Remember Diego "Chico" Corrales

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Aug 12, 2002
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#1
A great article from espn.com...

Rest in peace, Chico. God bless you, and we miss you.




I won't be so presumptuous as to call Diego Corrales a friend of mine.

Ours was both a casual relationship and a professional one. I was the writer; he was the fighter. I was the interviewer; he was the subject.

But the Las Vegas boxing community is a small fraternity. When I lived in the desert city, I would bump into him on numerous occasions, more often than was the case with most other boxers: ringside for fights large and small, at boxing gyms, in social settings. Even if we weren't exactly inviting each other out to the movies, we knew each other. In our limited interactions, we got along well.

Corrales was always amenable, always approachable, always generous with his time. Leave a message for him, and he would call right back (not a guarantee with professional athletes, believe me) and willingly talk.

The last one-on-one interview I conducted with him was for a profile on ESPN.com before his rubber match with Joel Casamayor in October 2006. I was there at the weigh-in for that bout, when he tipped the scales 5 pounds over the lightweight limit -- a transgression loaded with irony, given the fact that earlier that year Corrales and promoter Gary Shaw had sued Jose Luis Castillo for doing the same. That caused the cancellation of what would have been the concluding bout of a trilogy.

And I was ringside when Corrales, despite scoring a fifth-round knockdown, dropped a split decision to his Cuban rival.

After that fight, I didn't see, or speak with, Corrales again.

Seven months later, the day before Floyd Mayweather defeated Oscar De La Hoya, I stood outside the media room at the MGM Grand, talking with two friends -- one a fighter, one a manager, both close to Corrales. Conversation turned to our mutual associate, to concern over his well-being.

His career was less at a crossroads than at a standstill. (After his loss to Casamayor, he had stepped up to welterweight and had been dominated by Joshua Clottey, his third straight defeat.) He was separated from his wife, Michelle, who was pregnant with his child.

None of us had heard from him lately; each of us expressed our hope that he was all right.

Three days after that conversation, Corrales was dead, killed instantly when he was flung from the motorcycle he had crashed at high speed into the rear of a car.

I was on the East Coast when it happened. I was fast asleep when my phone rang in the middle of the night. I didn't hear the messages or notice that I had had any calls until I woke up the next morning.

Later that day, as the sun rose in Las Vegas, I picked up the phone and dialed. As I listened to the pain in the voices of his closest friends, I felt that pain, too. As I heard the sobs on the other end of the line, tears ran down my cheeks as well.

I was far from my extended boxing family. When friends and colleagues looked at my crestfallen face and asked me what was wrong, I just reached for the explanation that was the simplest and most easily understood, even though it was not the most precise.

"A friend of mine just died," I told them, and they understood. Or thought they did.


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It is an interesting contradiction that, in their dealings with people other than those they are being paid to hurt severely, many professional boxers are extremely polite and usually quite reserved. It is a reality that jars with the violence that they must be prepared to mete out and absorb when the bell rings, and it was all the more acute in the case of Corrales. His popularity among fans was greater than most, not just because he was especially approachable and devoid of airs and graces outside the ring, but also because he went about his business with particular ferocity inside it.

Freakishly tall for the weight divisions in which he fought most of his bouts, he nonetheless refused to use his height to his advantage by boxing outside, choosing instead to stand and fight. And whenever he was knocked down, he almost always clambered back to his feet again, never giving up. He once told trainer Joe Goossen that he would "f---ing kill him" if he ever tried to throw in the towel.

Conversely, because Corrales was so affable and open, because he spoke so honestly and with such a quiet voice, it was hard to comprehend that he was the same man who fought so many inner demons. Those were the demons that led to his imprisonment on assault charges, the demons with which he was seemingly struggling again in the weeks before he met his end.

Personally, I choose to remember him as the willing interviewee, the friendly acquaintance, the troubled but well-meaning young man whom friends of mine knew and loved dearly.

I shall remember him also, as will millions, as a fearless in-ring warrior. Particularly, I will always remember May 7, 2005, when I was privileged to sit ringside as he somehow peeled himself off the canvas in the 10th round against Jose Luis Castillo to come roaring back and win what was the greatest fight I have ever seen and likely ever will.

I wrote that night: "Many fighters boast that their opponents have to kill them to beat them. Corrales means it. Had Castillo beheaded him and thrust a stake through his heart, he still might not have denied him." But I also wrote, "As fantastic a fight as this was, it was 30 minutes of mayhem that made both men's careers, and at the same time, surely shortened them dramatically. Neither man is likely to ever be the same again …"

Indeed, Castillo earned just one more significant victory, and that was a tainted one: A knockout defeat of Corrales in the rematch after he had weighed in over the lightweight limit.

Corrales would not even have that much. His historic win over Castillo would be the last time his hand was raised in triumph in a boxing ring. Then came three defeats inside the ring, an unraveling outside it, and the sudden, shocking end, when he was finally felled by a blow from which even he could not recover.

That end came two years to the day of his greatest triumph, in the shadow of the arena where that triumph had taken place. In the near distance that night, the lights of the Mandalay Bay burned brightly, so near and yet so far away.

Kieran Mulvaney covers boxing for ESPN.com and Reuters.















 
May 13, 2002
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#3
One of my all time favorites. Every time he fought, you knew he'd give it his all each and every round, win or lose. One of the rare fighters that was exciting to watch no matter who he was fighting and the sport took a serious blow when he died, there just aren't enough Chico's in the sport.

RIP Chico!!

Greatest fight of all time: Diego Corrales vs Castillo, 10th round


I still get pumped up watching this fight, even though I've seen it dozens of times.
 
Aug 12, 2002
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#4
The thing that made him so loved, I think, was the fact that he didn't conserve himself for later rounds, he didn't slow down to keep himself from getting hit, he didn't run. He stood there and fought. He knew that's what his fans loved, he knew we were selfish in that regard, and he gave it to us, and gave it for us. The Mayweather fight proves it even further. I've seen fighters give up after less than that. Frietas, Tszyu, etc...and he never quit. There were rumors that I read, including a story from his wife, that he was sick during that fight. There's your exit, Chico. Take it. But he wouldn't. I remember the fight with Casamayor, with the cut in his mouth...he wanted to fight. That was him, and that's what was loved, admired, and respected about him. There's no one in the history of boxing, IMO, who was a greater warrior and a more exciting fighter than him, and that's why he's my personal favorite of all time.
 
May 13, 2002
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#5
and he never quit. There were rumors that I read, including a story from his wife, that he was sick during that fight.
Yeah numerous people said he was very sick, had a fever with a temperature over 100 or something. And I believe that because he went down so easy in that fight, he looked really weak. The thing is though, you never heard that from Chico. He never used that as an excuse or complained about it. Just went out there and fought, got knocked down 4 or 5 times, something like that, but got up each and every time and like you said, HE never gave up. and he never would.

And I remember when he died I was pretty bummed out for a few days. Normally when a sports player or famous person dies, it's like whatever, that sucks, but with Chico that shit was sad. Only other time I felt similar was when Walter Payton (aka God) died.
 
Aug 12, 2002
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#6
Yeah, I believe it was 5 times, and I remember seeing an interview after the fight, a few days later or something, and he was asked about it, if he was sick, and all he said was that the better man won the fight that night. He was pretty classy like that, too...

But yeah, he wouldn't quit. He was one of the fighters who would really die in the ring, if it came to that, I think. Everyone says it...but he proved it in his fights.
 
Aug 9, 2006
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#13
hes one of the few boxers i followed..being that he had a pretty local connection....he was a beast and still was in his prime...after he died i pretty much lost all intrest in boxing...

RIP CHICO
 
Aug 31, 2003
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#14
The beating Corrales gave Freitas to make him quit was greatness .. unfortunately followed by Popos wife parading him around the ring like he just did something heroic.
 
Jul 24, 2005
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#16
And I remember when he died I was pretty bummed out for a few days. Normally when a sports player or famous person dies, it's like whatever, that sucks, but with Chico that shit was sad. Only other time I felt similar was when Walter Payton (aka God) died.[/QUOTE]

When chico pass I was like damn they goes one of the great ones and he still was in his prime, mane I just wish in my own selfish way that chico would had left that damn motor cycle at home that night
 
Aug 31, 2003
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#18
When chico pass I was like damn they goes one of the great ones and he still was in his prime, mane I just wish in my own selfish way that chico would had left that damn motor cycle at home that night
I think we were privileged enough to witness his prime in its entirety. He was mad inactive, on a losing streak and had trouble making the weight he was most effective at.