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LORD OF THE RING: Above, in 1941,
Lunny dodges Eddie Marcus en route to a knockout
win. Right, Lunny (left)
coaches Stanford heavyweight Rothman in 1960.
Courtesy Ray Lunny III
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“five thousand fans let
loose a roar of approval. . . . San Francisco’s
pugilistic public has found a hero worthy of its adulation,” trumpeted
boxing’s tabloid, The Ring, in August 1940 after
Ray Lunny defeated rival Verne Bybee. Six decades later, those
sold-out Lunny-Bybee fights still echo in the boxing world.
Lunny,
a legendary pugilist and longtime Stanford boxing
coach, died May 20 in San Mateo. He was 83.
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Courtesy Ray Lunny III
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Raised in
San Francisco, Lunny got his first pair of boxing gloves
as a Christmas present and participated in
his first
regulation amateur fight at 15, winning 57 of his next
60 matches. In 1936, the lightweight won the San Francisco
Golden Gloves
title. In 1938, manager Joey Fox phoned him from L.A.
with an offer to box professionally. Lunny won fight
after fight
and became known for his accuracy, speed and precision. “He
had the ability to force his opponent to throw the
punch he wanted, when he wanted it,” says his son,
Ray Lunny III.
From 1938-40, Lunny went 22-0-2, with 10
knockouts.
His first professional loss came in October 1941 in
a nontitle fight against Chalky Wright, who a few months
later
won
the featherweight crown. “He was the best I ever
fought,” said
the ever-respectful Lunny in an interview with The Ring. World
War II ended Lunny’s fighting career. He enlisted
in the Coast Guard, and when he returned, he had passed
his athletic peak. He retired in 1944 after losing his
last three
fights.
In 1947, he came to Stanford as boxing coach
and physical education instructor. The Farm produced
some outstanding
fighters under Lunny, including Ed Rothman, ’61,
who placed second in the 1960 NCAA finals. But the NCAA
dropped
the sport in
the early 1960s, and Stanford boxing—along with Lunny’s
collegiate coaching career—ended in 1972.
Lunny went
on to coach his son, Ray, through a stellar boxing
career in which he was ranked among the top
10 lightweight and junior lightweight boxers in the
world.
In 1991, the elder Lunny was inducted into the
World Boxing Hall of Fame—one of only a few non-world
champions to earn that honor.
Jack Laird, ’40, former
associate director of development for athletics, knew
all the Stanford coaches, “but Lunny
was kind of special,” he says. “You think
of a boxer as a rough guy, but he was a real gentleman.”
Coach
Lunny went into the ring with all his students
and taught them more than feints and jabs. “He saw
young men who had never lost at anything—and
my dad had,” recalls
his son. “He really loved these guys, so it was
his desire to give every one of them a bloody nose.
He wanted them to
find out that getting a bloody nose, in the ring
or in life, was not the end of the world. They
could come back and do even
better.”
In addition to his son, Lunny is survived
by his wife of 59 years, Carney; a daughter, Carney, ’66;
four grandchildren; and a brother.
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