Joey Gamache Explained

Joey Gamache
Realname:Joseph Gamache
Birth Date:May 20, 1966
Birth Place:Bath, Maine, U.S.
Weight:
Height:5 ft 6 in
Reach:64 in
Style:Orthodox
Total:59
Wins:55
Ko:38
Losses:4

Joseph Gamache (born May 20, 1966) is an American boxing trainer and former professional boxer. He is the second boxer from Maine to capture a world boxing title, as he won the WBA super featherweight title in 1991 and the WBA lightweight title in 1992. He retired with a record of 55-4, with his losses being to Tony Lopez, Orzubek Nazarov, Julio César Chávez and Arturo Gatti.

Early years

At the age of 10, playing third base in Little League Baseball, Gamache tended to loop his throws to first base. His father suggested that if he worked out in a boxing gym he might strengthen his arms and straighten out his long throws across the infield. Gamache would come to love the rites of the gym and soon set aside baseball to become a boxer.[1]

Professional boxing career

Gamache was trained by Tony Lampron and Teddy Atlas. He turned professional in 1987 and won his first 28 bouts.[2]

Two-weight world champion

In 1991, Gamache defeated Jerry Ngobeni (19-1) to capture the vacant WBA super featherweight title. He vacated the title to move up to lightweight.[3] The following year, Gamache defeated Chil-Sung Chun (18-1) to win the vacant WBA lightweight title.[4] He lost the lightweight title in his first defense to Tony Lopez (40-3-1) via TKO in the eleventh round. Gamache fought bravely against the stronger, more experienced Lopez.[5] In 1994, Gamache fought Orzubek Nazarov (19-0) for the WBA lightweight title, but lost via second-round TKO.[6] He fought Julio César Chávez (96-2-1) in 1996. The referee stopped the fight at the end of the 8th round, giving Chávez a harder-than-expected victory.[7]

Retirement

In his last fight on February 26, 2000, Gamache was brutally knocked out in two rounds by Arturo Gatti (30-4) at Madison Square Garden. Gamache went on to file lawsuits against both Gatti and the New York State Athletic Commission, alleging that Gatti weighed significantly more than the contracted weight at the time of the fight.[8] A NYSAC official allowed Gatti off the scale before it could be determined that he had made the 141-pound weight limit. HBO said Gatti weighed 160 pounds on fight night compared to Gamache's 145 pounds. Gamache said he suffered brain damage as a result of the brutal knockout and was hospitalised for days.[9] The case was tried and decided by Judge Melvin Schweitzer, who found the state negligent in its lax handling of the pre-fight weigh-in. Gamache was not awarded any damages, as Schweitzer was not convinced that the negligence was a substantial factor in causing Gamache's injury. Gamache considered the verdict a win as it acknowledged the NYSAC's negligence.[10] [11]

Professional boxing record

ResultRecordOpponentTypeRound, timeDateLocationNotes
59Loss55–4Arturo GattiKO2 (10)2000-02-26
58Win55–3Craig HoukTKO6 (8)1999-11-05
57Win54–3Jerry SmithTKO8 (10)1999-08-07
56Win53–3John BaileyUD10 (10)1999-04-30
55Win52–3Mark BrannonTKO4 (10)1998-11-20
54Win51–3Chuck SturmTKO6 (10)1998-08-30
53Win50–3Tim ScottTKO3 (10)1998-07-30
52Win49–3Felix DubrayKO4 (12)1998-05-09
51Win48–3Felix DubrayKO3 (10)1998-02-20
50Win47–3Julio IbarraTKO3 (10)1997-10-24
49Win46–3Rocky BergKO3 (?)1997-06-14
48Loss45–3Julio César ChávezRTD8 (10)1996-10-12
47Win45–2Tim BondsTKO5 (10)1996-07-31
46Win44–2Rocky MartinezUD12 (12)1996-03-31
45Win43–2Tim PaytonTKO4 (10)1996-02-09
44Win42–2Kenneth KiddUD8 (8)1995-11-20
43Win41–2Tony EnnaTKO8 (10)1995-11-08
42Win40–2Danny MasonTKO4 (10)1995-09-15
41Win39–2Jose RuizTKO1 (?)1995-08-19
40Win38–2Tony EnnaTKO7 (10)1995-08-01
39Win37–2Tim BondsKO5 (?)1995-07-11
38Loss36–2Orzubek NazarovKO2 (12)1994-12-10
37Win36–1Wayne BoudreauxUD10 (10)1994-06-02
36Win35–1Jeff MayweatherUD12 (12)1994-01-28
35Win34–1Han KimTKO1 (10)1993-12-08
34Win33–1Jeff BumpusTKO10 (10)1993-09-10
33Win32–1Bobby AmslerTKO5 (10)1993-06-26
32Win31–1Rocky BergTKO2 (10)1993-04-23
31Win30–1Mike GrowUD10 (10)1993-02-12
30Loss29–1Tony LopezTKO11 (12)1992-10-24
29Win29–0Chil Sung JunTKO9 (12)1992-06-13
28Win28–0Tommy HanksUD10 (10)1992-03-27
27Win27–0Rick SouceTKO3 (10)1992-01-24
26Win26–0Tim TiptonKO2 (10)1991-11-22
25Win25–0Jerry NgobeniTKO10 (12)1991-06-28
24Win24–0Verdell SmithTKO6 (10)1991-05-10
23Win23–0Arthur ClarkeKO3 (?)1991-04-12
22Win22–0Jackie BeardTKO8 (10)1991-02-05
21Win21–0Jeff FranklinUD12 (12)1990-11-09
20Win20–0Brian BrownUD10 (10)1990-05-18
19Win19–0Nelson RodriguezUD12 (12)1990-04-06
18Win18–0Irving MitchellTKO4 (12)1990-01-05
17Win17–0Richie FosterUD10 (10)1989-09-28
16Win16–0John KalbhennUD10 (10)1989-07-03
15Win15–0Roberto RubaldinoRTD7 (10)1989-04-20
14Win14–0Felix DubrayTKO7 (10)1989-02-16
13Win13–0Rafael GandarillaUD8 (8)1988-12-01
12Win12–0Jose SotoKO1 (8)1988-10-22
11Win11–0Mark BrannonTKO1 (8)1988-09-02
10Win10–0Shawn SpindaKO1 (?)1988-06-30
9Win9–0Benny MarquezUD8 (8)1988-06-09
8Win8–0Stephan ZaffirofUD6 (6)1988-04-23
7Win7–0Samuel MeckUD6 (6)1988-03-12
6Win6–0Marc AmandTKO5 (?)1988-01-30
5Win5–0Ali AmoucheKO3 (?)1988-01-23
4Win4–0Chris GodeauxTKO1 (4)1987-12-04
3Win3–0Johnny ReddUD6 (6)1987-06-27
2Win2–0John PittsKO3 (6)1987-05-23
1Win1–0Al JacksonRTD3 (6)1987-05-01

Training career

Gamache's son, Steven Gamache, made his professional debut in 2010.[12] Today, Gamache works as a licensed boxing trainer, coaching some of the top fighters in the sport. He trained Boyd Melson, who won the gold medal at the 2004 World Military Boxing Championships in the 69 kg weight class and fought professionally at light middleweight until his retirement in 2016.[13] Gamache was hired by Team Sauerland, and trained the Danish super middleweight contender Patrick Nielsen.[14] Gamache is the current trainer of Swedish boxer Otto Wallin, who faced the former unified heavyweight world champion Tyson Fury on September 14, 2019.[15] He is also a member of the training team of Teofimo Lopez[16]

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. News: Gamache, a Local Hero, Hopes to Add to Maine's Boxing Folklore . The New York Times . Phil. Berger. October 24, 1992.
  2. Web site: Maine Secretary of State Kids: Joey Gamache . Maine.gov . February 26, 2000 . July 26, 2012.
  3. Web site: Keeping Up With... Joey Gamache . Doghouseboxing.com . August 6, 2008 . July 26, 2012.
  4. Web site: Ex-fighter Joey Gamache has lawsuit against New York State Athletic Commission rejected - ESPN . . April 8, 2010 . July 26, 2012.
  5. Web site: Sometimes a loss defines a champion.
  6. Web site: Tony Lopez - Boxrec Boxing Encyclopaedia . Boxrec.com . July 11, 2012 . July 26, 2012.
  7. Web site: Chavez is No Knockout but He Earns One. . October 13, 1996.
  8. Web site: Boxer injured in 2000 fight sues Gatti - Boxing- NBC Sports . https://archive.today/20120717145338/http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11643791/ . dead . July 17, 2012 . MSNBC . March 2, 2006 . July 26, 2012.
  9. Web site: Despite faulty weigh-in, Gamache's claim axed. April 9, 2010.
  10. Web site: Joey Gamache Lawsuit! . News.lalate.com . July 11, 2009 . July 26, 2012.
  11. News: 'Extreme Couponing' gone too far? Expert offers tips on how to save big without obsessing . New York . Daily News . Mitch . Abramson . July 11, 2009.
  12. Web site: Steven Gamache wins pro boxing debut . Sun Journal . August 9, 2010 . July 26, 2012.
  13. News: Boyd Melson.
  14. http://www.boxingscene.com/patrick-nielsen-like-wild-dog-says-gamache--92346/ Gamache: Nielsen is like a wild dog
  15. Web site: Tyson Fury overcomes bloody cut over eye to beat Otto Wallin. September 15, 2019.
  16. Web site: teofimo lopez like lomachenko . USA today . December 2019. August 13, 2020.