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      • Jake LaMotta 155 lbs beat Fritzie Zivic 151 lbs by SD in round 10 of 10 Date: 1943-06-10 Location: Forbes Field, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA Referee: Al Grayber 6-4 Judge: Kid Stinger 6-2 Judge: George Martzo 3-6 The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Pittsburgh Press, both felt Zivic won by a considerable margin.
      boxrec.com/wiki/index.php/Jake_LaMotta_vs._Fritzie_Zivic_(1st_meeting)
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  2. classicboxingsociety.blogspot.com › 2014 › 08Classic Boxing Society

    In a six-month stretch between 1943 and 1944, Jake LaMotta and Fritzie Zivic fought four times. Three of the four bouts ended in disputed split decisions, and three of the four bouts occurred in the hometowns of each fighter. LaMotta went 3-1 against Zivic, but it wasn’t that simple.

  3. May 21, 2005 · In a six-month stretch between 1943 and 1944, LaMotta and Zivic fought four times. Three of the four bouts ended in disputed split decisions, and three of the four bouts occurred in the hometowns of each fighter. LaMotta went 3-1 against Zivic, but once again, it wasn’t that simple.

  4. Jake LaMotta 161 lbs beat Fritzie Zivic 149 lbs by SD in round 10 of 10. Date: 1943-11-12; Location: Madison Square Garden, New York, New York, USA; Referee: Eddie Joseph 6-4; Judge: Marty Monroe 6-4; Judge: Jack Goodman 3-7

  5. LaMotta vs Zivic Result. Jake LaMotta defeated Fritzie Zivic via split decision in the 10-round fight. LaMotta improves his record to 35-6-2, while Zivic adds a loss to his record at 128-36-7.

  6. Jan 20, 2019 · Jake LaMotta 159 lbs beat Fritzie Zivic 151 lbs by UD in round 10 of 10. Date: 1944-01-14; Location: Olympia Stadium, Detroit, Michigan, USA; Referee: Sam Hennessey; Scoring: 6-3-1, 8-2, 8-2. Zivic was hurt in the 7th and 8th. LaMotta lost the 2nd and 4th rounds on low blows.

  7. [BETA] P4P #1 Naoya Inoue. #2 Artur Beterbiev

  8. Zivic continued elbowing and headbutting his way through the welter and middleweight ranks for a few more years, dropping decisions against the likes of Beau Jack, Jake LaMotta, Bob Montgomery and many others. “The Croat Comet” finally called it quits in 1949.

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