Call & Times

Lou Duva, 94; Boxing Hall of Fame manager, trainer

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PATERSON, N.J. (AP) — Lou Duva, the Boxing Hall of Famer who handled the careers of 19 champions including heavyweigh­t Evander Holyfield and multiple weight-class world champion Vinny Paz of Cranston, died Wednesday. He was 94.

The colorful Duva died of natural causes at a hospital in Paterson, where he lived, his son said in a statement released by the family.

A gruff, down-to-earth manager and trainer who was generous with his pupils, Lou Duva had a career that spanned seven decades. Besides Holyfield, he also handled fellow 1984 Olympians Pernell Whitaker and Meldrick Taylor. His first titlist was middleweig­ht Joey Giardiello, who won his crown in 1963.

The son of Italian immigrants, Duva and his family built the promotiona­l company Main Events (founded in 1978) into one of boxing's powerhouse­s. Duva was voted Manager of the Year in 1985 by the Boxing Writers Associatio­n of America. In 1987, the World Boxing Associatio­n chose Duva as Trainer of the Year.

Among casual boxing fans, Duva was best known for his role in the March 1990 fight between Julio Cesar Chavez and Taylor. Taylor had dominated the fight with speed and accuracy, but Chavez came on strong in the late rounds and hit Taylor with a right hand with 26 seconds left that hurt him. He tried to trade punches, only to be dropped by Chavez. Taylor used the ropes to pull himself up at the count of six, but sagged back into the corner post. Referee Richard Steele asked him at the count of eight if he was OK and Taylor did not respond, but instead looked at his corner, where Duva was climbing into the ring. Steele waved the fight to a close with Chavez a TKO winner with 2 seconds left in a fight Taylor would have won had he finished it. Steele was widely criticized for years for stopping the fight, but Duva stepping into the ring may have played a pivotal role.

“It's a hell of a way to lose a fight," Duva said later. "We were winning the fight for 11 rounds, two minutes and 58 seconds. Then the referee took it away from us."

He was enshrined in the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame, New Jersey Boxing Hall of Fame and National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame.

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