The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame

- By The Associated Press

Tough guy in the ring, James “Buddy” McGirt was not so tough on his special day.

McGirt struggled repeatedly with his emotions on a sunsplashe­d afternoon, at times barely managing to keep it together as he was inducted into the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame on Sunday.

“I warned you last night that I was going to cry,” McGirt, a twodivisio­n champion, said as he looked out at the fans, his wife Gina, and the rest of his family. “Today, my wife, my three daughters and my son, they said something to me that really got to me. They said, ‘We’re proud of you.’

“It makes me feel that all the hard work that I did for years, they appreciate it,” McGirt said. “All the sacrifices, not being home, missing birthdays, holidays, graduation­s. It’s a lot of work. I want my kids to know, I’m sorry. I love you.”

Also inducted were: two-division champions Donald Curry and Julian Jackson; Tony DeMarco in the old-timer category; promoter Don Elbaum; referee/ judge Guy Jutras; publicist Lee Samuels; and broadcaste­r Teddy Atlas. Puerto Rican journalist Mario Rivera Martino was selected posthumous­ly.

Inductees were selected in December by members of the Boxing Writers Associatio­n and a panel of internatio­nal boxing historians.

After giving up football for the sweet science as a kid, McGirt turned pro in 1982 as an 18-yearold high school senior and three years later won the WBC Conti

nentals Americas light welterweig­ht title from Sugar Boy Nando with a fifthround knockout. He captured the vacant IBF light welterweig­ht title in 1988 with a 12th-round knockout over Frankie Warren and retired in 1997 with a record of 73-6-1 with 48 KOs. He has since trained five champions.

Jackson, a native of the U.S. Virgin Islands, was renowned for his powerful punching power. Dubbed “The Hawk,” he turned profession­al in 1981 and scored 29 consecutiv­e victories, 27 by knockout. He retired in 1998 with a pro record of 55-6, including 49 KOs.

“Amazing. Wow. I’m honored to be here coming from such a humble life,” Jackson said. “St. Thomas is only 32 square miles, and if you look on the map all you’re going to see is a dot. But, you know what? The Virgin Islands pack a big punch. We may be a small island, but, man, we have a big heart.”

Curry, of Fort Worth, Texas was dubbed the “Lone Star Cobra” for his lightning- quick reflexes and hand speed. He captured the vacant WBA welterweig­ht in a 15-round decision over Jun-Suk Hwang in Fort Worth in 1983. The next year, he became the inaugural IBF champion and unified the 147-pound titles with a second-round knockout over WBC champ Milton McCrory. His induction came 22 years after he retired with a pro record of 34-6 with 25 KOs.

DeMarco was born in Boston and turned pro in 1948, borrowing his ring name from a friend because he wasn’t the legal fighting age of 18. He upset Johnny Saxton with a 14thround knockout at Boston Garden to become welterweig­ht champion, then lost the title to Hall of Famer Carmen Basilio in a 12thround knockout. Basilio also stopped him again in the 12th round of their rematch. DeMarco retired in 1962 with a pro record of 58-12-1 with 33 KOs.

“I implore those who visit the city of champions to remember the one single champion that has represente­d our city like no other champion because he’s a true Bostonian,” promoter Al Valenti said as he introduced DeMarco. “And today I get to call hima Hall of Famer.”

Atlas was born in 1956 on Staten Island, New York, and trained in upstate New York under Cus D’Amato, winning the 1976 Adirondack Golden Gloves lightweigh­t title. But back problems forced him out of the ring and he apprentice­d under D’Amato as an assistant trainer working with a young Mike Tyson. He trained nine champions before becoming one of boxing’s most popular and outspoken broadcaste­rs the past two decades.

“It kind of is a boxing heaven,” Atlas said. “I’ve been given this honor today for my work as a broadcaste­r. I tried in some small ways to make the audience aware of something that perhaps they had not been aware of that would both add to their viewing of the bout and the appreciati­on they had for what the fighters were doing in the ring.”

The Canadian- born Jutras was a Golden Gloves champion and the 1951 Royal Canadian Navy welterweig­ht champion before becoming a judge, referee, and matchmaker. He worked over 75 world championsh­ip bouts.

Samuels, a native of Pennsville, New Jersey, began his career writing for local papers before being hired by the Philadelph­ia Bulletin in the mid-1970s. After the paper folded, Samuels was hired by Bob Arum to handle East Coast publicity for his ESPN boxing series and has been the publicist for Top Rank since 1996.

Martino, who died last year at 93, wrote for The Ring, was boxing columnist for The San Juan Star, and served as director of public relations for the World Boxing Organizati­on, boxing commission­er in Puerto Rico and president of the Puerto Rico Boxing Commission over more than six decades in the sport. to left field in the first inning, tossing his lumber aside for flair.

“Yeah, that was one of those that you don’t feel off the bat. One of those nodoubters,” he said. “I was excited.”

New York has homered in 16 straight home games, setting a club record.

Frazier added an RBI double in the fifth off Jeff Hoffman (1-3).

“It’s hard to put a number on how valuable he is to this team,” Syndergaar­d said. “Just from a talent perspectiv­e to a leadership perspectiv­e, the energy that he brings day in and day out. It’s really a blessing to be his teammate.”

Carlos Gómez had a two-out RBI single in the fourth after Hechavarrí­a swiped second, one of a season-best three stolen bases by the Mets — equaling their total from the previous 15 games.

J.D. Davis chased Hoffman with his first career triple in the fifth, knocking in a run with a drive that eluded a diving Dahl in center field following a poor route.

Making his 100th major league start, Syndergaar­d struck out seven and walked two for his first win in five outings since May 14.

“He was on cruise control ever since the first inning,” Frazier said.

Up and down during a disappoint­ing season, Syndergaar­d was coming off three consecutiv­e nodecision­s. But he was finally at his fearsome best Sunday.

“He dominated,” Davis said. “It was pretty cool to watch.”

Syndergaar­d credited second-string catcher Tomas Nido and a mechanical tweak that made his four-seam fastball more deceptive.

“This is an encouragin­g outing, because that’s a really good teamover there,” the right-hander said.

Mets manager Mickey Callaway said Syndergaar­d was tired after throwing 98 pitches because he kept hustling to cover first base on grounders to the right side.

“Yeah, I got my sprints in today,” the pitcher said.

 ??  ??
 ?? JOHN BREWER - ONEIDA DAILY DISPATCH ?? From left to right, Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2019induct­ees : Teddy Atlas, Don Elbaum, Lee Samuels, Julian Jackson, Donald Curry, Tony DeMarco, Guy Jutras and Buddy McGirt display their IBHOF rings during the induction ceremony Sunday, June 9, 2019, in Canastota, N.Y.
JOHN BREWER - ONEIDA DAILY DISPATCH From left to right, Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2019induct­ees : Teddy Atlas, Don Elbaum, Lee Samuels, Julian Jackson, Donald Curry, Tony DeMarco, Guy Jutras and Buddy McGirt display their IBHOF rings during the induction ceremony Sunday, June 9, 2019, in Canastota, N.Y.
 ?? JOHN BREWER - ONEIDA DAILY DISPATCH ?? From left to right, Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2019induct­ees: Teddy Atlas, Don Elbaum, Lee Samuels, Julian Jackson, Donald Curry, Tony DeMarco, Guy Jutras and Buddy McGirt display their IBHOF rings during the induction ceremony Sunday, June 9, 2019, in Canastota, N.Y.
JOHN BREWER - ONEIDA DAILY DISPATCH From left to right, Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame Class of 2019induct­ees: Teddy Atlas, Don Elbaum, Lee Samuels, Julian Jackson, Donald Curry, Tony DeMarco, Guy Jutras and Buddy McGirt display their IBHOF rings during the induction ceremony Sunday, June 9, 2019, in Canastota, N.Y.

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