Frankie Duarte, former top bantamweight, dies aged 71
He was not on the list.
Frankie Duarte, the thrill-seeking bantamweight and super-bantamweight contender from the 1970s and 80s, has passed away at the age of 71 from a brain tumor.
“A raging warrior in the ring and the most lovable person
outside of it,” wrote his great friend Rich Marotta while paying tribute to
Duarte. “The SoCal boxing community will miss him dearly.”
Duarte, from Santa Monica in California, started boxing at
the age of 13 hoping that the sport would keep him on the straight and narrow.
But Duarte, despite turning professional at 18, would frequently find himself
battling his taste for fast living.
In a terrific contest, Duarte lost in five rounds to Albert Davila in a 1977 WBC bantamweight eliminator. But within two years Duarte was, by his own admission, lost to drugs.
Heroin addiction had taken hold. His mother kicked him out of the family home.
“I was living with an aunt,” Duarte told MaxBoxing in 2022. “I was strung out on heroin, I thought, ‘what am I doing?’ I dropped to my knees, and I cried. I thought, ‘this is no life’.”
What followed, in 1984, was the beginning of an incredible comeback. Trained by a young Joe Goossen, Duarte – by then widely written off – still had it all to do.
“I was making a comeback, but it wasn’t handed to me,” Duarte remembered. “I had to start back at square one. Nobody was handing anything to me. I really thought I’ll have two fights and then make enough to get a car and then get a job and be done with boxing. I really was thinking about having two fights and that was it.”
Though he would lose to Richie Sandoval, via 10-round split decision, he would beat Jesus Salad in 1986 before falling just short over the 15-round distance in a bid for Bernard Pinago’s WBA bantamweight title the following year.
But despite planning to then retire, what followed in 1987 saw him crowned as the winner of The Ring’s Comeback of the Year award when he stopped old rival Davila in a thrilling rematch.
In his last fight, in 1989, Duarte was stopped by WBC super-bantamweight boss, Daniel Zaragoza. By then, he was more than ready to walk away with an impressive 45-8-1 (33 KOs) record.
“I want to be remembered as a guy who gave fans an exciting fight,” Duarte once said. “A guy who always tried to give the fans good fights, remembered for putting on a good fight every time I got in the ring.”

No comments:
Post a Comment