Canzoneri was one of the members of the exclusive group of boxing world champions who have won titles in three or more divisions.
When he was a teenager, he and his family moved to New York, where he campaigned most of his career. Canzoneri fit the mold of the typical American boxer of the era: He could box up to three or four times in one month and up to 24 or 25 times in one year, and he would seldom fight outside New York City, considered to be boxing's mecca at the time. As a matter of a fact, of his first 38 bouts, only one was fought west of New York City, and that one was in New Jersey.
Canzoneri won his first title, the world's Featherweight title, with a 15 round decision over Benny Bass[?] on February 10, 1928. He retained that title one time, and then went up in weight and challenged world Lightweght champion Sammy Mandell[?], losing by a decision in ten rounds. But in 1930, Mandell was knocked out in the first round by Al Singer[?] to lose his title, and Canzoneri, who had already beaten Singer by a ten round decision before, challenged Singer for the title on November 14, 1930, knocking him out in the first too to become a two division world champion. In defeat, Singer made history by becoming the first man, and only man up until nowadays, to both win and lose the title by knockout in the first round.
Canzoneri's first defense was a unification of sorts: He faced world Jr. welterweight champion Jack Kid Berg[?], who was putting his Jr. Welterweight title on the line and trying to take Canzoneri's Lightweight title away. Canzoneri became a three division world champion by knocking Berg out in the third round, on their fight held on April 24, 1931. Canzoneri, Barney Ross and Henry Armstrong were the only boxing champions in history to be allowed to hold two or more world titles simultaneously (Sugar Ray Leonard won both the vacant world's Super Middleweight and the world's Light Heavyweight title in one night in 1988, but he had to choose only one to keep and he chose to keep the Super Middleweight belt).
Canzoneri lost his world Jr. Welterweight championship to Johnny Jadick[?], and he lost to Jadick again in a rematch. Meanwhile, Canzoner kept retaininghis lightweight belt, against the likes of Billy Petrolle[?] and his brother,Frankie Petrolle[?].
Jadick lost his belt to Battling Shaw[?], and Canzoneri once again challenged for the world Jr. Welterweight crown while keeping his Lightweight belt. He beat Shaw by decision and recovered the world Jr. Welterweight championship. In his next bout, versus Ross, he lost bot belts, when Ross beat him by a ten round decision. There was an inmediate rematch, and Ross won again, this time by decision in 15.
Canzoneri kept fighting and winning, and on May 10, 1935[?], he found himself in a ring for a world title again, this time against Lou Ambers[?], who had earned the world Lightweight title that once had belonged to Canzoneri. Canzoneri once again won the world's Lightweight title by outpointing Ambers over 15 rounds. After successfuly defending his Lightweight belt once, he lost it again, in a rematch with Ambers, by a decision in 15. There was a rubber match between the two, and Ambers once again won a decision in 15 rounds.
Canzoneri went on boxing professionally until 1939, but he never again challenged for a world title. Among other world champions that he beat were Frankie Klick[?], Baby Arizmendi[?], Jimmy McLarnin[?] and Kid Chocolate.
Canzoneri had a record of 139 wins, 24 losses, 10 draws and 3 no decisions (during his era, many states and countries still had no scoring on boxing fights, so each time a fight would go the scheduled distance on any of those areas where scoring was still not being held, the fight would be declared a no-decision). He had 44 knockouts.
He is a member of the International Boxing Hall Of Fame.
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