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CANADA'S DONATO PADUANO
By Jim Amato
August 2, 2008 - In the late 1960's and throughout the 1970's there was a
smooth Italian born boxer who fought out of Canada. He was tough and fearless.
He had great moves and a fine jab. The only thing he lacked was punching power
and that probably kept him from reaching the top of his sport.
Donato Paduano turned professional in 1968. He moved up the ranks quickly
beating useful opponents like Dorman Crawford, Juan Ramos, Colin Fraser, Pablo
Lopez and Pat Murphy. He appeared at Madison Square Garden's Felt Forum and the
Garden itself where he became quite popular. A year after turning pro he
outpointed Joey Durelle to win the Canadian welterweight title. He beat Durelle
in a rematch. Then at the Garden he created quite a stir when he won a decision
over Marcel Cerdan Jr. Young Marcel came in with a glossy 47-1-1 record but was
just outboxed by the talented Paduano. Cerdan Jr. proved to be no fluke. After
the loss to Paduano he beat Dario Hidalgo, drew with former junior welterweight
champion Sandro Lopopolo and lost decisions to top contenders Clyde Gray and
Robert Gallois.
The win over Cerdan Jr. led to a non title fight with the newly crowned world
lightweight champion Ken Buchanan of Scotland. The flashy Scot had upset Ismael
Laguna to win the title and now the Garden wanted to showcase him. Paduano
proved to be a worthy foe and in a great fight for boxing purists, Buchanan
outslicked Donato over ten rounds. In 1971 Paduano lost his Canadian title to
rugged Clyde Gray. Then he was upset over ten rounds by Danny McAloon. He fought
a draw with Fernand Marcotte and then defeated Marcotte in a 1972 rematch.
Donato then won a verdict over the aging former welterweight great Luis
Rodriguez, He then split a pair of decisions with Reynold Cantin.
In 1973 Paduano failed to regain the Canadian welterweight title losing to
reigning champion Ray Chavez Guerrero. Later in the year he was the stopped in
eleven rounds by Australian Charkey Ramon for the Commonwealth, British Empire
junior middleweight titles. Donato then reeled off six straight victories
including a knockout of highly touted Jean Claude LeClair. In 1974 Paduano met a
legend in Emile Griffith. Emile was on the downside of his great career but he
had enough left to outscore Donato.
Paduano would have five more fights winning only two of them. He hung up the
gloves in 1980. In all he had fifty two fights. His overall record was a fine
41-9-2. He only scored fifteen knockouts but he was stopped just once. He was a
crowd pleaser and a class act.
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