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OBITUARY
Harry Kabakoff, colorful boxing trainer and manager, dies at 82
The eccentric handler swapped his real name, Melville Himmelfarb, for
Kabakoff in honor of his uncle. Among his best fighters were Jesus
Pimentel, Don Jordan and Tury Pineda.
By Valerie J. Nelson
November 22, 2009
After boxing's Melville Himmelfarb started going by Harry Kabakoff,
sportswriters invariably marveled over the unorthodox trading of one
unwieldy name for another.
Why not "Tyrone Youngblood" or something with "Lancelot" in it?, The
Times' Jim Murray wrote in 1979.
The re-christened Kabakoff, once known as the premier handler of Mexican
fighters in the U.S., always said he took the name of his uncle to honor
his relative, a successful boxer.
Kabakoff, who had cancer, died Tuesday of cardiac arrest at Northridge
Hospital Medical Center, said Jesse Pimentel, who considered Kabakoff
his grandfather. He was 82.
Six weeks before his death, he had returned to Los Angeles from
Mexicali, where he retired at least a decade ago.
"He was maybe the most colorful character in boxing that I've ever met,
and everyone in boxing is colorful," said Bill Caplan, a boxing
publicist. "He was a rogue and a rascal and he was funny and lovable."
One of Kabakoff's best fighters was Jesus Pimentel, father of Jesse, and
"perhaps the greatest bantamweight fighter who never won a world
championship," Mike Hiserman wrote in The Times in 1995.
Known for scouring the barrios of Mexico in search of young talent,
Kabakoff met Pimentel in Mexicali.
"They were together for 12 years, from beginning to end," the younger
Pimentel told The Times on Friday. "Harry would say, 'Your father held
my hand in 1958 and hasn't let go since.' "
As he sought a world-championship belt, Pimentel's career was marked by
near-misses that often were blamed on Kabakoff.
He "was a good trainer and good manager" but "ran from title fights" if
he thought his boxer was at risk, Caplan said.
For publicity, Kabakoff would do outrageous things, Caplan said,
including dressing as the dynamic duo during the Batman craze in the
late 1960s. The portly Kabakoff and Pimentel called themselves Fatman
and Bobbin.
By 1972, Kabakoff was "the General Motors of fight managers," with a
roster of 67 names but only 10 who could "really fight," Murray wrote in
The Times.
Kabakoff's loyalty to his men was "unmatched," John Hall noted in a 1971
Times column that made light of the fact that Kabakoff had nicknamed
himself "the Mad Russian."
"At least, he's got insight," Hall quipped.
Born July 13, 1927, in St. Louis, Kabakoff was the son of Sam
Himmelfarb, a bread-truck driver from London and his wife, the former
Stella Kabakoff, who was from Poland.
Growing up, Kabakoff went to eight schools between St. Louis and Los
Angeles and claimed he was thrown out of them all.
At 16, he eloped in Mexico with his girlfriend, who was pregnant, but
the marriage was annulled after five days.
In 1944, Kabakoff joined the Navy and became a cook on a minelayer.
After World War II, he moved to Los Angeles and started boxing.
"I was an average fighter as an amateur and a poor one as a pro,"
Kabakoff later recalled.
As a manager and trainer, he worked with a number of good fighters,
including former welterweight champion Don Jordan and lightweight Tury
Pineda.
In the 1950s, Kabakoff ran into trouble as assistant matchmaker at the
Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles when he was accused of secretly
handling fighters for Babe McCoy, who as the Olympic's matchmaker could
not own fighters.
Kabakoff always denied the charges but the fallout caused him to "lose
everything," he told The Times in 1968.
He managed to buy a beer parlor in Santa Ana in 1958 and then made the
fortuitous trip to Mexicali, where he met Pimentel. The fighter, who
lives in North Hills, named one of his sons Melville.
Kabakoff "was manager, trainer, father-confessor and cook" for his
fighters, Caplan recalled.
He was just too soft-hearted for the business, Aileen Eaton, then the
Olympic promoter, told Sports Illustrated in 1977.
"Even after they retire . . . he keeps giving them money," Eaton said.
"He's 1,000 percent loyal. . . . Because of the movies, people think
managers are some kind of monsters. They should know Harry."
He has no immediate survivors.
A memorial service was being planned.
Copyright � 2009, The Los Angeles Times