Davey Moore
WBA Light Middleweight Champion
1982 - 1983

   

DAVEY MOORE
b. June 9, 1959
d. June 1, 1988

 

WON
18

LOST
5

DRAWS
0

KO'S
14

 

Light middleweight champion Davey Moore has boldly signed this magazine photo in black flair type ink... A rare autograph due to Moore's untimely death

measures: 7.75 x 10.75"
condition: stain at upper left, .75" tear at bottom (right of center)

sold

 
     
  Davey Moore was an American world champion boxer, the second of two boxers who shared the name in the late 20th century, and whose respective careers each ended with death by trauma around the age of thirty.

This Davey Moore was born in New York, during the championship reign of the first Davey Moore. As a boxer, he rose quickly through the junior middleweight ranks -- perhaps too quickly, according to some boxing writers and critics.

After winning eight professional fights, five by knockout, the WBA named him their #1 challenger, and in February 1982, he travelled to Japan, where he knocked out defending champion Tadashi Mihara in six, winning the WBA world junior middleweight title.

In April of that year he defended it against Charlie Weir, taking five rounds to knock him out, and in July former world champion Ayub Kalule, whom he stopped in ten.

Moore started 1983 by beating challenger Gary Guiden, again by knockout, in four. He had been scheduled to fight Tony Ayala Jr., however Ayala was convicted of burglary and rape, he was sentenced the 35 years in prison. Next, he defended against former two-time world champion Roberto Duran. Moore was perhaps overconfident, against an aging 'Hands of Stone' Duran, but experience proved the key with Duran hammering shut one of Moore's eyes and stopping him in eight rounds at Madison Square Garden. Moore won his next two fights, the first in Monte Carlo over Wilfredo Benitez, but then he was disqualified in the ninth round against Louis Acaries in Paris. In 1985, he won one more fight and was in line to challenge Carlos Santos for the IBF World Junior Middleweight title. That fight did not materialize, but eventually he did get to challenge for the IBF title, going against Buster Drayton in August 1986. Moore lost by TKO in the tenth and only fought 5 more times, winning 3 and losing 2.

One morning in early June 1988, as Moore was leaving his home, he stepped out of his car to open his garage door. The car lurched backwards, pinning him against the door of his garage. He died at the scene

 
 


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