Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Ricky Hatton Achievements

Championships

  • The Ring magazine's World Light Welterweight Champion
  • IBO World Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former 2x IBF World Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former WBA World Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former WBA World Welterweight Champion
  • Former WBU Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former British Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former WBO Inter-Continental Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former WBA Inter-Continental Light Welterweight Champion
  • Former British Central Area Light Welterweight Champion
  • The Ring magazine's 2005 'Fighter of the Year'
  • ABA National Champion Light Welterweight 1997
  • ABA National Junior Champion (Class A) Light Welterweight 1995,1996
  • ABA National Junior Champion (Class B) Light Welterweight 1997
  • ABA National Junior Champion (Class C) Light Welterweight 1994.

Ricky Hatton

Richard John Hatton MBE, more commonly known as Ricky "the Hitman" Hatton, (born 6 October 1978, in Stockport, Greater Manchester, England), is a British professional boxer is a two-time IBF and IBO light welterweight champion, having relinquished the IBF belt, only to step back down to the weight class and beat Juan Urango.

He was the WBA Welterweight Champion, but relinquished this title on 31 August 2006.[3] Hatton is also the former WBU, WBA Light Welterweight Champion and WBC, WBA, WBO Inter-Continental Light Welterweight Champion, and current Ring Magazine Junior Welterweight Champion.

Boxing career

Training, 1 May 2006.
Hatton's debut fight was on 10 September 1997 against Colin McAuley in Widnes at Kingsway Leisure Centre (he won by a KO in 1),[6] while in his second fight Hatton boxed at Madison Square Garden in New York

Fight against Kostya Tszyu

On 5 June 2005 Hatton beat Kostya Tszyu, then widely regarded as one of the top pound-for-pound boxers in the world by a technical knockout after the Australian failed to answer the bell for the 12th round. Hatton was a heavy underdog for this fight, and the victory announced his entry to the upper echelons of the world boxing scene. Prior to the fight the majority of boxing critics had given Hatton little or no chance and this victory was regarded as one of the best victories by an English boxer in the last 20 years. On 26 November 2005 Hatton won the WBA title when he defeated Carlos Maussa in the ninth round of a unification bout.[8] In December, Hatton was named the 2005 Ring Magazine Fighter of the Year.[9]

Hatton relinquished his IBF belt on 29 March, 2006 after refusing to fulfil a mandatory defence against number one contender Naoufel Ben Rabah, because he intended to move up to the welterweight class.[10] Hatton signed a three fight contract with Dennis Hobson's fight academy after splitting from long time promoter Frank Warren.[11] The three fights would take place in the United States.

Moving to Welterweight

Hatton moved up a division to meet American Luis Collazo for the WBA Welterweight crown which took place on 13 May 2006.[12] Hatton won the WBA crown from Collazo but struggled with Collazo's slick south-paw style and the extra weight. Hatton started well, knocking Collazo down in the very first few seconds of the first round,[13] but it turned out to be one of the toughest fights of his career, with some boxing analysts believing Collazo won the fight,[14] although many also thought Hatton had done enough early on in the fight to secure victory, with the knock down a pivotal point in the fight.

Back to Light Welterweight

Hatton's first fight back at Light Welterweight was against the current IBF Light Welterweight Champion Juan Urango on January 20, 2007 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Hatton's promoter Dennis Hobson stated that the impetus for moving back down was to set up a fight with Jose Luis Castillo, a fighter who nearly beat Floyd Mayweather Jr. at Lightweight in 2002.[3]

Hatton was forced to relinquish his IBF title again on 10 February, to be able to fight Castillo. The fight was held on Saturday, June 23, 2007, at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.[15] In round four, Hatton landed a "perfect" left hook to the liver, which put Castillo to the canvas.[16] Ricky later claimed that 4 of Castillo's ribs were broken with this one punch. Unable to stand up, Castillo was counted out for the first time in his career.

Return to Welterweight

Hatton vs. Mayweather Jr.

Press Conference in NYC

Hatton agreed to terms on Friday July 27, for a December 8, 2007 welterweight fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr[17] which was considered to be the biggest welterweight fight since the 1999 clash between Oscar de la Hoya and Puerto Rican legend Felix 'Tito' Trinidad. The MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas was announced as the venue on August 17, 2007. The fight was agreed to less than three months after Mayweather had said he planned to retire following a victory over Oscar De La Hoya.

Hatton was able to bring the fight to Mayweather in the early rounds. In the 1st round Hatton caught Mayweather with a left jab which knocked Mayweather off balance.[18] His constant pressure appeared to make Mayweather uncomfortable at first. In the third round, Mayweather landed a right that cut Hatton above the right eye.[19] In round six, referee Joe Cortez took a point away from Hatton after he appeared to hit Mayweather on the back of the head while Mayweather was rested between the ropes.[20] However, the punch was revealed to have hit the rope rather than Mayweather's head but Hatton was warned for punching behind the head on numerous occasions before the deduction. Hatton became angry at the referee's decision to deduct a point from him and turned his back on him in frustration. Hatton would later claim that he had become angry by the referee and that had caused him to lose his calm and contributed to his downfall.[21] Hatton was able to hold his own, until round eight, when Mayweather began to adapt to Hatton and started counterattacking. Mayweather knocked Hatton to the mat in Round 10.[22] Hatton got up, but Mayweather quickly resumed his attack, resulting in Joe Cortez putting a stop to the fight, and Hatton's corner threw in the towel. Mayweather commented post-match that "Ricky Hatton is one tough fighter. He is still a champion in my eyes and I'd love to see him fight again. "Ricky Hatton is probably one of toughest competitors I've faced. I hit him with some big ones but he kept coming and I can see why they call him the 'Hitman'."[23] The fight received large amounts of publicity, with both fighters promoting the fight heavily.

Back at Light Welterweight


Hatton vs. Lazcano

On 24 May 2008, Hatton beat Mexican Juan Lazcano by unanimous decision with scores of 120-110, 120-108 and 118-110,[24] in front of his home crowd of 55,000 (a post-World War II record for a boxing match in Britain),[25] at City of Manchester Stadium to retain The Ring Magazine and IBO light welterweight titles.[26] Hatton did well when he boxed and controlled the range, utilizing his jab and dominating a lot of the early exchanges. In round eight, Hatton absorbed a left hook to the chin that wobbled him, and in round ten, Hatton was hurt again by a left hook.[26][27] Despite that, Hatton outworked Lazcano to win at least ten of the rounds.

Hatton vs. Malignaggi

Ricky Hatton fought Paulie Malignaggi of the United States at the MGM Grand, Las Vegas on 22 November for Hatton's IBO Light Welterweight title and Ring Magazine Light welterweight title.[28] He was trained for the fight by Floyd Mayweather, Sr..[29] Hatton dominated for all of the fight and defeated Malignaggi by 11th-round TKO when Malignaggi's trainer, Buddy McGirt, threw in the towel 48 seconds into the round.[30]

Floyd Mayweather Sr.

Floyd Mayweather Senior has revealed he may have to quit because of ill health. Mayweather has a lung disease called sarcoidosis, which he says has got worse over the last few years. The dusty, dry heat of Las Vegas worsens his condition and he has returned home to Michigan to convalesce following his seven-week training camp with Hatton for his fight with Paulie Malignaggi. Mayweather, 55, coughs every few seconds and after trying to treat his condition with steroids, now uses herbal remedies and ointments.

"It's tough and I don't see me carrying on for another two years," he said. "If you don't find something that works for you, you're going to have a bad day. It can attack you at any time. I'm training these fighters and exercise is good. But it seems the more I exercise, the worse my lungs get."[31]

Hatton vs. Pacquiao

Ricky Hatton will fight Manny Pacquiao in a May 2nd showdown which will take place at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, the fight will be at Light Welterweight which will be the 5th weight category Pacquiao has fought at, and is the weight at which Ricky has never been defeated. [32]

Fernando Vargas



Fernando Vargas (born December 7, 1977) is a former Mexican American boxer and two-time world champion, who won a bronze medal as an amateur at the 1995 Pan American Games in Mar del Plata. His nicknames include "Ferocious", "The Aztec Warrior" and "El Feroz".

Some of Fernando's notable wins include victories over former world champions Raul Marquez, Ike Quartey and Winky Wright. His losses to Felix Trinidad, Oscar de la Hoya, Shane Mosley and Ricardo Mayorga remain his only career defeats and he is a favorite of American cable TV giant HBO.

Fernando is very good friends with Julio César Chávez; Chavez has been part of Vargas' ring entourage in at least two fights (the fight with Trinidad and the fight with de la Hoya).

Amateur career

Vargas, a Mexican American, was born in Oxnard, California. In his youth, Vargas trained at the popular La Colonia Youth Boxing Club in the La Colonia Barrio neighborhood of Oxnard, California. Fernando Vargas compiled an extraordinary amateur record of 100-5. In 1992, he won the 132 lb. championships at the Junior Olympics Box-Offs, and came in second at the Junior Olympics. In 1993, he captured the triple crown of amateur boxing: the Junior Olympics Box-Offs, the Junior Olympics, and the Junior Olympics International tournament. The following year he solidified his position as one of the premier amateur fighters in the world by winning the 132 lb gold medal at the Olympic Festival, seizing the U.S. Junior Championships at 132 lb, and by becoming the youngest fighter ever to win the U.S. Championships. In 1995, he was selected to the 1996 U.S. Olympic Team.

Vargas lost a controversial decision in the second round of the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. Disappointed, but undaunted, Vargas set his sights on achieving greatness in the professional ranks.

Vargas was scheduled to turn pro on November 1996, however, while training for his debut bout he broke his right hand. Eager to turn pro and begin his march toward a world championship, Vargas "ferociously" followed his physical therapy program, and within five months he was ready for his professional debut.

Professional career

In his professional debut on March 25, 1997, Vargas crushed Jorge Morales in just 56 seconds. Immediately, a star was born. Fernando blasted his next five opponents all within two rounds, eliminating four of his five challengers in one round each. After six professional bouts, Vargas had fought a total of only eight rounds. Vargas racked up an impressive record of 14 victories with 14 KOs against no defeats by the time he fought for his first world championship.

Vargas won his first world title in 1998, knocking out Yori Boy Campas in seven rounds for the IBF light middleweight championship, becoming the youngest champion in the light middleweight division's history [21 years and 5 months]. Vargas successfully defended the title throughout 1999, with victories over Howard Clarke (TKO 4), Raul Marquez (TKO 11), Winky Wright (MD 12), and Ike Quartey (UD 12).


Manny Pacquiao Achievements

Titles

Major:

  • WBC world flyweight champion
  • IBF world super bantamweight champion
  • WBC world super featherweight champion
  • WBC world lightweight champion

Minor:

  • OPBF flyweight champion
  • WBC international super bantamweight champion
  • WBC international super featherweight champion

The Ring Magazine titles:

  • World featherweight champion
  • World super featherweight champion

Recognitions

Manny Pacquiao Pro Record

Boxing Record:
Total fights 53
Wins 48
Wins by KO 36
Losses 3
Draws 2
Win Loss Draw
Date Opponent Result Location Title belt(s) disputed
May 2, 2009 Flag of the United Kingdom Ricky Hatton
MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States IBO and The Ring Magazine light welterweight titles (Hatton's title belts)
December 06, 2008 Flag of the United States Oscar De La Hoya 8th round TKO MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States A non-title fight, fought at catchweight (welterweight)
June 28, 2008 Flag of the United States David Díaz 9th round KO Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States Won WBC world lightweight title
March 15, 2008 Flag of Mexico Juan Manuel Márquez Split decision Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States Won WBC and vacant The Ring Magazine world super featherweight title
October 6, 2007 Flag of Mexico Marco Antonio Barrera Unanimous decision Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas, United States Retained WBC international super featherweight title
April 14, 2007 Flag of Mexico Jorge Solis 8th round KO Alamodome, San Antonio, United States Retained WBC international super featherweight title
November 18, 2006 Flag of Mexico Érik Morales 3rd round KO Thomas and Mack Center, Las Vegas, United States Retained WBC international super featherweight title
July 7, 2006 Flag of Mexico Óscar Larios Unanimous decision Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City, Philippines Retained WBC international super featherweight title
January 21, 2006 Flag of Mexico Érik Morales 10th round TKO Thomas and Mack Center, Las Vegas, United States Retained WBC international super featherweight title
September 10, 2005 Flag of Mexico Héctor Velázquez 6th round TKO Staples Center, Los Angeles, United States Won vacant WBC international super featherweight title
March 19, 2005 Flag of Mexico Érik Morales Unanimous decision MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States WBC international super featherweight title
December 11, 2004 Flag of Thailand Fahsan (3K Battery) Por Thawatchai 4th round TKO Fort Bonifacio Global City, Taguig City, Philippines
May 8, 2004 Flag of Mexico Juan Manuel Márquez Draw MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States WBA and IBF world featherweight title
November 15, 2003 Flag of Mexico Marco Antonio Barrera 11th round TKO Alamodome, San Antonio, United States Won The Ring Magazine world featherweight title
July 26, 2003 Flag of Mexico Emmanuel Lucero 3rd Round KO Olympic Auditorium, Los Angeles, United States Retained IBF world super bantamweight title
March 15, 2003 Flag of Kazakhstan Serikzhan Yeshmagambetov 5th round TKO Rizal Park, Manila, Philippines
October 26, 2002 Flag of Thailand Fahbrakorb Rakkiatgym 1st round KO Rizal Memorial College Gym, Davao City, Philippines Retained IBF world super bantamweight title
June 8, 2002 Flag of Colombia Jorge Eliecer Julio 2nd Round TKO The Pyramid, Memphis, United States Retained IBF world super bantamweight title
November 10, 2001 Flag of the Dominican Republic Agapito Sánchez 6th Round Technical Draw Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, San Francisco, United States WBO and IBF world super bantamweight title
June 23, 2001 Flag of South Africa Lehlohonolo Ledwaba 6th Round TKO MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, United States Won IBF world super bantamweight title
April 28, 2001 Flag of Thailand Wethya Sakmuangklang 6th round TKO Kidapawan City, Cotabato, Philippines Retained WBC international super bantamweight title
February 24, 2001 Flag of Japan Tetsutoru Senrima 5th round TKO Manila, Philippines Retained WBC international super bantamweight title
October 14, 2000 Flag of Australia Nedal Hussein 10th round TKO Ynares Center, Antipolo City, Philippines Retained WBC international super bantamweight title
June 28, 2000 Flag of South Korea Seung-Kon Chae 1st round TKO Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City, Philippines Retained WBC international super bantamweight title
March 4, 2000 Flag of the Philippines Arnel Barotillo 4th round KO Ninoy Aquino Stadium, Manila, Philippines Retained WBC international super bantamweight title
December 12, 1999 Flag of the Philippines Reynante Jamili 2nd round KO Elorde Sports Complex, Parañaque, Philippines Won WBC international super bantamweight title
September 17, 1999 Flag of Thailand Medgoen Singsurat 3rd round KO Pakpanag Metropolian Stadium, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand Lost WBC world flyweight title
April 24, 1999 Flag of Mexico Gabriel Mira 4th round TKO Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City, Philippines Retained WBC world flyweight title
February 20, 1999 Flag of Australia Todd Makelim 3rd round TKO Kidapawan City, Philippines
December 24, 1998 Flag of Thailand Chatchai Sasakul 8th round KO Tonsuk College Ground, Phutthamonthon, Thailand Won WBC world flyweight title
May 18, 1998 Flag of Japan Shin Terao 1st round TKO Korakuen Hall, Tokyo, Japan
December 6, 1997 Flag of Thailand Panomdej Ohyuthanakorn 1st round KO South Cotabato Stadium, Koronadal, South Cotabato, Philippines Retained OPBF flyweight title
September 13, 1997 Flag of the Philippines Melvin Magramo Decision Cebu City, Philippines
June 26, 1997 Flag of Thailand Chokchai Chockvivat 5th round KO Mandaluyong City, Philippines Won OPBF flyweight title
May 30, 1997 Flag of the Philippines Ariel Austria 6th round TKO Almendras Gym, Davao City, Philippines
April 24, 1997 Flag of South Korea Wook-Ki Lee 1st round KO Makati City, Philippines
March 3, 1997 Flag of the Philippines Mike Luna 1st round KO Muntinlupa City, Philippines
December 28, 1996 Flag of South Korea Sung-Yul Lee 2nd round TKO Muntinlupa City, Philippines
July 27, 1996 Flag of Indonesia Ippo Gala 2nd round TKO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
June 15, 1996 Flag of the Philippines Bert Batiller 4th round TKO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
May 5, 1996 Flag of the Philippines John Medina 4th round TKO Manila, Philippines
April 27, 1996 Flag of the Philippines Marlon Carillo Decision Manila, Philippines
February 9, 1996 Flag of the Philippines Rustico Torrecampo 3rd round KO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
January 13, 1996 Flag of the Philippines Lito Torrejos Decision* Paranaque City, Philippines
December 9, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Rolando Toyogon Decision Manila, Philippines
November 11, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Rudolfo Fernandez 3rd round TKO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
October 21, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Renato Mendones 2nd Round TKO Puerto Princesa City, Palawan, Philippines
October 7, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Lolito Laroa Decision Makati City, Philippines
September 16, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Armando Rocil 3rd round KO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
August 3, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Acasio Simbajon Decision Mandaluyong City, Philippines
July 1, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Dele Decierto 2nd round TKO Mandaluyong City, Philippines
May 1, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Rocky Palma Decision Cavite, Philippines
March 18, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Pinoy Montejo Decision Mindoro Occidental, Philippines
January 22, 1995 Flag of the Philippines Edmund Enting Ignacio Decision Mindoro Occidental, Philippines