers were hard as nails {compared to today´s lot} n defended their titles sometimes 2 weeks after winning it not months or years later like today!
Beautifullly told. One aspect which is never explored in raging bull, the movie, is the childhood of lamotta, we're given a very insecure, violent, brute, yet with a humanity we can identify with. And knowing about his childhood it explains a lot.
As always a quality tribute,I’ve seen all the previous documentaries you’ve done and you never Fail to give theses champions there due..,Nuff Respect and Appreciation it’s a honour being able to learn from a Boxing Historian of the highest order as yourself Rich 👏🏽👏🏽🥇🏆👑🥊🥊🥊
@@RichtheFightHistorian It's credit where due mate. your videos are quality at its finest. You don't even have to be a boxing fan to enjoy these biographies, these men lived some amazing ups and downs and most of these boxers I have never heard of. You do them and their families a great service, and also to your viewers. ✌🏻❤️💪🏻🇦🇺
Years ago I used to see Jake taking long walks along Park Ave in NYC. One day I yelled out champ! Jake pumped one fist high in the air. Man even at an advanced age,Jake looked like no one to mess with
His autobiography is so much darker than the film, I’m not going to spoil it but some of the stuff he confesses doing is shocking. Makes me remember reading Somebody up there likes me , Rocky Graziano’s book which is easily in the 10 best boxing books I’ve read. Number 1 is No man stands alone by Barney Ross.
One of the Bull's underrated victories came at the end of his career against light heavyweight Bob Murphy. He simply out boxed the brawling southpaw and out worked him with his left jab, giving him a boxing lesson for 10 rounds. The first time I saw LaMotta on film was back in the 70's when i was an amateur boxer. It was the 6th and final fight in their series with the Bull weakened by making 160lbs, for the last time. Robbie targetted the Bull's body so the champion kept his elbows tucked in and offered his head as a target for one of history's most lethal left hookers. Robbie actually tired of hitting the Bull's massive head. Rocky Graziano once said LaMotta was a lightweight with a heavyweights head, but what a head !!!!
Rich you have covered the life of the Bronx Bull, not only in fullness, but even then some! Probably my favorite boxer ever (due in part mostly to De Niro's performance in the film 'Raging Bull' and also Jake's autobiography). I remember in an interview Jake said that he took his ex wife Vicki to the opening screening of Raging Bull. When the film finished Jake turned to Vicki and said to her 'was I really that bad?' to which Vicki replied 'No. You were worse!' There is nothing to add here except thank you once again for another brilliant vlog.
Your documentaries are always a treat to watch, never too much personal life or boxing techniques and analysis. It's a style I can show to my friends to make them like boxing !
The beating he got from Robinson in their last fight would have killed most men, yet he could not knock Jake down. Unbelievable heart and just raw toughness. RIP to one the greatest ever. Jake LaMotta.
Mostly it was jake’s extra thicker than normal skull. But his heart of course led him and kept him going. But yeah so like they measured his skull at autopsy and discovered his to be something like 35% thicker skull bones than a normal humanoid male adult.
This was was my dad’s favourite fighter, he spoke of him the way you do when you idolize someone. When I was 22 I reconciled with my dad who I hadn’t seen since I was 4 years old. He had abandoned my mother and older brother And sister after terrorizing us for all of our lives. He would be the poster boy for an abusive, extremely violent alcoholic, and man could he fight. My dad weighted 150lbs. And was very tough, that was a different time and much more violent. We got together and went to see the new film “raging bull”. It was in a strange way , his showing me what and who he was. I have worked hard my entire life not to be like my father, and sometimes it pushed me to the limit. My father and I had a very intense argument 6 months after we had resumed contact. We never reconciled, I never accepted Or forgave his actions as a young father. He had a massive heart attack and died 50 yrs. old. His idol, and who he wanted to be like was Lamotta. I despise him for it, I despise men like this and that entire generation.They are a sick product of cruel, murderous period in North America society and destroyed most things they came n contact with. I encourage people to watch RagingBull so maybe they will see evil.
@@peterparsons7141 thanks for sharing such personal info about your dad and your relationship with him, i have a super bad or non existent relationship with my father too, he isn't violent, but a very cold and narcissistic man, that only loves himself, i think both of our relationships with our father's are bad, just very different
@@kevinlewis8162 Sharing ? Most people who’ve known me all my long life don’t know the things that I just shared.I have three sons, and two grandchildren. I shared in hopes that it might help someone, somewhere,, maybe me. And for anyone who thinks Lamotta was just a good guy misunderstood, he was evil. I wish you Peace and contentment and it’s to your benefit to let your father know what’s what!
@@RichtheFightHistorian How come you didn't talk about his relationship with his brother/trainer that is portrayed as tumultuous and violent in the movie? Did the movie get it wrong?
Again, another connection to the Philly area. His son used to own a night club in King of Prussia PA. It was called Popcorn’s. Nice club... He was a nice guy and treated patrons well. Good work Rich
Sugar Ray Robinson is the true TBE in boxing and for LaMotta to win 1 out of six against him is a huge accomplishment with his come forward style with little defense. Respect to the fighters of that era!
Ehhh really tough to compare eras given the advances in technique and training/nutrition. Robinson is an ATG but it’s really tough to say who the GOAT is.
Man I’ve waited for this one ! 👍👍 That come from behind knockout in the 15th round was amazing. I can’t believe the chin this man had, that last beating from Robinson could have killed him.
When i see his fight with ray . I got emotional. His face was bleeding both eyes were swollen ray was throwing series of punches but He kept coming forward with his open guard even ray was exhausted beating him. The point was not win but pushing the limits standing as long as possible. When i see today boxers start back paddling after one hard blow .but raging bull was insane warrior he used to move forward after getting hit
@@NimvarCan't discount how having his face pummeled literally his whole life, gave him a sort of resistance to punishment. I grew up with a kid from Queens, dad was a nasty drunk who beat his face often, he fought constantly and got punched a lot,it just didn't do much to him. His younger brother was the same and when they fought it ended when both were too tired to swing anymore, neither could pound the other into submission or knock the other out. They also didn't bruise or bleed that much considering the bare knuckle shots they gave and took.
Robert Deniro's portrayal of LaMotta, was Masterful...not only did LaMotta hate the Mob, his fights with Sugar Ray, were WARS...Sadly, he had to throw the fight, for a chance at The Title...
@Sony PlayStation Carmine Basilio... truly a man of Integrity and a tough Son-of-gun...his fight with Sugar Ray proved he was one of a handfull, that stayed true and uncompromising, in the Fight Game, run by organized crime in his era..
Fantastic work Rich. Great research & delivery. As well as I know LaMotta's career, I didn't know the back story to so much of it. Really appreciate this content. Bless up bro 👊
Oh my God, I cannot believe that the Building that's shown in this video after 2 minutes is 148 Orchard st. The man sitting on the chair near the Shoe store is someone I remember from My childhood, Its Irvin, I can't believe it. Oh Man, he was such Good person to us kids, God Rest His Soul. I really am awestruck, he died sometime in the late 1970,s. All of us kids really thought the world of Irvin. I'm sorry for being redondent but I never in my wildest dreams ever thought I'd see anything like this in an old Video about Boxing Great Jake LaMotta. Wow, Whoever made this video, You, just can't imagine how this brought back Great Memories of when I was a kid. Thank you, 👍
Great episode! That Lamotta took a shot of Brandy just before entering the ring against the GOAT in what would become infamously known as the St Valentine's Day Massacre, just blows me away,,, but it makes perfect sense.
Jake is a miracle of generics in that he sustained considerable head trauma yet was with it right up until he died. Some people just hit the lottery in some aspects.
He explained how he rolled with the punches, it wasn’t his head or his jaw (although I’m sure they were pretty darn strong) he used his reflexes and it prevented the damage so much so he lived till 95 and was still functional in his old age.
First-rate documentary-: detailed yet fast paced, unflinching, and fair minded. It would have added a lot to the DVD/Blu Ray package for Raging Bull, but it's great that it's available on UA-cam.
The story of Jake LaMotta, will live on in history forever do to Martin scorsese's, classic film Raging Bull. I had the honor of meeting Jake many years ago.
Enormous criminal empires had been built on the supply of illegal liquor during the Prohibition era. Al Capone’s the most infamous among them. When prohibition came to an end in 1933, after more than a decade of lucrative and bloody endeavour for the Mob, they needed something new. Access to the machinery of boxing, a wilfully unfettered anarchy proved remarkably easy to acquire. Boxing was now fertile ground for the Mafia. The son of an Italian immigrant, encouraged to fight by his Sicilian born father, Jake LaMotta was a great boxer on the rise in 1947, but he was looking for a greater rise, and favor with the mob. The mob controlled boxing, and wanted LaMotta to take a dive against Billy Fox for an extra $20,000 and a guaranteed title shot against Frenchman Marcel Cerdan.. Jake was awarded his promised 20 grand and title shot, as well as an investigation from the FBI years later. No matter the sincerity of LaMotta’s performance, in the end, the answer that would glow in the history books, in the folklore of boxing and into the living rooms of America in 1960, had to be uttered Bonomi: “That’s the truth, you faked the knockout, is that correct?” LaMotta: “Yes sir.” And in those two words, though their significance was not fully appreciated at the time, the racketeering and organised crime machine that ran boxing, began to unravel.
Fun fact ,JFKs father Joe, made lots of money in prohibition eara on alcohol, invested it in the stock market and climbed the social and political ladder ,an extraordinary story .
LaMotta was sleeping on the needlebeds, of a time boxing was about "those" connections, (which still are), but who can be compared to LaMotta, (Saad...?) I didn't care for the movie, yet Everytime I review a LaMotta fight(s), I can't believe the fierceness, and toe- to-toe... Superb work, Rich!
As usual,another superb documentary about an extraordinary fighter. Don’t really know if it would work but a documentary about the great ring and ringside announcers could be interesting.
"The Raging Bull" Jake LaMotta (1922-2017 = 95). PRO record: 83-19-4, KO's 30. # Undisputed Middleweight Champion of the World: 1949-1951 (3-1-0, KO's 2). # Most notable victories: Sugar Ray Robinson, Marcel Cerdan, Jimmy Reeves, Fritzie Zivic x3, George Costner, Bert Lytell, Tommy Bell x3, Holman Williams, Bob Satterfield, Tony Janiro, Tiberio Mitri, Laurent Dauthuille. # Most notable losses: Sugar Ray Robinson x5, Jimmy Reeves x2, Fritzie Zivic, Lloyd Marshall, Laurent Dauthuille, Irish Bob Murphy, Danny Nardico.
When Jake was a teenager, he mugged a local bookie called Harry Gordon by hitting him over the head from behind with a lead pipe. He then read in the papers that the bookie had died and so for years he thought he was a murderer. Then on the night he won the Middleweight title, at the party in his hotel room, an old guy came to congratulate him and said he used to live in the same neighbourhood......it was Harry Gordon.The papers had wrongly reported his death all those years ago and he moved out of the bronx following the mugging.
my dude the only person who has ever claimed the guy was secretly alive is jake he absolutely invented this magical encounter with the secretly alive guy he killed
This is why combat sports can be the loneliest sport in the world sure you have all the trainers,medics, and if youre lucky enough family can support you, but in the ring you're by yourself and your worst enemy is yourself
We lived in an apartment. Dad told us we didn't have a chimney so Santa was just gonna fly on by on his sled. I knew Vickie and got to know Jake, both were great people. Jake was funny as hell and Vickie was a knockout even in her fifties. Jake told me any man that wouldn't have had sex with Vickie at 16 was ***** . Sorry Jake wasn't a politically correct kinda guy.
This is a great story,an told in such great detail in a short amount of time,I really love an appreciate them,especially the ones before my time THANK YOU!!
Jake had such a dark past going as high as world champion to wasting away in alcohol in prison …what a legend I live jake he’s REAL to me but in the end he lost to his own demons sadly
@@Eventual-Visitor what?? You sound like an idiot do your research be for you talk you make no sense he accomplished a lot but in the end he lost his family bcz of his addictions he talks about this openly he made tons of mistakes don’t compare me to this legend he’s a great great man I hold him high
When I was a kid the used to show his 2nd fight with Bob Murphy on ESPN Classic that was actually a great fight probably one of his last impressive wins. I guess his movie obviously distorted his style to look like a power punching destroyer, but he seemed to use a lot of elusiveness and boxing ability.
Never forget that scene in the movie where Jake used a hammer and flat head screwdriver to remove the "precious stones" from the belt and attempt to hock them. LOL
I just went left a long comment on the Cooney video with about half referencing Jake. I spent my summers with my old man who worked at Caesars in Vegas, and most of my early fight memories come from that time and how i got into the sport. I got to see every big summer fight from Mancini and Hagler all the way to Riddick Bowe, Tyson and Klitschko. Gerry was very kind to me and I loved him for it. But Jake? Jake is a whole nother story. When I was at Fordham U, I trained in the hood but hung out on Arthur avenue (all that is left of "Little Italy" in the Bronx). Every day I see this old pug sitting in front of the "Blue Moon Ristorante" till one day the even older pizza man told me "THAT IS THE BRONX BULL". From that day on I spent more time with Jake than in class. What a character, and like Ernie Shavers who would always repeat his "I hit Ali so hard he saw his African ancestors" phrase, Jake would drop "I fought Sugar Ray so many times I caught diabetes". Literally every day the same line. Just the funniest and coolest guy i ever met. He would always insult me with "youre too pretty and soft to be a fighter" as we discussed the sport. Gregarious outwardly but super sad inside. Very regretful to the point i almost cried a couple of times seeing his face get melancholy (he would have smacked me and called me a "f**"). I miss him. I really do. So many great fighters i have met and got to know ovee the years ranging from Antuofermo to Smokin Joe and Jab Zudah. Coach Kevin Kelley is still around helping coach and a ton others. But Jake was actually my friend. Great job Rich. I appreciate this
@@RichtheFightHistorian a lot of these guys, especially the old timers and less famous fighters really go into a funk as they get older and it is sad to see. My dad, not a particularly compassionate or good guy, would tell me how degrading he felt it was for Joe Louis and Liston to be working as casino greeters for a few bucks to shake hands and smile. Cooney actually liked it but he was a lot younger at the time. The only guy I ever met who made me more depressed than Jake was Joe Frazier. Around 2006 I had time time to kill while the gf was shopping for fabric in Philly, so i went to the gym. There was Joe, nobody else except Marvis who stopped in later. He was living upstairs in what i assume was as beat up and decrepit as the gym itself was. Couldnt have been nicer and even offered up some coffee but he was just so beaten down it was rough to see. Philly couldnt even save the gym as a memorial or atleast give him a statue while he was alive. Why i love what you do. All the forgotten guys and even the champs. You bring them a lot of dignity and memorilize them
Hey Rich, it would mean a lot to me if u could do emile griffith, I can't ever find any docs on him. Please consider it, I love the work you do. Thank you
@@RichtheFightHistorian thank you for telling me about this, I just watched it. If anyone is interested, the link is ua-cam.com/video/HZtEqy0MMbc/v-deo.html
yep most of the great boxers and fighters were bullied. I guess it puts a fire in them. But wow he was hit with 30 unanswered punches and didn't fall thats disturbing. His opponent collapsed from exhausting on beating him also disturbing. You had to be half dead before the ref stopped the fights in those days.
Great footage RICH, Lamotta was one of the best in the greatest era. He best fighting weight would been at 168 but the division and weight limit didn’t exist unfortunately. Amazing how these boxers then just fought guys bigger than them (Welterweights fighting middleweights and middleweights fighting Light Heavyweights), boxers of today just wouldn’t dream of doing that as often as they did then. Interestingly Charley Burley said that his manager would fiddle the scales so Burley could go in the ring with naturally bigger fighters than him. Burley was trying to get a fight with Lamotta but it never materialised. Lamotta was born mean, and was a bad piece of work at times, boxing is a nasty almost sadistic profession at times.
They were way tougher back then than today. Every forty years or so a new crew arrives. The last time we had great middle weights was Hearns, Leonard, Duran and Hagler. That was in the 80s.
That was great, the second and third Robinson fights were only three weeks apart. I meet Jake in January 1995 he had one off the biggest headed i had ever seen. Really enjoyed this must watch more from this channel.
It was amazing seeing an American sports heroes,a legend in person. I admired Jake la motta , it was just unreal seeing him for real.,I will never forget it Ll
One of the most amazing parts of Jake's story is that he lived to the age of 95.
@bflo1000 not always.Many boxers lived long lives.jimmy bivens, terry downes, jack demsey, and gene tunney to name a few.
@bflo1000not always. Alot of these boxers had great defensive skills and slipped and countered punches. Its not all about taking punches but evading them.
@bflo1000 true but he lived a long life.95 is not bad age considering.
And he never displayed any early dementia! The Middleweight George Chuvalo.
I think it's a testament to his strength of the will, rip
My grandfather called me Jake Lamotta. He is gone to a better place, passed in 2001, but I have always felt privileged that he called me that in reference. He said it was his favorite boxer and told me I don't need to box to be tough, "use your mind" to be tough and no one can defeat you.
Wise words.
Them boxers were hard as nails {compared to today´s lot} n defended their titles sometimes 2 weeks after winning it not months or years later like today!
You grandfather was sage, respect.
After such a painful life, the Raging Bull Jake LaMotta lived to a ripe old age of 95. Incredible story. May he RIP.
That's a strong spirit.
He was an awful person
He was bully, and I hate bullies.
2017 after 106 fights. Amazing Man
Short people live much longer than tall people.
Beautifullly told. One aspect which is never explored in raging bull, the movie, is the childhood of lamotta, we're given a very insecure, violent, brute, yet with a humanity we can identify with. And knowing about his childhood it explains a lot.
Thanks, Ash.
@@RichtheFightHistorian your work is beautiful Rich, keep at it! These are gems of boxing history and of the human spirit.
As always a quality tribute,I’ve seen all the previous documentaries you’ve done and you never Fail to give theses champions there due..,Nuff Respect and Appreciation it’s a honour being able to learn from a Boxing Historian of the highest order as yourself Rich 👏🏽👏🏽🥇🏆👑🥊🥊🥊
I Totally agree 👍.
Hey, I appreciate that Wayne. Thanks very much.
Here here
@@RichtheFightHistorian It's credit where due mate. your videos are quality at its finest. You don't even have to be a boxing fan to enjoy these biographies, these men lived some amazing ups and downs and most of these boxers I have never heard of. You do them and their families a great service, and also to your viewers. ✌🏻❤️💪🏻🇦🇺
Ive just subed best boxing channel i have ever seen. Makes todays fighters look soft asf
Years ago I used to see Jake taking long walks along Park Ave in NYC. One day I yelled out champ! Jake pumped one fist high in the air. Man even at an advanced age,Jake looked like no one to mess with
I had a very similar experience with Rocky Graziano, on Park Ave, sometime in the 80's
His autobiography is so much darker than the film, I’m not going to spoil it but some of the stuff he confesses doing is shocking. Makes me remember reading Somebody up there likes me , Rocky Graziano’s book which is easily in the 10 best boxing books I’ve read. Number 1 is No man stands alone by Barney Ross.
What a hard and gritty life... even with all the distractions, Jake still became the world's champion...
As opposed to the World Champion..
What's really amazing is that he navigated most of his career without the mob ..who controlled everything at that time .
I just got done watching raging bull yesterday and now you put this up
The universe works in mysterious ways
One of the Bull's underrated victories came at the end of his career against light heavyweight Bob Murphy.
He simply out boxed the brawling southpaw and out worked him with his left jab, giving him a boxing lesson for 10 rounds.
The first time I saw LaMotta on film was back in the 70's when i was an amateur boxer.
It was the 6th and final fight in their series with the Bull weakened by making 160lbs, for the last time.
Robbie targetted the Bull's body so the champion kept his elbows tucked in and offered his head as a target for one of history's most lethal left hookers.
Robbie actually tired of hitting the Bull's massive head.
Rocky Graziano once said LaMotta was a lightweight with a heavyweights head, but what a head !!!!
You mean the late 40s/50s.
He said "on film"
Mmm jm
J
4
Trump called denero punchy
Rich you have covered the life of the Bronx Bull, not only in fullness, but even then some! Probably my favorite boxer ever (due in part mostly to De Niro's performance in the film 'Raging Bull' and also Jake's autobiography). I remember in an interview Jake said that he took his ex wife Vicki to the opening screening of Raging Bull. When the film finished Jake turned to Vicki and said to her 'was I really that bad?' to which Vicki replied 'No. You were worse!' There is nothing to add here except thank you once again for another brilliant vlog.
Thanks for the support, oncall21.
I remember that interview.
Trump called dinero punchy well denero words where deleted to many f words
Di Niro is an actor. He played a boxer and an Army Ranger. But he is nothing more than a poser.
@@danpaesano2429 so how do you explain the three best actor Oscar’s and countless nominations???
Hi Rich. Thanks for uploading this great documentary. Jake la Motta was an incredibly tough and durable boxer.
Sure thing, Logical Network.
Your documentaries are always a treat to watch, never too much personal life or boxing techniques and analysis. It's a style I can show to my friends to make them like boxing !
I appreciate that, fred, thanks.
The beating he got from Robinson in their last fight would have killed most men, yet he could not knock Jake down. Unbelievable heart and just raw toughness. RIP to one the greatest ever. Jake LaMotta.
Mostly it was jake’s extra thicker than normal skull. But his heart of course led him and kept him going. But yeah so like they measured his skull at autopsy and discovered his to be something like 35% thicker skull bones than a normal humanoid male adult.
Mmmmmm. Man love.
@@Mr.Weed420you read that online somewhere and you read it wrong.
LaMotta was in that ring against two guys. One was Robinson, the other was the referee who should of stopped that fight a much earlier.
One of your best videos, well done! Almost like a documentary movie. Love the extra photos and video clips I had not seen before.
Thank you, Francisco.
i've seen raging bull many times, but never knew the finer details about his life like you explain here, very good and informative documentary !
Thanks, Kevin.
This was was my dad’s favourite fighter, he spoke of him the way you do when you idolize someone. When I was 22 I reconciled with my dad who I hadn’t seen since I was 4 years old. He had abandoned my mother and older brother And sister after terrorizing us for all of our lives. He would be the poster boy for an abusive, extremely violent alcoholic, and man could he fight. My dad weighted 150lbs. And was very tough, that was a different time and much more violent.
We got together and went to see the new film “raging bull”. It was in a strange way , his showing me what and who he was.
I have worked hard my entire life not to be like my father, and sometimes it pushed me to the limit. My father and I had a very intense argument 6 months after we had resumed contact. We never reconciled, I never accepted Or forgave his actions as a young father. He had a massive heart attack and died 50 yrs. old. His idol, and who he wanted to be like was Lamotta.
I despise him for it, I despise men like this and that entire generation.They are a sick product of cruel, murderous period in North America society and destroyed most things they came n contact with. I encourage people to watch RagingBull so maybe they will see evil.
@@peterparsons7141 thanks for sharing such personal info about your dad and your relationship with him, i have a super bad or non existent relationship with my father too, he isn't violent, but a very cold and narcissistic man, that only loves himself, i think both of our relationships with our father's are bad, just very different
@@kevinlewis8162 Sharing ? Most people who’ve known me all my long life don’t know the things that I just shared.I have three sons, and two grandchildren. I shared in hopes that it might help someone, somewhere,, maybe me. And for anyone who thinks Lamotta was just a good guy misunderstood, he was evil.
I wish you Peace and contentment and it’s to your benefit to let your father know what’s what!
@@RichtheFightHistorian How come you didn't talk about his relationship with his brother/trainer that is portrayed as tumultuous and violent in the movie? Did the movie get it wrong?
Again, another connection to the Philly area. His son used to own a night club in King of Prussia PA. It was called Popcorn’s. Nice club... He was a nice guy and treated patrons well. Good work Rich
I remember when Jake Jr died and I was just in college. Do you remember if it was Joey?
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@@thegadflygang5381 I believe it was Jake Jr. This was during the mid 80’s.
Superb masterpiece. Hats off! Keep up the great work historian! 🥳
Thank you, Jose! Will do!
Sugar Ray Robinson is the true TBE in boxing and for LaMotta to win 1 out of six against him is a huge accomplishment with his come forward style with little defense. Respect to the fighters of that era!
Sugar Ray is the best and the greatest boxer of all time. Jake La Motta had the best chin of all time.
Ehhh really tough to compare eras given the advances in technique and training/nutrition. Robinson is an ATG but it’s really tough to say who the GOAT is.
LaMotta actually won two of those six fights. He got the bad end of a bad decision.
@@yankee2666 You are right, wish more people knew
LaMotta had pretty great defense actually. At least, a lot better than people give him credit for.
Man I’ve waited for this one ! 👍👍 That come from behind knockout in the 15th round was amazing. I can’t believe the chin this man had, that last beating from Robinson could have killed him.
But his wife kept getting back up.
Another outstanding job Rich. You pull no punches and deliver the unvarnished truth.
I appreciate that, Baja, thanks.
When i see his fight with ray . I got emotional. His face was bleeding both eyes were swollen ray was throwing series of punches but He kept coming forward with his open guard even ray was exhausted beating him. The point was not win but pushing the limits standing as long as possible.
When i see today boxers start back paddling after one hard blow .but raging bull was insane warrior he used to move forward after getting hit
The guy had a really big head, possibly huge skull and maybe even denser skull than normal people... unbelievable
@@NimvarCan't discount how having his face pummeled literally his whole life, gave him a sort of resistance to punishment. I grew up with a kid from Queens, dad was a nasty drunk who beat his face often, he fought constantly and got punched a lot,it just didn't do much to him. His younger brother was the same and when they fought it ended when both were too tired to swing anymore, neither could pound the other into submission or knock the other out. They also didn't bruise or bleed that much considering the bare knuckle shots they gave and took.
I love your documentaries, Rich! This one I believe is your best! Well done "my Friend"👍✌❤👊
Hey thanks, Monty, I appreciate the support.
Absolutely great video with lots of unknown behind the scenes facts. 👏🥊👏
Thank you Rennea911
Love your videos. Thanks for doing what you do!
Thank you, Joseph, will do.
What a beautiful researched channel, this man needs more subscribers!!!
Your tributes bring a unique presence to these boxers I have never seen before- amazing gift. Thank you.
My pleasure, Arthur.
Fantastic job with this piece. Saw some clips I hadn't seen and you did a great job summing up his life in the short time you had. Bravo.
Thanks so much, Oldschool Saint
24:00 - DeNiro brilliantly portrayed Lamotta in '82's Raging Bull. Especially at this stage of his life where he gained weight and pretty much gave up
This/the, stage?
80 not 82
1980!🥊
Raging Bull - 1980!🎥
Robert Deniro's portrayal of LaMotta, was Masterful...not only did LaMotta hate the Mob, his fights with Sugar Ray, were WARS...Sadly, he had to throw the fight, for a chance at The Title...
@Sony PlayStation Carmine Basilio... truly a man of Integrity and a tough Son-of-gun...his fight with Sugar Ray proved he was one of a handfull, that stayed true and uncompromising, in the Fight Game, run by organized crime in his era..
Thanks Rich for covering this amazing fighter 👏
Sure thing, John.
You need a book deal. Something like the history of boxing. You are a scholar, and a wonderful storyteller. God bless you, Rich. Love your work.
Wow. Thank you very much, Mary.
Fantastic work Rich. Great research & delivery. As well as I know LaMotta's career, I didn't know the back story to so much of it. Really appreciate this content. Bless up bro 👊
Glad you enjoyed it, Nick. Thanks.
Possibly the greatest chin in boxing history. The original unmovable object.
Totally agree with your comment.robinson hit him with shots that would of kod some light heavyweights and he still kept comming!!!!
I think that it was marvelous Marvin hagler with the greatest chin in boxing history
@@victorteleguz4302 Just look at the old film. The man was carved from granite. People broke their hands upon his head...
Rich great stuff. Also luv your Monday recaps of the big weekend fights.
Thanks, John.
Boxing Legends sent me over. Nice channel, sir. Subscribed!
Thanks for the sub!
Keep bringing these guys to life RTFH
The usual Brilliant Stuff 🥊💥🥊
Thanks, C T O
Another EXCELLENT video!
Thanks, RICH THE FIGHT HISTORIAN
Thank you abudujana13
Oh my God, I cannot believe that the Building that's shown in this video after 2 minutes is 148 Orchard st. The man sitting on the chair near the Shoe store is someone I remember from My childhood, Its Irvin, I can't believe it. Oh Man, he was such Good person to us kids, God Rest His Soul. I really am awestruck, he died sometime in the late 1970,s.
All of us kids really thought the world of Irvin. I'm sorry for being redondent but I never in my wildest dreams ever thought I'd see anything like this in an old Video about Boxing Great Jake LaMotta. Wow,
Whoever made this video,
You, just can't imagine how this brought back Great Memories of when I was a kid.
Thank you, 👍
Great episode! That Lamotta took a shot of Brandy just before entering the ring against the GOAT in what would become infamously known as the St Valentine's Day Massacre, just blows me away,,, but it makes perfect sense.
Another amazing documentary, thank you!
Hey thanks, Guy.
I am really happy I found this great channel , greetings from Dublin Ireland 🇮🇪
Thank you and welcome
Jake is a miracle of generics in that he sustained considerable head trauma yet was with it right up until he died. Some people just hit the lottery in some aspects.
Absolutely
Roman.
He explained how he rolled with the punches, it wasn’t his head or his jaw (although I’m sure they were pretty darn strong) he used his reflexes and it prevented the damage so much so he lived till 95 and was still functional in his old age.
Italian chin
A burnt steak defeats it's own purpose. That's all I remember from that movie.
Lol!
First-rate documentary-: detailed yet fast paced, unflinching, and fair minded. It would have added a lot to the DVD/Blu Ray package for Raging Bull, but it's great that it's available on UA-cam.
Thanks, Ronald.
LaMotta always seemed like the ultimate brute and primitive street kid but at the same time it amazed me how funny he was and able to formulate well.
The story of Jake LaMotta, will live on in history forever do to Martin scorsese's, classic film Raging Bull. I had the honor of meeting Jake many years ago.
And part 2 taxi driver
U got a sub this his the best boxing channel i have seen ✌👍🥊
Enormous criminal empires had been built on the supply of illegal liquor during the Prohibition era. Al Capone’s the most infamous among them. When prohibition came to an end in 1933, after more than a decade of lucrative and bloody endeavour for the Mob, they needed something new. Access to the machinery of boxing, a wilfully unfettered anarchy proved remarkably easy to acquire. Boxing was now fertile ground for the Mafia.
The son of an Italian immigrant, encouraged to fight by his Sicilian born father, Jake LaMotta was a great boxer on the rise in 1947, but he was looking for a greater rise, and favor with the mob. The mob controlled boxing, and wanted LaMotta to take a dive against Billy Fox for an extra $20,000 and a guaranteed title shot against Frenchman Marcel Cerdan..
Jake was awarded his promised 20 grand and title shot, as well as an investigation from the FBI years later.
No matter the sincerity of LaMotta’s performance, in the end, the answer that would glow in the history books, in the folklore of boxing and into the living rooms of America in 1960, had to be uttered
Bonomi: “That’s the truth, you faked the knockout, is that correct?”
LaMotta: “Yes sir.”
And in those two words, though their significance was not fully appreciated at the time, the racketeering and organised crime machine that ran boxing, began to unravel.
Thanks for the history lesson.
Thanks Asha. Im a big boxing fan
Fun fact ,JFKs father Joe, made lots of money in prohibition eara on alcohol, invested it in the stock market and climbed the social and political ladder ,an extraordinary story .
Mr. La Motta was nice enough to autograph everything I ever sent him---
no charge.
Very classy man.
LaMotta was sleeping on the needlebeds, of a time boxing was about "those" connections, (which still are), but who can be compared to LaMotta, (Saad...?) I didn't care for the movie, yet Everytime I review a LaMotta fight(s), I can't believe the fierceness, and toe- to-toe... Superb work, Rich!
Thank you, Todd.
As usual,another superb documentary about an extraordinary fighter. Don’t really know if it would work but a documentary about the great ring and ringside announcers could be interesting.
Yes i agree. It would be great to see documentaries about boxing referees, boxing announcers, boxing commentars and boxing trainers.
Thanks, Gordon. Trainers are forthcoming. Will have to think about announcers as there may not be a whole lot of drama there.
I would agree but to me,Jimmy Lennon
@@RichtheFightHistorian a documentary on Michael Buffer would be amazing.
"The Raging Bull" Jake LaMotta (1922-2017 = 95).
PRO record: 83-19-4, KO's 30.
# Undisputed Middleweight Champion of the World: 1949-1951 (3-1-0, KO's 2).
# Most notable victories: Sugar Ray Robinson, Marcel Cerdan, Jimmy Reeves, Fritzie Zivic x3, George Costner, Bert Lytell, Tommy Bell x3, Holman Williams,
Bob Satterfield, Tony Janiro, Tiberio Mitri, Laurent Dauthuille.
# Most notable losses: Sugar Ray Robinson x5, Jimmy Reeves x2, Fritzie Zivic, Lloyd Marshall, Laurent Dauthuille, Irish Bob Murphy, Danny Nardico.
Yet another excellent video. Definitely my favourite UA-cam channel
I appreciate that, David. Thanks.
Wow he lost both his sons that was the most saddest part .. rip the ragging bull !
Been waiting my whole life to see his battle with Bobby Satterfield. Jake was a real Tough SOB !
legend Rich 👊
Yeah, I wish we had footage of that Satterfield fight!
When Jake was a teenager, he mugged a local bookie called Harry Gordon by hitting him over the head from behind with a lead pipe. He then read in the papers that the bookie had died and so for years he thought he was a murderer. Then on the night he won the Middleweight title, at the party in his hotel room, an old guy came to congratulate him and said he used to live in the same neighbourhood......it was Harry Gordon.The papers had wrongly reported his death all those years ago and he moved out of the bronx following the mugging.
Don’t know why he cared about being a murderer when he was a rapist
Neither do I......Some people are funny like that I guess.@@kainlives7958
my dude the only person who has ever claimed the guy was secretly alive is jake
he absolutely invented this magical encounter with the secretly alive guy he killed
This is why combat sports can be the loneliest sport in the world sure you have all the trainers,medics, and if youre lucky enough family can support you, but in the ring you're by yourself and your worst enemy is yourself
We lived in an apartment. Dad told us we didn't have a chimney so Santa was just gonna fly on by on his sled. I knew Vickie and got to know Jake, both were great people. Jake was funny as hell and Vickie was a knockout even in her fifties. Jake told me any man that wouldn't have had sex with Vickie at 16 was ***** . Sorry Jake wasn't a politically correct kinda guy.
3:24 I was surprised to see Jake helping his opponent to his feet.
This is a great story,an told in such great detail in a short amount of time,I really love an appreciate them,especially the ones before my time THANK YOU!!
My pleasure, flj4957
Another great job, Rich, I loved it !
Thanks so much, grahamdoe.
Jake had such a dark past going as high as world champion to wasting away in alcohol in prison …what a legend I live jake he’s REAL to me but in the end he lost to his own demons sadly
You mean he lost at 95 years old? Lets see at what age do you win.
@@Eventual-Visitor what?? You sound like an idiot do your research be for you talk you make no sense he accomplished a lot but in the end he lost his family bcz of his addictions he talks about this openly he made tons of mistakes don’t compare me to this legend he’s a great great man I hold him high
De Niro was superb playing the Raging Bull. 95. Amazing.
When I was a kid the used to show his 2nd fight with Bob Murphy on ESPN Classic that was actually a great fight probably one of his last impressive wins. I guess his movie obviously distorted his style to look like a power punching destroyer, but he seemed to use a lot of elusiveness and boxing ability.
It's sad because he lived an abusive childhood at the hands of his father. He should've gotten some help for that
Great job loved this one hell I love all your documentarys
Thank you, Jordan.
Never forget that scene in the movie where Jake used a hammer and flat head screwdriver to remove the "precious stones" from the belt and attempt to hock them. LOL
Then he starts yelling at Vicki for the dinner plates falling from banging on the counter.
Yea he should have left them in the belt
@@jasonkessler7321
He said to her, "Don't you know how to stack dishes so they don't fall down??" Totally blaming her for it!!!
What a truly amazing person, to channel that, did you become a legend, it’s the backstory, that needs to be told
I just went left a long comment on the Cooney video with about half referencing Jake. I spent my summers with my old man who worked at Caesars in Vegas, and most of my early fight memories come from that time and how i got into the sport. I got to see every big summer fight from Mancini and Hagler all the way to Riddick Bowe, Tyson and Klitschko.
Gerry was very kind to me and I loved him for it. But Jake? Jake is a whole nother story. When I was at Fordham U, I trained in the hood but hung out on Arthur avenue (all that is left of "Little Italy" in the Bronx). Every day I see this old pug sitting in front of the "Blue Moon Ristorante" till one day the even older pizza man told me "THAT IS THE BRONX BULL".
From that day on I spent more time with Jake than in class. What a character, and like Ernie Shavers who would always repeat his "I hit Ali so hard he saw his African ancestors" phrase, Jake would drop "I fought Sugar Ray so many times I caught diabetes". Literally every day the same line.
Just the funniest and coolest guy i ever met. He would always insult me with "youre too pretty and soft to be a fighter" as we discussed the sport. Gregarious outwardly but super sad inside. Very regretful to the point i almost cried a couple of times seeing his face get melancholy (he would have smacked me and called me a "f**").
I miss him. I really do. So many great fighters i have met and got to know ovee the years ranging from Antuofermo to Smokin Joe and Jab Zudah. Coach Kevin Kelley is still around helping coach and a ton others. But Jake was actually my friend.
Great job Rich. I appreciate this
Thanks, Gadfly. I appreciate the share. I can see why you'd want to spend more time talking with him, such a complex man.
@@RichtheFightHistorian a lot of these guys, especially the old timers and less famous fighters really go into a funk as they get older and it is sad to see. My dad, not a particularly compassionate or good guy, would tell me how degrading he felt it was for Joe Louis and Liston to be working as casino greeters for a few bucks to shake hands and smile. Cooney actually liked it but he was a lot younger at the time.
The only guy I ever met who made me more depressed than Jake was Joe Frazier. Around 2006 I had time time to kill while the gf was shopping for fabric in Philly, so i went to the gym. There was Joe, nobody else except Marvis who stopped in later. He was living upstairs in what i assume was as beat up and decrepit as the gym itself was.
Couldnt have been nicer and even offered up some coffee but he was just so beaten down it was rough to see. Philly couldnt even save the gym as a memorial or atleast give him a statue while he was alive.
Why i love what you do. All the forgotten guys and even the champs. You bring them a lot of dignity and memorilize them
@@thegadflygang5381 I didn't know that about Frazier. People forget. Really interesting shares, thank you.
Jake Lamotta & my Uncle Bob Satterfield were Best of Friends,... He was a Friend of the Family,...
Wonderful upload and so grateful ❤️✔️👏🇬🇧
"Throw me out the window Joey" ! SNL, best skit ever!
The first to beat the greatest middleweight in history; Sugar Ray Robinson, and Ray was in his prime then. Raging Bull for sure.
His brother Joey who was his manager was a pro boxer aswell for 22 months and had 39 fights.. absolute different breeds back then
Best chin of all middleweights? Maybe definitely between him and Hagler
I would say Lamotta just because gloves of that time had hardly any padding
Marciano had granite chin. He wasn't much bigger than a middleweight.
@@PathwayPrivate6 oz gloves in his era and Jake fight much much tougher competition. No comparison to Hagler era.
I remember seeing The Raging Bull at a Yonkers PAL tournament in 2000 and in his Senior years he still looked tough. RIP Champ 💖
A great presentation Freind 🇬🇧👊
One thing I notice in older fights is that they don’t cover up when hurt. I wonder if that is because the gloves where smaller?
Hey Rich, it would mean a lot to me if u could do emile griffith, I can't ever find any docs on him. Please consider it, I love the work you do. Thank you
Great and tragic story. Wish I had links for you but there are docs on Emile.
Agree 100% on Emile Griffith deserving more credit
There is the "Ring of Fire"...one of the best boxing docs ever on Griffith-Paret.
@@RichtheFightHistorian thank you for telling me about this, I just watched it. If anyone is interested, the link is ua-cam.com/video/HZtEqy0MMbc/v-deo.html
yep most of the great boxers and fighters were bullied. I guess it puts a fire in them. But wow he was hit with 30 unanswered punches and didn't fall thats disturbing. His opponent collapsed from exhausting on beating him also disturbing. You had to be half dead before the ref stopped the fights in those days.
*Don't overthink it when you watch this, it defeats its own purpose*
Must go down as one of the toughest fighters of all time . Sheer Brutality.
Pure excellence, thanks again Rich.
Sure thing, BB
Wonderful narration.
Thanks very much.
Awesome mini documentary
Thanks, armida.
Great work as usual.
Thank you, gianca60
This is a horrific story, not the story that Martin Scorsese told, True horror story, good God
Have him tattooed to my stomach and his autograph at home .. my fav fighter .
Thats awesome mate 👊🔥👊
Awesome.
Really enjoyed this🥊🥊👍👍
This Is A Great Documentary May He Rest In Peace.
Great footage RICH, Lamotta was one of the best in the greatest era. He best fighting weight would been at 168 but the division and weight limit didn’t exist unfortunately. Amazing how these boxers then just fought guys bigger than them (Welterweights fighting middleweights and middleweights fighting Light Heavyweights), boxers of today just wouldn’t dream of doing that as often as they did then. Interestingly Charley Burley said that his manager would fiddle the scales so Burley could go in the ring with naturally bigger fighters than him. Burley was trying to get a fight with Lamotta but it never materialised. Lamotta was born mean, and was a bad piece of work at times, boxing is a nasty almost sadistic profession at times.
Thanks, Brett. Agreed about the catchweight matches, they are a thing of the past.
Sadistic AND maaochistic simultaneously.
Keep up the good work mate!! Fantastic vids
Will do, Andrew, thanks.
They were way tougher back then than today. Every forty years or so a new crew arrives. The last time we had great middle weights was Hearns, Leonard, Duran and Hagler. That was in the 80s.
This is an excellent commentary on this extraordinary fighter. I look forward to other unbiased bios like this- thanks very much.
My pleasure, Clive. Thanks.
That was great, the second and third Robinson fights were only three weeks apart. I meet Jake in January 1995 he had one off the biggest headed i had ever seen. Really enjoyed this must watch more from this channel.
Thanks, Barry.
Incredible, first time ive watched his full story, fascinating stuff.
I met Jake months before he passed away at a movie theatre he signed a boxing glove for me
It was amazing seeing an American sports heroes,a legend in person. I admired Jake la motta , it was just unreal seeing him for real.,I will never forget it
Ll
Robert denero brilant
Edited very well, smooth VO, Thanks
Sure thing, Michael