In alphabetical order (with their respective trainees): •
Teddy Atlas was trained as a fighter and had shown considerable initial success winning every subsequent fight by knockout, but after his spinal illness was discovered, D'Amato tutored him to be a trainer (Atlas actually became a trainer and
cornerman for both Kevin Rooney and Mike Tyson in 1979–1982, while aging D'Amato relieved of his everyday training duties to be a mentor and resolve managerial issues.) •
Donny Lalonde •
Shannon Briggs •
Michael Moorer •
Michael Grant •
Alexander Povetkin •
Timothy Bradley •
Oleksandr Gvozdyk •
Joey Hadley, 1973 top U.S. middleweight amateur boxer. •
Buster Mathis, trained for several years at the start of his professional career by Cus D'Amato. •
Floyd Patterson, the first fighter to use the peek-a-boo effectively, becoming
Olympic gold medalist and two-time
Heavyweight Champion of the world. Also, the first man to ever win back the heavyweight championship. •
Tracy Harris Patterson •
Kevin Rooney, Mike Tyson's former trainer, is an expert in peek-a-boo boxing, having once been a
Golden Gloves champion. •
Omar Sheika •
Vinny Paz •
José Torres, who was trained and managed by
D'Amato, won the silver medal in the 1956 Melbourne Summer Olympics, and won the
Light Heavyweight world title by defeating
Willie Pastrano. •
Mike Tyson, whose use of the style is probably the most famous example, was notorious for his punching ability and defense. == References ==