Dave “Ziggy” Zyglewicz, the heavyweight from Watervliet who fought boxing great Joe Frazier in 1969, died at 79 years old on Sunday night, the day before a street in his hometown was named in his honor.
“Something told me to go let him know Saturday, so I did, and he was so proud,” said Nan Romano, his daughter.
Romano said her father passed away in a nursing home in Albany after suffering from dementia and stomach cancer that spread to his liver.
Born in Troy, Zyglewicz was raised in Watervliet and attended La Salle Institute in Troy, where he was a standout football player. After graduating high school, he entered the Navy and began his boxing career. He became the Navy and Armed Forces champion, according to his obituary.
He embarked on a professional boxing career and finished 32-4 with 18 knockouts. His most noteworthy fight came against Frazier in an April 22, 1969 title bout at Sam Houston Coliseum in Houston.Â
“I’m just a guy from Watervliet,” Zyglewicz told the Times Union in 2009. “I went into the Navy, got out and moved to Houston with $10 in my pocket. Four-and-a-half years later I was fighting for the heavyweight championship. I lived the dream.”
Frazier knocked down Zyglewicz for the first time in his pro career 13 seconds into the fight and knocked him out 1:36 into the first round. But they became longtime friends and Frazier later visited Zyglewicz’s bar, Ziggy’s Corner, in Watervliet. They also went to Saratoga Race Course together.
“They were buddies from the weigh-in on,” Romano said. “He would call my dad at Albany Airport every time he flew in. My dad would pick him up.”
Heavyweight champions Mike Tyson and Floyd Patterson and heavweight contender Gerry Cooney also visited Ziggy’s Corner. But Zyglewicz remained the local hero.
“Everybody in Watervliet called him ‘The Champ,’…
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