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lockridge


Tuesday Jun 30, 2009

Lockridge's top purse translates to almost $450,000 today. He was a rock-solid fighter, but not a superstar who accrued enough to retire on. TSS hopes Lockridge has some more fight left in him, to kick the drugs and drink. Good luck, Rock!

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Rocky Lockridge: I Thought It Would End Differently For Him

By Frank Lotierzo

This past weekend there was a sad story in the New Jersey Star-Ledger on former WBC and IBF junior lightweight champ Rocky Lockridge 44-9 (36 KOs). According to the Star-Ledger, Lockridge has been homeless for 10 years, much a result of drug and alcohol addiction on Lockridge's part for at least the past 20 years. It was also mentioned in the article that the 50 year old Lockridge suffered a stroke a few years ago and walks with the assistance of a four pronged walker.

As it is most often times you really don't know the fighters you train with on a daily basis. Unless you become friends and interact together outside of the gym with them, you have no idea who they associate with or what they do during their spare time. Which was case between myself and former two time junior lightweight champ RockyLockridge. I didn't really know him and couldn't consider or call him a friend and vice-versa. But I can adamantly say that from what I did know of Rocky, I liked him.

It was 1980 and I was fighting as an amateur middleweight. Rocky Lockridge at that time was six months away from challenging WBA featherweight champ Eusebio Pedroza for the title. Pedroza had one of the longest title reigns in featherweight history, holding the title for seven years. Rocky and I both trained at Joe Frazier's gym in North Philadelphia and were trained by George Benton. At that time I lived in Cherry Hill N.J. and I was told that Rocky split his time between Paterson andLindenwold N.J. The fighters who Lockridge hung around mostly fought under the "Tomorrow's Champions" banner and were promoted by Main Events. Rocky was very articulate when he conversed, however he was on the quiet side and seemed most comfortable around fellow stable mates JohnnyBumphus and Alex Ramos.

Whenever I think of Rocky Lockridge training, I think of how hard and fast he ran. During those years I was quite a runner myself and it was always hard for me to find a running partner. I liked to run at a very fast clip to simulate the pace of a fight and had no time for jogging and felt it was a waste of time. This was something Rocky and I shared, making us different than most fighters who usually jogged for long periods of time at a slow pace.

Right outside of Philadelphia there's the suburb of Pennsauken N.J. which is home to Cooper River Park. On the outskirts of the Park there's a 3.8 mile tar bike/running path. Rocky and I would often meet there around 7:30 am and take off. Together we would leave any other runners way behind us before we were even a mile out. Once we made our way around the course and approached the final half mile, we'd pick it up. During those years I ran with friends who ran races regularly, played college football and who boxed and wrestled. Not once did they ever get by or stay with me during that last half mile. The only exception to that was RockyLockridge . I think I may have finished ahead of him maybe three times at the most. Usually, I ended up watching his running shoes and marveling at his perfect stride and envying how he remained so loose and relaxed as he was pulling away from me. Nobody could hang with Rocky doing roadwork, nobody.

Later in the afternoon he'd be focused and do exactly what Benton asked of him during training. Rocky trained harder than any most fighters I've ever been in the gym with -- with the exception of Curtis Parker andMarvis Frazier. What separated Rocky Lockridge from other name fighters on the verge of fighting for a title was he sometimes talked about what he wanted to do once he'd accomplished his goal in boxing and was through fighting. I remember him talking about taking courses in journalism and broadcasting. Which seemed appropriate for a guy like him who always had a unique perspective on whatever thought he was conveying. And according to the Star-Ledger Rocky did enroll in college for two years and studied business.

Rocky said in the Star-Ledger after each fight that he would party "two weekends," adding that he snorted cocaine and abused alcohol, drinking whatever was around. Again, not knowing or hanging around Rocky away from the gym, there wasn't any sign of this nor were there any rumors of it flying around the gym regarding him. Which usually isn't the case. Most fighters and trainers know who the fighters are that are messing around with drugs and alcohol and it doesn't take a genius to deduct exactly who those fighters and some trainers are.

Lockridge also said that whenever he needed money he would ask the Duvas (who owned Main Events) for it and they'd always give it to him. Today, he says that was a mistake and they should've resisted him. Yeah right. Had they resisted him he would've sought another manager or promoter who he could've charmed for the money. There's one thing about world class/championship caliber fighters that most fans don't know -- that is they can be some of the most charming and warm human beings around. I have no love for promoters and managers, but am well aware that fighters will con and bleed a vein supplying them money dry. A fighter with the potential of RockyLockridge along with his cerebral personality and charm would've been very hard to refute if you were the Duvas.

It says a lot that Rocky according to the article is willing to accept some of the blame pertaining to his unfortunate predicament, but that's not enough. According to the Star-Ledger Rocky's biggest payday was $200,000, that being for his fight versus Julio Cesar Chavez, which obviously isn't enough to sustain a man with a wife and two kids like RockyLockridge for the rest of his life. Rocky was an outstanding fighter. I relished watching him put the "Black Mamba" Roger Mayweather to sleep with one overhand right in 1984. That said, Rocky wasn't a truly great fighter and didn't earn the million dollar purses like Chavez or Hector Camacho did.

Like boxing, life is tough. A person also needs to have a Plan B and C. At one time I would've bet anything that Rocky Lockridge had a backup plan and would've never been homeless at age 50. Rocky was/is a smart guy and was aware of everything going on around him. He knew that the life of a world class fighter was short lived and it could end overnight via one fight. Add to that two plus decades of alcohol and drug abuse, what did he expect to happen? It wasn't like what has happened to Rocky hadn't happened to other champions and he was fully cognizant of it.

Alcohol and drugs have destroyed many strong men and women. Rocky Lockridge made that choice and when all is said and done only has himself to blame. I'm sure he was screwed out of money during his life and career. Not to mention the misfortune of having to get through a tough and underrated champion likeEusebio Pedroza along with suffering one of the worst robberies ever in a big fight versus Wilfredo Gomez in 1985. However, that's still not an excuse to snort and drink your life down the drain.

If I had to pick a fighter who I was certain would never end up in the dire straits the way he has, Rocky Lockridge would have been one of the fighters at the top of the list. He seemed to have too much going for him and had an identity other than being a world class fighter. At the same time when fighters of his stature are on top, they don't believe anything can take them down. That's part and parcel as to what enables them to be successful. But when all is said and done they're people just like everyone else and need air to breath. RockyLockridge was no different and we now know he wasn't impervious to the same temptation and poor choices that are always within striking distance of all men and women.

I feel terrible for Rocky. Lou Duva said Rocky is like a son to him. He also said he'd bring him on to train fighters if he could stay clean and sober. Yet Rocky hasn't been able to hold up to that end of the deal. So once again it all falls back on him. Like everyone else who knows him, I wish him well, but he has to help himself. I'd say a former two-time world champ could very possibly have a future and be an outstanding boxing trainer.

Maybe it's not too late and Rocky can save himself from himself?

 

 Contact the writer at:  GlovedFist@Gmail.com

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DaveB:  I saw the video on Rocky Lockridge. He is only a few miles from me in Camden, N.J. It was very sad to see him looking haggard and disheveled, walking with a cane. I remember seeing him on television back in those days. He always seemed like a very likable guy, intelligent and talkative, a color commentator would have been right up his alley. I remember him putting Roger Mayweather's lights out and also getting his lights put out by Juan Laporte. On the video he also said that one of his sons made an invitation to him to live with him but he needed to be clean and sober. How humbling it is to go from being on the top of the world to being in a position where you have to beg for change on a street corner. At 50 his story is still being written I pray it will have a better continuation.
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 07:19:10 PM
brownsugar:  damn shame....
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 07:24:18 PM
Radam G, a humble PacManite had 2 hollering about this piece:  Wow! Fightwriter F-Lo, that was a masterpiece. Thanks for the great copy on a great human being who is in an everyday struggle. I've was just mentioning Rocky in this Universe a week or two ago. I glad that the boxing journalist powers that be rediscover him. You are so right about Rocky running. He could really put it hypespeed. And I'm hoping that he eventually speed away from this terrible addiction. He'd made a great trainer-teacher. Enough said! Holla!
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 07:26:07 PM
Fe'Roz :  F-Lo, You knew the man and your sympathies are telling. But I believe you might add that drugs and alcohol, unlike the will to fight and become a champion, are sicknesses better known as Addiction. It is sad that one man takes a drink and parties and another becomes an addict ...but that is how it happens. Same with drugs. I hope that this good man can get straight....but he'll need more than a strong will. He needs real help. Professional help.
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 07:38:59 PM
peter:  Nice article. Fellow stable mates Johnny Bumphus and Alex Ramos are having their problems, too.
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 08:07:08 PM
lillou:  there is still hope for lockridge. all he needs to do is reach out for help from people that suffer from the disease of addiction. he can find those kind of people in narcotics anonymous or AA
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 08:10:04 PM
the Roast:  Radam, I was thinking the same thing. I just watched that Mayweather fight a couple weeks ago on youtube. Hopefully Rocky can turn his life around. Barkley last week and the tragic news about Alexis today, not good times for some of my favorite 80's boxers. Sombody call Joltin Jeff Chandler and make sure he's ok.
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 08:29:47 PM
MisterLee:  Great work!
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 09:11:58 PM
Real Talk:  F-Lo .......respect . This is one of the best pieces I've read in TSS universe . I'll put him in my prayers , prayers change things . What happened to Iran Barkeley ??? Holla Back
Wednesday Jul 1, 2009 11:10:33 PM
Fistic Fury:  This guys story is hugely similar to that of talented british fighter Kirkland Laing. Kirkland wasn't a world champion but was a decent fighter that actually beat Roberto Duran in the early 80's I think. Last I heard Kirkland Laing was on the streets of London drunk and on any drugs he could get his hands on and apparently some 'gangsters/thugs' threw him from the third floor of some high rise flats putting him in a coma but he came out of the coma and I haven't heard anything since. Look it up guys it's really interesting and tragic aswell...
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 01:30:35 AM
Fistic Fury:  Done some research and it turns out it was just a rumour that he was pushed, he fell from his balcony while drunk. It was 1982 he beat Duran and he was giving away 6lbs to Roberto...
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 02:13:23 AM
ali @ Radam G:  I believe you said he was a good friend of yours have you ever tried to help him get his life together or have you lost contact with him.
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 05:14:20 AM
Rey Vaca @ ali:  I'm a friend of the person you know as Radam and a cousin of Rocky. The answer to you about Radam and Rocky is yes. Everybody, friends and family, helps Rocky. He is involved in a very tough addiction. Radam is more than a friend to Rocky. But he doesn't tell all his business in cyberspace. This new frontier can be dangerous. It is wonderful that the reporters on this site give its audience real-life material. I don't mind speaking for Radam, but I think he should cut back on his visit to TSS. He will be gone for a while anyway.
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 09:15:25 AM
ali @ Rey Vaca :  Good looking out on that information I have alot a family members with alcohol and drug problems and I have seen how it has mess up there lives. Me and Radam G don't see eye to eye on anything so maybe he would not have gave me that information so I appreciate it.
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 02:40:43 PM
the Roast:  @ Real Talk, Barkley is broke and plans to fight again at age 49. There was a recent article with the full details. In the comments I accused King and Arum of being vampires.
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 06:10:34 PM
MisterLee:  @ the Roast! hows' that garlic? Does it make your clothes smell? Reye vaca, please tell Radam he's the mf' man. I luv his writing. He's so clever and witty and knowledgeable. He must be one character to be around. Are you into boxing also? @ ali, F-lo writa' said he wasn't good friends with rocky, but he's seen him train, and he liked the little bit that he saw. pc out! F-lo writa' rules!
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 08:02:51 PM
Lion:  Rocky and I started boxing at the same boxing gym in Tacoma. We use to spar together, and I hated sparing with him because he hit so hard. This was when he was 11 yrs. old. We spared when he went to Main Event, and he was hitting even harder. I have great respect for Rocky, and he know that if he come back to Tacoma, we will do what we can to help him.
Thursday Jul 2, 2009 08:39:33 PM
ali @ Mister Lee:  I was'nt talking about F-lo writa I was talking about Radam G he said he knew Rocky in real life. You O.K Mister Lee!
Friday Jul 3, 2009 09:20:25 AM
MisterLee @ ali:  My bad!
Friday Jul 3, 2009 10:08:11 AM
fletch:  please can any one tell me where i can see the video of rocky?
Monday Jul 6, 2009 01:58:49 PM
Michael Sampson:  Wow! I feel bad about this and I only new Rocky when he was Ricky and he trained at the Boys Club in Tacoma, Washington. He was so good that the coach would not put me in the ring with him. I always admired Rocky because he was super good and was not cocky. He did not show off and he respected everyone. I even copied that signature overhand right because it was an effective weapon when you set someone up and they were coming in on you – it is like throwing a curve punch and goes over your opponents defenses. But we all need a plan B, C. etc. Boxing was not my main thing -- I was only doing it for self-defense. My main thing was college. Education is the key. It is alright to do any sport but we need to concentrate and get a good education. Then plan B and C become available if something with sports does not work out. Best wishes and love to Rocky, Michael
Thursday Oct 29, 2009 12:16:03 AM
Todd Schmerler:  F-Lo, I'm very impressed with this work. I wrote the original article on Rocky and I can tell you he is not getting much help. He is having all kinds of problems staying clean, but the Retired Boxers Foundation is trying to look out for him. They started the Rocky Lockridge Fund. Anyone interested should send a check to the Retired Boxers Foundation, 3359 Bryan Avenue, Simi Valley, CA 93063. All donations are tax deductible. Or donate through Paypal at retiredboxers (dot) org. Even $10 would be significant.
Monday Nov 2, 2009 10:09:04 AM

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