SUDDENLY ONE SUMMER: THE
GLORIOUS RUSH OF GREATNESS THAT WAS ROBERTO DURAN
EL CHOLO: Roberto Duran was a lean and mean young hitter with the
nickname of 'Rocky' when he stepped into the ring to challenge Ken
Buchanan for the lightweight championship in June 1972. Roberto left the
arena that night as the new champion and a legend was born. To many,
Duran is the greatest of all the lightweights. He was a fabulous
135-pounder who went on to win world titles at welterweight,
junior-middleweight and middleweight.
When El Cholo first came to visit us in earnest, it was with a glorious
rush of youth and fire that burned the blood and made the spine tingle.
Given his charisma and volcanic presence, it seems hard to believe now
that Roberto Duran had slipped in under the radar when he climbed
through the ropes to challenge Ken Buchanan for the lightweight
championship on the night of June 26 1972. Most of us knew that Duran
was a wild kid from Panama with a big right hand punch who had been
knocking a lot of guys out in the first round. Trouble was, we hadn’t
heard of most of the guys.
They were calling Duran Rocky in those days, not El Cholo or Manos de
Piedra. The nickname, like the fighter, was still in transition as the
formula for greatness bubbled and gelled tantalisingly into the final
product.
Only as his greatness matured and the years rolled by with gathering
momentum and gathering moss would the stories about Duran multiply and
grow to near mythical proportions. In the beginning, we had very little
background flesh to hang on the bones of the lean young killer’s body.
But oh, did he look like a fighter! Lean and sinewy, all springs and
coils, powerful and sleek, Duran was the nearest human equivalent I have
seen to a predatory animal. The lion’s mane of jet-black hair was
perfectly apt, but it was the almost satanic twinkle in the eye that set
Roberto apart from the rest. Such a look can never be cultivated or
faked. A man either has it or he doesn’t. It represents the chilling
invitation to come into his domain and try and beat him at the ultimate
game of life and death.
We would learn, not greatly to our surprise, that little in Duran’s life
was regimented or even basically structured. Small wonder that the
Internal Revenue Service eventually homed in on his finances, since one
could never quite imagine Roberto poring over his balance sheets and
keeping tabs on his spending. He spent money when he was a rich man
because he never had it when he was a poor boy. He fought his fights,
held celebratory parties on the beach with his family and friends and
spoke his mind to anyone who asked him his opinion.
An airline pilot discovered the prickly side of Duran’s nature when he
asked him how he thought he would fare against Sugar Ray Leonard. “I’ll
kill Leonard,” Duran replied, “and if you don’t stop bugging me, I’ll
kill you.”
After battering Ray Lampkin in a lightweight title defence and sending
him to hospital, Duran allegedly barked, “Next time I’ll put him in the
morgue.” The social graces were never among Roberto’s greatest
attributes.
Only in later life did the fiery Panamanian mellow and show his softer
side. He wept as he embraced former opponent Esteban DeJesus in a prison
hospital, when AIDS was sucking Esteban’s life away from him. Duran also
became more open and encouraging to a new generation of young fighters
who regarded him as their idol, while he and Ken Buchanan recently
reunited after more than thirty years to bury the bad feelings that had
lingered after their epic fight at the Garden.
Perhaps Duran, as a gnarled and retired old warrior, has finally come to
terms with the more mundane and less challenging aspects of life. For
years, life without boxing and its unique excitement was an impossible
pill for him to swallow. When he was still slugging away in his late
thirties, losing more fights than he should have done, he famously said,
“I was born to fight. I do not know what else to do.”
Greatest
In my lifetime, I have never seen a greater pound-for-pound fighter than
Roberto Duran. He possessed the talent, the skill, the versatility and
the arrogance that the greatest trainers can never instil into
manufactured fighters. He was indeed a wild one, but the wildness came
with the cunning and inherent discipline of a chess master. Few fighters
have those instincts built into them.
Such was Duran’s ferocity in his glorious prime that many observers were
blind to his more subtle skills, such as his ability to slip and block
punches and counter with unerring accuracy. His punching power in his
peak years as a lightweight was tremendous.
As a youth, he survived the often ferocious streets of his native
Panama, where deaths from teenage knife fights were common. As a young
man, he served his professional apprenticeship in the cauldrons of
suffocating little fight arenas throughout Panama and Mexico. In taking
the lightweight championship from Ken Buchanan at Madison Square Garden,
Duran beat a master boxer out of sight. In winning the welterweight
title from Sugar Ray Leonard eight years later, he outfought and
out-thought a master strategist in producing his greatest performance.
As he moved into the sunset of his magnificent career, the slower but
wiser Duran still managed to win versions of the junior middleweight and
middleweight titles in fights he was expected to lose against tough
young guns in Davey Moore and Iran Barkley.
Challenging the great Marvin Hagler proved a step too far in 1983, but
it was noticeably Hagler who looked the more intimidated as he
cautiously punched out a unanimous points victory.
What added to Duran’s charisma was his fiery temperament and inner
demons, which he didn’t always manage to keep in check. In his second
fight with Leonard, he suddenly stopped dead in the eighth round and
walked away uttering his now famous cry of "No mas" (No more).
Duran was accused of quitting, which he surely did, but not for some of
the fanciful reasons offered at the time. He had come to fight while
Leonard had come to play mind games. Taunting Duran and winding up
punches in theatrical style, Leonard got into the mind of the machismo
warrior and completely tore it apart. It was too much for such an
intensely proud man to bear, and Duran’s most likely thought as he waved
himself out of action was a simple, ‘The hell with this, I’m going
home’.
That was eight years after Roberto had ripped the lightweight
championship from Ken Buchanan and cleaned out the division with twelve
defences over six electrifying years. For Buchanan, the coming of Duran
was a rude and violent awakening. The brilliantly skilful, gritty Scot
had endeared himself to American fans with his ringcraft and his ability
to tough it out in the trenches. Ken had already encountered one great
Panamanian and seen him off twice. In the blazing heat of day in San
Juan, Buchanan had taken the title from Ismael Laguna in a gruelling
fifteen rounder. The decision was split, but Ken confirmed his
superiority in the return match at Madison Square Garden, where he
rallied down the stretch superbly to capture a unanimous verdict.
Buchanan was hailed by none other than Ring editor Nat Fleischer as a
boxing wizard of the old school, and it seemed that Ken would reign over
the lightweights for a good few years. Then he met Duran: a wild child,
an underdog, just a big banger with a string of knockouts over lower
grade competition. How good could the kid be? Over the course of
thirteen brutal rounds, Buchanan would learn that Roberto Duran was the
best of his generation, one of those greats who come along to raise the
bar and damn the very good.
Knockdown!
It is near impossible to read a fighter’s mind and ascertain when the
seeds of doubt are first planted on those nights when it all goes wrong.
For Buchanan, it went wrong shortly after the opening bell. One
incident, not shattering in its immediate impact but certainly
destructive in its long term significance, threw the champion and
everyone else into disarray. Referee Johnny LoBianco called a knockdown
as Duran clipped Buchanan and sent him half down with a grazing left to
the head.
Even Don Dunphy, that most excellent of commentators, was caught out.
Measured and sensible in just about everything he ever said, Don wasn’t
given to loud outbursts or unnecessary melodrama. But as Buchanan
scrambled up, Dunphy cried, “That is not scored a knockdown – yes it is!
Johnny scores it as a knockdown!”
Duran’s early success was not an aberration. Buchanan knew at once that
he was sharing the ring with a man on fire, a very special talent. In
the hurly burly of those opening seconds, Ken fired back and knocked
Roberto off balance with a solid left hook, but quickly discovered that
his tormentor was not one to be deterred.
Duran was unleashing punches with both hands and showing terrific hand
speed. His well publicised right, in particular, was lightning fast and
effective in its delivery. Don Dunphy had already recognised the scale
of Buchanan’s task: “He’s in there with no cream puff. Duran’s just
dynamite with his right hand.”
Legendary trainer Ray Arcel had come out of retirement to coach Duran
and was obviously pleased with the start made by his hungry young lion.
The Garden was buzzing and a cacophony of noise as the bagpipes of
Buchanan’s supporters competed with a Panamanian band.
Ken began the second round like a man determined to restore order. He
was the champion and a big favourite. Maybe this fiery kid before him
would have his moment in the sun and quickly blow out. Ken got his jab
working but simply couldn’t find a way to avoid Roberto’s punches. Not
only were they fast, they were fired off with constant variety and came
raining in from all angles. Everything about Duran moved and jiggled and
bounced, yet in perfect harmony. His head movement was superb, as was
his timing and balance. He judged distance beautifully, never lunging or
looking awkward. “Win or lose this one, I have a feeling Duran will be
back,” Don Dunphy prophetically announced.
Roberto offered Ken no rest inside, banging to the ribs and pounding
short punches to the stomach. Buchanan tried to discourage his
challenger with one or two effective uppercuts and certainly seemed to
be finding his rhythm in a calmer fourth round, but the champion’s few
successes were being swamped by the greater volume of return fire.
In the fifth round, Buchanan ran into a firestorm. A left and two
smashing rights to the chin drove him to the ropes and his mouthpiece
came out as Duran swarmed over him. Even though he was still raw, the
young Panamanian ace was already showing the instinct of the greats.
Nothing he did seemed robotic or consciously planned. His movement was
fast and fluid, his punches flowed naturally.
The fight was charging along, fast and bumpy like a train going over the
points, as Duran the engine driver sucked up Buchanan and the crowd in
his slipstream and raced for the terminus. In the sixth round,
commentator Dunphy compared the pace of the bout to that of the Beau
Jack-Bob Montgomery thriller of years gone by. Somewhere within the
general maelstrom, Buchanan found a rail to cling to as he re-discovered
his boxing skills and began to more effectively evade Duran’s sweeping
rushes. It was a better round for Ken, but that was his problem. His
moments of joy were too short-lived and were inevitably wiped out by
another torrent.
However, the expected backlash from Roberto didn’t follow in the
seventh. He unveiled a jolting jab from long range and continued to
ruffle Buchanan with vicious, chopping shots to the jaw in close, but it
was Ken who won the plaudits of the crowd as he began to jab brilliantly
and tagged the challenger with a hurtful right to the body.
Duran appeared irritated with himself at having failed to make further
progress and flew from his corner at the beginning of the eighth. A
swelling was coming up above Ken’s left eye and he began to trade with
Roberto in an attempt to slow the runaway train. Don Dunphy proved a
wise old sage again in the ninth as he commented, “Buchanan’s looking a
little better, but every time I say that he runs into one.”
Boy oh boy, did Ken run into one. He was nailed by a cracking right to
the chin in his corner, but showed tremendous heart and fighting spirit
as he took the play away from Duran with a beautifully timed countering
left hook. Following up with an array of jabs and hooks, Buchanan
incredibly turned the tide to post his best round of the fight.
Heartened by his success, the champion increased the power of his
punches in the tenth round, winging solid left and right hooks to
Roberto’s body. Both men teed off with good shots to the chin, but the
difference between them was now graphically clear. Buchanan looked like
a man who was in the fight of his life, who had to dig and scrap and
claw for every small piece of turf he gained. Duran looked the same as
he had done from the outset, an implacable and relentless animal of a
man who could not seem to be significantly hurt or deflected from his
purpose.
Tide
Buchanan was charting his way through the choppy waters with further
success in the eleventh round when the storm began to rage again. Some
of Ken’s skilfully placed punches were almost too fast to be seen in
real time and he was now blocking many of Duran’s body shots. Then came
the sudden rush of power and fury that would break the hearts of so many
men in the years to follow, as Roberto erupted. He found the boxing
master’s chin with a vicious salvo, bulling him halfway through the
ropes in the big surge that followed.
Buchanan was now looking noticeably tired. He had played his best cards
and found nothing with which to extinguish the raging inferno. Duran
sensed his time was coming. He was still full of life and full of fire,
revelling gloriously in the one arena of life that he completely loved
and understood. Out fast for the twelfth, he caught Buchanan with a big
left-right combination and punished the champion with head-jerking
uppercuts up close. Ken just couldn’t get out of the way of the flying
leather and teetered closer to the cliff edge when he was hammered by a
tremendous right to the chin. Incredibly, the blow did not even stagger
Buchanan, whose heart and ability to take a punch was exemplary.
But the champion was now spiralling ever downwards. He needed the
respite that natural ring killers never allow, and he needed a lot more
points to save his crown. The last crucial rounds were slipping from his
grasp and Duran just kept punching, switching his blows from the head to
the body.
As the thirteenth round opened, each fighter’s agenda was perfectly
simple. Duran wanted the knockout. Buchanan needed it. Right away, the
omens were not good for Ken. He grimaced in pain as Roberto went low
with a right, a portent of things to come. Buchanan broke free of his
tireless pursuer and bounced up and down as he tried vainly to shake
fresh life into his arms and legs Duran was hunting him down all the
time, but Ken was firing back defiantly when the two fighters moved to
the ropes at the sound of the bell. But that wasn’t the end of the
action.
Bang! A sweeping right from Duran caught Buchanan below the belt and
sent him tumbling to the canvas, writhing in pain. Uproar and confusion
followed as Ken’s handlers helped him back to his corner. The champion
was still in apparent distress when the warning whistle sounded for the
fourteenth, as trainer Gil Clancy and father Tommy Buchanan made their
protests.
The complaints cut no ice with referee Johnny LoBianco, who ruled the
blow irrelevant since it came after the bell. The fight was stopped and
Duran was declared the new champion. For years afterwards, well over two
decades in fact, Buchanan would feel bitter about the circumstances of
Duran’s coronation and never miss a chance to remind his old foe of that
burning, violent night in New York.
Was the punch low? Very definitely. Could Buchanan have won the fight if
he had continued? Not in the opinion of this writer. The circumstances
were unfortunate for all concerned, but Roberto Duran was a force apart,
a man of destiny who was always going to tear down the barricades of the
church and claim the crown.
It happened suddenly that summer. It would have happened anyway.
Mike Casey