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Cus D'Amato

Constantine "Cus" D'Amato (January 17, 1908 – November 4, 1985) was an American boxing manager and trainer who handled the careers of Floyd Patterson, José Torres and Mike Tyson, all of whom went on to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.[1] Several successful boxing trainers, including Teddy Atlas and Kevin Rooney, were tutored by D'Amato. He was a proponent of the peek-a-boo style of boxing, in which the fighter holds his gloves close to his cheeks and pulls his arms tight against his torso, which was criticized by some because it was believed that an efficient attack could not be launched from it.[2][3]

Cus D'Amato
D'Amato in 1959
Born
Constantine D'Amato

(1908-01-17)January 17, 1908
New York City, U.S.
DiedNovember 4, 1985(1985-11-04) (aged 77)
New York City, U.S.
Occupation(s)Boxing manager and trainer
Years active1933–1985

Early life edit

Constantine D'Amato was born into an Italian-American family in the New York City borough of the Bronx on January 17, 1908, to Damiano (1868–1938) and Elisabetta (née Rosato; 1875–1913).[4][5] Both his parents were from Toritto, Italy. His father delivered ice and coal in the Bronx using a horse and cart.[6] He had three brothers, Rocco, Gerald, and Anthony. At a young age, D'Amato became very involved and interested in Catholicism, and even considered becoming a priest during his youth.

He had a brief career as an amateur boxer, fighting as a featherweight and lightweight, but was unable to get a professional license because of an eye injury he had suffered in a street fight. Despite having an abusive father, Cus stated in an interview that he did not hold any grudges because the beatings made him a better and more disciplined man.[6]

Career edit

At age 22, D'Amato opened the Empire Sporting Club with Jack Barrow at the Gramercy Gym.[5] He lived in the gym for years. According to D'Amato, he spent his time at the gym waiting for a "champion", but his best fighters were routinely poached by "connected" managers. One fighter discovered by D'Amato was Italian-American Rocky Graziano, who signed with other trainers and managers and went on to become middleweight champion of the world.[2] D'Amato also confronted boxing politics and decided, along with his friend Howard Cosell, to thwart the International Boxing Club of New York (IBC). Suspicious to the point of paranoia, he refused to match his fighter in any bout promoted by the IBC.[5] The IBC was eventually found to be in violation of anti-trust laws and was dissolved.[5][7]

Personal life edit

Cus D'Amato and Camille Ewald (1905–2001) met in the 1940s and entered into a common-law relationship. Ewald was born in Staromishchyna, Ukraine, to Hnat and Anastasia Pershyn Ewaschuk, and adopted the surname Ewald after her family immigrated to Canada.[8] Ewald supported D'Amato in his dedication to training socially challenged youths, and she allowed her home to function as a halfway house for D'Amato's pupils, often fulfilling the role of a mother figure to them. Most notably, D'Amato and Ewald, in anticipation of Mike Tyson's future athletic success, established legal guardianship over the young man in an effort to protect him both personally and financially from the cutthroat boxing establishment. D'Amato and Ewald never married, although their close friendship lasted for decades, until his death. Cus oversaw all the training and managing of his fighters, while she was responsible for cooking and household chores.[9]

Notable boxers trained edit

Floyd Patterson edit

 
D'Amato and Patterson in 1957
 
D'Amato and Patterson in 1961

Under D'Amato's tutelage, Floyd Patterson captured the Olympic middleweight gold medal in the 1952 Helsinki games. D'Amato then guided Patterson through the professional ranks, maneuvering Patterson into fighting for the title vacated by Rocky Marciano. After beating Tommy "Hurricane" Jackson in an elimination fight, Patterson faced Light Heavyweight Champion Archie Moore on November 30, 1956, for the World Heavyweight Championship. He beat Moore by a knockout in five rounds and became the youngest World Heavyweight Champion in history at the time, at the age of 21 years, 10 months, three weeks and five days. He was the first Olympic gold medalist to win a professional Heavyweight title.

Patterson and D'Amato split after Patterson's second consecutive 1st-round KO loss to Sonny Liston, although his influence over the former two-time champion had already begun to diminish.[6]

José Torres edit

D'Amato also managed José Torres who, in May 1965 at Madison Square Garden, defeated International Boxing Hall Of Fame member Willie Pastrano to become world Light Heavyweight champion.[10] With the victory Torres became the third Puerto Rican world boxing champion in history and the first Latin American to win the world Light Heavyweight title.

Mike Tyson edit

I think of a light bulb on Cus that says: 'I have found my Sonny Liston. I'm gonna do everything to coddle him, to protect him, to develop him, because he is my revenge on the world.'

Jack Newfield on Tyson's special role in D'Amato's life[11]

After Patterson and Torres' careers ended, D'Amato worked in relative obscurity. He eventually moved to Catskill, New York, where he opened a gym, the Catskill Boxing Club.[5] There he met and began to work with the future heavyweight champion, "Iron" Mike Tyson, who was in a nearby reform school.[2][12] He adopted Tyson after Tyson's mother died. D'Amato trained him over the next few years, encouraging the use of peek-a-boo style boxing, with the hands in front of the face for more protection. D'Amato was briefly assisted by Teddy Atlas, and later Kevin Rooney, a protégé of D'Amato, who emphasized elusive movement.

It is unclear at exactly which age (11 or 12) Tyson first became seriously interested in becoming a professional boxer. "Irish" Bobby Stewart, a former Golden Gloves Champion, was approached by Tyson while working as a counselor at the Tryon School For Boys. Tyson knew of Stewart's former boxing glory and specifically asked to speak with Stewart who immediately took on a gruff attitude of the subject after witnessing Tyson's terrible behavior in his first days at the school. Bobby Stewart introduced Mike Tyson to D'Amato when Tyson was around 12 or 13 years old, after Stewart stated he had taught Tyson all he could about boxing technique and skill.[13][14] D'Amato died a little over a year before Tyson became the youngest world heavyweight titleholder in history at the age of 20 years four months, thus supplanting Patterson's record.[6] Rooney would guide Tyson to the heavyweight championship twelve months after D'Amato's death. Footage of D'Amato can be seen in Tyson, a 2008 documentary. Tyson credits D'Amato with building his confidence and guiding him as a father figure.[15]

Death edit

D'Amato died of pneumonia at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan on November 4, 1985. He was 77.[3]

Legacy edit

Cus D'Amato Memorial Award edit

Cus D'Amato Memorial Award was established by the Boxing Writers Association of America. The first was presented to Mike Tyson at the group's 61st annual dinner, May 16, 1986.[16]

Science of Victory Marathon edit

From October 26, 2017, through November 4, 2017, an international, online "Science of Victory" marathon was dedicated to the memory of Cus D'Amato. Several journalists and boxers from Russia, Ukraine, Italy, Spain, Germany and the U.S. took part in this project, including Silvio Branco, Patrizio Oliva, Dr. Antonio Graceffo, Avi Nardia, and Gordon Marino.[17] The marathon promoted the book Non-compromised Pendulum by Tom Patti and Dr. Oleg Maltsev, which reviewed Cus D'Amato's training style.[18][19][20]

Portrayals in film, theater, and fiction edit

George C. Scott portrayed D'Amato in the 1995 HBO movie Tyson.

KNOCKOUT: The Cus D'Amato Story is a stage and screenplay based on the life of Cus D'Amato, from a concept by boxing trainer Kevin Rooney and written by Dianna Lefas.

The biography by Dr. Scott A. Weiss Confusing The Enemy tells the story of an exceptionally gifted individual who was an enigma to most people who encountered him. This biography offers the reader an up close and personal glimpse of the extraordinary man who had an amazing ability to bring out the best in a fighter and cultivate a life-long bond in the process. It reveals his ascendancy to the elite status he earned in the world of boxing and discloses many of the aspects of his life that remain difficult to explain.[1][6]

Harvey Keitel portrayed him in the 2022 Hulu TV series Mike.

Commemoration edit

In 1993, the 14th Street Union Square Local Development Corporation named part of 14th Street, where D'Amato's Gramercy Gym was located, Cus D'Amato Way.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Brozan, Nadine (October 29, 1993). "CHRONICLE". The New York Times.
  2. ^ a b c Heller, Peter (1995). Bad Intentions: The Mike Tyson Story. Da Capo Press. pp. 17–20, 26, 51. ISBN 0-306-80669-X.
  3. ^ a b "Boxing Manager Cus D'Amato Dies at 77". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 23, 2012.
  4. ^ "United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M5M2-WF7  : accessed 26 September 2022), Constantino Damato in household of Damiano Damato, Bronx Assembly District 33, New York, New York, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 1511, sheet 4A, family 67, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 999; FHL microfilm 1,375,012. Copy Citation
  5. ^ a b c d e Roberts, James (March 14, 2003). The Boxing Register: International Boxing Hall of Fame Official Record Book (3rd ed.). McBooks Press. ISBN 978-1590130209.
  6. ^ a b c d e Weiss, Scott (August 1, 2013). Confusing The Enemy - The Cus D'Amato Story. Acanthus. ISBN 978-0989000123.
  7. ^ "D'Amato Misses on Long Shot". The New York Times. January 8, 1982.
  8. ^ Lazko, Andy (February 15, 2020). "Camille Ewald, Mike Tyson's Ukrainian adoptive mother".
  9. ^ Watch Me Now: A Documentary by Michael Marton (1983).
  10. ^ "Hall of Fame Friday: Jose Torres". The Ring. February 25, 2010. Retrieved September 20, 2017.
  11. ^ ESPN SportsCentury – Mike Tyson
  12. ^ Tyson, Mike (May 30, 2017). Iron Ambition: My Life with Cus D'Amato. Blue Rider Press. ISBN 978-0399177033.
  13. ^ Heller, Peter(1988). "Bad Intentions: The Mike Tyson Story," p. 13. Da Capo Press, New York, 1988.
  14. ^ Anderson, Dave (August 3, 1987). "Sports of the Times; 'Time for the New Trainers'". The New York Times.
  15. ^ Graham Bensinger (March 3, 2016). "Emotional Mike Tyson on trainer who made him champ". Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. Retrieved July 2, 2017 – via YouTube.
  16. ^ Berger, Phil (May 20, 1986). "Tyson Named Best Rookie". The New York Times. p. 5. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  17. ^ Guests of the project noncompromisedpendulum.com
  18. ^ Online marathon dedicated to memory of legendary trainer Cus D'Amato www.worldboxingnews.net
  19. ^ www.boxen1.com
  20. ^ Unique International Project "Science Of Victory" December 1, 2017, at the Wayback Machine worldofmartialarts.pro

External links edit

amato, constantine, amato, january, 1908, november, 1985, american, boxing, manager, trainer, handled, careers, floyd, patterson, josé, torres, mike, tyson, whom, went, inducted, into, international, boxing, hall, fame, several, successful, boxing, trainers, i. Constantine Cus D Amato January 17 1908 November 4 1985 was an American boxing manager and trainer who handled the careers of Floyd Patterson Jose Torres and Mike Tyson all of whom went on to be inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame 1 Several successful boxing trainers including Teddy Atlas and Kevin Rooney were tutored by D Amato He was a proponent of the peek a boo style of boxing in which the fighter holds his gloves close to his cheeks and pulls his arms tight against his torso which was criticized by some because it was believed that an efficient attack could not be launched from it 2 3 Cus D AmatoD Amato in 1959BornConstantine D Amato 1908 01 17 January 17 1908New York City U S DiedNovember 4 1985 1985 11 04 aged 77 New York City U S Occupation s Boxing manager and trainerYears active1933 1985 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Notable boxers trained 4 1 Floyd Patterson 4 2 Jose Torres 4 3 Mike Tyson 5 Death 6 Legacy 6 1 Cus D Amato Memorial Award 6 2 Science of Victory Marathon 6 3 Portrayals in film theater and fiction 6 4 Commemoration 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editConstantine D Amato was born into an Italian American family in the New York City borough of the Bronx on January 17 1908 to Damiano 1868 1938 and Elisabetta nee Rosato 1875 1913 4 5 Both his parents were from Toritto Italy His father delivered ice and coal in the Bronx using a horse and cart 6 He had three brothers Rocco Gerald and Anthony At a young age D Amato became very involved and interested in Catholicism and even considered becoming a priest during his youth He had a brief career as an amateur boxer fighting as a featherweight and lightweight but was unable to get a professional license because of an eye injury he had suffered in a street fight Despite having an abusive father Cus stated in an interview that he did not hold any grudges because the beatings made him a better and more disciplined man 6 Career editAt age 22 D Amato opened the Empire Sporting Club with Jack Barrow at the Gramercy Gym 5 He lived in the gym for years According to D Amato he spent his time at the gym waiting for a champion but his best fighters were routinely poached by connected managers One fighter discovered by D Amato was Italian American Rocky Graziano who signed with other trainers and managers and went on to become middleweight champion of the world 2 D Amato also confronted boxing politics and decided along with his friend Howard Cosell to thwart the International Boxing Club of New York IBC Suspicious to the point of paranoia he refused to match his fighter in any bout promoted by the IBC 5 The IBC was eventually found to be in violation of anti trust laws and was dissolved 5 7 Personal life editCus D Amato and Camille Ewald 1905 2001 met in the 1940s and entered into a common law relationship Ewald was born in Staromishchyna Ukraine to Hnat and Anastasia Pershyn Ewaschuk and adopted the surname Ewald after her family immigrated to Canada 8 Ewald supported D Amato in his dedication to training socially challenged youths and she allowed her home to function as a halfway house for D Amato s pupils often fulfilling the role of a mother figure to them Most notably D Amato and Ewald in anticipation of Mike Tyson s future athletic success established legal guardianship over the young man in an effort to protect him both personally and financially from the cutthroat boxing establishment D Amato and Ewald never married although their close friendship lasted for decades until his death Cus oversaw all the training and managing of his fighters while she was responsible for cooking and household chores 9 Notable boxers trained editFloyd Patterson edit Main article Floyd Patterson nbsp D Amato and Patterson in 1957 nbsp D Amato and Patterson in 1961Under D Amato s tutelage Floyd Patterson captured the Olympic middleweight gold medal in the 1952 Helsinki games D Amato then guided Patterson through the professional ranks maneuvering Patterson into fighting for the title vacated by Rocky Marciano After beating Tommy Hurricane Jackson in an elimination fight Patterson faced Light Heavyweight Champion Archie Moore on November 30 1956 for the World Heavyweight Championship He beat Moore by a knockout in five rounds and became the youngest World Heavyweight Champion in history at the time at the age of 21 years 10 months three weeks and five days He was the first Olympic gold medalist to win a professional Heavyweight title Patterson and D Amato split after Patterson s second consecutive 1st round KO loss to Sonny Liston although his influence over the former two time champion had already begun to diminish 6 Jose Torres edit Main article Jose Torres D Amato also managed Jose Torres who in May 1965 at Madison Square Garden defeated International Boxing Hall Of Fame member Willie Pastrano to become world Light Heavyweight champion 10 With the victory Torres became the third Puerto Rican world boxing champion in history and the first Latin American to win the world Light Heavyweight title Mike Tyson edit Main article Mike Tyson I think of a light bulb on Cus that says I have found my Sonny Liston I m gonna do everything to coddle him to protect him to develop him because he is my revenge on the world Jack Newfield on Tyson s special role in D Amato s life 11 After Patterson and Torres careers ended D Amato worked in relative obscurity He eventually moved to Catskill New York where he opened a gym the Catskill Boxing Club 5 There he met and began to work with the future heavyweight champion Iron Mike Tyson who was in a nearby reform school 2 12 He adopted Tyson after Tyson s mother died D Amato trained him over the next few years encouraging the use of peek a boo style boxing with the hands in front of the face for more protection D Amato was briefly assisted by Teddy Atlas and later Kevin Rooney a protege of D Amato who emphasized elusive movement It is unclear at exactly which age 11 or 12 Tyson first became seriously interested in becoming a professional boxer Irish Bobby Stewart a former Golden Gloves Champion was approached by Tyson while working as a counselor at the Tryon School For Boys Tyson knew of Stewart s former boxing glory and specifically asked to speak with Stewart who immediately took on a gruff attitude of the subject after witnessing Tyson s terrible behavior in his first days at the school Bobby Stewart introduced Mike Tyson to D Amato when Tyson was around 12 or 13 years old after Stewart stated he had taught Tyson all he could about boxing technique and skill 13 14 D Amato died a little over a year before Tyson became the youngest world heavyweight titleholder in history at the age of 20 years four months thus supplanting Patterson s record 6 Rooney would guide Tyson to the heavyweight championship twelve months after D Amato s death Footage of D Amato can be seen in Tyson a 2008 documentary Tyson credits D Amato with building his confidence and guiding him as a father figure 15 Death editD Amato died of pneumonia at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan on November 4 1985 He was 77 3 Legacy editCus D Amato Memorial Award edit Cus D Amato Memorial Award was established by the Boxing Writers Association of America The first was presented to Mike Tyson at the group s 61st annual dinner May 16 1986 16 Science of Victory Marathon edit From October 26 2017 through November 4 2017 an international online Science of Victory marathon was dedicated to the memory of Cus D Amato Several journalists and boxers from Russia Ukraine Italy Spain Germany and the U S took part in this project including Silvio Branco Patrizio Oliva Dr Antonio Graceffo Avi Nardia and Gordon Marino 17 The marathon promoted the book Non compromised Pendulum by Tom Patti and Dr Oleg Maltsev which reviewed Cus D Amato s training style 18 19 20 Portrayals in film theater and fiction edit George C Scott portrayed D Amato in the 1995 HBO movie Tyson KNOCKOUT The Cus D Amato Story is a stage and screenplay based on the life of Cus D Amato from a concept by boxing trainer Kevin Rooney and written by Dianna Lefas The biography by Dr Scott A Weiss Confusing The Enemy tells the story of an exceptionally gifted individual who was an enigma to most people who encountered him This biography offers the reader an up close and personal glimpse of the extraordinary man who had an amazing ability to bring out the best in a fighter and cultivate a life long bond in the process It reveals his ascendancy to the elite status he earned in the world of boxing and discloses many of the aspects of his life that remain difficult to explain 1 6 Harvey Keitel portrayed him in the 2022 Hulu TV series Mike Commemoration edit In 1993 the 14th Street Union Square Local Development Corporation named part of 14th Street where D Amato s Gramercy Gym was located Cus D Amato Way 1 References edit a b c Brozan Nadine October 29 1993 CHRONICLE The New York Times a b c Heller Peter 1995 Bad Intentions The Mike Tyson Story Da Capo Press pp 17 20 26 51 ISBN 0 306 80669 X a b Boxing Manager Cus D Amato Dies at 77 Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 23 2012 United States Census 1910 database with images FamilySearch https familysearch org ark 61903 1 1 M5M2 WF7 accessed 26 September 2022 Constantino Damato in household of Damiano Damato Bronx Assembly District 33 New York New York United States citing enumeration district ED ED 1511 sheet 4A family 67 NARA microfilm publication T624 Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration 1982 roll 999 FHL microfilm 1 375 012 Copy Citation a b c d e Roberts James March 14 2003 The Boxing Register International Boxing Hall of Fame Official Record Book 3rd ed McBooks Press ISBN 978 1590130209 a b c d e Weiss Scott August 1 2013 Confusing The Enemy The Cus D Amato Story Acanthus ISBN 978 0989000123 D Amato Misses on Long Shot The New York Times January 8 1982 Lazko Andy February 15 2020 Camille Ewald Mike Tyson s Ukrainian adoptive mother Watch Me Now A Documentary by Michael Marton 1983 Hall of Fame Friday Jose Torres The Ring February 25 2010 Retrieved September 20 2017 ESPN SportsCentury Mike Tyson Tyson Mike May 30 2017 Iron Ambition My Life with Cus D Amato Blue Rider Press ISBN 978 0399177033 Heller Peter 1988 Bad Intentions The Mike Tyson Story p 13 Da Capo Press New York 1988 Anderson Dave August 3 1987 Sports of the Times Time for the New Trainers The New York Times Graham Bensinger March 3 2016 Emotional Mike Tyson on trainer who made him champ Archived from the original on December 12 2021 Retrieved July 2 2017 via YouTube Berger Phil May 20 1986 Tyson Named Best Rookie The New York Times p 5 Retrieved June 12 2019 Guests of the project noncompromisedpendulum com Online marathon dedicated to memory of legendary trainer Cus D Amato www worldboxingnews net Internationales Projekt die Wissenschaft des Sieges www boxen1 com Unique International Project Science Of Victory Archived December 1 2017 at the Wayback Machine worldofmartialarts proExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cus D Amato nbsp Biography portalCus D Amato at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cus D 27Amato amp oldid 1185642467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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