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I was
well ensconced in my den in
Masachusetts, with friends, beverage
and cigars, ready for action as the
fight was being aired on CBS with
Gil Clancy and Sugar Ray Leonard at
the mikes. But I'm getting ahead of
myself.
The referee was Johnny LoBianco and
the judges were Carol Castellano,
Luis Rivera, and Bernie Freidkin.
Everyone sensed their work would be
brief since both fighters had an
astonishing 75 KO’s on their
combined resumes. Garza, was 40-0,
with 38 knockouts (13 in the first
round) and a 95% ko percenatge.
"Kid" Meza, from Los Angeles, by way
of Mexicali, was 49-9, with 37 KO’s.
Both men scaled 121 ˝ lbs.
'Knockout" was the operative word in
Kingston. While Kid Meza had never
been sent to the canvas, most
experts felt the heavy handed Garza
would be up to the task.
But first, the somewhat limited but
always game Billy Costello, 140, of
Kingston defended his WBC super
lightweight title against cagey (but
too old) Saul Mamby in the
co-feature and won a UD to the
delight of the home town fans. There
was considerable interest in this
card which also included Wilford
Scypion. Little did the fans know
what was coming.
Garza was handled by John Montes Sr.
and Bennie Georgino (who ironically
also handled "Little Red" Lopez) and
threw lightening fast combinations
punctuated with lethal hooks. If
landed squarely, most of his
opponents would go; in fact, 30 went
in less than three. He was
undefeated and ready for superstar
status.
As for Juan "Kid" Meza (whose
trainer was Jimmy Montoya), two
years before, the Mexicali native
had fought well before being stopped
in the sixth by the great Wilfredo "Bazooka"Gomez.
After losing that fight, he took off
for a year. During this time, Gomez
left the championship vacant to go
for the Featherweight crown and won
it by knocking out the
aforementioned Berna. Meanwhile,
Meza worked his way back into title
contention with wins over Roberto
Castillo (KO 8), Pongpan
Sorphayathai (20-1) whom he ko' d in
three in Thailand and two 10-round
decisions over Javier Barajas. The
"Kid" also was a quick starter and
closer with 21 of his 31 knockouts
ending in less than three rounds.
Earlier in his career, Meza made his
first noticeable mark when he
knocked out Carlos Ortiz in one in
1977 avenging an earlier loss. He
won 29 of his next 31 bouts, earning
a fan-following on the West Coast.
Included in those 31 fights were a
ten-round decision over Carlos
Mendoza in 1981as part of the
Gomez-Sanchez under card in Las
Vegas, and a 9th round knockout over
Antonio Guido as part of the Bentize-Duran
under card in 1982. He was then
ranked the number one challenger to
Wilfredo Gomez's WBC world
Super-Bantamweight title. By then,
informed boxing people knew that
Juan "Kid" Meza was never to be
taken lightly. Nor, of course, was
Jamie Garza who had 23 straight
stoppages coming into this fight.
Which brings us to November 13, 1984
As the bell rang, Meza reached out
to touch gloves, but Garza declined
and kept his hands up ready to
fight. Clearly, there was no love
lost as there reportedly had been an
altercation at breakfast between the
two.They came out immediately
winging and trading hooks. In this
case, the old adage "never hook with
a hooker" did not apply, for both
fighters were deadly hookers.
Incredibly, after a right uppercut
missed, a wide hook crashed off
Meza’s temple and put him on the
canvas for the very first time in
his 47-fight career. With only only
40 seconds into the fight, Garza had
now demonstrated beyond any doubt
the power of his blows. One of my
friends jumped up and said "don't go
to the john." We were all standing
and shouting as was the live crowd.
This is exactly what we expected and
what we wanted.
The Kid looked around and then
picked up the count showing great
poise for a fighter who had never
been floored. Garza charged in for
the kill and drove Meza back toward
the ropes, but the Kid responded
with heavy shots that slowed him
down. Garza continued to fire away
with his all-offense, no-defense
style, and showed little fear of
Meza's punches. The Kid's jabs found
their mark through Garza’s porous
defense and the two began exchanging
three and four punch flurry's. The
fight took on the aura of a furious
cock fight with back and forth
winging. One could literally hear
the swish sound when they missed and
the thump sound when they didn't
miss. I was up and screaming,
"....end it Jaimie, end it, take him
out......"
"Garza’s making the mistake of
falling in with his hands down," CBS
analyst Sugar Ray Leonard correctly
noted as Garza kind of stumbled into
the corner after missing a wild
hook. When Meza went after him,
Garza spun away and landed a cuffing
hook that sent Meza to the canvas.
Meza quickly arose and pointed his
gloves toward the canvas to indicate
he had been pushed. Referee LoBianco
agreed and ruled it a slip. Garza
then landed some jabs, but his
speedy combos, launched with the
evilist of intentions, missed;
Meza's were more accurate marking an
ever-so-subtle, albeit early, shit
in his favor.
At that point, commentator Gil
Clancy pointed out something I had
also noticed, "The big difference
that I see so far is that Garza is
much the shorter puncher of the
two......he’ll beat Meza to the
punch because Meza is a wide
puncher." Then, a split-second after
he said that, it happened. Jaimie
began to throw a counter hook after
Meza had missed with a short combo.
Unfortunatley for him, he kept his
right arm low which created an
opening. Meanwhile, Meza, by missing
with his right dipped and in so
doing was in excellent position to
trigger his own hook with solid
leverage behind it. His blow was
launched just before Garza’s. So
here it was in plain
sight.....hooking with the hooker.
We all rose and started screaming
because we knew what had just
occured. Ready for the devastating
result, we were not dissapointed.
Meza had beaten Garza to the punch
with shocking and decisive effect.
The savage hook struck Garza on the
sweet point of his jaw, snapping his
head violently to the side. His body
twisted grotesquely and crashed hard
to the canvas, his head bouncing
dangerously off the canvas. Garza’s
eyes rolled back into his head. He
was in bad shape but made a vailant
effort pull himself upright after
rolling under the ropes. His effort
was too little too late. Referee
LoBianco reached the count of ten a
split-second before Garza fully
regained his feet, but he would have
been in no shape whatsoever to
continue. A new and jubilant
champion had beem crowned. The ko
was named 1984’s Knockout of the
Year by KO Magazine. Juan Meza
became the first challenger in
boxing history to be dropped in
round one, get up and knock out the
world champion in the same first
round.
Garza would go to win four
uneventful bouts but lost in
shocking fashion to Daryl Thigpen
(10-4) being stopped in the six
after being down four times. After
the devastating loss to Meza, Jaime
was never the same and would never
again win a meaningful fight. He
went 2-3 in his final five finishing
with a proud record of 48-6 (44 KOs)
and an astonishing ko percentage of
81%.
Meza fought seven more times and
beat tough tough Mike Ayala in six
rounds, but shockingly dropped his
belt to prohibitive underdog Lupe
Pintor in a thrilling 12-round
slugfest. Sixteen months later, he
challenged for a world title for the
final time against slick Samart
Payakaroon in Bangkok, but was
stopped by the Thai with just five
seconds before the final bell. He
was far behind on points so the
stoppage was academic. Later, Meza
ko'd Lenny Valdez in one but was
then stopped in eight by Javier
Marquez. Remarkably, nine years
later at age 40, he came back to
stop Esteban Lozoya in four, but
after being stopped in one by
Wilfredo Negron, he retired ending
with a fine record of 45-9 (37 KOs)
and a ko percentage of 69%.
Now, among other things, being a
serious boxing fan means
accumualting indelible memories of
great -fights......fights like
Castiilo-Corrales, Brooks-Curry,
Hagler-Hearns, Ward-Green-Gatti-Burton,
Norton-Holmes, Chacon-Limon, Chacon-Boza-Edwards,
Mancini-Kim, Moore-Durelle and many,
many others. But for me, it also
means Meza-Garza. Thanks for the
memories.
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