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| Lou Ambers was born Luigi d'Ambrosio in Herkimer, New York on November 8, 1913. He was a lightweight boxer who fought from 1932 to 1941. Ambers engaged in 102 fights, of which he won 88, (29 on knockouts), lost 8 (2 by knockouts) and 6 draws. Managed by Al Weill and trained by the legendary Charley Goldman, the "Herkimer Hurricane", as he was known, began his career losing only once in more than three years when he faced future hall of fame lightweight champion Tony Canzoneri on May 10, 1935. Canzoneri defeated him over 15 rounds on a decision. Ambers did not let the defeat discourage him. He won his next 15 fights and gained revenge when he captured the lightweight championship by decisioning Canzoneri in 15 rounds on September 3, 1936. On August 17, 1938 Ambers met the legendary Henry Armstrong in a historic title fight. Armstrong was attempting to become the first fighter in history to win and hold three world titles simultaneously. In a great fight, Ambers was knocked down twice, in the fifth and sixth rounds, and appeared badly beaten. He then mounted a great comeback, but lost the controversial split decision. A rematch was inevitable. The rematch was as controversial as their first bout. Armstrong was penalized for low blows, which enabled Ambers to capture the 15-round decision on August 22, 1939. This was Ambers last great performance. On May 10, 1940, Ambers defended his title against the wild, free swinging, Lew Jenkins. Jenkins scored an upset when he knocked out the defending champion in the 3rd round. Ambers sought a rematch, and after a tune up win over Al Bummy Davis, he again faced Jenkins. This time he was knocked out by Jenkins in the 7th round on February 28, 1941. Although Ambers wanted to continue with his career, his manager, Al Weill, convinced him that he was through, and to retire. Ambers never fought again. He died on April 24, 1995. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Lou Ambers ] Some related entries: Punter | Tug McGraw | Tony Parrish | Landon Donovan | Deion Branch | Mike Ammann | Omar Vizquel | Giovanni Carrara | Grant Balfour | Earl Weaver | Mikey Whipwreck This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Lou Ambers; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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