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- He subsequently became a comic actor and wrote, with Rowland Barber, his autobiography, Somebody Up There Likes Me, which was made into a popular film starring Paul Newman in 1956. Graziano’s career record was 67 wins (52 by knockout), 10 losses, and 6 draws. He was inducted into The Ring magazine’s Boxing Hall of Fame in 1971.
www.britannica.com/biography/Rocky-GrazianoRocky Graziano | Middleweight Champion, Italian-American ...
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Cohen arranged a debut bout and billed the young fighter under his grandfather's surname as Rocky Graziano. Despite his notoriously lax approach to training, Graziano leveraged his untutored, brawling style and powerful punching ability to win by knockout.
Graziano defeated fighters Al Davis, Marty Servo, and Harold Green to get his first shot at a title against Tony Zale. Graziano battled Zale for the title three times in less than two years; these epic battles were his best-known fights.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Jan 18, 2016 · Baited by friends into entering a boxing tournament, he became city welterweight amateur champion, then hocked his medal. At 20, his parole case came before Lou Gehrig himself, who, struck by...
Rocky Graziano was an American professional boxer, who fought a total of 83 fights throughout his career, spanning over 10 years, from 1942 to 1952. During this time, he achieved a record of 67 wins, 10 losses, 6 draws, and 0 no-contests.
Bells & Boos. One mighty haymaker was the making of Rocky. He pulled it out of center field last March, knocked his opponent groggy. The confidence gained from that wallop gave him the same...
Rocky Graziano was the middleweight champion for 11 months during the late forties, but his three wars with Tony Zale plus his winning personality have contributed to making the Rock a ring...
ONE OF the most popular fighters of any era, Rocky Graziano was an adored champion until the day he died. Graziano, whose real name was Thomas Rocco Barbella, was a troubled youth growing up on the gritty Lower East Side of Manhattan. It can be said that boxing saved his life.