lunes, 8 de octubre de 2012

Nominados al salon de la Fama del boxeo 2013

2012 International Boxing Hall of Fame Nominees

Below are biographical capusles on the candidates for 2013 entry into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
First Time Nominees
Arturo GattiCareer: 1991-2007
World Championships: IBF Super Featherweight (1995-97, 3 Defenses), WBC Light Welterweight (2004-05, 2 Defenses)
Hailed from: Calabria, Italy (birth place)
Record: 40-9 (31 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 8-3, 5 KO
Champions faced:
Tracy Harris Patterson, Calvin Grove, Gabriel Ruelas, Joey Gamache, Oscar De La Hoya, Terron Millett, Leonard Dorin, Jesse James Leija, Floyd Mayweather Jr., Carlos Baldomir
Champions defeated: Tracy Harris Patterson (W 12, W12), Calvin Grove (RTD 7), Gabriel Ruelas (TKO 5), Joey Gamache (KO 2), Terron Millett (TKO 4), Leonard Dorin (KO2), Jesse James Leija (KO 5).
Arturo Gatti, a Canadian born in Calabria, Italy, was his generation’s Rocky Graziano —a brawler with burning pride that compelled him to get up when he couldn’t and whose rage made him dangerous every second of every round. Despite losses to Oscar De La Hoya and Floyd Mayweather, and disappointing ones to lesser opponents, Gatti was revered for two things: the thunder in his left hook and his heart. Despite his tragic death in 2009, Gatti is one of boxing’s immortals. His sixteen-year career is highlighted by brink-of-destruction comebacks and capped by a thrilling trilogy against Mickey Ward. To many thousands of boxing fans, he was the personification of fighting spirit. “I think about him almost every day,” Ward said recently. He isn’t alone. Gatti appeared in four Ring Magazine Fight’s of the Year (vs. Gabriel Ruelas, Ivan Robinson, and Mickey Ward twice) and won titles in two weight classes, defeating Tracy Patterson for a 130 lb. title and Gianluca Branco for a vacant belt at 140 lbs.
Virgil Hill
Career: 1991-2007
World Championships: WBA light heavyweight (September 5, 1987-June 3, 1991, September 29, 1992-June 13, 1997), IBF light heavyweight title (November 23, 1996-June 13, 1997), WBA cruiserweight title (December 9, 2000- February 23, 2002, January 27, 2006-vacated)
Hailed from: Clinton, Missouri (birth place)
Record: 50-7 (23 KO)
Boxrec Record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 11-7, 3 KO
Champions faced: Marvin Camel, Leslie Stewart, Bobby Czyz, Frank Tate, Adolpho Washington, Fabrice Tiozzo, Lou Del Valle, Henry Maske, Donny Lalonde, Thomas Hearns, Dariusz Michalczewski, Roy Jones Jr., Jean Marc Mormeck, Firat Arslan
Champions defeated: Marvin Camel (KO 1), Leslie Stewart (KO 4), Bobby Czyz (W 12), Frank Tate (W 12, W 12), Adolpho Washington (TW 11), Fabrice Tiozzo (W 12, KO 1), Lou Del Valle (W 12), Henry Maske (W 12, L 12), Donny Lalonde (W 10)
Hill, appropriately nicknamed "Quicksilver," was one of the most accomplished pure boxers of his era. A natural southpaw, Hill used a prolific and powerful jab from the orthodox stance in addition to lively legs and phenomenal stamina to carve out two light heavyweight reigns that, save for a 15-month break, spanned nearly 10 years and a record-setting 20 defenses. Long criticized for not defending his belt beyond the friendly confines of his adopted home state of North Dakota (16 of his 29 title fights took place there), Hill capped his second lengthy reign by traveling to Munich and dethroning longtime IBF titlist Henry Maske by split decision. After losing a three-belt fight to WBO king Dariusz Michalczewski and being stopped by Jones in an over-the-weight fight, Hill astonished many by going up a weight class, traveling to Fabrice Tiozzo's native France and capturing Tiozzo's WBA cruiserweight belt at age 36 -- by first round knockout. Finally, Hill was one of a handful of fighters to capture a major title after age 40 as he decisioned Valery Brudov for a vacant cruiserweight strap days after turning 42. At his best, Hill not only won title fights but seldom lost a round.
Henry Maske Career: 1990-2007
World Championships: IBF Light Heavyweight (1993-96)

Hailed From: Treuenbrietzen, Brandenburg, Germany (birth place)
Record: 31-1 (11 KO) Boxrec Record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-1 (1 KO)

Champions faced: Prince Charles Williams, Iran Barkley, Graciano Rochigianni, Virgil Hill 

Champions defeated: Prince Charles Williams (W12), Iran Barkley (RTD 9), Graciano Rochigianni (W12, W12), Virgil Hill (L12, W12)

In many ways, Maske was the beginning of the modern, vibrant German fight market. A masterful southpaw boxer with range and quick, educated hands, Maske was one of the best amateurs in the world in his time. A 1986 World Silver Medalist, 1988 Olympic Gold Medalist, and 1989 World Champion at Middleweight, Maske turned professional as a Light Heavyweight and made his career there. Defeating Charles Williams for the IBF crown in 1993, Maske made ten successful defenses, including a stoppage of former three-division titlist Iran Barkley and two fantastic battles with national rival Graciano Rochigianni. Maske’s run came to a surprising close in 1996 when Virgil Hill beat him by split decision in Maske’s lone unification bout. Maske would stay out if the ring until 2007 when he returned for one night only to avenge the Hill defeat by unanimous decision.
Return Nominees
Horacio AcavalloCareer: 1956-67
World Championships: WBA Flyweight (March 1, 1966-August 12, 1967)
Hailed from: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Record: 75-2-6 (34 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-1
Champions faced: Salvatore Burruni, Hiroyuki Ebihara, Efren Torres
Champions defeated: Burruni (W8, L10, UD10); Ebihara (UD15, MD15); Torres (UD15)
One of the best of the 1960s, the southpaw Accavallo never lost in his native Argentina. Of course, fighting mostly in Argentina meant a lot of non-descript opposition, but he squeezed in a fair share of quality. Accavallo won two of three non-title affairs against Burruni, all of them going the distance, with wins in Burruni’s native Italy and his own Buenos Aires. In 1966, he traveled to Japan to narrowly outpoint Katsuyoshi Takayama for the vacant WBA belt and then brought one of Japan’s best home three fights later, posting a unanimous decision over Ebihara in his first defense. A couple of years before Efren Torres would begin his epic rivalry against Chartchai Chionoi, Accavallo gave him his first shot at gold, retaining via unanimous decision. In a shocker, Accavallo would follow the Torres win with a non-title sixth round TKO loss in Japan. It would be, in his 81st professional start, the only stoppage defeat in his career, which would hold only two more starts. In his farewell bout, Accavallo would retain his crown for the second time against Ebihara, a debated split decision in Buenos Aires which convinced Accavallo to hang up his gloves just shy of his 34th birthday.
Georgie AbramsCareer: 1937-1948
World Championships: None
Hailed from: Roanoke, Virginia
Record: 48-10-3 (9 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-4-1
Champions faced: Fred Apostoli, Lou Broulliard, Marcel Cerdan, Izzy Janazzo, Sugar Ray Robinson, Billy Soose, Teddy Yarosz, Tony Zale
Champions defeated: Yarosz (SD10), Soose (W8, W10, UD10), Broulliard (W10).
Abrams – whose middle name was “Freedom” – was a top middleweight contender during the early 1940s who used mobility and excellent defensive maneuvers to offset his lack of power. Sugar Ray Robinson once said that Abrams had given him one of his toughest fights as he took the reigning welterweight king to a 6-4, 6-4, 4-6 split decision in May 1947 – a decision that, according to the Associated Press, “was accompanied by a solid round of boos.” He was the opponent in Cerdan’s American debut in December 1946 and took him 10 bloody rounds before dropping the decision. Besides the men listed above, Abrams defeated tough contenders like Cocoa Kid and Steve Belloise during his decade-plus in the game.
Joey Archer Career: 1956-1967
World Championships: None
Hailed from: New York City
Record: 45-4 (8 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-2Champions faced: Sugar Ray Robinson, Denny Moyer, Dick Tiger, Emile Griffith
Champions defeated: Robinson (UD10), Moyer (UD10), Tiger (SD10)
He was much more than just the man who retired Sugar Ray Robinson. Though he lost twice on close decisions to Emile Griffith for the world middleweight championship, Archer was nonetheless a classic boxer, well-schooled in the New York City gym system of the 1950's. The lack of a substantial punch proved a hindrance in gaining a crown, but his ring skills made up for much of his natural disabilities. His craftiness and ring generalship were first-rate, and though he would have been lost in the shuffle of today's more eye appealing TV sluggers, he was a captivating student of the sweet science. His points win over the famed left hooker Rubin “Hurricane” Carter is a testament to his “wise owl” approach. Joey was a mainstay of the “Friday Night Fights” of the 1960's who had wins over Don Fullmer and Jose Gonzalez.
Jose Becerra Career: 1954-1960
World championships: World Banatamweight (February 4, 1960-August 30, 1960)
Hailed from: Guadalajara, Mexico
Record: 72-5-2 (43 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-0 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Mario D’Agata, Alphonse Halimi
Champions defeated: D’Agata (KO10), Halimi (KO8, KO9)
Turned pro at 17, Becerra underwent an apprenticeship that encompassed six years and 55 fights. He first earned world-level attention by upsetting the more experienced Manuel Armenteros over 10 rounds in January 1957 before notching three decision victories over perennial contender Jose Medel. Becerra then stopped former bantamweight champion Mario D’Agata in 10 rounds to earn a crack at D’Agata’s conqueror, Halimi, three fights later. Beccera broke open an even contest by decking Halimi twice in the eighth to post a TKO and capture the belt. Following three non-title wins against Frankie Duran and Walt Ingram (who died of his injuries two days later), Becerra met Halimi again, overcoming a second round knockdown to stop Halimi in nine. Just as Becerra was gaining popularity in Mexico and a solid foothold as a champion, Eloy Sanchez stopped Becerra in eight and at 24 he announced his retirement. Perhaps sparked by his memories of the Ingram fight, Becerra made one final ring appearance a six round win over Alberto Martinez, at a charity event for Rudy Coronado who had been seriously injured in a recent contest.
Johnny Bratton Career: 1944-55
World Championships: NBA Welterweight (March 14, 1951-May 18, 1951)
Hailed from: Chicago, Illinois
Record: 60-24-3 (34 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 1-9-1 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Chalky Wright, Ike Williams, Sammy Angott, Beau Jack, Joe Brown, Kid Gavilan, Johnny Saxton
Champions defeated: Brown (KO4)
Bratton was the sort of fighter who lost more than he won to the best, only to work out as a compliment to the men who beat him. A popular attraction is his day, “Honey Boy” possessed ending power and ring savvy which kept him afoot in all but three of 87 contests. At the height of his prowess, Bratton defeated perennial contender Charley Fusari in a rugged affair to capture the NBA share of the Welterweight title vacated by Sugar Ray Robinson in 1950. He would not hold the distinction long, losing the crown to Kid Gavilan in his first defense. On his way up the ranks, he faced some of the best Lightweights of any era, managing a knockout of future champion Joe Brown, and later held Gavilan to a draw in a non-title rematch of their title affair.
Jimmy CarruthersCareer: 1950-1962
World Championships: World bantamweight (November 15, 1952-May 2, 1954)
Hailed from: Paddington, New South Wales, Australia
Record: 21-4 (13 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 2-0 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Vic Toweel
Champions defeated: Toweel (KO1, KO10)
Carruthers was a member of Australia’s 1948 Olympic team but had to withdraw before the quarterfinal round after sustaining an eye injury. Upon turning pro he achieved instant success by winning the Australian bantamweight title in 1951 and added the British Commonwealth title the following year. A highly skilled southpaw speedster, Carruthers became Australia’s first universally recognized world champion with a startlingly savage assault against longtime champ Vic Toweel, who he dispatched in 139 seconds. Carruthers repeated the triumph four months later and registered defenses against Henry “Pappy” Gault and Chamroen Songkitrat before retiring as an undefeated champion (19-0, 11KO). The Songkitrat defense remains famous due to the monsoon-like conditions that forced them to fight in bare feet. Carruthers launched a six-fight comeback seven years later and lost four of six fights before hanging up the gloves for good.
Donald CurryCareer: 1980-1997
World Championships: WBA welterweight (February 13, 1983-September 27, 1986), WBC welterweight (December 6, 1985-September 27, 1986), IBF welterweight (February 4, 1984-September 27, 1986), WBC super welterweight (July 8, 1988-February 11, 1989)
Hailed from: Fort Worth, Texas
Record: 34-6 (25 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-5 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Lupe Aquino, Lloyd Honeyghan, Rene Jacquot, Mike McCallum, Milton McCrory, Michael Nunn, Terry Norris, Gianfranco Rosi, Carlos Santos, Marlon Starling
Champions defeated: Aquino (W12), McCrory (KO2), Rosi (KO9), Santos (DQ5), Starling (W12, W15)
Nicknamed “The Cobra” for his lightning quick and powerful counters, Curry survived a challenging early gauntlet (Mike Senegal, Bruce Finch, Adolfo Viruet and Starling) to earn a crack at the WBA belt vacated by the retiring Sugar Ray Leonard. After outclassing fellow unbeaten Jun Suk Hwang, Curry zoomed up the pound-for-pound rankings with six defenses and five knockouts. He stopped Roger Stafford, the 31-0 Elio Diaz, the 59-1 Nino LaRocca, perennial hard man Colin Jones, Pablo Baez, and added an impressive decision defense over Starling. Curry unified the belts with an electrifying two round destruction of WBC champ Milton McCrory. Curry was poised to challenge Marvin Hagler for pound-for-pound supremacy but a weight-weakened Curry was overwhelmed and stopped by Honeyghan in one of the decade’s most shocking upsets. After rising to 154, he was stopped by McCallum in a challenge for the WBA belt but beat Rosi for the WBC belt. He lost it in 1989’s Upset of the Year to Jacquot. Curry lost subsequent title challenges to Nunn and Norris before launching a two-fight comeback in 1997 in which he went 1-1.
Hiroyuki EbiharaCareer: 1959-1969
World Championships: World Flyweight (September 18, 1963- January 23, 1964); WBA Flyweight (March 30, 1969-October 20, 1969)
Hailed From: Tokyo, Japan
Record: 63-5-1 (34 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-5 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Fighting Harada, Chartchai Chionoi, Pone Kingpetch, Alacran (Efren) Torres, Horacio Accavallo, Bernabe Villacampo
Champions defeated: Chionoi (UD12), Kingpetch (KO1, L15), Torres (SD12, TKO7)
Ebihara became the third Japanese boxer to ever win a world title with a first round knockout of Kingpetch. This durable champion may have lost five times, but he was never stopped, going fifteen rounds in defeat on four occasions, two coming in relatively close decisions to Horacio Accavallo in Buenos Aires. His style was entertaining, something that the rather unsophisticated early Japanese fans appreciated in its bang for the buck. He met Harada when both were in the professional cradle, dropping a six-round decision, only to match his countryman’s feat of besting, and then losing, the crown to Kingpetch. It would take three tries to taste championship gold again
Tommy FarrCareer: 1926-1940, 1950-1953
World Championships: None
Hailed From: Clydach, Wales, United Kingdom
Record: 81-30-13 (24 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-3
Champions faced: Tommy Loughran, Bob Olin, Max Baer, Joe Louis, James J. Braddock
Champions defeated: Loughran (W10), Olin (W10), Baer (W12)
Tommy Farr was an icon of the United Kingdom boxing world back in the 1930's. He was always on the front line of the sport in those days. An idol of the Welsh people, Farr was a tactical man inside the ring. Though he dropped four straight bouts to Louis, Braddock, Baer, and Lou Nova, Tommy went the full route in each of them. The bout with Louis was particularly dramatic as Louis was in his prime and coming off a knockout win for the Heavyweight crown. Farr was the first in a still-record streak, in any weight class, for consecutive title defenses (25), After a ten-year retirement, he came back and won the Welsh heavyweight title at age 37. He had also held this title in 1936.
Tiger Jack FoxCareer: 1932-1950
World Championships: None.
Hailed From: Spokane, Washington
Record: 152-23-12 (96 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-4-1 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Lou Brouillard, Maxie Rosenbloom, John Henry Lewis, Bob Olin, Melio Bettina, Jersey Joe Walcott
Champions defeated: Brouillard (TKO7), Rosenbloom (L10, D10, MD10), Walcott (KO8, W10), Olin (TKO2)
Learning his trade on the barnstorming circuit, “Tiger” often fought like one; cunning and quick. Along with a clowning style, you could say he was difficult to pin down on a good night. He was also known as a counter puncher with a tight defense. That defense helped early in his career as he lasted the distance while giving up seventy pounds to Hall of Fame Heavyweight George Godfrey. He learned as he went against the slick Rosenbloom, capping their rivalry with a win. Walcott couldn’t get past him in two tries years before Walcott would win the Heavyweight crown. Though he fought many of his bouts in Spokane, Jack wasn't one to fear going on the road. He was the kind of world-class fighter of the era who was a bonafide opponent. His winning record against top fighters proves that.
Ceferino GarciaCareer: 1923-1945
World Championships: New York State Athletic Commission World Middleweight (October 2, 1939-May 23, 1940)
Hailed from: Manila, Philippines
Record: 103-27-12 (68 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-10-2 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Henry Armstrong, Fred Apostoli, Anton Christoforidis, Young Corbett III, Lloyd Marshall, Ken Overlin, Barney Ross, Billy Soose, Freddie Steele
Champions defeated: Apostoli (KO7)
The originator of the “bolo punch,” later made famous by Kid Gavilan, the hard-hitting Filipino faced a who’s who in the Welterweight and Middleweight divisions. He lost Welterweight title fights to Armstrong and Ross (the latter being part of the historic “Carnival of Champions” in 1937) before capturing the NYSAC Middleweight belt from Apostoli in October 1939. He defended the Middleweight title three times against Glen Lee (KO 13) and Armstrong (a draw in ten most thought Armstrong won) before losing it to the slick Overlin. His most powerful weapon was a right cross that scored multiple knockdowns in many fights, and a knockout in the second of two wins over Hall of Famer Lloyd Marshall. Garcia was vulnerable to cuts and shifty boxers. His 102 wins are the most of any Filipino champion and his initial defense against Lee was the first championship fight ever staged in the Philippines.
Betulio GonzalezCareer: 1968-1988
World Championships: WBC Flyweight (June 3, 1972-September 29, 1972; August 4, 1973-October 1, 1974), WBA Flyweight (August 12, 1978-November 17, 1979)
Hailed from: Maracaibo, Venezuela
Record: 77-12-4 (52 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 9-9-2 (5 KO)
Champions faced: Rodolfo Blanco, Venice Borkhorsor, Miguel Canto, Prudencio Cardona, Guty Espadas, Juan Herrera, Luis Ibarra, Santos Laciar, Peter Mathebula, Masao Ohba, Shoji Oguma, Erbito Salavarria, Franco Udella, Bernabe Villacampo,
Champions defeated: Canto (MD15, L15, L15), Cardona (KO 3), Espadas (W15), Mathebula (KO6, KO10), Oguma (W10, L15, D15, KO12), Udella (KO10), Villacampo (W12)

Gonzalez was one of only three men to capture a version of the Flyweight title three times (Pone Kingpetch and Chartchai Chionoi being the others) and was a fixture in the flyweight rankings throughout the 1970s. His best asset was extraordinary ring craft, which came in handy against title challenger Martin Vargas in 1978. Behind on points, Gonzalez sagely trapped Vargas on the ropes and after battering him he slyly used his elbows and forearms to pull him back each time he tried to escape. The wearing down process eventually resulted in a 12th round TKO. Minuses include the lack of a lengthy reign (his final reign was the longest at three defenses) and his spotty record against fellow champions, though four of them were by split decisions (two of which were away from home). Ultimately, he won four of six against arguably the best of an incredibly rich Flyweight era with wins over Canto, Oguma, and Espadas
Yoko GushikenCareer: 1974-1981World Championships: WBA junior flyweight (October 10, 1976-March 8, 1981)
Hailed from: Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan
Record: 23-1 (15 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-1 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Juan Antonio Guzman, Jaime Rios, Alfonso Lopez, Rafael Pedroza and Pedro Flores
Champions defeated: Guzman (KO7), Rios (TKO13, SD15), Lopez (KO7), Pedroza (UD15), Flores (UD15, TKO by 12)
Veteran trainer and manager Masaki Kanehira described Gushiken as "a genius who appears once in every 100 years.” A southpaw with textbook punching technique, Gushiken patiently probed for openings for his tremendously powerful left cross. Once he hurt an opponent, Gushiken became the personification of his nickname "kanmuriwashi" ("fierce eagle") as he swooped down on his foes and hammered them into submission. Of his 13 successful title defenses, eight ended in knockout (including six in succession). Gushiken won the WBA title in his ninth bout, an indication of both his talent and the lack of depth in the 108-pound class that was created the year Gushiken won the belt. His main weakness was a leaky defense and that was exploited in his final fight (and only defeat) against Flores, from whom Gushiken won a unanimous decision less than four months earlier. Gushiken retired at age 25 following the 12th round TKO defeat.
Naseem HamedCareer: 1992-2002
World Championships: WBO Featherweight (September 30, 1995-September 30, 2000); IBF Featherweight (February 8, 1997-July 19, 1997); WBC (October 22, 1999); Lineal World Featherweight (April 18, 1998-April 8, 2001)
Hailed from: Sheffield, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Record: 36-1 (31 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 10-1 (8 KO)
Champions faced: Juan Polo Perez, Steve Robinson, Manuel Medina, Tom Johnson, Kevin Kelley, Wilfredo Vasquez, Wayne McCullough, Paul Ingle, Cesar Soto, Vuyani Bungu, Marco Antonio Barrera
Champions defeated: Perez (KO2); Robinson (TKO8); Medina (TKO11); Johnson (TKO8); Kelley (KO4); Vasquez (TKO7); McCullough (UD12); Ingle (TKO11); Soto (UD12); Bungu (TKO4)
The fountainhead for a new economic order in the Featherweight arena, Hamed at his best was lightning fast, unorthodox, and possessing of lethal power…and that doesn’t even account for some of boxing’s more theatrical ring walks. Hamed won the EBU Bantamweight title in only his 12th start and downed Steve Robinson to begin a long WBO title run in his 20th. Through the remainder of the nineties, Hamed would defeat the reigning, or most recently stripped, titlist of the IBF, WBA, and WBC to cement his place atop the Featherweights. Notably, while Wilfredo Vasquez had been stripped of the WBA belt prior to the Hamed fight, he was the lineal champion of the division traced to the days of Eusebio Pedroza. Hamed would ultimately defend the WBO belt 15 times, the lineal crown five, and vacate the WBC and IBF belts after winning them. After almost six years as a champion, Hamed was outboxed by Marco Antonio Barrera for the title in 2001. He would fight only once more, defeating Spain’s Manuel Calvo in 2002.
Carlos HernandezCareer: 1959-1971
World Championships: World Junior Welterweight (January 18, 1965-April 29, 1966)
Hailed From: Caracas, Venezuela
Record: 60-12-4 (41 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-6 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Davey Moore, Eddie Perkins, Joe Brown, Carlos Cruz, Ismael Laguna, Sandro Lopopolo, Nicolino Loche, Ken Buchanan.
Champions defeated: Moore (TKO7), Brown (KO3), Cruz (TKO2), Perkins (L10, SD15)
Hernandez was a power puncher who could come from behind and win a fight with just one punch. He had over twice as many stoppage wins as by decision. He took on many of the tough opponents of the era who were never champs or Hall of Famers, scoring wins over Kenny Lane, Doug Vaillant, Bunny Grant, Percy Hayles (title defense), Alfredo Urbina, Vicente Derado, Lennox Beckles, and L.C. Morgan. Hernandez won his lone world title with a decision over Hall of Famer Eddie Perkins, an awkward split decision in Venezuela that saw Hernandez win on both judges cards but lose almost every round on the referee’s. Hernandez defended twice before a majority decision loss on the road in Italy to Sandro Lopopolo. He wouldn’t receive another title shot until 1969, outboxed by the Nicolino Locche.
Harry JeffraCareer: 1933-50
World Championships: World Bantamweight (September 23, 1937-February 20, 1938); World Featherweight (May 20, 1940-May 12, 1941)
Hailed from: Baltimore, Maryland
Record: 94-20-7 (28 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 10-5-1
Champions faced: Sixto Escobar, Joey Archibald, Jackie Wilson, Chalky Wright, Phil Terranova, Lou Salica
Champions defeated: Escobar (SD10, W10, UD15, L15, W10); Archibald (L15, UD15, L15, UD10); Wilson (SD10, L10); Terranova (W10, D10); Salica (UD10)
A two-division world champion when it still really meant something, Jeffra was an intelligent craftsman previously enshrined in the now defunct Ring magazine Hall of Fame. Unbeaten in his first 26 contests, Jeffra beat the great Sixto Escobar twice before he could nail him down for a title shot at Bantamweight. He won there too, with a unanimous decision as part of Mike Jacbobs’s Carnival of Champions at the Polo Grounds. He would lose the title back to Escobar in his first defense and fall short, in 1939, of the Featherweight crown in his first crack at Joey Archibald. Most in attendance felt Jeffra had been robbed and a rematch was made, Jeffra exiting the champion less than a year later. Jeffra made it four out of five against Escobar in a non-title affair, retiring the Puerto Rican in December 1940, before losing a split decision rubber match with Archibald to lose the Featherweight crown. Jeffra would continue on until 1950 but without another title shot despite a non-title win over Archibald in their fourth fight and wins over Phil Terranova and former Bantamweight king Lou Salica.
Rafael HerreraCareer: 1963-86
World Championships: World Bantamweight (March 19, 1972-July 29, 1972); WBC Bantamweight (April 14, 1973-December 7, 1974)
Hailed from: Mexico City, Mexico
Record: 48-9-4 (19 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 7-3 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Jesus “Chuco” Castillo, Rodolfo Martinez, Ruben Olivares, Enrique Pinder, Venice Borkhorsor, Romeo Anaya
Champions defeated: Martinez (MD12, TKO12, TKO by 12), Castillo (TKO by 3, SD12), Olivares (TKO8, MD10), Borkhorsor (SD15), Anaya (TKO6)
One of the best in a fantastic pool of Bantamweight talent in the 1960s and 70s, Herrera honed his craft in the ring, building on a 10-3 start to reel off almost five years unbeaten before a knockout loss to Chuco Castillo. He would lose once more before a decision over undefeated future titlist Rodolfo Martinez and a revenge win over Castillo set him on a course to the crown. Herrera dominated Ruben Olivares en route to an eighth round stoppage win for the title but lost it in his first defense, by decision, to Enrique Pinder. Herrera defeated Olivares again, by decision, before winning the vacant WBC belt with a knockout of Martinez and added two defenses against former Flyweight king Venice Borkhorsor and, by knockout, against future champion Romeo Anaya. Herrera was controversially stopped in a third bout with Martinez in the fourth round and would not become a champion again. Herrera made a one fight comeback after a decade away in 1986, winning a four round decision.
Al HostakCareer: 1932-49
World Championships: NBA Middleweight (July 26, 1938-November 1, 1938; June 27, 1939-July 19, 1940)
Hailed from: Seattle, Washington
Record: 64-9-11 (41 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-6-1 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Babe Risko, Freddie Steele, Solly Krieger, Tony Zale, Ken Overlin
Champions defeated: Risko (KO7) Steele (KO1); Krieger (L15, TKO4)

The “Savage Slav” excelled in the rich Middleweight field of the 1930s and early 1940s, twice holding a share of the World title. Beginning his pro career at only 16, Hostak built himself into a draw in the Pacific Northwest with an all-action style and big knockout wins over the likes of Babe Risko and Freddie Steele, the latter for his first title. Hostak would drop the title in his first defense by majority decision to Solly Krieger, breaking both hands and suffering his first knockdown by the end of the night. Hostak rebounded quickly, avenging the loss and regaining his belt, dropping Krieger four times before referee and former Heavyweight champion Jim Braddock halted the action in the fourth. Traveling to Chicago Stadium in 1940, Hostak dropped a non-title verdict to Tony Zale to set up a title match on Hostak’s home turf of Seattle. The change of locale didn’t change the outcome with Zale stopping Hostak for the first time in round 13. A third match was even worse for Hostak, Zale victorious in two rounds in 1941. He would never fight for a World title again though he continued with mixed success until 1949, with a brief interruption brought on by service in World War II.
Peter KaneCareer: 1934-51
World Championships: World Flyweight (September 28, 1938-June 19, 1943; vacated)
Hailed from: Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom
Record: 89-7-2 (54 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 2-2-1
Champions faced: Benny Lynch, Baltazar Sangchili, Jackie Paterson, Dado Marino
Champions defeated: Sangchili (W10), Marino (W10)
The U.K.’s Kane battled often with a scale that wanted him at Bantamweight and the long shadow of Scotland’s great Benny Lynch. Kane won his first 42 professional bouts to secure a 1937 shot at an aging Lynch, losing a classic October battle in front of over 40,000 in the thirteenth frame. An intended title rematch ended up a non-title affair when Kane came in just shy of eight pounds over the limit in March 1938; Kane earned a fifteen-round draw. When Lynch vacated the crown, Kane was matched with Jackie Jurich for the title and left with a points win but largely focused on the Bantamweights from there. He would net a decision win over former 118 lb, champ Baltazar Sangchili, only to briefly return to Flyweight in 1943, stoned out of his crown by the heavy handed Jackie Paterson in one. In the latter days of his career, he would earn a points win over future Flyweight king Dado Marino and completed his career halting a three fight losing streak with a knockout win in 1951.
Pone KingpetchCareer: 1955-1966
World Championships: World Flyweight (April 16, 1960-October 10, 1962; January 12, 1963-September 18, 1963; January 23, 1964-April 23, 1965)
Hailed From: Hua Hin, Thailand
Record: 28-7 (9 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-3 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Pascual Perez, Fighting Harada, Hiroyuki Ebihara, Salvatore Burruni.
Champions defeated: Perez (SD15, TKO8), Harada (MD15), Ebihara (SD15)
Kingpetch was the first World champion in the rich history of Thai boxing. Though Kingpetch had only 40 professional matches, he was on center stage for what seemed like nearly a decade. He was a three-time Flyweight world champion, beating Perez, Harada, and Ebihara for his crowns; Perez and Harada have both previously been elected to the Hall of Fame. Kingpetch’s chin was a liability but he showed resilience in avenging defeats and was a tough out at home. Kingpetch relinquished the Orient Flyweight title before stepping up and taking the world title from the great Pascual Perez via decision in Bangkok, later proving it was no fluke when he KO'd the great Perez in an immediate return bout in Los Angeles.
Santos LaciarCareer: 1976-90
World Championships: WBA Flyweight (March 28, 1981-June 6, 1981; May 1, 1982-May 6, 1985); WBC Super Flyweight (May 16, 1987-August 8, 1987)
Hailed from: Cordoba, Argentina
Record: 79-10-11 (30 KO) Boxrec record*
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 8-5-1 (5 KO)
Champions Faced: Charlie Magri, Peter Mathebula, Luis Ibarra, Juan Herrera, Betulio Gonzalez, Hi-Sup Shin, Prudencio Cardona, Hilario Zapata, Gilberto Roman, Sugar Baby Rojas, Hugo Soto
Champions Defeated: Mathebula (TKO7); Herrera (TKO13, SD15); Gonzalez (SD15); Shin (TKO1); Cardona (KO10); Zapata (UD15); Roman (D12, TKO11, L12)
Laciar is one of the unsung greats from the land of Carlos Monzon, Argentina, and one of the more dominant titlists of the 1980s. Possessing both skill and pop, Laciar had a great beard and was never stopped in more than 100 contests. He held the WBA belt twice at Flyweight, with all of his nine successful defenses coming in the second reign. Laciar would win his first belt from Peter Mathebula by knockout, only to lose it in his first defense, versus Luis Ibarra. He bounced back less than a year later to stop Ibarra’s conqueror, Juan Herrera, in thirteen and would hold the title until a move up to Jr. Bantamweight. His move to Jr. Bantamweight brought less time as a champion and an early setback. In the first of three fights with Roman in August 1986, the reigning WBC and lineal champion at 115 lbs., he settled for a draw. Six straight wins set up a rematch just as evenly contested through the first ten rounds, but cuts suffered by Roman awarded Laciar the title in the eleventh round. It would be his last title victory, as Laciar would be soundly outboxed by Rojas in his first attempted defense. He continued until 1990, losing the third Roman fight in 1989 by decisive scores and finally retiring following a loss to future titlist Hugo Soto.
Tippy LarkinCareer: 1935-52
World Championships: World Jr. Lightweight (April 26, 1946-September 13, 1946; vacated)
Hailed from: Garfield, New Jersey
Record: 137-15-1 (60 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-5
Champions faced: Freddie Cochrane, Jack “Kid” Berg, Lew Jenkins, Beau Jack, Henry Armstrong, Billy Graham, Ike Williams
Champions defeated: Cochrane (W10, W10, W10, W10, W10); Graham (UD10)
Larkin briefly resuscitated a dead Jr. Welterweight title, the sole claimant to the 140 lb. throne between 1935 and 1959. A slick boxer-puncher, Larkin’s chin was a draw back as ten of 15 losses came via knockout. It must be noted many of those knockouts came at the hands of the best, men like Ike Williams, an undefeated Charley Fusari, Henry Armstrong, Beau Jack and Lew Jenkins. He mastered future Welterweight champion “Red” Cochrane five out of five and outboxed Hall of Famer Billy Graham over the route. His lone title came when matched with veteran contender Willie Joyce whom he defeated on points for the title and in his lone defense.
Jose LegraCareer: 1960-1973
World Championships: WBC Featherweight title (July 24, 1968-January 21, 1969; December 16, 1972-May 5, 1973)
Hailed From: Cuba/Spain
Record: 133-11-4 (50 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 2-5 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Eder Jofre, Clemente Sanchez, Alexis Arguello, Howard Winstone, Vicente Saldivar, Johnny Famechon
Champions defeated: Winstone (TKO5), Sanchez (TKO10)
A two-time WBC titlist, Legra was part of a long line of great Cuban born boxers who left their homeland with the arrival of Fidel Castro. He took his talents to Spain, and fashioned a lengthy and productive career. His speedy, slashing style made him a fan favorite. Besides his bouts with champions and Hall of Famers, Jose defeated top-rated boxers such as Love Allotey, Joe Tettah and Don Johnson. He also held the European Featherweight title for nearly six years. Legra briefly held his first title, avenging a previous loss to Winstone by knockout only to lose his first defense against Johnny Famechon. Legra reached a final peak with his title win over Clemente Sanchez. The thrill was short lived. Months later, Legra would lose the title to the great Jofre by decision and, later in the year, suffer a first round knockout at the hands of Alexis Arguello to end his career.
Miguel LoraCareer: 1979-1983
World Championships: WBC bantamweight (August 9, 1985-October 29, 1988)
Hailed from: Monteria, Colombia
Record: 37-3 (17 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 8-3 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Gabriel Bernal, Rolando Bohol, Gaby Canizales, Albert Davila, Rafael Del Valle, Raul Perez, Cesar Polanco, Wilfredo Vazquez, Daniel Zaragoza
Champions defeated: Avelar (KO4), Bernal (W10), Bohol (W10), Davila (W12, W12), Polanco (W10), Vazquez (W12), Zaragoza (W12)
Nicknamed “Happy” for his cheery demeanor even while fighting, Lora showed power early in his championship time by decking Zaragoza five times and stopping Enrique Sanchez and former WBC Flyweight king Avelar. As his reign lengthened, Lora depended heavily on lively legs and quick hands to outclass opponents. Lora defended only twice in his native Colombia, beating Davila before 50,000 in Barranquilla and defeating the capable Lucio Lopez over 12 in Cartegena. All but one of his other defenses were in Miami, his rematch win over Davila was tainted when sugar water was confiscated from his corner. Despite concrete evidence of tampering, the WBC allowed Lora to keep his belt. Lora’s quality of opposition was fairly strong as wins over Zaragoza, Davila, Lopez, Sanchez and Vazquez show. Lora lost his belt to the vastly taller Perez and was stopped in a two-round shootout with Canizales for the vacant WBO belt. He made another attempt at the WBO strap against Del Valle, but after a comprehensive loss Lora retired at 32.
Raul MaciasCareer: 1953-1962
World Championships: NBA Bantamweight title (March 1955-June 1957)
Hailed From: Mexico City, Mexico
Record: 41-2 (25 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 0-1
Champions faced: Alphonse Halimi
Champions defeated: None
Though his career did not last very long, "El Raton" was right in the thick of things during his heyday. Roaring right out of the 1952 Olympics, Macias captured the North American Bantamweight title in only his 11th pro bout. In his very next outing, he won the vacant NBA title. He had two successful defenses before losing to Halimi for the world title, a split decision at Los Angeles’ Wrigley Field. Macias would fight on sparingly, winning five straight from 1958 to 1962 but never again competing for a championship
Ernesto MarcelCareer: 1966-1974
World Championships: WBA Featherweight (August 19, 1972-February 16, 1974; Retired)
Hailed From: Panama City, Panama
Record: 40-4-2 (23 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-1-1 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Roberto Duran, Alfredo Marcano, Kuniaki Shibata, Antonio Gomez, Sam Serrano, Alexis Arguello
Champions defeated: Marcano (W10, W10), Gomez (MD15, TKO12), Serrano (SD10), Arguello (UD15)
Marcel was hatched from the standard mold of Panamanian boxers. Speed and fancy footwork were their calling cards, though he did produce 24 stoppage wins in his 47-fight career. Except for his initial title fight – a draw with Shibata – in Japan, he did all his boxing in South and Central America. Marcel would suffer only one knockout loss, at the hands of Roberto Duran in 1970, before going on to capture gold two years later. Marcel had four successful title defenses before his premature retirement at age 25. He went out on a high note, scoring a decision over future the future Jr. Lightweight champion Serrano and posting a final title defense in a schooling of a young Alexis Arguello.
Dariusz MichalczewskiCareer: 1991-2005
World Championships: WBO light heavyweight (1994-2003, 23 Defenses); WBO cruiserweight (1994, vacated without defending); WBA/IBF Light Heavyweight (1997, vacated without defending)
Hailed From: Gdansk, Poland
Record: 48-2 (38 KO)
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-2 (3 KO)
Champions Faced: Leeonzer Barber, Nestor Giovanni, Graciano Rocchigiani, Virgil Hill, Montell Griffin, Julio Gonzalez, Fabrice Tiozzo
Champions Defeated: Barber (UD 12), Giovanni (KO 10), Rocchigiani (DQ 7, TKO 10), Hill (UD 12), Griffin (TKO 4)
Fighting largely out of Germany, Michalczewski would win his first 48 professional contests, winning three major belts and a claim to the lineal throne at Light Heavyweight along with a belt at Cruiserweight. His 23 consecutive defenses of the WBO belt at 175 lbs., win from Kronk product Leeonzer Barber in 1994, are a division record. 14 defenses of his claim to the lineal title, traced to his defeat of Virgil Hill in a unification contest in 1997, ties the record of Bob Foster at Light Heavyweight…for those who saw Michalczewski as the rightful lineal king. Michalczewski was shorn of the WBA and IBF belts he won from Hill in large part because of boxing politics. Those belts would ultimately end up with Roy Jones Jr. The two never fought, leaving an enduring source of debate about the statistical accomplishments of Michalczewski and what might have been.
Freddie MillsCareer: 1936-50
World Championships: World Light Heavyweight (July 26, 1948-January 24, 1950)
Hailed from: Bournemouth, Dorset, United Kingdom
Record: 76-18-7 (49 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 1-3
Champions faced: Gus Lesnevich, Joey Maxim
Champions defeated: Gus Lesnevich (KOby10, W15)
“Fearless” Freddie lived up to his nickname with a style of get or get got that thrilled fans on both sides of the Atlantic. A pair of wins over British exemplars Jock McAvoy and another over Len Harvey portended a future as champion. It would not come easy as the first of two title fights with Gus Lesnevich ended with Mills dropped four times in a classic brawl before being stopped in ten in 1946. Mills was stopped again the following year in five by Hall of Famer Lloyd Marshall but opportunity would knock with Lesnevich one more time. He earned a chance for revenge in 1948, forcing Lesnevich to the floor twice en route to a unanimous decision win. He would manage only one successful title defense before losing the crown to Joey Maxim by a tenth round knockout in his final fight. Mills would go on to be a nightclub owner in London, found dead of a gunshot wound in 1965 ultimately ruled a suicide.
Rinty MonaghanCareer: 1934-49
World Championships: NBA Flyweight (October 20, 1947); World Flyweight (March 23, 1948-March 30, 1950; retired)
Hailed from: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Record: 51-9-6 (20 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-3-1 (3 KO)
Champions faced: Jackie Paterson, Terry Allen, Dado Marino
Champions defeated: Paterson (KOby 5, TKO7, KO7), Allen (KO1, L8, D15), Marino (DQ by 9, W15)
John Joseph “Rinty” Monaghan of Belfast, Ireland, was as popular outside the ring as he was fearless in it. Monaghan became a national flyweight champion in 1945 and within months he avenged the only knockout loss of his career against Scotland’s Jackie Paterson. A disqualification loss in a non-title bout against Dado Marino in July 1947 led directly to a rematch three months later for the vacant NBA title, and Monaghan again avenged himself with a victory. He dropped an eight round non-title decision to Terry Allen between his first two defenses and escaped with a draw against Allen in his second title defense. It would be his last bout. A chronic lung condition forced his retirement, but his legacy began the night he took the lineal flyweight championship by knocking out Paterson in their third match. Rinty stood triumphant in the ring at King’s Hall and sang “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.” The whole crowd joined him. They would for the rest of his life.
Masao OhbaCareer: 1966-1973
World Championships: WBA Flyweight title (October 20, 1970-January 24, 1973)
Hailed From: Tokyo, Japan
Record: 35-2-1 (15 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 5-1 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Susumu Hanagata, Bernabe Villacompo, Berkrerk Chartvanchai, Betulio Gonzalez, Chartchai Chinoi
Champions defeated: Hanagata (L10, MD15), Villacompo (UD10), Chartvanchai (KO13), Gonzalez (UD15), Chinoi (KO12)
Masao Ohba is to Japan what Salvador Sanchez is to Mexico –a young master on the path to all-time greatness before his tragic death at age 23. Ohba was a good technician and counter-puncher who set up combinations behind a strong jab. He was not hard to find with punches, but was never stopped in 38 professional bouts. His last fight was against future lineal champion Chartchai Chinoi. It showed us who he was. In the first round, Chinoi landed an overhand right and knocked Ohba down. Ohba landed on his right ankle and injured it. Though forced to limp and hop in the ring to keep the weight of it and despite absorbing excessive punishment, he still managed to demonstrate how a great fighter overcomes adversity by scoring a twelfth round stoppage.
Sven Ottke Career: 1997-2004
World Championships: IBF Super Middleweight (October 24, 1998-March 27, 2004); WBA Super Middleweight (March 15, 2003-March 27, 2004)
Hailed from: Berlin, Germany
Record: 34-0 (6 KO)
Boxrec record
Record Against champions and Hall of Famers: 8-0 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Charles Brewer, Glen Johnson, Silvio Branco, Anthony Mundine, Byron Mitchell, Robin Reid, Armand Kranjc
Champions Defeated: Brewer (SD12, SD12), Johnson (UD12), Branco (UD12), Mundine (KO10), Mitchell (SD12), Reid (UD12), Kranjc (UD12)
Immensely popular in his native Germany, Ottke had a style for the purists to admire. Using quick combinations and deft head movement, Ottke was a master of space who befuddled more dangerous opponents. Ottke never fought outside of Germany and this has cast a shadow on a few of his professional bouts. Decisions in his favor over Mads Larsen, both wins over Charles Brewer, and a late career win over Robin Reid, were marred by questionable officiating. To his credit, wins over Glen Johnson, Silvio Branco, and Byron Mitchell were hard fought and well-earned. In perhaps his most surprising performance, Ottke was behind on the scorecards to Anthony Mundine but managed to summon a single shot to save his title.
Ken OverlinCareer: 1931-44
World Championships: NYSAC Middleweight (May 23, 1940-May 9, 1941)
Hailed from: Norfolk, Virginia
Record: 135-19-9 (23 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-7-2
Champions faced: Vince Dundee, Teddy Yarosz, Fred Apostoli, Freddie Steele, Ceferino Garcia, Billy Soose, Ezzard Charles, Al Hostak
Champions defeated: Apostoli (MD10, D10); Garcia (UD15); Charles (UD10, D10); Hostak (UD10)
They called him the ‘King of the Cocktail Lounge’, but Overlin was great despite his distaste for training. Known for his physical and mental agility –he would typically bound in and around his opponents, swiping, grabbing, and baffling many during the Golden Era. A win over future titlist Fred Apostoli set up a crack at Freddie Steele for NBA honors in 1937, Overlin was stopped in the fourth round. It would take 39 more fights before he was granted another title opportunity. The second time was the charm for Overlin;who he scored a unanimous decision over Ceferino Garcia. A highly disputed non-title loss to Billy Soose came before two defenses against tough Steve Belloise and, finally, a title loss to Soose. Overlin followed that defeat with a career highlight, winning a unanimous decision to hold off a 15-0 Ezzard Charles. Overlin continued until 1944, adding wins over Al Hostak, a draw versus Apostoli and holding Charles to a draw in a 1944 rematch.
Gustave RothCareer: 1927-1945
World Championships: None
Hailed From: Antwerp, Belgium
Record: 113-11-12 (25 KO) Boxrec record
Records against champions and Hall of Famers: 0-2
Champions faced: Marcel Thil, Lou Brouillard
Champions defeated: None
Roth’s 137-bout career lasted over seventeen years and spanned all three decades of boxing’s Golden Era. He was, however, strictly a European phenomenon, particularly in Belgium where he won the national middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight crowns. He was only 20 years old when he captured the EBU welterweight title and would successfully defend it a dozen times. Within a few years he captured two more European championships with lineages that began with the legendary Georges Carpentier –the EBU middleweight and light heavyweight titles.
Lou SalicaCareer: 1932-1944
World Championships: NBA bantamweight (August 26, 1935-November 15, 1935, September 24, 1940-August 7, 1942)
Hailed from: Brooklyn, N.Y.
Record: 62-17-12 (13 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 6-7-4 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Jackie Callura, Richie Lemos, Little Dado, Sixto Escobar, Harry Jeffra, Small Montana, Manuel Ortiz, Midget Wolgast
Champions defeated: Lemos (W 10), Montana (KO 3, W 10), Escobar (L 15, W 15, L 15), Ortiz (W 10, KO by 11, L 12), Wolgast (W 10, D8, L8)
Salica won a slew of national amateur titles before taking a bronze medal at the 1932 Olympics. Not blessed with great power, Salica’s good jab and solid footwork complemented his courage and determination went 1-1-1 with Midget Wolgast en route to dethroning Sixto Escobar (Puerto Rico’s first world champion) in a disputed decision in August 1935. Salica’s reign lasted just 79 days as Escobar regained the crown over 15 rounds and Salica lost a subsequent challenge to him in February 1937. He defeated future champs Manuel Ortiz and Richie Lemos among others to gain another shot, this time for the vacant NBA crown against Georgie Pace. Their first fight was a draw but Salica won the rematch six months later. His second reign saw him defeat Tommy Forte twice and Lou Transparenti before Ortiz dethroned him for the last time in 1943. Historian Herb Goldman ranks Salica 18th on his list of bantamweights.
Dave SandsCareer: 1941-52
World Championships: None
Hailed from: Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Record: 97-10-1 (63 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 2-0
Champions faced: Carl “Bobo” Olson
Champions defeated: Olson (UD12, UD10)
The Aborigine warrior was a middleweight who held the Australian middleweight, light heavyweight, and heavyweight crowns. Although he fought most of his contests in Australia and the United Kingdom, Sands managed a trip to the U.S. in 1951 after luring Hall of Famer Bobo Olson to Australia to Sydney in 1950. Sands won the first encounter and repeated the feat in Chicago, winning a unanimous verdict over ten rounds on national television. Stopped only twice in 110 bouts, Sands had a solid chin, a big left hook, and a style that was a study in grace and power. Sands was closing in on a shot at Sugar Ray Robinson’s middleweight crown, when he was killed in an auto accident in 1952. He was only 26 years old.
Petey ScalzoCareer: 1936-1943
World Championships: NBA Featherweight (December 5, 1938-July 1, 1941)
Hailed From: New York City
Record: 90-15-6 (48 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-2 (2 KO)
Champions faced: Joey Archibald, Sal Bartolo, Richie Lemos, Bob Montgomery
Champions defeated: Archibald (KO2), Bartolo (W10), Lemos (KO by 5, TKO7)
Petey Scalzo was a native New Yorker back when it meant something in the fight game. Though his career spanned only eight years, he was able to pack in over 100 fights when the New York area was chock full of club shows as well as big arena cards. He wasn't averse to traveling either, and would criss-cross the continent on a dime to get fights. Like a lot of boxers toward the end of their boxing days, he had a spotty record of 11-11-2, but he went undefeated in his first 40 bouts before dropping a decision to tough Mike Belloise (who once held a lightly regarded claim to the Featherweight crown in New York). After retirement, he couldn’t stay out of the ring and so became an active referee in New York from 1947 until 1959 when he was appointed to the New York State Athletic Commission.
Samuel SerranoCareer: 1969-1997
World Championships: WBA junior lightweight (October 16, 1976-August 2, 1980, April 9, 1981-January 19, 1983)
Hailed from: Toa Alto, Puerto Rico
Record: 50-5-1 (17 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 2-3-1 (0 KO)
Champions faced: Ernesto Marcel, Roger Mayweather, Yatsusune Uehara, Ben Villaflor
Champions defeated: Uehara (KO by 6, W15), Villaflor (W15)
Serrano was a long-armed boxer who used lateral movement and knowledge of the darker arts to enjoy a lengthy stay as WBA junior lightweight champion, one that was made longer since he never unified against Alexis Arguello or Alfredo Escalera. Twelve defenses over two reigns were among the most prolific in the division’s history and he wasn’t afraid to defend on the road as he fought in Chile, Venezuela, Japan, South Africa and the United States. Serrano fought then-champion Ben Villaflor to a disputed draw in the titlist’s adopted hometown of Honolulu, spawning a return match in Serrano’s home area of San Juan, where he won by unanimous decision. Serrano amassed nine defenses over the next three-and-a-half years against a string of mostly nondescript mandatory challengers and was on his way to another easy win when Uehara starched him with a single right in the sixth. A more cautious Serrano regained the belt via decision eight months later and notched three more defenses before Roger Mayweather ended his reign.
Yoshio ShiraiCareer: 1943-55
World Championships: World Flyweight (May 19-1952-November 26, 1954)
Hailed from: Tokyo, Japan
Record: 46-8-4 (18 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 4-3-1 (1 KO)
Champions faced: Dado Marino, Terry Allen, Pascual Perez
Champions defeated: Marino (TKO7, W15, W15); Allen (W15)
Call him the Godfather of the vibrant, modern Japanese fight market. Shirai was the first world champion from the Land of the Rising Sun, also holding the Japanese flyweight and bantamweight crowns. He lost 3 of his first 13 bouts before beginning his rise through the ranks. He would not lose again until 1951. After dropping two straight from March to May of 1951, he avenged both; critically, he avenged a non-title split decision loss to champion Dado Marino via knockout, earning a shot at the crown. He defeated Marino twice more by decision, the first time for the title and also posted a successful defense over former champion Terry Allen. Shirai retired in the corner in a shocking non-title upset versus a 7-4 Leo Espinosa and narrowly found revenge in a split decision title fight. He traveled to Argentina for a draw against the undefeated Pascual Perez in a non-title affair but fell to Perez twice for the World championship in his native Japan, first by decision and then by knockout in his final fight.
Kid TuneroCareer: 1929-1948
World Championships: None
From: Victoria de las Tunas, Cuba
Record: 95-32-16 (37) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 3-3
Champions faced: Marcel Thil, Anton Christoforidis, Ezzard Charles
Champions defeated: Thil (W12, L15, L15), Christofordis (W10, W10, D10), Charles (SD10)
“The guy is decent and elegant,” Ernest Hemingway once said of this Cuban expatriate. “He never hits in excess.” For twenty years, Tunero’s elegant efficiency saw him defeat champions and great fighters including Marcel Thil, Anton Christoforidis, Holman Williams, Ken Overlin (in a match where he was brought in as a substitute), and a rising legend in Ezzard Charles. Charles called him a “wizard in the ring.” This fighter was more than a mere “road warrior” – twenty nations all around the globe witnessed his mastery. He was comfortable at close quarters as much as he was at range and could slip and counterpunch with “with great aim,” remembered trainer Luis Sarria. Sarria ranked him over Muhammad Ali when asked about the greatest fighters he had ever worked with. “Kid Tunero,” he said, “made it look easy.”
Wilfredo VazquezCareer: 1981-2002
World Championships: WBA Bantamweight (October 4, 1987-May 9, 1988); WBA Super Bantamweight (March 27, 1992-May 13, 1995); WBA Featherweight (May 18, 1996-March 24, 1998; relinquished title)
Hailed from: Bayamon, Puerto Rico
Record: 56-9-2 (41 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 8-7-1 (5 KO)
Champions faced: Antonio Avelar, Orlando Canizales, Antonio Cermeno, Israel Contreras, Khakor Galaxy, Naseem Hamed, Thierry Jacob, Miguel Lora, Luis Mendoza, Takuya Muguruma, Chan Yong Park, Juan Polo Perez, Raul Perez, Eloy Rojas,
Champions defeated: Canizales (W12), Jacob (KO8, KO10), Mendoza (W12), Park (KO10), Perez (W12), Perez (L10, KO 3), Rojas (KO11)
Vazquez began learning the fundamentals of the sweet science two weeks after his father died. To honor his memory, 18-year-old Vazquez wanted to win a title like his father’s hero Wilfredo Gomez. After 17 amateur fights he turned pro with a four-round decision loss but quickly developed into a two-fisted bomber. He lost his first title shot and then came up short in a shootout to Avelar but rebounded and won his first title at bantamweight with a knockout. His reign was underwhelming. He fought a draw with Muguruma and lost to Galaxy, but soon hit his stride as a 122-pounder. He avenged a previous loss to Perez by bombing him out in three rounds and piled up nine defenses. Presumed to be past his prime when he lost the belt to Cermeno at age 35, Vasquez confounded experts when he stopped lineal and WBA featherweight champ Eloy Rojas in come-from-behind fashion the following year. He notched four defenses of the belt before relinquishing it to fight Naseem Hamed instead of taking a rematch with Cermeno. Vasquez gave a credible effort before Hamed stopped him in seven. He retired at age 42 after winning his last four fights.
Myung Woo YuhCareer: 1982-1993
World Championships: WBA Junior Flyweight (December 8, 1985-December 17, 1991; November 18, 1992-July 25, 1993)
Hailed from: Seoul, South Korea
Record: 38-1 (14 KO) Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 7-1 (0 KO)
Champions faced: Rodolfo Blanco, Jose DeJesus, Leo Gamez, Hiroki Ioka, Joey Olivo
Champions defeated: Blanco (KO8), DeJesus (W15, W12), Gamez (W12, W12), Ioka (L12, W12), Olivo (W15)
Though many believe Olivo should have gotten the decision against Yuh, the South Korean proved himself a worthy champion by establishing a divisional record for length of reign (six years) and consecutive defenses (17) that has stood the test of time. The South Korean used a bustling offense to grind down opponents and his defense was dependable given his prodigious output. His first fight with Argentine Mario DeMarco is a forgotten classic as the pair swapped more than 3,000 blows over 15 savage rounds. The fact that he never met fellow champions Humberto “Chiquita” Gonzalez, Jung Koo Chang, or Michael Carbajal in potential big-money unification showdowns is his biggest negative, in addition to engaging a long string of obscure Oriental challengers instead of fighting outside of his native land. Yuh retired at age 29 after making the only defense of his second reign. He is considered one of the greatest fighters ever produced in South Korea.
Hilario ZapataCareer: 1977-1993
World Championships: WBC Light Flyweight (March 24, 1980-February 6, 1982; July 20, 1982-March 26, 1983), WBA Flyweight (October 5, 1985-February 13, 1987)
Hailed from: Panama City, Panama
Record: 43-10-1 (14 KO)
Boxrec record
Record against champions and Hall of Famers: 12-6-1 (4 KO)
Champions faced: Fidel Bassa, Freddie Castillo, Jung Koo Chang, Juan Antonio Guzman, Santos Laciar, Alfonso Lopez, Sung Kil Moon, Shigeo Nakajima, Joey Olivo, Dodie Boy Penalosa, Juan Polo Perez, Tadashi Tomori, German Torres, Amado Ursua, Netronoi Sor Vorasingh
Champions defeated: Castillo (W12), Chang (W15, KOby 3), Guzman (W10), Nakajima (W15, KO11), Olivo (KO13), Penalosa (W15), Perez (W10), Tomori (W15, KO8), Torres (W15), Vorasingh (KO10)
A mantis-like southpaw, Zapata towered over his opponents and he used surprising agility to avoid shots like he was on a spring. His long jabs to controlled distance though he preferred mixing it up on the inside, Zapata decisioned former WBA 108-pound king Guzman in his fifth pro fight and first 10 rounder. He lost to Lopez in his seventh professional bout but beat Castillo in his ninth. Zapata captured his first world title in his 12th fight. After he lost his belt by knockout loss to Ursua, Zapata regained the belt five months later by beating Ursua’s successor, Tomori. Weight issues played a big role in his rematch KO loss to Chang. After winning Won eight of nine fights to earn a crack at a third title at age 34, Zapata was stopped in the first round and finally hung up those busy gloves.
Biographies compiled by:
Lee Groves, Maxboxing.com
Jack Obermayer, Boxing Digest
Cliff Rold, BoxingScene.com
Springs Toledo, TheSweetScience.com
* Boxrec records are unofficial and may not always agree with career records given here.

The BWAA and the INTERNATIONAL BOXING HALL OF FAME

One of the perks and responsibilities of being a full BWAA member is voting on candidates for induction into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, N.Y.
The IBHOF mails ballots to voters after October 1 each year. Winning inductees are announced in December and enshrined in the Hall during annual Hall of Fame weekend festivities in Canastota the following June.
In 2009 the BWAA created a Hall of Fame Committee, which has written these capsule biographies of all HOF candidates to assist voters. The Hall of Fame Committee consists of Cliff Rold (Chairman), Lee Groves, Jack Obermayer, and Springs Toledo.

©2004 -

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