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Eder Jofre 80th Birthday Special: Part I

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  • Eder Jofre 80th Birthday Special: Part I

    Later this month, Brazilian legend Eder Jofre, the "Golden Bantam", will celebrate his 80th birthday. I had the great pleasure of writing a homage for the best Brazilian boxer off all time, and the best bantamweight boxer of history. The "Eder Jofre 80th Birthday Special" will be a series of 4 articles that will discuss Jofre's journey from his birth until the present day.

    Here is the beginning of the first part and the link, so you can read it all. I hope you all enjoy it, and stay tunned for the next parts. Every feedback about this is welcome.



    Part I: Zumbano-Jofre, Childhood, Amateurism and Beginning in Professional


    The Zumbano-Jofre clan


    It is impossible to talk about Eder Jofre without first talking about the biggest and most famous clan of Brazilian boxing history: the Zumbano-Jofre. The story starts in the state of São Paulo, more precisely in the city of Mococa, where the couple Salvador and Maria Zumbano raised their children. The oldest ones, Higino and Waldemar, were responsible for the creation of a gym in the backyard, with a ring that had two orange trees and two guava trees on the corners, as described in the documentary "Quebrando a Cara" (which means "Breaking the Face") of the filmmaker Ugo Giorgetti.

    In the 30s, the family would move to the capital of the state, the municipality of São Paulo. A few years after, Higino would start training boxing in the gym owned by Armando Jofre, who was an Argentinian known as Kid Pratt in the local boxing world. Armando was the brother of Aristides, the Kid Jofre.

    Subsequently, besides Higino, his brother Waldemar also started to dedicate himself to boxing. Increasingly close to the Jofre family, it was matter of time until the single Aristides met Angelina, daughter of Salvador and Maria. But, before we talk about the couple that would change the history of Brazilian boxing, it is worth noting that the other brothers of the Zumbano family also got into the noble art. Ralph, Erasmo, Tonico, all trained by Kid Jofre, were a part of the amateur pugilism universe of the city of São Paulo at the time.

    But, so we do not dwell on the rich and profound history of the most important family of Brazilian boxing [we suggest, for those who want more details, reading the excellent book "Em 12 Rounds" (which means "In 12 Rounds") written by Bruno Freitas and Maurício Dehò], we will advance the story to the dawn of March 26 of 1936. It was on this day that Eder Jofre was born, the pugilist who years later would become not only the greatest exponent of the traditional clan, but also the greatest boxer in the history of Brazilian boxing.

    Peruche's Neighborhood: Eder's Childhood

    Fruit of the marriage and the love between the Argentinian naturalized in Brazil, Aristides "Kid" Jofre, and Angelina Zumbano, daughter of a traditional family of Italian origin, Eder was born on the Seminário Street ("Rua do Seminário"), where his father's gym was located.

    ...(continue in the website)

    See the full story at: http://round13.com.br/?pg=conteudo&artigo=270

  • #2
    I love you

    Comment


    • #3
      Thank you!

      Your a wonderful writer....thoroughly enjoying this, about to go to the website to read the rest. I am curious about Brazilian boxing history. I learned quite a bit about the wrestling culture and the Capoera culture in Brazil and thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it! Now I am hoping to learn about the boxing tradition in one of this world's most fascinating polyglots.

      Thanks again.

      Comment


      • #4
        Mate massive fan of Jofre, sat readin it in the pub n lookin forward too the next additions, am a training writer myself and am writing a piece on Jofre, enjoyed this.
        Keep it up man.

        Comment


        • #5
          With a tradition like that I wonder why boxing didn't take off more in Brazil. You hardly see any fighters from that country at the top level.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by ShoulderRoll View Post
            With a tradition like that I wonder why boxing didn't take off more in Brazil. You hardly see any fighters from that country at the top level.
            The same thought occured to me

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by billeau2 View Post
              Your a wonderful writer....thoroughly enjoying this, about to go to the website to read the rest. I am curious about Brazilian boxing history. I learned quite a bit about the wrestling culture and the Capoera culture in Brazil and thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it! Now I am hoping to learn about the boxing tradition in one of this world's most fascinating polyglots.

              Thanks again.
              Thank you mate, really glad that you enjoyed it. I will talk about Brazilin boxing history as well in the next parts. Thanks for the support!

              Originally posted by NChristo View Post
              Mate massive fan of Jofre, sat readin it in the pub n lookin forward too the next additions, am a training writer myself and am writing a piece on Jofre, enjoyed this.
              Keep it up man.
              Thanks mate! Stay tunned for the next parts. On next Tuesday we'll have the next one! Thanks for the support!

              Originally posted by ShoulderRoll View Post
              With a tradition like that I wonder why boxing didn't take off more in Brazil. You hardly see any fighters from that country at the top level.
              Yes, I wonder it myself as well sometimes. I will discuss some of those problems in Brazil, but I can anticipate to you that the main problem is the lack of investments and of serious people in front of the sport. Our luck is that we have sometimes talented boxers that can win even in this tough scenario. Our last great fighter in a world level was Acelino Popo Freitas, but in the last few years, we have some fighters that may have great careers, like Falcão Brothers (Yamaguchi Falcao and Esquiva Falcao), Everton Lopes, Patrick Teixeira... but Jofre will probably be always on another level, he was that kind of fighter that you see in decades from decades.
              Last edited by luigiR13; 03-05-2016, 06:54 AM. Reason: error

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by luigiR13 View Post
                Thank you mate, really glad that you enjoyed it. I will talk about Brazilin boxing history as well in the next parts. Thanks for the support!



                Thanks mate! Stay tunned for the next parts. On next Tuesday we'll have the next one! Thanks for the support!



                Yes, I wonder it myself as well sometimes. I will discuss some of those problems in Brazil, but I can anticipate to you that the main problem is the lack of investments and of serious people in front of the sport. Our luck is that we have sometimes talented boxers that can win even in this tough scenario. Our last great fighter in a world level was Acelino Popo Freitas, but in the last few years, we have some fighters that may have great careers, like Falcão Brothers (Yamaguchi Falcao and Esquiva Falcao), Everton Lopes, Patrick Teixeira... but Jofre will probably be always on another level, he was that kind of fighter that you see in decades from decades.
                I see a "Yamaguchi" in there lol. Many people would be shocked to find out how much Japanese society there is in Brazil due to the historic Portugese and Japanese trading treaties. Its how the Gracie Brothers got their start.
                So you have so many elements of a great fight sport culture in Brazil...

                Comment


                • #9
                  True. Hell, without those treaties and Japanese presence, there'd probably be no Brazilian style of jiu jitsu or MMA as a major sport.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Anthony342 View Post
                    True. Hell, without those treaties and Japanese presence, there'd probably be no Brazilian style of jiu jitsu or MMA as a major sport.
                    I may have mentioned this to you in a PM but during the second world war because of Japanese ExPats there was a thriving Judo community in Brazil and it was never put off by the war, or when the first Kodokn was destroyed. This means you have Judo lines in brazil that have developed a style, substance and presence that is unique and perhaps more pure than in Japan! There is also some weird KoRyu classical stuff over there. But you had some great jpanese fighters who developed a presence in Japan, including the Gracies teacher who many think was really a "Judo" guy MAKING Gracie Jiu Jitsu into....Gracie Judo!

                    Lol this Judo versus Jiu Jitsu argument is the equivalent of our "Dempsey versus Lewis" type threads! and just as Juggy has challenged Ray, and Ray challenged Juggy? there have been many incitations for members to meet at a gym to settle this argument. lol. Never mind how a scuffle would settle this issue...I guess instead of "say uncle" it would be "admit the Gracies do Judo or ill give you a pink belly!

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