Chucho Castillo

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Castillo and the second or maternal family name is Aguillera.
Chucho Castillo
Statistics
Real name Jesús Castillo Aguillera
Nickname(s) Chucho
Rated at Featherweight
Super Bantamweight
Bantamweight
Height 5 ft 8 in (173 cm)
Reach 70 in (178 cm)
Nationality Mexico Mexican
Born June 17, 1944
Nuevo Valle de Moreno, Guanajuato, Mexico
Died January 15, 2013 (aged 68)
Stance Orthodox
Boxing record
Total fights 66
Wins 46
Wins by KO 22
Losses 18
Draws 2
No contests 0

Jesús Castillo Aguilera (June 17, 1944 January 15, 2013) was a Mexican boxer. Better known as Chucho Castillo, he was WBA and WBC Bantamweight champion in 1970.[1][2]

Castillo and Rubén Olivares sustained one of the most important rivalries in the history of Mexican boxing. Castillo was described by the boxing book The Ring: Boxing In The 20th Century as quiet and sullen, while Olivares was more of an outgoing partygoer, according to the book. The personality contrast made fans very interested in their matches.[3]

Early career

Castillo was born in Nuevo Valle de Moreno, a small town in the municipality of León, Guanajuato, Mexico. He made his professional debut on 26 April 1962 against Carlos Navarrete, suffering his first loss by a decision after six rounds. His next bout was his first win, outpointing Arnulfo Daza in eight rounds.[4] Castillo built a record of 24 wins and 7 losses, with 11 knockout wins, before facing José Medel for the Mexican Bantamweight title on 29 April 1967. He won the title on points after the twelve rounds, retaining it twice and also winning an additional seven non-title bouts before his first world title challenge.[5] Among the fighters he beat during that streak were Jesus Pimentel and Memo Tellez, who had beaten Castillo twice before.[6]

WBC & WBA Bantamweight Championship

Castillo made his first world title attempt against Australia's Lionel Rose, the first Aborigine ever to win a world title. The fight was held on 6 December 1968 at the Forum in Inglewood, where Rose won a very unpopular fifteen-round decision in front of a decidedly pro-Castillo crowd, causing a riot.[7] Castillo had eight bouts in 1969, going 5-1-2 during that period. He beat future world champion Rafael Herrera to defend his Mexican title, had a ten-round draw in Tokyo with Ushiwakamaru Harada, drew with Medel, and split two decisions with Raul Cruz.[8]

Castillo vs. Olivares

In 1970, Castillo was given a second world title chance when he and Olivares clashed to begin their three fight rivalry, with all three fights taking place at the Forum in Inglewood.[9] On 18 April, Olivares retained the crown by outpointing over Castillo. However, a rematch between the two fighters took place on 16 October. Castillo cut Olivares in round one, and when it was determined that Olivares could not continue in Round 14, Castillo was declared winner by a technical knockout.[10] After one non-title win, Castillo met Olivares for a third time on 3 April 1971, when Olivares recovered the crown by outpointing Castillo despite suffering an early knockdown.[11]

Later in career

Castillo went on fighting until 1975, but his record from the Olivares fight until his retirement was a rather ordinary one of 5 wins and 7 losses. He lost to former or future world champions Enrique Pinder, Bobby Chacon, and Danny "Little Red" Lopez. After losing to Ernesto Herrera on 12 December 1975, he retired.[12][13]

See also

Preceded by
Rubén Olivares
WBA Bantamweight Champion
16 October 1970 2 April 1971
Succeeded by
Rubén Olivares
WBC Bantamweight Champion
16 October 1970 2 April 1971

References

External links

Professional boxing record for Chucho Castillo from BoxRec