Daniel Zaragoza
Daniel Zaragoza | |
---|---|
Born | Daniel Zaragoza 11 December 1957 |
Nationality | Mexican |
Other names | The Bulldog,[1] The Mouse |
Statistics | |
Weight(s) | Super Bantamweight |
Height | 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) |
Reach | 1.73 m (68 in) |
Stance | Southpaw |
Boxing record | |
Total fights | 66 |
Wins | 55 |
Wins by KO | 28 |
Losses | 8 |
Draws | 3 |
No contests | 0 |
Daniel Zaragoza (born December 11, 1957 in Mexico City) is a Mexican former professional boxer known also as "The Mouse". Described as a "road warrior" for his willingness to travel and fan friendly style, Zaragoza was a popular champion in the Bantamweight and Super Bantamweight divisions throughout the 1980s and 1990s.[2]
Amateur career
- 1979 Represented Mexico as a bantamweight at the Pan-American Games in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Results were:
- Defeated Alfonso Abata (Ecuador)
- Lost to Jackie Beard (United States) points
- Represented Mexico as a bantamweight at the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games. Results were:
- Defeated Philip Sutcliffe (Ireland) points
- Defeated Ray Gilbody (Great Britain) points
- Lost to Michael Parris (Guyana) TKO by 2
Professional career
In October 1980, Zaragoza won his pro debut against Ernesto Gutierrez.
WBC Bantamweight Championship
In 1985 he captured the vacant WBC Bantamweight title with a disqualification victory over Freddie Jackson in Aruba.
He lost his title in his first defense to Miguel "Happy" Lora. In his next bout in 1986, he suffered a non-title loss to IBF Bantamweight Champion and future International Boxing Hall of Fame member Jeff Fenech in Australia.
WBC Super Bantamweight Championship
Zaragoza moved up in weight in his next bout and scored 7 consecutive wins before capturing the vacant WBC Super Bantamweight title with a knockout win over future hall of fame member Carlos Zarate in 1988.
He successfully retained the title five times, including a hard fought draw in South Korea against IBF Super Bantamweight champion Lee Seung-hoon, a knockout victory against future champion Valerio Nati in Italy, a decision victory over Paul Banke (16-3-0) in the first fight of their trilogy, a knockout victory against Frankie Duarte (47-7-1), and a decision victory over former champion Chan-Yong Park in South Korea. In 1990, he lost the belt to Paul Banke whom he had defeated just three fights prior.
Banke would go on to lose the title by knockout against Pedro Ruben Decima, who in turn was knocked out by Kiyoshi Hatanaka. In 1991, Zaragoza regained the belt with a split decision win over Hatanaka in Japan. He defended the belt against Chun Huh (25-2-0) of South Korea and avenged his loss to Paul Banke. In 1992, he lost his title to Thierry Jacob by decision in France. In his next two fights he battled newly crowned WBC super bantamweight titleholder Tracy Harris Patterson, who had recently defeated Jacob. He fought to a draw with Patterson in the first bout and lost by technical knockout in the second bout when the fight was stopped due to a cut despite the objections of Zaragoza.
Oldest Super Bantamweight Champion
In 1995 he would yet again get another crack at the title against WBC Super Bantamweight champion Hector Acero-Sanchez, who had defeated Tracy Harris Patterson to win the title. The bout was controversially ruled a draw with most observers believing Zaragoza should have been declared the winner.[3] He fought a rematch with Sanchez later in the year and won the belt via split decision. At 36 years 11 months, he became the oldest super bantamweight champion in history.[4]
This began a late-career surge for Zaragoza who was able to defend the title four times, including two wins against former and future champion Joichiro Tatsuyoshi in Japan, a tko win over Tsuyoshi Harada (20-1-0) also in Japan, and an upset win against undefeated bantamweight champion Wayne McCullough who had recently moved up in weight. On Sep 6, 1997, he lost his title to then-undefeated 21-year-old Erik Morales, who knocked out Zaragoza in the 11th round. Zaragoza retired after the bout at the age of 39 with a record of 55-8-3.
Retirement
He was inducted to the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 2004.
References
- ^ Morales, Álvaro (17 April 2007). "El 'Bulldog' de Tacubaya" (in Spanish). ESPN Deportes. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
- ^ http://articles.latimes.com/1989-08-29/sports/sp-1349_1_title-defense
- ^ http://articles.latimes.com/1995-11-06/sports/sp-65440_1_daniel-zaragoza
- ^ http://www.maxboxing.com/Groves/Groves081208.asp
External links
- Boxing record for Daniel Zaragoza from BoxRec (registration required)
- International Boxing Hall of Fame Biography