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Billy Costello

Managed by Mike Jones, who was also famous for managing Gerry Cooney and Wilford Scypion[?], Billy Costello fought a lot of his early professional bouts around the Hudson Valley[?]-NYC area, after a successful amateur career that culminated in a Golden Gloves award. Kingston, New York[?] (about 90 miles north of NYC) eventually became his home, at least while he was champion. But before winning a title, he put together an early undefeated streak, which included a 10-round decision over Willie Rodriguez[?] on CBS television in November 1982. He and his management then became closely associated with the CBS network, which aired several of his fights.

The one and only title he held in his career, the WBC junior welterweight title, was won by knocking out Bruce Curry[?] in the 10th round in January 1984 in front of a pro-Curry crowd in Beaumont, Texas. He would then make three defenses of the belt, all in Kingston, and all by 12-round unanimous decision. His first foe as champion was Ronnie Shields[?], with whom he traded first-round knockdowns before eventually securing the points win. Next was former WBC 140-lb. champion and wily veteran Saoul Mamby, who replaced Leroy Haley[?], another former possessor of Costello's belt, on five days notice. This caused concern for Costello's group, but Billy steadily erased such concerns, dominating the challenger in points en route to a unanimous decision.

Next up was Haley for real. The result was a unanimous nod over 12 rounds for Costello. That would be the last bout in his career—he would finish with both a title and undefeated record intact. A Denver, Colorado fighter named Lonnie 'Lightning' Smith[?] would eventually break the goose egg in Costello's loss column by knocking down and cutting the defending champion en route to an eighth-round stoppage in NYC to claim the title in August 1985.

Billy came back, though, albeit briefly. He fought three-time champion and living legend Alexis Arguello in February 1986. He controlled the first three rounds, but Arguello caught him flush on the chin in Round 4, knocked him down, and followed up with a relentless barrage to force the referee to end the fight. Costello then took some time off from the ring, fighting on a sporadic 'here-and-there' basis until the early 1990s.



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