Joe Hadley
Joseph Hadley is an American retired boxer from Jackson, Tennessee, who competed in middleweight division in the 1970s, one of a few trained by Cus D'Amato himself, and also one of the first documented U.S. mixed martial artists. He was selected a member of the All-American AAU boxing team for 1973, and was named the top middleweight amateur boxer in the nation in 1973 by the National AAU Boxing Committee. Hadley drew attention of the press and public by carrying a Bible into the ring, hence his nickname "Preacher," which reflects he actually was a minister. For that reason Hadley refused to pose for a picture with Muhammad Ali, "because Mr. Ali does not live tip to my principles according to the Bible."
Amateur career
Joey Hadley was one of the lesser known boxers D'Amato trained, who fought both in amateur and professional bouts in the 1970s. Hadley was living and training in D'Amato's mansion in Catskill, New York. Hadley took up boxing in 1966 while still living in Tennessee. Hadley won various awards as an amateur boxer, being a six-time Golden Gloves of the Memphis and Mid-South, Three-time Southeastern AAU champion, and United States and North American champion. Fighting for the middleweight at the 1971 National Championships, he won seven fights in nine days, all against regional champions, five by knockouts, knocking down every fighter he faced. Hadley also knocked out future world champ Leon Spinks as an amateur in 1973. He also gained fame in 1976 for having fought one of the earliest mixed martial arts bouts in history against Arkansas Karate champion David Valovich. He used D'Amato's style prominently in these fights.Highlights
Mid-South Golden Gloves, novices, Union University Gymnasium, Jackson, Tennessee, February 1967:- 1/2: Defeated Joe Graziano by unanimous decision, 5–0
- Finals: Defeated Earl Coggin TKO 1
- Defeated Bruce Whitehorn
- Defeated Don Morgan
- 1/8: Defeated Paul Stephens
- 1/4: Lost to Lamont Lovelady by split decision, 2–3
- 1/32: Defeated n/a KO
- 1/16: Defeated n/a KO
- 1/8: Defeated Wilbert Crews by decision
- 1/4: Defeated n/a KO
- 1/2: Defeated Vince Fagan
- Finals: Defeated Zachary Page by unanimous decision, 5–0
- Finals: Defeated Jim French by split decision, 3–2
- Lost to Jerry Otis
National Golden Gloves, Minneapolis, Minnesota, March 1972:
- 1/16: Defeated n/a KO
- 1/8: Defeated n/a KO
- 1/4: Defeated Robert McAlpine KO 2
- 1/2: Lost to Marvin Johnson by decision
- Lost to Marvin Johnson
- Lost to Frank Lucas by decision
- Lost to Vyacheslav Lemeshev TKO 2
- n/a
- 1/4: Defeated Johnny Johnson KO 1
- 1/2: Lost to Vonzell Johnson by decision
- Henry Johnson
- n/a
- 1/4: Lost to Jim Krtinich KO
Professional career
Professional boxing record
| No. | Result | Record | Opponent | Opp Record | Type | Round, time | Date | Location | Notes |
| 4 | Win | 4–0 | ![]() Mixed martial arts recordRetirement and later lifeHadley's career ended after an eye infection while working in New York.As a former student of D'Amato, Hadley is one of the only boxing coaches to train people in the authentic peek-a-boo style of boxing. |
