Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini was in Los Angeles last week to provide the ringside analysis for a Premier Boxing Champions event that featured Leo Santa Cruz, the exciting featherweight, appearing and winning in prime time on Fox.
Boom Boom will be in Minneapolis as the analyst for Saturday night's Premier card at the Minneapolis Armory. The main event has Anthony Dirrell and Avni Yildirim meeting for the WBC's vacant super middleweight title. And, for the third time, welterweight contender Jamal James of Minneapolis will be featured on a Premier card at the Armory, facing Janer Gonzalez, a Colombian with a 19-1-1 record.
Mancini was on the phone from L.A., and he was asked about "The Good Son," Mark Kriegel's book written in 2012 about Boom Boom's life. Mancini details the darkest events of his life, the most famous of which was the death of opponent Duk Koo Kim on Nov. 13, 1982.
Mancini, only 21, was defending his WBA lightweight title for the second time. The fight was televised on CBS in the bright afternoon of the Caesars Palace outdoor ring in Las Vegas. The traditional distance for title fights then was 15 rounds, and this went to the 14th before Mancini stopped Kim on a TKO.
Moments after the fight, Kim collapsed, fell into a coma and died four days later. Mancini went to the funeral in South Korea. He had been hit with another traumatic blow — the death of his brother Lenny — 21 months earlier and fell into a depression after Kim's death.
Lenny was 5½ years older than Ray, and he died from an accidental gunshot from a girlfriend. In this phone call, Mancini said:
"I was thinking about Lenny today because this is the anniversary — Valentine's Day, Feb. 14, 1981. He was 25, and his girlfriend was 17. There was a gun around and an accidental shooting.
"The people who watched him in the ring as an amateur say that Lenny had more talent than me, and they're right. He was a handsome, charming son of a gun and the ladies loved him. Lenny had it all, but he also had wiseguy friends. Lenny just lacked discipline."