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Master Ralph Passero has been
a long-time friend of the Bohan Family and we cannot thank him
enough for the support he has shown us. His
loyalty to his Sensei and the Isshin-Ryu community is second to none.
We are looking forward to helping him celebrate Grand Master Don
Nagle's 50 years in Isshin-Ryu at the
Grand Master Don Nagle's American Okinawan Karate Association
Inc 2007 Hall of Fame Banquet and Tournament, September 21 and 22,
2007.
Wayne Wayland

Master Ralph Passero
NOTE:
Information for this article was supplied by Don Nagle's
AOKAINC. www.AOKAinc.com
The Beginning:
Ralph D. Passero, started
Isshin-Ryu at the
Bayonne Dojo on April 1st 1968, April Fools' Day. The school was
known as Don Nagle's American Okinawan Karate Association. It was
established in 1966. The head sensei was Joel Buchholtz a 7th Dan.
At that time one of Master Nagle's most knowledgeable students.
An excellent teacher and a dedicated Isshin-Ryu karate master. His
staff of instructors included Mark Wzorek, Dennis Wright, Robert
Doria, Robert Mansfield, Ed Badjbeck, Ralph Chirico on occasion,
many others I don't remember.
My original intention was to fight one of their
instructors who had a reputation of being an outstanding black
belt and vicious fighter, I knew him prior to this. He was Mark
Wzorek.
I was just discharged from the U S Army, 82nd
Airborne Division, and a Viet Nam Veteran I had served with the
1st Air Cavalry Division, 1st Brigade Airborne, I was a combat vet
who thought I was invincible. My Airborne Combat training had me
convinced as all airborne troops are, we are the ultimate weapon.
I was about to enter a dojo, for the first time in my life and
they had a different idea. I walk in the school, I challenge Mark
Wzorek to a fight, he explains to me, that before he can fight me
in this school, I would have to join, pay $20.00 for dues, and
$20.00 to join the AOKA. I did not have $40.00 to do this.
I have a friend Butch Nagy and we are both
working for my father in a dress factory, my dad pays for the both
of us for the first month. I know we won't be here after the
first night, but I want to fight this guy. Which turns out to be
not such a good idea. The paper work is done, we are both on the
floor, class is in progress and then about 8:00PM osh is called,
and all line up, aswatti is called we all sit down. And Sensei
Wzorek announces that he will be fighting all the black belts,
this is my chance to fight I guess.
As Butch and I watch, Sensei Wzorek fight the
class one after the other is getting a beating, these fights were
real, and there was no equipment. You got hit, and you hit back
if you could. Butch and I sat there in awe. I can't describe
accurately what I saw because what was happening was happening so
fast, I did not know the name of the back kicks, jump kicks,
spinning back hands, shuto's, take downs, to me at this time was
just a vicious display of fighting techniques. Each time the match
ended, they would both bow out and shake hands. This was new to
me.
After Sensei Wzorek finished with them, he looks
at me and says does any one want to kumite, what do I know what
kumite means, I don't answer. Then he says in English who wants
to sparr, fight. I lowered my head and looked at the floor, and
said NO. My best friend Butch, suggests to me, to fight him and
if I start to loose, he will jump in. I can't say on this bio
what I said to him. I knew I was gong to get murdered if I fought
this guy. I did not, class ended. On the walk home from the
school Butch and decided to return and make peace and become
students. That was the beginning of my Martial arts life 36 years
ago.
We both returned to class the next night, as
humble students, ordered a gi, got our basics and spent two hours
on six exercises, not talking and then watched as the rest of the
class did kumite.
Eventually, Sensei Wzorek became my sensei, and a
true friend. He spent a lot of time and was very patient with me,
I was having a hard time with this. He was trying to teach me
timing, balance, focus, the snapping technique, all that is
required for the Isshin-Ryu punch to be effective.
I was a slow learner and probably one of the most
difficult students he encountered. His patience I will never
forget. I was on my basic upper body exercises almost forever, my
kicks I had no problem with at all. I would watch Sensei Wzorek
and Sensei Dennis Wright do these exercise and could not believe,
how sharp, fast and focused they performed them. Both were
trained by Master Nagle I finally get my chance to kumite, I am
fighting a black belt named Bobby Doria, he is a little guy, half
of my weight and he is all over me, the more I try to hit him the
more I am getting hit. He was incredible, and then he says he
can't fight too good, he has a bad knee.
I fight another guy, Sensei Wright, I never saw
half of techniques he hit me with, he was super fast, hard as
steel, and his timing wore me out. I knew I was going to be
fighting this guy again and again. He was one of Master Nagle's
super fighters. He had a personality second to none, a very
gentle man, patient and never complain, and would not say a bad
word about any one. I immediately had total respect and
admiration for the man. He was one hundred sixty-five lbs and half
my size. I weighed about two twenty, over the next four months,
he would beat over thirty lbs off me. His endurance was endless,
he would along with the other black belts in the school, fight
matches for over thirty minutes.
Every night that I trained, I would fight him,
and we would meet on Saturday and Sundays, I would fight him as
hard as I could and he would, sometimes I think he was just
playing. We fought constantly the harder I hit him, the harder
he hit me back, this was a battle. This was the best feeling I
ever enjoyed in my entire life this was a high second to none.
When I did fight in competition, I didn't care
who I fought, in my mind no one was any threat to me whether I won
or lost, I fought without fear, they were n o comparison to Sensei
Wright.
When we fought on off days at the school,
spectators, and students would watch and not under stand how we
would try to beat each other to death, draw blood, give and get
black eyes, body bruises, and what ever and then when we both had
enough, shake hands clean up, go next door to Als Sportsman Bar,
enjoy a beverage and go home, and the formal class we would fight
after class ended, for some times a half hour, this was after
Sensei Wright fought the rest of the class. I would some how
manage to walk home, Sensei Wright would to work, over a mile
away, to work the midnight shift at Pirelli Cable. I don't know
how he did this. The man was not a normal human being.
What we shared no longer exists in most dojos.
Back then no one sued for and injury received in kumite. Today,
if you touch a student the wrong way, you could have legal
problems. This was also a time when there was no equipment, it
was not required because it did not exist. When it did exist, it
took our school until 1983 to adapt to it.
Finally the time comes for me to be tested for
green belt, Sensei Mansfield was instructed to test the four
candidates for advancement. I know I can wipe them out, but my
kata is not good, no terminology, the three others get
promoted, I don't. In a few months they leave. I am still there.
I was told by Sensei Mansfield, that I had no future in Karate,
try something else. I was determined to make this rank, but it
would not happen until the shiai at Fairlegh Dickinson.
It was a long time to wait but I made it.
We came back to school, I saw George Wanko carrying his
Brown Belt, and said, are you carry someone's gi and obi, did I
pay for that, I had found out just how good a fighter this man
was. I learned a few lessons from George Wanko , the hard way.
No regrets, that was the beginning of a life time friendship,
family style.
My fighting was getting better and better, I
worked for my dad. In a dress shop and was constantly punching and
kicking bolts of material, the shop employed about 90 women some
thought I was a mad man. They were old and did not under stand
what I was doing. Making green belt to me was a turning point
in my fighting and I was enjoying it more and more.
It was great being a student at this school,
times when you left in pain, you returned the next night, got new
injuries, and forgot about the old ones. This was continuous.
The school had a reputation and returning marines who had heard of
the living legend Don Nagle, would visit the school. Those with
good intentions left that way, those who wanted to challenge this
school's fighters did not leave happy. All who wanted to
challenge Sensei Nagle could not get past Dennis Wright, or Mark
Wzorek. I did not get a chance because I was just a kyu grade.
This school was for real, you trained hard fought
hard and this is what we did, some stayed some left, this was my
home and I was not going any where.

George Wanko
As time when on from when I was a green belt,
the new black belt on the floor was George Wanko. He was as tall
as me, by very thing, and lanky, I knew him when I was younger we
hung around with the same group of guys, and we were friends so to
speak. He was a black belt now, and I wondered how did he do
this. I was about to find out.
Even though I had mad a crack about him holding
someone else's gi and obi, he got over that, or didn't pay it much
mind.
He was now teaching me, but he had a different
approach than the other instructors. He was going to be a Police
Officer, that was his goal. His fighting tactics could not be
used in the school. He was taking his time with me and explaining
in detail about each punch, how to effectively drop someone
without hurting them, that was for the school where a minimum of
contact was to be used. (this applied to only the new and frail
students, as they progressed so did the level of contact) in an
actual street confrontation his methods were very effective. I
immediately tuned in to his way of thinking. He was the new Black
Belt on the floor, Sensei Wzorek and Sensei Wright were senior to
him and he gave them that respect always, and I learned what this
respect was all about. They taught and helped him and his was
doing that to me.
George and I sparred as often as possible, on off
days and after class at the school. George was not a
competitor, but did compete sometimes, he would either win or get
disqualified. He was not much into controlled contact and playing
tag. He was also a student of Don Nagle, and this touch and tag
was not for him. I was in this school at the right time, the
right instructors who came originally from Master Don Nagle.
George and I would kumite and be reprimanded by
our head sensei, that's not the way . But we would continue to beat
each other up and enjoy it. For all who think I was a great
fighter, I was trained by the best, Dennis Wright, Mark Wzorek,
and George Wanko, these were the instructors at the AOKA, they
were all for real, no nonsense, and they were gentleman. Sensei
Wright was called the black sheep, for his color and being a
little too rough on all, but we all loved it. The head sensei
referred to him by that and some other names I won't mention.
For 27 years that I was a student there he was the only black
person to stick it out, and that's another story.. George, Mark
and I became great friends, good times and bad we remained the
same, I am the head of the AOKA School, and we are partners
together. I am the senior man in rank, but they are my
sensei's and will always be senior to me, a piece of paper can't
change all that.

Sho Dan Testing
Finally the day comes for me to be tested for Sho
Dan. It is now 1971, and the honored guest at the Shiai will be
Kichiro Shimabuku. I am going to meet Soke Shimabuku's Heir to
the Isshin-Ryu System I was tested on my basics, kicks, and
kata, the testing for Sanchin, including me being struck by
Sensei Wright Sensei Wzorek, Sensei Cooling and Sensei Buchholtz,
I was beat about the neck, throat, back, thighs, stomach I did not
care, I could not wait to fight. I was right where I wanted to be,
fighting for my black belt, I was ready thanks to Sensei Dennis
Wright, the week prior to this he an I were banging it out and I
sprained my wrist, but I didn't care. I had been fighting with
injuries for so long it made no difference. I fought, and I fought
and I fought, I don't know how many black belts I fought, but
Ricky Kaminsky was one of them, he was a defensive fighter and I
could not hit him, Finally the test is over, and they call osh,
the gym is silent all are lined up. This was at the old PAL in
Bayonne N J. A decent size gym. They call all the names of the
new black belts and my name is not called, all get the belts and
the audience applauds, I am shocked, what is happening, Sensei
Mark Wzorek goes to the center of the gym, all is quiet, calls my
name I go to him not knowing what the hell is going on, he sits
aswatti, I kneel, he takes off his obi and takes off my obi, puts
his obi one me, the obi Sensei Nagle gave to him. Now I am in
shock, this was the most emotional moment I had ever experienced.
I relive it every time I put an obi on a new black belt. Kichiro
Shimabuku shakes my hand after we bow, and says you are most high
man here today
THIS IS AS IT WAS
Constant Competitor
Immediately after I made black belt, I became a
constant competitor, our school would travel all around the
country. Wherever we competed, our school would do well, The AOKA
fighting team from Bayonne consisted of Dennis Wright, Joe
Lagriola, Robert McKittrick, Richard Perseghin all were good
fighters.
I was a place fighter, winning
Grandchampionships, 1st, 2nd and 3rd place shared by me team
mates. We would all bow out to Sensei Wright. We all had a
tremendous amount of respect for him, and still do. He made us
all fighters. I managed to acquire about 200 trophies, plaques,
medallions. I was not always victorious, but I left may mark the
best I could.
John Shields & The
Grizz
I have great memories, even when I got ripped
off, and felt I was robbed of a point costing me the match, I
always ended my match with a bow, and a handshake. Except for one,
I was selected to fight a fighter from the Bronx only known as the
Grizz, and his name fit him well, including his manners, which had
none. Before that match I was a fighter of Gary Alexander, in his
U S KICK FIGHT LEAGUE, I was to fight a full contact match
against Richard Gorrell, an excellent Isshin-Ryu fighter who I had
fought five times in non contact, but at Alexander's tournament
that was just a term for don't not kill any one. His
tournaments were always contact, Richard and I had some great
fights, he had beaten me five out of five. We were fighting
buddies. When I was chosen to fight him full contact, I knew I
was in for a battle. The first round Richard Gorrell is all
over me but I'm not getting hurt, I am dealing with this, and in
the second round I am all over him with kick punches and what
ever, he is laughing and I see he has no teeth, I
can't stop
laughing but we're are still fighting, Third round we both go at
each other he is laying punches on me to the body and I am
hurting, I'm fighting back and I score with some round house
kicks and set him up for a punch, I catch him with a good hard
round house to the gut, he bends a little, I catch him with an
over hand right, he goes down for the count. I could not
believe I beat him, as I looked at him with my arms raised, and
saw he was hurt, I didn't enjoy the win. I went over to him the
people around pushed me away and when he looked up at me he smiled
and we both laughed. We were still friends.
Now I am loaded with confidence, and I am
scheduled to fight another match for Alexander, this one is at the
Pines Manor in Edison N J. An unknown fighter named John
Shields, Frizzy hair, stocky and coke bottle glasses, he is 5ft
10, and I know I am going to take him apart. The fight night
arrives, its a full house, but the ring is set up in a ball room,
and when I get in it the ceiling is just inches away from my head,
no big thing. We enter the ring and I insult this guy about his
Irish heritage, he makes some kind of strange noise from his mouth
we hit the corners and the fight starts, the referee is Master
Bowe and Akido master, who was probably wearing the wrong glasses
this night. As soon as both of us meet, John Shields breaks my
nose, goes under one my round house kicks to his head and picks me
up and throws me out of the ring, and this is the beginning of the
first round. Gary Alexander forget to mention to the both of us
the rounds were five minutes and there were no rules. When we both
got back into the ring, we clashed again, and this time I throw
John out of the ring, and go after him, but we landed on the
announcers table. The fight goes back into the ring, and we are
fighting each other I am hitting him but he is hitting me with
everything but the kitchen sink, the round ends, and we are both
tired. Round two we start over and it is pretty much of the same,
but John is getting the best of me, I catch him with some good
kicks, but I am careful not to let him grab my leg, cause he will
throw me out of the ring. Round three, we are mixing it up
punching and kicking at a slower pace now and we wind up against
the ropes and the rope that holds the ropes together is raped
around my left hand, I can't hit back and I can't get out John is
taking advantage of this and punching me and then throws me out of
the ring, Richard Bow the Ref, is standing there best view in
the house and he does not see this.. I am pushed backed into the
ring, the round ends, and John Shields said to his trainer Ray
Martin if Passero comes out, throw in the towel, Ray goes to the
ref and says Passero doesn't look too good check him out, Master
Bowe asks me how many fingers do I have up as he put his hands
behind his back, and I answered three, he stopped the fight and
John Shields was the winner. Some of my friends seem to think I
was winning, I don't know what fight they were watching, but John
Shields won that fight, I was beat, if I had continued I would
have been knocked out. John Shields and I became good friends, and
to this day we speak regularly and laugh about how we met. I had a
concussion, broken, nose, two broken thumbs, and a rib cage that
was bruised badly.
I was scheduled to fight on the following Sunday,
this fight with John was on a Monday night, I took the week off
from work, just to recuperate, but I was going to fight Sunday no
matter what. A tournament was scheduled at the Statler Hilton
Hotel, and it was hosted by Master Ralph Chirico, Master Isaac
Henry, and Master Thomas LaPuppet, it was the East Coast Alliance,
the winners would represent NY and be on the first NY Full Contact
Karate Team. The matches were to be controlled contact, in a
boxing ring, I was to fight a super heavy who weighed in at 280,
when I fought John Shields I was 220, after the match I was 207
lbs. I was determined to get my dignity back, I had to come back
after the loss to Shields. My face was still black and blue, and
my ribs were not healed. The match starts, and this Grizz comes
charging, I throw a round house kick to the body, and also a
backfist off the left side and score, Isaac Henry stops the match,
instructs us to go to our corners, I turn around, an the Grizz
jumps me and throws me on the floor, and is stepping on me. He is
pulled off, I get awarded the point, he gets a warning, the match
continues, it happens just about the same way I turn around and
again I get attacked from the rear and the same happens again. I
get the point, he gets a warning, match starts again, I score
with a punch to the chest area, match stops, I turn around to go
to my corner, this time I side step turn around and he is coming
at me, I punch him square in the face several times, he goes down
on his knees, I get grabbed by the officials, he falls over, gets
rolled on to a stretcher, is disqualified and I win the match.
I lost my temper and I apologized to Master
Henry, he said I should have done that at the beginning of the
match. My next match was against a well known football star Mike
Rowe, from the Washington Redskins. Mike was built like Arnold
Scwartzneger. He had muscles I had never ever seen before. This
match was at Madison Square Garden, and the promoter was Arron
Banks. The winner would fight Monster Man Eddie. This fight would
be an opening to fight some of the highly rate fighters from the
west coast. I trained with a former sparring partner of Chuck
Wepner, his name was Tony Costa, he was 6ft 3, a 32 inch waist,
16 inch biceps and a rouged street fighter. Tony would come to the
dojo on the off night or after the formal class and we would box,
he was tough, and his fighting skills were boxing and street
combinations. He was trying to teach me to box, but he connected
with his left hook to my jaw too many times. So I learned how to
get up off the floor, after being knocked down and sometimes out.
But fighting him was what I needed, he was enormous, and did not
play by the rules. When given the opportunity he would drop you.
My brother Andrew and I both trained with Tony, my brother was
given him a better fight than me. The day of the Mike Rowe fight,
I am confident and ready, the fight starts and I am dropping Row
two and three times in each round, and then they announce the
three knock rule is not in effect. The fight continues, it is
round four I think and the bell rings, I have been dominating
this fight from the beginning, Mike is loosing no question about
it, the bell rings I stop fighting and turn away from Mike, he
claims he did not hear the bell hits me in the left eye with a
strong right hand, closes my eye, blood all over, I go to my
corner, he gets a reprimand. and I go out to fight next round with
one eye, I can't see him they stop the fight he wins. Mike Rowe,
is one tough guy, he spoke and said he honestly did not hear the
bell, he was to sincere for me not to believe him. He goes on to
fight Monster Man Eddy and lost that fight. Mike Rowe, no matter
what I hit him with, and dropped him with, got up each time and
would not stop, he was like a machine, he just kept coming. I
could not believe he kept coming. I salute you Mike.
Jerry Robbins
This first match was wild. I lost my temper, but
this guy was crazy, I would have liked to fight him on the street,
by the same rules he was using, none! My next match at this event
was against Jerry Robbins, one of the best karate fighters of the
Korean style, his legs were by far the most powerful I had ever
encountered, James Henry was the fastest, and also packed the
power and technique to drop any one, when he wanted.
Jerry Robbins and I were friends at times and
rivals and both wanted to be the best. I knew this match was no
walk in the park. His roundhouse spinning jump kick was second to
none, I had to play him close or I did not have a chance, I was
feeling the injuries from John Shields, and my legs were not what
they could be, my ribs were killing me, and every kick I threw, I
felt like I got hit.
This match immediately starts out fast and
neither of us giving up any ground, his kicks are flying and I am
trying not to get hit, and using my hand techniques, I m scoring
he is scoring, something happened and when the point was called
as I returned to my corner, Jerry decided to jump me from behind
and use the tactics of the Grizz from the first fight, he gets
pulled off of me, and is giving a warning by Don Nagle, at the
beginning of continue, I am all over him, now its my turn to be
wild, he decides to rope a dope me, la Mohammed Ail style, this
just made me hit him fore to the body and any area of the face or
head I could hit. This fight is going and we are both scoring both
kicking and now a call is made, we are told to return to or
corners, and as I turn to go to my corner, Jerry jumps me again,
is grabbed by the referees and Master Nagle, he is disqualified.
I am awarded the East Coast lst Place Heavyweight Championship,
this qualified me to be on the 1st N Y Full Contact Karate Team,
to be known as the N Y Puppets, managed by Sensei Thomas LaPuppet.
Dennis Wright
Now the training is going to be strictly for full contact
karate, which as an Isshin-Ryu student is a lot different. The
hard part and the worse part of the training was getting to the
dojo, which was at Sensei LaPuppet' s school, off Eastern Parkway,
on Utica Ave on top of the McDonalds. This are was known as a
war zone, color was not an issue it was just a dangerous area.
I had to teach class with Sensei Wright at the Bayonne School,
and then at 10:00PM when our class was over, we would drive to the
dojo in Brooklyn, we arrive there about 10:30PM and the school
class is as if it is at 7:00PM and this is a workout before we
start to sparr. Running, Jumping jacks, pushups, skip rope, bag
work, stretching, Sensei Wright the machine, is not phased by
this at all, I am border line passing out, and the its time to
sparr. This is insane, but this is the program, you can quit,
anytime, this is all voluntary. Each of us get a partner and we
are all wearing gloves, and head gear and the fights begin, we get
corrections, advice on timing, footwork, and boxing techniques.
When the work out is over, it is now about 12:00Midnight, and we
all say good night. This may be hard to believe, but you can't
make this stuff up. We all had to go to work in the morning and
it was already late.
One incident, after training at this dojo I will never
forget, I am exhausted and we have to stop to get something to
drink, we stop at a corner grocery store on Pacific Ave, and as I
go to get out of the car, Sensei Wright says, let me got this is a
bad neighborhood. There were a group of black hanging out side
this store, so he goes in, now about 10 minutes pass, there is
some kind of commotion going on in this store, I am getting out of
the car, and here comes Sensei Wright, lets get out of here, no
juice, and he is in a hurry, I floor the car and we are on our way
back to Jersey. To this day, I still do not know what happened.
The next time we worked out over three, we brought what we were
going to drink. I survived Vietnam with this idea, discretion is
the better part of valor. I wanted to return to this store and see
what happened, but Sensei Wright said it would not be worth it.
He was pissed off when he came out of that store, and if you know
Sensei Wright that is very hard to do. He is a very tolerant man.
Sensei Wright and I became very good friends, but I never
forgot he was the Sensei, and I was a student, our friendship grew
and we were like brothers, I was the light skin guy. His training
and continuous sparring with me made me a fighter, I always fought
him to beat him, I would fight him as hard as I could, he got
stronger, I got faster trying not to get hit. I had injuries
from black eyes, sprained wrists, both legs were fractured in
different places, all toes broken, instep fractured, I don't how
many ribs he cracked, but while this was happening, I was enjoying
every minute of it. I guess I was high, I experienced feelings
of excitement and thrills, that I am sure others serious fighters
shared at one time or another. Unless you have experienced this,
I don't expect you to believe this. But it does exist, and Ali,
Wepner, Frazier, Duran, and I know Tyson had to share these
moments of this thrill.

(Isshin-Ryu Hall Of fame, 1996)
NY Puppets in Texas
The next match I have is in Houston Texas, with
the N Y Puppets, and I am matched against Nelson Thorpe, a pipe
fitter welder, he is on the Texas team. We both were ready for
each other and this match was a good fight, I won the decision. On
the team with me was a fighter named Shelton Wilkins, a Kung Fu
stylist, a nice guy, he is matched against David McCallum, who is
the super star of the Houston All Stars. They start fighting and
Shelton is getting beat badly, I am in his corner, trying to
persuade him to box this guy and he refuses, round two he
continues to get hit with everything, and now he is behind in
kicks, round three Shelton says I have him figured out now, we in
the corner know Shelton is going to loose, and probably get
knocked out. The round starts David moves in swinging, Shelton
does some out maneuvering foot work, throws a spinning back fist,
hits David, whose head goes one way and his feet left the ground,
and David bounced off the canvas, he is out for the count, the
Houston Coliseum is without a sound, Shelton is the winner by K
O .
Now the team wins against the Texas All Stars,
and we are scheduled to fight the LA Stars in Los Angeles, Eddie
Andujar his going to fight Benny the Jet Uiquerdes, who is one
unbelievable fighter. I am scheduled to fight Monster Man Eddy but
he has suffered the loss of a lung in Hawaii and I was fighting
his replacement, Another Bear, Sugar Bear Hillard, a first
round knock out fighter. I am in the dressing room and an East
Indian comes in, he is from India, he said I am here to give you
spiritual enlightenment and a rub down, I am not going for this,
he mentions Tahid Cali sends his regards. OK he massages me,
with some ointment and oils and who knows what, and then just
leaves, By the time I get in to the ring, I am so energized, it
was as if someone gave me rocket fuel. The fight starts, and sure
enough Sugar Bear comes charging at me, I side step and he runs
into the turn buckle, he turns around and I open up on him, but
each time I get hit, with a punch, its like he has steel hands,
I'm fighting back and he cant handle my legs, he is getting kicked
with every kick I throw. But when he punches me, it is harder than
you can imaging, we have boxing gloves on and there 12 oz. As
the fight continues, I win by a decision. Master LaPuppet is
missing out of my corner, he took the gloves that Sugar Bear Took
off and found out the inside stuffing where the fist hits the body
was cut out prior to the match. That is why he was a first round
knock out fighter.

1980 World Kung Fu
Karate Champion
My next fight is actually insane, I am selected
to fight the World Kung Fu Karate Champion, of the MODAFY Kung Fu
Organization, based in Harlem N Y. I accept and the fight is on.
It is scheduled to be at the Beacon Theater. The year is 1980 and
this fighter has had 18 first round knockouts. I take the
fight, and I am training with any one who is willing to sparr
with me at the Bayonne Dojo, I am going to the PAL in Bayonne, the
Boxing Club and the boxers are having a good time punching me, I
made a deal, I wanted to sparr them three rounds, and I would not
punch or block, as long as they did not hit me in the face. They
enjoyed this, but I was proving to my self I could take this
pounding. I was going to Harlem to win. The Beacon theater is
packed, it is 97% black fans of this champion, who I have not met
or even seen a picture of. The lights go out the spot light goes
on and there is an entourage of people making a path down the
middle of the aisle. This is some show I figure, All of a sudden,
a man 6ft tall whose body looked like it was carve out and this is
a live black statue with an unbelievable body. He does a flip on
to the apron of the ring, then does a flip over the ropes and
lands in a full split on the floor, the crowd is going wild,
including my corner, because we think this is part of the show, it
turns out this is the guy I am fighting John L Rovell, The Lord
of the Ring. I am in total disbelief, what am I doing here. To
make matters worse, some of the fans who are there for me are
shouting more than the N word and in my corner is my Sensei Dennis
Wright, Black and I am embarrassed and he is saying that we got to
get out of here. This was not funny at this time. And some of
them fans got banged around, they got what they deserved. Now the
fight is ready to start, I was thrilled to see Nick Adler as one
of the five judges. He must have known where the back door was,
to escape out of here. The round starts John comes charging at me,
with his head low as I kicked he tried to throw me out of the
ring, I got him into a headlock, guillotine style and while he was
trying to throw me out, I would not let go, someone pushed us back
in and we landed on his head. I thought he broke he neck, this
fight did not stop it just continued, he throws a roundhouse
spinning jump kick at me, I step back, he misses, I step in and
with a right hand drop him to the floor, I know he is out, at
this time all the lights in the Beacon Theater go out, we are all
in the dark, and now the bell rings, This was a very short
round. Round two, John is flying at me with jump side kick and I
am out timing him moving back and extending my hand to him to help
him off the floor, now he's aggravated and coming in at me non
stop with more of the same, and I am out distancing him. I drop
him a couple of time in the coming rounds, and he is furious, he
is using Chinese leg sweeps on me but can't connect. I'm running
out of gas, I am tired and there is one more round left, we both
finish the round, I am just too much for him and he is not
stopping, I am awarded the match. The spectators at this fight,
where the best spectators and fans at any event I was at They were
there for him, and they cheered me, and even picked me up in the
air, I could not believe we were given respect, even after to some
of my fans were out of order.

Chuck Wepner and Larry
Cureton
Now its the 80's I am training at the dojo, the
school is doing well, and I am just competing in tournaments in
the local circuits: Nick Adler's Centurions, Gary Alexander,
Isaac Henry, J H Kim, Al Smiths Red Dragons, George
Iberl,
Lizotte's AOKA, IIKA Tenn., the days of Harold Long, Don
Nagle's, Doug Kings, John Hughes, Marty Manuel (My Favorite
Karate person in the Whole World and also was a member of the N Y
Puppets, he is still my idol.), and S L Martin, these are
all respected martial artists who are tournament promoters.
Time is passing an I am missing full contact, and
it is now 1984, and an old acquaintance of mine when I was
competing as a black belt, he was just a little kid, Larry
Cureton, only little Larry is a grown adult, and is one hell of
a martial artists. We met at a tournament in Jersey City, it
was called the Barbarians Karate Competition, contact, equipment
optional, I had to attend this, I brought no students, I fought
a few matches won 1st Place, and Larry and I talked, I asked him
if he was interested in full contact, and he tells me he already
had some matches and is undefeated. He needs a manager, we
shake and its a deal for life, as well as his friendship. Larry
Thunderfoot Cureton, a unique individual, one of the best
persons I ever met, he is a true role model, for any person to
follow. He has a talent of diplomacy second to none. His
fighting talents were boxing and karate, a must if you want to
fight full contact. He body is in great shape and we are training
full contact at the Bayonne School. We have sparring sessions
after class, and also on the off nights. I said to my wife Lisa,
when I run into a fighter I can't handle, I am going to retire,
Larry convinced me he was the guy. I fought until 1987 and then
stopped competing. I managed Larry and trained with him
constantly.
Around this time I was approached by a charity
organization to raise money for ARC, the Association for Retarded
Citizens, we run a tournament and get the idea to have a full
contact match at the next years event. I run this idea by Chuck
Wepner, and he and I are going to be the main event. I have
jumped ahead a bit here, it is now 1993. Training for this fight
is not east, Larry is my sparring partner and I am no match for
him, but this is what it is going to take to last three rounds
with Chuck Wepner, the Real ROCKY, the guy they made the
movie about. Chuck and I are friends and he is as far as I am
concerned, the champ. I have hung out with him and we have
survived a few Jersey Bar Brawls, and I know he does not quit, and
does not go down, plus this will be a crowd draw, and we are not
getting paid. All the money goes to ARC. If you are aware of
ARC, they need money every day. We fight its a money maker,
Chuck and I get a decision its a draw. This fight was my last,
and also Chucks. At the begging of the round as soon as the bell
rang, Chuck hits me with a left hand I think I am going out, first
punch thrown. But I don't, and I am laying kicks on him and he
is tagging me, He grabs me for a body slam and my head his the mat
first, and my hair piece goes sailing, this gets the audience
into a laughing roar, I didn't care, then the fight continues, I
am getting thrown to the floor like this is a wrestling match, I
am kicking Chuck, his is laying punches on me, its a fight, I
finally manage to lay a side kick on his stomach he bends a little
and we continue, his is a gorilla, he takes my kick to the head
and says to me , nice kick . The fight is over we are laughing,
and we are still best of friends, he is a champion and I was
honored to fight him. It is more fun going out with him, than
fighting him.

36 Active Years of Experience
in the Martial Art of Isshinryu
1974
|
First Full Contact Karate -
Heavyweight Champ NY Puppets
|
1988
|
IIKA Hall of Fame Fighter of
the Year
|
1989
|
Shihan Nick Adler's
Northeast Open Karate Samurai Spirit Award
|
1993
|
New Jersey Hudson County A R
C Angel Award
|
1994
|
IIKA Hall of Fame Inductee
|
1996
|
World Sokeship Council
International Hall of Fame Master Instructor Award
|
1996
|
Karate Masters Hall of Fame
|
1997
|
Grandmaster Don Nagle's AOKA
Hall of Fame Inductee
|
1998
|
Isshinryu Council Board
Member
|
1998
|
Grandmaster Amato's GOJU RYU
Karate Legend Award
|
2000
|
Angi Uezu Okinawan
Isshinryu Karate and Kobudo Assn - HALL OF FAME
INDUCTEE
|
2001
|
Action Marital Arts Magazine
- HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE - Silver Lifetime
Achievement Award.
|
2001
|
Awarded the Don Nagle
Isshinryu Karate Senior Fight Master and Diamond
Life Time Achievement Award
|
2002
|
Action Martial Arts Magazine
- HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE - Ambassador to the
Martial Arts
|
2003
|
Grandmaster Gary Alexander's
International Assn of Martial Artists - HALL OF
FAME INDUCTEE
|
|
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NOTE:
Information for this article was supplied by Don Nagle's
AOKAINC. www.AOKAinc.com
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