Category Archives: Uncategorized

2015 Michael Melbar

2016 Jon Melbar

Michael Melbar comes from a boxing family. Michael Melbar is a native Clevelander who was born at the old St. Alexis Hospital in 1966. As a young child, Melbar’s mother died. After her death, he and his brothers were raised by their grandparents, James and Genevieve Gray, until Melbar was eight years old. According to Melbar, his father took the responsibility to care for him and his brothers, Tony, Joey, Jim, and Johnny. “At nine years old,” Melbar said, “my first pair of boxing gloves were put on me by my father.”

Melbar and his brothers were trained by the late Jim Kelly at PAL 10 gym. According to Melbar, he had his first fight was at the old Navy Park. Melbar graduated from Central Catholic High School in 1984, and joined the United States Army. He served in the Army from 1984-1987. Melbar continued his boxing career in the Army and he is proud that he was a member of the `All Army Team’ of 1986 and 1987. Prior to an early retirement, Melbar was a machinist at Central Brass before the plant relocated overseas. According to Melbar, his biggest fan is his daughter, Destiny, who always been in his corner.

Melbar and his brother, John, were matched eight times against each other in the finals of the Tough Guy Competitions, and the brothers took turns so that the other could win. As a professional figher, Melbar got a late start in his career. He became a professional fighter at 38 years old. Melbar was trained by Gary Horath, and his first professional fight was against Robert Smart at St. Michael’s Hall in Cleveland in May of 2004, and he won the fight by a KO in the first found. In his second fight, he won it by a TKO in the first round 14 against Kelly Praterin in June of 2004 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Cleveland. Melbar fought five professional fights, and retired with a record of 2-3.

Melbar enjoys watching all kinds of sporting events, but most especially boxing matches. Melbar is being inducted into the Ohio State Former Boxers And Associates, Inc., Hall of Fame along with Alex Cooper and Terry Strowder.

2015 Earl Jewell (Official of the Year)

jewell
Jewell honored as Official of the Year.

Earl Jewell started boxing as a way to enhance his athletic skills and to keep himself out of trouble as a teenager and use his time productively into develop into manhood. Jewell, 49 years old, started his amateur boxing career under the trainership of Ozell Dobbins at the PAL Gym at E. 79th St. and Woodland Avenue. With a total of 103 amateur fights, Jewell won the Cleveland Golden Gloves in 1973 in the 132 pounds division; 1974 in the 139 pounds division; and 1975 in the 139 pounds division.

In 1976 he won the National PAL Championship in the 147 pounds division. While as an amateur boxer, he fought and beat such world boxing champions as Aaron Pryor, Helmer Kenty, Harry Arroyo and J.B. Williamson. Although Jewell fought Sugar Ray Leonard as an amateur, he was not able to get a win over him. As a professional boxer, Jewell had a short lived career with two fights and two wins. After ending his boxing career, Jewell trained boxers for a brief period at the PAL #3 Gym.

Being active for more than 18 years as an amateur and professional boxing referee, Jewell is licensed by the Ohio Athletic Commission as a referee. He has refereed world title fights in Europe and South America for the World Boxing Organization. Receiving his formal education in the Cleveland Public School System, Jewell graduated from East Tech High School. He retired after being employed for 32 years by the City of Cleveland. Following his retirement, Jewell is financial services expert for Primerica. While meeting in high school, Jewell has been married to his “Sweetheart” Theresa Ann for 35 years, and they have two sons, Earl Jr. and Aaron, and three grandchildren.

He enjoys watching football, basketball, and boxing. Jewell was inducted into the Ohio State Former Boxers and Associates, Inc. Hall of Fame in 2003. “It was an honor to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. If you are dedicated and work hard, you will be rewarded,” Jewell said. He is being honored as Official of the Year.

 

2015 Paul LaBuda (Lifetime Achievement Award)


LaBuda honored with Lifetime Achievement Award.

Although Paul LaBuda was an excellent athlete in a number of sports, he never boxed, but he always had a devotion to the sport and followed the careers of many amateur and professional boxers in the Cleveland area.

LaBuda was born and raised in Cleveland, and he attended the Cleveland Public Schools where he graduated from the old South High School. In high school, LaBuda was on the wrestling and decathlon teams. He received an associate’s degree in business from Cuyahoga Community College. Following graduation, LaBuda married his wife, Judy, and the couple has two sons, Stan and Gary. LaBuda began working at the Fisher Foods Warehouse in Bedford Heights when he became a union member. His union affiliations have been long and fruitful where he became a member of Teamster Local 507 for 24 years. During his association with the union, LaBuda held several union offices including: business agent, trustee, recording secretary, and vice president. His union affiliation continued and he has been a member of Baker’s Union Local No. 19 for 35 years. LaBuda served as president of the Baker’s Union for 15 years.

LaBuda was the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers (BCTGM) Local Union general executive board member, Region II for 14 years, and he served as the vice president for the AFL-CIO, Ohio for 15 years. He has served as the treasurer for the Ohio Teamsters Credit Union, and executive vice president of BCTGM East Central States Council as well as holding the following positions in the organization: secretary treasurer; snack & pasta council trustee; trustee for the Cleveland Bakers and Teamsters Health and Welfare and Pension Funds; and the Cleveland Bakers Local No. 19 Charitable, Education and Recreational Fund. LaBuda is an avid golfer, and he has played softball on several teams while serving as director of the Teamster & Bakers Softball league for 15 years.

LaBuda was inducted into South High School Hall of Fame and the Ohio State Former Boxers And Associates, Inc. Hall of Fame in 2007. LaBuda is being honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award along with Joe Gentile, Bill Futchi, and Tom Lorek.

2015 Tom Lorek (Lifetime Acheivement Award)

2006 Tom Lorek

Lorek to receive Life Time Achievement Award.

Tom Lorek’s life-long interest in boxing came after watching his older brother, Frank, participate in the 1954 Cleveland Golden Gloves Tournament. Lorek started his boxing career at the St. Clair Bathhouse under trainer Sam `The Barber” Gagli

ardi. Lorek entered the 1959 Cleveland Golden Gloves Tournament as a novice in the welterweight division and he advanced to the quarter finals.

Following his graduation from East High School in Cleveland in 1957, Lorek enlisted in the United States Coast Guard. When he returned home in 1961, Lorek entered the Cleveland Golden Gloves Tournament in the novice middleweight division and advanced to the semifinals. He has attended the Cleveland Golden Gloves for the past 61 years.

After retiring as an amateur boxer, Lorek continued his interest in boxing when he became a judge for amateur boxing. A highlight of Lorek’s judging career came in 1996 when he judged the last two heavyweight division bouts of the National Golden Gloves held in Cleveland, seated next to Mike Tyson. Lorek retired from the Cleveland Plain Dealer in 1989 at 50 years old with 30 years of service as a pressman. He was chapel chairman, secretary//treasurer and pension trustee for the Cleveland Newspaper Printing Pressmen Local #5. He judged 13 years of amateur and professional bouts.

Currently, he is president of Lake County Homes, Inc. He worked as a real estate broker and agent for 46 years at Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Professional Realty (formerly Prudential Select Properties) in Lake County.

Lorek and his wife, Sherry, have been married for 51 years. They have two sons, Tommy and Gary; daughter-in-laws, Laura and Jenny; and four wonderful grandchildren, Danielle, Allison, Brenna, and Ryan (Champ). They reside in Mentor. His grandchildren have now become his first love (besides Sherry) and boxing has dropped to second place. Lorek is being honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award along with Bill Futchi, Paul LaBuda, and Joe Gentile.

2015 Leo Keglovic (Coach of the year)

2006 Leo Keglovic

Leo Keglovic honored as Coach of the Year.

Leo Keglovic interest in boxing was reignited when his sons became interested in the sport and he became their trainer. Keglovic started his amateur boxing career in 1976 when he was trained by Frank Collica and Joe Polo at the Chuck Ross A.C. Keglovic wore a shirt with his motto, “No Excuses.” His philosophy was practice makes perfect, and he put in the time to be the best boxer that he could be. Keglovic’s amateur boxing career was from 1976 through 1977, and his amateur boxing record is 8 and 2. Keglovic returned to boxing in 1996 as a trainer when he started training his sons at the Pinzone Boxing Club in Parma.

When the late Chuck Pinzone retired in 2005, Keglovic took over the gym where he continued to train boxers until the gym closed. His sons, Matt and Leo Jr., became boxers under his tutelage. While training his sons, Leo Jr. and Matt competed in the Golden Gloves Tournament and won. Leo Jr. won the 147 pounds novice tournament in 1998; and Matt won the 147 pounds novice tournament in 1999.

Matt continued his boxing career, and he became a professional boxer in 2005. He had a short professional boxing career with a record of 1 win, 2 losses, and 1 draw. Keglovic coached Stipe Miocic, a former Golden Gloves champion, and ranked #3 in the heavyweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). He also coached Jessica Eye who is ranked #5 in the Ultimate Fighting Championship in the bantamweight division. Continuing to train the next generation of boxers, Kleglovic is one of the trainers at the Old Angle Gym on Cleveland’s West side. Aside from training boxers, Keglovic has been employed for 29 years with Valley Ford Truck Sales as a truck parts specialist. He and his wife, Pat, have been married for 38 years. They have three sons, Leo Jr., Matt and Kevin, and a granddaughter, Isabella. Keglovic was inducted into the Ohio State Former Boxers and Association Inc., Hall of Fame in 2006.

Keglovic is being honored with the Clint Martin Coach of the Year Award. The award is named in honor of the late legendary trainer, Clint Martin, and Keglovic is the first to receive the award.

Once a Boxer, Always a Boxer


Once a Boxer, Always a Boxer: A Recap of Fred Bambino’s Boxing Career

Fred Bambino of Cleveland is watching the Golden Gloves this year. To him, there’s nothing like boxing. That was not always his mindset though. It wasn’t until he was 19, a young man in the workforce in 1978 straight from high school, that Bambino even considered the sport.

Three years later, he would become well-known in Cleveland as a three-time Golden Gloves champion.

“It was just one of those things,” Bambino said. “I never in my wildest dreams thought I was going to box.” He said he always loved sports in general as a kid and played football for what was then West Technical High School. When his father passed away in 1977 though, he said he started going out a little too much and getting into the “night life,” putting sports aside.

“I was at a point where I didn’t know what 1 wanted to do,” Bambino said.
About the same time his father passed, the famous “Rocky” movie came out, and it served to be an inspiration, he said. “It’s kind of corny, but true,” Bambino said. “It was about a tiny guy from a tiny neighborhood, and I liked that.”

He said it was then he decided maybe he should start working out. So he did.
He also went and watched the Golden Gloves. He said he thought it looked really interesting and competitive, which made him want to get back into sports. Not just any sports though.

He started waking up at six in the morning to work out, jogging and going to the YMCA on West 30th to hit the heavy bag. It was there that he met George Bowen, a former professional fighter. The “old timer,” as Bambino referred to him, was hitting the heavy bag and showed him how to hold his hands.
“Next thing you know, I saw an article about the Golden Gloves coming up, so I signed up for them,” Bambino said, knowing nothing whatsoever about boxing at the time. “All I knew is you put on the gloves, went into the ring, and started fighting.”

He trained himself, learning as he went and from the people he came across in the gym. One of his friends worked the corner in his first fight. “I don’t know who was more nervous, him or me,” Bambino said. Despite the. nervousness, he won that fight. “I got the bug right then and there,” he said.

The partying stopped too. “When I started boxing, it all stopped because boxing teaches you a lot of discipline,” he said. “Boxing is one that a kid could just walk off the street, you don’t know anything about him, and he could get in the ring and be a really good boxer.”
Bambino is living proof of that.

He met trainer Jim Kelly after his first fight who became his trainer for the duration of his boxing career. Bambino was an un-attached fighter, so when Kelly came up to him, he graciously accepted Kelly’s offer to work his corner.

He went on to win all five fights in the light-heavyweight division as a novice in 1978.
“He (Kelly) knew what to say in that corner, knew exactly what to tell me, how to calm me down, give you that confidence push you needed,” Bambino said. “I don’t care who you talk to, they’d be lying if they said they weren’t nervous their first couple of fights.”
After that win, Bambino sat out for a year and worked, but he didn’t stay away for long. In 1980, boxing struck his interest again. He saw the Golden Gloves coming up and entered for the second time.

This time around he was considered an open-division fighter although he only had five amateur fights under his belt. Under Kelly’s training, he started sparring with other fighters like Paul (Pablo) Ramos and Marc Rivera and going to different gyms, all the while gaining more experience in the ring and getting more confidence.
“Mentally, I knew I was prepared,” Bambino said. “When I was in the ring I used to think, I know this guy didn’t train as hard as me, I don’t think he ran as far as me. I knew I worked out hard, and I did everything I was supposed to do to get ready.”

He won the city division and districts that year. An injured hand prevented him from advancing to nationals, and he had to have surgery.
After recovering, Bambino said he got right back to it and trained hard for the rest of the year, running frequently, sparring four or five rounds a night, hitting the heavy bag, jumping rope and doing a lot of conditioning overall.

In 1981, he entered the Golden Gloves for his third and final time and fought in the middle-weight division. That year, he had a really good following, he said.
“People used to tease me about my left hook,” he said. “They used to say, `When Bambino hits them with a left hook, it’s gonna be lights out.’ I loved it.”
Bambino did not fail to live up to his reputation either. He had five fights, and all five were first-round knockouts. He deemed this his favorite moment of his boxing career. “It’s kind of an accomplishment not a lot of people do,” he said.

He also won the most outstanding boxer trophy for the city and district tournaments and proceeded to the national Golden Gloves tournament.
He lost at nationals in his first fight to a guy who was ranked fourth in the country. “They mix you with whoever,” he said, “and he happened to be one of the better fighters in the country.”

Bambino ended up with a 34-4 amateur record. He turned pro in 1981 at 22 years old. Out of his six professional fights, he won them all.
Over a period of time, he developed shoulder problems and has currently had five surgeries. He said after his first shoulder injury it basically ended his boxing career because it took so long to heal.

Bambino may be out of the game, but the game is still with him.
“To this day where I run in the neighborhood, some of these guys don’t even know my name,” he said, “they see me running and just call me ‘boxer.'”

By Amanda Duganier 8 April 2012

RIP Jimmy Bivins

1975 Jimmy Bivins

Cleveland and the boxing world have lost one of its last great fighters from the 1940’s-1950’s era. Jimmy Bivins lost his final battle on July 4th at McGregor House on Cleveland’s eastside. He was 92.

Jimmy Bivins was not only the outstanding contender for two world championships in the 1940’s; he also was entered in several Hall of Fames for his boxing exploits, including the Canadian Boxing Hall of Fame, The World Boxing Hall of Fame and the International Boxing Hall of Fame. He also was a member of the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame and the Ohio State Former Boxers Hall of Fame.

Jimmy’s credentials were many including 86 wins against many of the best fighters of a special era in boxing. He defeated several hall of fame boxers and eight world champions, plus several other greats such as Charley Burley and Lloyd Marshall. He was the “Duration”, or wartime champion, in both the heavyweight and light-heavyweight divisions.

Having been Jimmy’s friend for over forty years, the thing I will remember him most for were his acts of kindness toward others, his willingness to help any kid or adult learn to box, and his overall generous nature. He was a special friend to many and a goodwill ambassador for Cleveland. He lived in Cleveland since he was a young child and will always be a Clevelander. He will be greatly missed. May he rest in peace.

Jerry Fitch

RIP Neeko Pappas

2010 Nick Pappas

Sadly I have to report that one of Cleveland’s most popular fighters, Neeko, “Nick” Pappas passed on February 2nd. He was only 54. Nick was a GG and Tough Man Champion and fought briefly as a professional Cruiserweight with a 6-3-1 record. In August of 1995, after a heated sparring session at Marciano’s Gym on Cleveland’s westside, Nick collapsed in the shower and fell into a coma. He was rushed to the hospital for surgery but after that and a massive stroke he was confined to a wheelchair and the use of a walker the rest of his life. Neeko was known locally as the “Golden Greek”. I will never forget the time someone mailed me a fan letter from overseas for Nick. I called him up and he drove over in his little sports car. It was summer and he was shirtless and tan and looking the part of the ladies man, the “Golden Greek”. He was a genuine nice guy, liked and loved by many. He will be missed. May he Rest in Peace always.

Jerry Fitch

RIP Robert Ritter

1994 Robert Ritter

God bless Papa.

A Celebration of Life Service will be Thursday, April 23, 2015 from 1 to 3 p.m. at Hellriegel’s Inn, 1840 Mentor Ave., Painesville, OH 44077.He was preceded in death by his siblings, Richard and Virginia.Survivors are his wife, Janice; children, Anthony, Scott, Kim, Becky, Annette, Anne Marie, Sheryl; his pride and joy, grandchildren, Adam, Brian, Kelli, Danny, Tim, Christina; siblings, Florence and Gertrude.Bob was a proud U.S. Navy Veteran. He was an iron worker for 50 years. He was a member of the Ohio Boxing Hall of Fame. He was born July 5, 1928 in Cleveland.Robert J. Ritter, 86, of Mentor, passed away April 16, 2015 in Kirtland.

2015 Joe Gentile (Lifetime Achievement Award)

1997 Joe Gentile

Gentile to receive Lifetime Acheivement Award.

Joe Gentile, went from being a poor young immigrant from Italy to becoming a boxer and beloved, legendary boxing trainer who took many poor youngsters off the street and showed them that they could achieve more with their lives. Gentile said his life philosophy has always been, “It takes very little energy to be nice.” Gentile has used his energy to transform lives, and in the process he developed many outstanding boxers. Gentile was born in Rome, Italy and his family immigrated to the United States. After spending a short time in New York City, his family relocated to Elyria where he was raised with his three brothers, Tony, Frank, and Sal.

Gentile fought as an amateur boxer with an impressive record of 52-5, before finding his calling as a boxing trainer and promoter. According to Gentile, he trained 60 Golden Gloves championships, including Lovell Nixon and Larry Bowen, the runner-up in the 118 pounds division. Bowen lost to Gregg Richardson from Youngstown. During his training career, Gentile helped William Stafford and Jim Ralston win district titles in 1969. He also helped Sean Mueller, of Sandusky, win the Toledo Golden Gloves.

As a promoter, several world champions such as Michael Dokes, Hilmer Kenty and Richard Rozell fought on his boxing shows. Gentile was a chief official for 13 years for the Lake Erie Association. During this period, he judged more than 5,000 bouts.

He was inducted into the Ohio State Former Boxers and Associates, Inc. Hall of Fame, and was the Ohio State Former Boxers and Associates, Inc. Man of the Year in 2005. He was inducted into the Elyria Hall of Fame as well as the Legends of Leather Hall of Fame in 2006. He was the Man of the Year, Legends of Leather in 2007. Gentile, along with his son, Lorenzo, sponsored the 2012 Lake Erie Association Jr. Olympic Tournament in Elyria. Gentile is enjoying retirement with his wife, Francesca, and his son, Lorenzo. Gentile is being honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award , along with Bill Futchi, Paul LaBuda, and Tom Lorek