Chicago Sun-Times

FEATHERWEI­GHT CHAMPION SHADOWED BY 2 RING DEATHS

- BY TIM DAHLBERG AP Boxing Writer

Sugar Ramos, the Cuban featherwei­ght champion whose fists led to two ring deaths — one inspiring a Bob Dylan song — has died in Mexico City. He was 75.

He died Sunday from cancer complicati­ons, the World Boxing Council said.

Ramos was best known for his 1963 fight at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles with Davey Moore in which he won the featherwei­ght title for the first time. It was the only fight card held at the ballpark, and it was deadly.

Ramos had been battered by the champion in early rounds but came back to stop him in the 10th. Moore left the ring on his own but lost consciousn­ess in his dressing room and slipped into a coma.

He died two days later, sparking an outcry about the safety of boxing and prompting California Gov. Edmund Brown to call for the sport to be banned. Dylan would later memorializ­e the bout in the song “Who Killed Davey Moore?”

Ramos was no stranger to tragedy in the ring. Five years earlier in Cuba he stopped a fighter named Jose Blanco, who also died.

Ramos, whose real name was Ultiminio Ramos, lived in Mexico after fleeing Cuba. He was the first champion of the WBC, winning the organizati­on’s new belt in his fight with Moore.

“We will always remember Ultiminio as a great champion, but even more so, as a wonderful, friendly, genuine and kind man,” WBC President Mauricio Sulaiman said.

Ramos, who started boxing profession­ally at age 15, retired in 1972 with a record of 55- 7- 4 with 40 knockouts.

A power puncher despite standing only 5- foot- 4, Ramos drew large crowds to his fights, largely because he never backed up. He fought in an era of 15- round battles and six- ounce gloves, and he fought whoever was put in front of him.

Doctors who looked at tapes of the Moore fight didn’t blame his punches for the boxer’s death, though. The ring at Dodger Stadium had only three ropes and they weren’t padded. Moore’s head snapped on the bottom one as he fell in the 10th round and his brain swelled.

“It was a time when there was one champion in every division, if you can imagine that,” said boxing publicist Bill Caplan, who was at the fight. “Davey Moore was the guy and he was a heck of a fighter. It turned out that so was Sugar Ramos.”

Ramos would defend the title that he won from Moore three times before losing it by knockout to Carlos Ortiz in 1966. He was knocked out in a rematch a year later, and never fought for a title again.

But it was his fight with Moore for which Ramos would mostly be remembered. Ramos shrugged off suggestion­s he killed Moore in the ring, saying his injury was caused by the rope and complainin­g no one gave him credit for putting up a good fight against a top champion.

Soon after the fight, another rope was added to boxing rings, and they were padded.

Dylan, in his 1963 song, asked the question: Who was to blame for Moore’s death? He sings at the outset: “Who killed Davey Moore/ Why an’ what’s the reason for?”

“‘ Not I,’ says the referee/’ Don’t point your finger at me.’” The lyrics continue:

“‘ Not us,’ says the angry crowd,/ Whose screams filled the arena loud./’ It’s too bad he died that night/ But we just like to see a fight.”

 ??  ?? Sugar Ramos, right, trades punches with Davey Moore in 1963 during a fight in which Ramos won the featherwei­ght title. Moore died two days after the match, sparking an outcry about boxing safety. | AP
Sugar Ramos, right, trades punches with Davey Moore in 1963 during a fight in which Ramos won the featherwei­ght title. Moore died two days after the match, sparking an outcry about boxing safety. | AP

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