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He was a celebrated
Olympic hero and undefeated as a professional until losing an
extremely debatable verdict in Korea. Nino came to New York
and captured the American fans with his suave, arrogant
demeanor. He took two out of three against the great Emile
Griffith and he was the middleweight champion of the world.
Nino had
some very ill advised thoughts about moving up to challenge
Bob Foster for the light heavyweight crown. First he had to
get by former titleholder Dick Tiger. The stronger Tiger
handled Nino with ease thus ending Nino's illusion of
competing against Foster. This was the end of Nino's career. Looking back I remember the Italian boxing heroes... Graziano. Marciano, LaMotta, Basilio and DeMarco. Throw in a clever but tough Giardello and you can get a picture of what I was looking for. Nino didn't fit the bill. He was not of the same mold. I've never seen a fighter complain to the referee like Nino used to. In my eyes he was real whiner. Hagler and Hopkins would have worn him down and stopped him. Hearns and Leonard would have knocked him out. Toney and McCallum would have out cuted him. Iran Barkley would have out slugged him. 6-13-2005
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