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RODNEY ROD BOBICK SIGNED AUTO 3X5 INDEX CARD SPARRED WITH MUHAMMAD ALI PSA DNA

$ 527.99

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Product: Index Card
  • Sport: Boxing
  • Player: RODNEY BOBICK
  • Original/Reprint: Original
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    One of the rarest Heavyweight autographs ever. He fought against Larry Holmes and Mike Weaver and sparred with Muhammad Ali and fought him in an exhibition match. This one was obtained on October 11 , 1975 and is dated by him 10-11-75. It was signed after he had sparred against Ali in Century City while The Greatest was prepping for the Thriller In Manila.  For series Boxing Auto Collectors, the Holy Grail of autographs. He is a member of the Minnesota Boxing Hall Of Fame. His career record was 37-7.
    This one was authenticated by PSA/DNA and comes with a numbered hologram on the back along with a matching numbered card.
    Winner pays .00 shipping and handling, we do combine shipping on multiple lots to save you money.
    Below is info about his career.
    The lead to a story in the St. Paul Pioneer Press
    during the 1970s on Rodney Bobick’s fight the
    night before read something like this:
    When the Prom Ballroom was constructed many
    years ago they certainly didn’t have someone like
    Rodney Bobick in mind. After all, the facility has
    always catered to dancers.
    Bobick got up to the morning newspaper that day
    in St. Paul, and upon his next encounter with the
    author of the article did what he always did best,
    growled...with a smile on his face.
    Even in the ring, Bobick always appeared to fight,
    with a wry grin . Boxing was fun to him, a natural
    part of his boyhood past, part of growing up in
    a family of 12 boys and one girl. Fighting was a
    frequent activity with his numerous brothers, all
    of them heavyweights. His father seemingly spent
    half his time fixing broken doors, windows or
    caved in sheet rock. Fighting over this or that and
    many times nothing at all was part of growing up
    Bobick.
    Bobick was 37-7-0 with 18 knockouts when he
    died in a car accident on June 5, 1977, only 25
    years old. Three years earlier he outpointed future
    heavyweight champion Mike Weaver with a
    unanimous verdict, just four months before
    his brother Duane followed up with a TKO over
    Weaver.
    “Everybody says that Duane was the better fighter,’’
    said their brother Loren, “but Rodney could really
    take a punch and had a harder punch. For Rodney,
    though, it was just fun. He wasn’t that serious
    about it. He just loved to fight.’’
    Rodney Bobick had a genial side to him, a friendly
    side, hence his nickname the Bowlus Bear. Yet,
    he truly loved to fight. “He had phenomenal
    power,’’ Loren recalled, citing a street brawl that
    illustrated that specific recollection. “He once
    threw an uppercut on a guy in a street fight that
    lifted him a foot and a half off the ground before
    he bounced off the blacktop,’’ said Loren.
    Bobick was also a baseball player in high school.
    Loren recalled a conversation between Twins
    announcer Dick Bremer and former Twins pitcher
    Bert Blyleven during the broadcast of a particular
    game. “They were talking about some of the
    longest homers off Blyleven, ‘’ he recalled, “and
    Blyleven asked Bremer (a high school pitcher)
    who hit the longest ball off him. ‘It was in a
    little town called Bowlus,’ Bremer recalled, ‘and
    Rodney Bobick hit a ball over two cornfields.’ ‘’
    Big, brawny and tough, Rodney Bobick played
    catcher for his high school team. “He’d throw the
    ball back to the pitcher faster and harder than the
    pitcher threw it to him,’’ Loren added.
    Yet, despite his reputation as a street brawler,
    rugged opponent in the ring and a high school
    version of Babe Ruth, Bobick had another side
    that outsiders seldom saw.
    “You didn’t want to get on the wrong side
    of him,’’ Loren said. “But Rodney would give you
    the shirt off his back. He had a kind heart and
    was soft spoken.’’
    Loren doesn’t recall all of the details – probably
    after Rodney and Duane defeated Weaver four
    months apart – to a question posed to him by one
    Weaver’s handlers, “My, God, how many
    more Bobicks are there?’’
    For the record there were many: Loren, Rodney,
    Duane, Leroy, Michael, Donald, Tom, Lester,
    David, Bruce, Kurt, Robert and Tara.
    Bobick’s reputation as a fighter sometimes drew
    challenges outside the ring. There was the time, for
    instance, when a fellow came after him with a tire
    iron outside a Dairy Queen on Lake Street. “He hit
    Rodney on the head with that thing,’’ Loren said.
    “Rodney shook it off and the guy ran away.’’
    Bobick himself could not run away when confronted
    by none other than Muhammad Ali following a
    sparring session one time. Ali liked to use Bobick
    as a sparring partner, and when the Bowlus Bear
    began making arrangements to return home, Ali
    stopped him.
    “He wanted to know what Rodney thought he
    was doing,’’ Loren said. “When Rodney said he was
    going home, Ali told him to stay put, that where
    Ali went Rodney went, too.’’
    Differences of opinion were not confined to Ali and
    Bobick, they were present in the Bobick household
    itself and perhaps with good reason, at least from
    the outside looking in.
    “The house we lived in was only twenty feet by
    twenty-two feet and one and one-half stories,’’
    Loren said. “And when it was twenty degrees
    below zero outside it was five below inside. There
    was ice on the windows an inch and half thick.
    You had to scrap it off all the time. We slept four to
    a bed.’’ Loren recalled that the toilet was outside,
    too, although their father did install a shower in
    the house. “Then Leroy and Duane got into a fight
    and went right through the wall.’’
    Rodney Bobick loved to fight and he loved his
    automobiles. “He loved fast cars,’’ Loren said.
    “He had a 1962 T Bird, a 1964 Malibu with the
    top cut off, a 1968 Firebird, a 1971 Cadillac. ’
    ’ And, of course, there was the Skylark convertible. “
    He loved driving that thing with the top down,’’
    Loren added, “driving through downtown Bowlus,
    with the top down and a blanket on his lap
    because it was fifteen degrees below zero.’’
    Bobick was three months shy of his twenty-six
    birthday when he was killed in a car accident near
    his hometown. One month earlier he defeated
    Walter White with a 10-round unanimous decision
    in Miami, Florida, in what would be his final bout.
    He began his career with ten consecutive victories,
    including a six-round decision over Tommy Clark in
    Madison Square Garden. He won once more before
    losing the first fight of his career, on points to Dan
    Johnson at the Silver Slipper in Las Vegas, Nevada.
    He rebounded in his very next bout, defeating
    John Clohessy on points, again in Madison Square
    Garden. Bobick was 17-1 before he lost again, that
    time on points to Reynaldo Raul Gorosito, again
    at the Garden. Unlike his brother Duane, who
    defeated fellow Hall of Fame inductee Scott
    LeDoux twice, Rodney lost on points to the
    fighting Frenchman. Yet, he did more than
    enough to earn his place in the Minnesota
    Boxing Hall of Fame