Joey Giardello wasn’t born with that name, but it’s the one that became famous.
Well, famous enough to land him a statue on East Passyunk Avenue, and to bring standing prominent enough for a defamation suit over a Hollywood movie starring Denzel Washington. (The lawyer who got that suit settled, George Bochetto, has a connection to another statue: the one of Christopher Columbus in Marconi Plaza.)
Way before all that, Giardello was an NYC kid who enlisted in the army, learned to box, landed in South Philly, and was managed by a dude with alleged mafia connections.
He was a good enough boxer that he became middleweight champion, and successfully defended his title four times — including against Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, whose wrongful conviction and incarceration inspired the biopic.
Scroll through the thread below for details on how it all went down.
“One time he coulda been the champion of the world.”
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
So sang Bob Dylan about the boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter.
Did you know the man who denied Carter his title was from South Philly?
Our “Headline of Yore” this week is from today’s Daily News in 1964:
“Winner Joey”
🧵… pic.twitter.com/Jk1zlo1R69
You've likely heard of Rubin Carter — the middleweight contender who spent nearly 20 years in prison after he was wrongfully convicted of a 1966 triple murder in New Jersey.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
Carter was the subject of the Bob Dylan song “Hurricane” and later a biopic starring Denzel Washington. pic.twitter.com/mNCfwrSCud
Carter never won a world title…but he got close in 1964.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
That year, Carter went 15 rounds with the reigning champ…Joey Giardello.
And Giardello has a pretty interesting story of his own.
Giardello was born in Brooklyn in 1930 under the name Carmine Orlando Tilelli.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
He grew up in South Philly and — like many Italian American entertainers of that generation — changed his name.
But in this case, the change had nothing to do with assimilation. pic.twitter.com/4WqnTJveKE
At age 15, Tilelli used the name of his cousin’s friend to enlist in the Army.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
The Army taught him how to box…and it gave him the name he’d use the rest of his life: Joey Giardello.
In an eerie parallel, Giardello was also accused of a crime he likely didn’t commit and briefly jailed in Philadelphia.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
This column by the legendary sports writer Robert Lipsyte speculates that Giardello may have been arrested because he was white: https://t.co/FvvVqEwfJR
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Giardello’s rise through the boxing ranks drew some suspicion because his manager, Blinky Palermo, was a famed South Philly underworld figure.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
However, despite some allegedly unsavory behavior by his management, Giardello was a legit fighter. pic.twitter.com/p0UOK2UQbq
After upsetting the legendary Sugar Ray Robinson in June of 1963, Giardello got a title shot against middleweight champ Dick Tiger.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
In December of the same year, Giardello beat Tiger in a tight bout to win the belt. pic.twitter.com/VJ0vcd8qXe
Giardello successfully defended his title four times. The third defense came at Philadelphia’s Convention Hall against Rubin Carter.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
Carter battered Giardello early, but by the fifth round Giardello took control. He ended up winning by unanimous decision. pic.twitter.com/kjwgazYMDn
Giardello lost his belt in 1964 in a rematch with Dick Tiger. From there, his career faded.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
After boxing, he became an inspector for the New Jersey Department of Weights & Measures and an advocate for people with disabilities. pic.twitter.com/jPZFKGNNAY
But when Universal Pictures released “The Hurricane” in 1999, Giardello landed back in the headlines…
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
The movie — about Rubin “Hurricane” Carter — depicted Carter's title fight with Giardello. And it implied that the judges’ decision to award the win to Giardello was tinged by racism.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
Giardello sued, claiming the movie was defamatory.
In that lawsuit, Giardello was represented by George Bochetto.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
Bochetto recently ran in Pa.’s Republican primary for U.S. Senate.
You may have seen his billboard off I-95 that actually shows him in boxing gloves saying he’ll “fight the left” and the “woke mob.” pic.twitter.com/sOUTfo9HsR
Giardello and Universal settled the lawsuit out of court.
— Avi Wolfman-Arent (@Avi_WA) December 15, 2022
Giardello died in 2008.
Today, he’s commemorated with a statue on Passyunk Avenue in South Philly.
End thread. pic.twitter.com/P177ZAVyQo
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