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Early life and career Born in 1927, La Starza grew up in the
Van Nest section of
the Bronx. La Starza’s skills for boxing showed early, and he would become a very crafty
out-boxer and
counterpuncher. He had a very successful amateur career, winning five
Golden Gloves titles in
New York in 1944 and 1945. He began his professional career on July 7, 1947, and in less than three years, put together an undefeated record of 37 straight victories. This would line him up for a fight with another undefeated, rising heavyweight.
Fights with Marciano La Starza and Rocky Marciano met for the first time in
Madison Square Garden on March 24, 1950. La Straza fought well, and although the fight went against him on a split decision, La Starza may have come closer than any other boxer to defeating Marciano. The scoring for the bout was 5–4, 4–5, and 5–5, but La Starza lost on a supplemental point system used by New York and Massachusetts at that time (which was awarded to Marciano on account of him scoring the fight’s only knockdown). La Starza felt he was robbed of victory, and even went on record in the
New York Herald Tribune, March 25, 1950, as saying, "The fact is [Rocky’s] manager Al Weill was matchmaker for the Garden. I would say that had a lot to do with the decision." He maintained that belief for over 50 years after the bout. Over the next three years, La Starza fought 18 more times, (losing on points to Dan Bucceroni and Rocky Jones, before avenging both losses in 1952), and eventually won a heavyweight title eliminator against
Rex Layne in early 1953. This set himself up for what would be the most important fight of his career: a world heavyweight championship bout which was also a rematch against Marciano on September 24, 1953. The fight took place in an outdoor venue—the Polo Grounds in New York City. La Starza fought Marciano quite well for the first six rounds, but began to wear down as he took more punishment. Referee
Ruby Goldstein stopped the fight in an eleventh round. Shortly before the fight was stopped, Marciano had knocked La Starza through the ropes. La Starza beat Goldstein's count, but the bout was stopped shortly thereafter on a TKO as Marciano battered the challenger relentlessly. This was the first of only two times La Starza was stopped during his career.
Later career Following the title bout, La Starza was hospitalized for injuries sustained during the fight, and required surgery to treat the damage done to his arms. He continued his boxing career but was never the same again. He lost his next match in March 1954 to
British champion
Don Cockell, and went on to lose half of his subsequent eight fights. La Starza finally retired after his final fight on May 8, 1961. During his over 14 year long career, he fought a total of 446 rounds in 66 professional fights, and won 57 of them with 27 by knockout. After his boxing career La Starza appeared on
television in a number of stereotypical tough-guy roles. His biggest break was a regular role as Pvt. Ernie Lucavich on the short-lived
World War II series
The Gallant Men. He also did guest appearances on various shows including
77 Sunset Strip,
The Wild Wild West and
Perry Mason. He appeared in two episodes (13 and 14) of the
Batman series of the 1960s, and appeared in movies including
Point Blank (1967) and
The Outfit (1973). He, his wife (Jane) and two children (Amy and Mark) left California to retire at their family's cattle ranch outside of
New Smyrna Beach,
Florida, in 1972. La Starza died on September 30, 2009, in
Port Orange, Florida, at the age of 82. ==Professional boxing record==