Julio César Chávez vs. Tony Lopez
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Date | December 10, 1994 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Venue | Estadio Mobil Super, Monterrey, Mexico | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Title(s) on the line | WBC super lightweight title | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tale of the tape | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Chavez wins via 10th-round technical knockout |
Julio César Chávez vs. Tony Lopez was a professional boxing match contested on December 10, 1994, for the WBC super lightweight title.[1] The fight was the featured bout on a boxing card promoted by Don King dubbed Noches de Campeones (Night of Champions in Spanish).
Background
[edit]On October 6, 1994, promoter Don King announced that WBC super lightweight Julio César Chávez would headline the boxing card Noches de Campeones in his native Mexico against former three-time world champion Tony Lopez.[2] Along with the Chávez–Lopez main event, the card also featured IBF welterweight champion Félix Trinidad defending his title against Oba Carr, WBA middleweight John David Jackson defending against Jorge Castro, Frankie Randall vs. Rodney Moore for the WBA super lightweight title and WBC strawweight champion Ricardo López vs. Yamil Caraball. This was King's fourth super card of 1994 to be headlined by a Chávez title fight. There were tentative plans for the card to be headlined by a third Chávez–Randall fight, though talks stalled and the two appeared in separate fights on the card.[3]
In the days prior to the fight Chávez insisted that his fight against Lopez would be the beginning of a year-long farewell as he had announced his intentions to retire at the end of 1995 following a further six fights to get him to 100 professional fights. Chávez promised a rematch with Pernell Whitaker and third fight with Randall, which he planned to be his final fight, would be among the bouts he had planned for 1995.[4] However, his planned rematch with Whitaker never came to be and a third fight with Randall would not occur until 2004, while Chávez himself would hold off his retirement until a decade later in 2005.[5]
The fights
[edit]Castro vs. Jackson
[edit]The fight between WBA middleweight champion Jorge Castro and John David Jackson, was critically acclaimed, being named the The Ring magazine's 1994 fight of the year, while the bout's ninth round would also win the publication's round of the year for 1994 as well.[6] Jackson was attempting to regain the WBA middleweight title after being stripped of the title earlier in the year for taking a non-title fight against Jeff Johnson on the undercard of the Lennox Lewis–Phil Jackson heavyweight title fight without the permission of the WBA, while Castro, having claimed the vacant title after decisioning Reggie Johnson in August, was making his second defense of the title.[7]
Jackson had dominated Castro through the first eight rounds and Castro sported cuts above both eyes. Jackson continued his dominance into the ninth and with around a minute to go in the round, caught Castro flush with a left hook that stunned the champion and sent him staggering into the ropes. Looking to knockout his hurt opponent, Jackson swung wildly at Castro, leaving him open for Castro to counter with a left hook that sent Jackson down to the Canvas. Clearly hurt from the blow, Jackson answered the referee's count but was on wobblily legs as Castro quickly rushed him and sent him down again. Jackson again struggled back to his feet but Castro again sent him down with a left hand. Following the third knockdown, the fight was stopped with 17 second remaining in the round.[8]
Trinidad vs. Carr
[edit]Making the fifth defence of his IBF Welterweight title Félix Trinidad faced number two ranked contender Oba Carr.[9]
In the second round, Carr scored a knockdown, which was the product of a quick right hand punch.[10] Trinidad continued the fight and pursued the challenger, who displayed a quick pace throughout the fight.[11] In the fourth round Trinidad connected a solid punch that injured Carr, and in the eighth he scored three consecutive knockdowns before the referee stopped the fight by technical knockout.[12]
Main Event
[edit]Chávez put forth a dominating effort, winning nearly every round on the judge's scorecards and battering Lopez throughout the fight.[1] The turning point of the fight came in the fourth round when Chávez opened a cut above Lopez's left eye, an injury that got progressively worse as the fight went on. By the following round, the eye was almost completely shut and the cut began to bleed, causing the ringside doctor to examine Lopez after each round to make sure he could continue. After Chávez opened another cut above Lopez's right eye, Lopez was warned after the ninth round that he would only have one more round before the fight would be stopped. However, with Lopez's eye beginning to swell after constant abuse from Chávez, referee stopped the fight at 1:41 in order for the doctor to check on Lopez's condition. Against Lopez's wishes, the doctor stopped the fight, giving Chávez the victory by technical knockout.[13]
Fight card
[edit]Confirmed bouts:[14]
Weight Class | Weight | vs. | Method | Round | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Super Lightweight | 140 lbs. | Julio César Chávez (c) | def. | Tony Lopez | TKO | 10/12 | Note 1 |
Welterweight | 147 lbs. | Félix Trinidad (c) | def. | Oba Carr | KO | 8/12 | Note 2 |
Middleweight | 160 lbs. | Jorge Castro (c) | def. | John David Jackson | KO | 9/12 | Note 3 |
Super Lightweight | 140 lbs. | Frankie Randall (c) | def. | Rodney Moore | TKO | 7/12 | Note 4 |
Strawweight | 105 lbs. | Ricardo López (c) | def. | Yamil Caraball | TKO | 1/12 | Note 5 |
Super Flyweight | 115 lbs. | Joel Luna Zárate | def. | Alcibiades Gallegos | TKO | 4/10 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Tony Tucker | def. | Dan Murphy | TKO | 3/10 | |
Super Welterweight | 154 lbs. | Maurice Blocker | def. | Hector Lopez | TKO | 4/10 | |
Heavyweight | 200+ lbs. | Bobby Crabtree | def. | King Ipitan | KO | 1/10 | |
Featherweight | 126 lbs. | Jose Badillo | def. | Carlos Ramirez | TKO | 3/8 |
^Note 1 For WBC Super Lightweight title
^Note 2 For IBF Welterweight title
^Note 3 For WBA Middlewight title
^Note 4 For WBA Super Lightweight title
^Note 5 For WBC Strawweight title
Broadcasting
[edit]Country | Broadcaster |
---|---|
United States | Showtime |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Julio Cesar Chavez vs. Tony Lopez". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Chavez to Fight Lopez in December, NY Times article, 1994-10-07 Retrieved on 2024-10-02
- ^ Taylor Older But No Wiser As Chavez Wins Again, NY Times article, 1994-09-18 Retrieved on 2024-10-02
- ^ Chavez begins winding down career, UPI article, 1994-12-06 Retrieved on 2024-10-03
- ^ Slater, James. ""Adios" - 15 Years Ago Today Julio Cesar Chavez Scored His Final Ring Victory — Boxing News (Ref does not cover when or the reason for retiring)". www.boxing247.com. East Side Boxing. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
- ^ "Jorge Fernando Castro vs. John David Jackson". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ The Kid and the Champ: The Tale of Jorge Castro-John David Jackson, The Ring article, 2019-12-11 Retrieved on 2024-10-03
- ^ Battered Castro knocks out Jackson, Tampa Bay Times article, 1994-12-11 Retrieved on 2024-10-03
- ^ "Felix Trinidad vs. Oba Carr". boxrec.com. BoxRec. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Luis Santiago Arce (2008-01-09). Rumbo a la TITOMANÍA. El Nuevo Día.
Esta vez el oponente era otro peligroso retador invicto, el estadounidense Oba Carr y de inmediato demostró sus cualidades con un relampagueante derechazo que derribó a Tito en el segundo asalto, al igual que hizo el azteca Luis Ramón 'Yori Boy' Campas en su combate anterior.
- ^ Luis Santiago Arce (2008-01-09). Rumbo a la TITOMANÍA. El Nuevo Día.
Y el cuento se repitió. Trinidad se levantó luciendo en perfectas condiciones, y siguió presionando con insistencia a su rival, que exhibió la prometida buena velocidad de manos y un efectivo boxeo, pero sin lograr alcanzar nuevamente con solidez al campeón welter de la Federación Internacional de Boxeo (FIB).
- ^ Luis Santiago Arce (2008-01-09). Rumbo a la TITOMANÍA. El Nuevo Día.
El monarca boricua dio un anticipo de lo que venía con un fuerte derechazo que tambaleó al retador en el cuarto asalto, hasta que a mediados del octavo capítulo lo tumbó con un óper de derecha y una recta. Carr se reincopró pero volvió a caer par de veces adicionales ante el ataque inmisericorde de rectos y ganchos de Tito, hasta que se produjo la intervención del árbitro Robert González restando unos 20 segundos de acción.
- ^ Chavez defends WBC title, UPI article, 1994-12-11 Retrieved on 2024-10-03
- ^ "BoxRec - event".